Alice in Jeopardy: A Novel (30 page)

BOOK: Alice in Jeopardy: A Novel
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“FBI,” a male voice says.

“Sally Ballew, please.”

“Moment, please.”

She waits. She can hear ringing on the other end.

“Special Agent Warren Davis,” another man says.

“Sally Ballew, please.”

“Sorry, she’s not here just now,” he says. “Anything I can help you with?”

“Yes, can you please give her a message when she comes in? Tell her Alice Glendenning called…”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“…with something I don’t think she’s considered yet.”

“Yes, ma’am, and what’s that?”

“I think my children may be on a boat. We’ve been checking land accommodations, but they may be on a boat someplace. Miss Ballew may want to alert the Coast Guard, or—”

“Yes, ma’am, I’ll tell her.”

“Thank you,” Alice says.

There is a click on the line. She has the feeling she’s just been brushed off. She replaces the receiver on its cradle, and is staring at the phone in anger and disbelief when suddenly it rings.

She picks up the receiver at once.

“Hello?” she says.

“Mrs. Glendenning?”

“Yes?”

“This is Rosie Garrity. Please don’t hang up, ma’am.”

“What is it, Rosie?”

“My husband, you know? George?”

“Yes.”

“He’s a waiter out on Siesta Key? In Sarasota? A restaurant called The Unicorn?”

“Yes, Rosie, what about him?”

“He was working last night when this man came in for dinner. A white man with a black woman.”

“Yes?”

“George thought he recognized him, so he went over to the table and introduced himself—”

“Rosie, what is it you’re—?”

“Do you remember that Saturday my car broke down and George had to drive me to work? And he met Mr. Glendenning going out to the mailbox for the newspaper?”

Alice is suddenly listening very hard.

“Well, George thought this man last night was your husband. Was Mr. Glendenning.”

“Why… why would he think that, Rosie?”

“Well, this man was the same height and build, and he had blue eyes, and blond hair.”

“Even so, Rosie…”

“Though now he’s wearing it much longer. To his shoulders, actually.”

“What are you saying, Rosie?”

The line goes silent.

“Rosie? You said he’s wearing it much longer. What are you trying to tell me?
Who’s
wearing it much longer?”

“God forgive me, your
husband
!” Rosie says. “Mr. Glendenning.”

“Rosie, that’s imposs—”

“I know, I know. Your husband drowned last year, how can I believe it was him sitting there in that restaurant?”

Mom, I can’t believe it!

The words her daughter shrieked into the phone.

“But this man paid the bill with a credit card, and the last name on the card was Graham, but his first name was Edward…”

Oh Jesus, Alice thinks.

“…so I can’t help believing…”

“Oh
Jesus
!” she says aloud.

“Mrs. Glendenning?” Rosie says. “Please don’t fire me. I just had to tell you what I was thinking.”

“You’re not fired, Rosie. Thank you. I have to go now.”

“Mrs. Glendenning? Do you think it really was—?”

Alice puts the receiver down on the cradle.

Her heart is pounding.

“What?” her sister asks.

“Eddie’s alive,” she says.

“What!”

“He’s alive. He was out last night with that black woman, he’s
alive
!”

“That can’t be.”

“It is.”

She goes into the bedroom and takes the .32-caliber pistol from her top dresser drawer.

“Come on,” she tells her sister.

13

“He’s the one
who has the kids,” Alice says. “Him and this black woman… whoever she is.”

They are driving out to Lewiston Point. Alice is thinking that she doesn’t know who the woman is, and she doesn’t know who Edward Graham is, either. Edward Fulton Glendenning no longer exists. These people are both strangers to her.

“He knows boats,” she says. “He’d be comfortable on a boat. And they’d be less obvious on a boat than in a hotel or a motel. Besides, we took the kids there four years ago. They loved it. They’d feel safe and protected there.”

“Where, Alice? Where are we going?”

“Marina Blue. That’s what Ashley was trying to tell me on the phone. Not Maria, not Marie, but Marina Blue. Out on Crescent Island. Half an hour from the Shell station.”

The women are silent for several moments.

The Mercedes truck bounces along Lewiston Point Road, which in the past few minutes has gone from potholed asphalt to rutted dirt. Either side of the road is lined with thick mangroves. Beyond, they can hear the gentle lap of water. The sun is beginning to set. Nightfall comes quickly here on the Cape, especially near the water, where the sky turns from red to violet, to blue, and then black with a suddenness that can stop the heart.

“That’s why the kids got in that car,” Carol says, nodding. “It wasn’t a stranger, it was their father.”

Was,
Alice thinks.

Was
their father.

Who knows what he has become now?

 

Eddie has paid
the marina bill, refueled the boat, and brought it back to their dockside mooring. Christine knows that his plan is to get under way as soon as it’s dark. She knows nothing beyond that. When she comes topside, he is sitting at the helm, alone and silent, smoking a cigarette. He raises the flip-up bolster, making room for her on the upholstered companion seat. She sits beside him and takes his left hand. It is a warm evening, but his hand is cold to the touch.

“You okay?” she asks.

“Yes, fine. What are the kids doing?”

“Watching television.”

He nods.

“When do we call Alice again?” she asks.

“Well, there’s no hurry,” he says.

“Because we should tell her where we’re leaving the kids, you know.”

“Yeah,” he says, and nods, and takes a long drag on the cigarette.

They are silent for several moments.

Out on the water, a fish jumps.

Then all is still again.

“Are we going to just leave them here on the dock?”

“No, that wasn’t my plan,” he says.

“Because I thought we were getting under way…”

“That’s right.”

“…soon as it got dark.”

“Right.”

“Which is pretty soon, Eddie.”

“I know it is.”

“So where are we going to leave the kids?”

“You see…” he says, and then stops, and shakes his head.

She looks at him.

“They saw me,” he says.

He draws on the cigarette.

“They know I’m alive,” he says.

She is still looking at him.

“We can’t turn them loose,” he says.

“We can’t take them with us, either, Eddie. The police’ll be looking for them everywhere we—”

“I know that.”

“We
have
to let them go, Eddie.”

“But we can’t,” he says.

“Then what…?”

He draws on the cigarette again.

“We’ll move out in about five minutes,” he says, and looks at the luminous dial of his watch. “We’ll head straight out to the Gulf.”

“I don’t understand. What about…?”

He does not answer.

He turns away from her penetrating gaze and tosses the cigarette overboard. Its glow arcs against the sudden blackness of the night and hits the water with a brief dying hiss.

 

They get to the
ferry landing just as the boat is about to leave. Alice pulls the truck into a parking space alongside a red Taurus. Carol jumps out and first begins waving and shouting at the lone dockhand who is already tossing lines aboard, and next at the pilothouse to let the captain know they’re here. Alice slams the door shut on the driver’s side. They both run for the dock.

“Take it easy, you’ve got time,” the dockhand says.

The ferry carries passengers only, no cars. There are perhaps half a dozen people aboard when the captain gives a final warning toot on his horn and begins backing away from the dock. He makes a wide circle, coming around, and then points the boat’s prow toward Crescent Island, some thousand yards across the inlet.

Ten minutes later, the boat is docking on the island side.

The night is balmy and still.

 

Eddie has already
started the engines.

The Sundancer is idling at the dock.

The two women come striding out of the darkness beyond, moving rapidly toward where he is crouched over the forward line. He does not recognize them until the dockside stanchion lights pick them up, and then he sees that it is Alice and her sister, Carol. He shakes his head and smiles because Alice looks so utterly ridiculous and helpless, her left foot in a cast, limping across the dock like a cripple. And then he sees the pistol in her hand, and the smile drops from his face. He loosens the line from its cleat and tosses it aboard. In the next instant, he leaps aboard himself, and reaches into a locker alongside the wheel.

“Where are the kids?” Alice shouts.

He is already behind the wheel.

Alice does not raise the pistol in her own hand until she sees that what he’s taken from the locker is a gun.

“Put it down!” he yells.

The thirty-two is shaking violently in her fist.

“Give me the children and leave,” Alice says. “You’re Edward Graham now, you can forget all this.”

“But will
you
?” he says, and smiles thinly. “Will your
sister
? Will the
kids
?”

The gun in his fist is a nine-millimeter Glock. It looks very large and very menacing, and it is pointed at her head.

“You know the penalty for kidnapping in the state of Florida?” he asks.

His tone is almost conversational. He could be giving a little talk on the wisdom of investing in growth stocks.

“You can leave Florida,” she says. “Take your girlfriend and—”

“My wife,” he corrects.

“Your… ?”

“Kidnapping is a life felony, Alice. If they ever catch up with us...”

“No one will even
try,
Eddie. Just let the kids
go
!”

“Well, no,” he says, “I’m afraid I can’t do that.”

And throws the engines into reverse.

She hears a click in the dark.

Is there a safety on the gun?

Has he just thrown off a safety?

She hears two simultaneous voices.


Don’t,
Eddie!”

“No, Daddy!”

The first voice is the voice Alice has heard so many times before on the telephone, the voice of the woman she came face-to-face with outside the Shell station’s ladies’ room, the woman she now sees again, rushing up from below, holding out her hand beseechingly to Eddie. His wife, Alice thinks. His wife.

The second voice is a voice Alice has not heard since the morning they learned that Eddie drowned out on the Gulf.

The second voice belongs to her dear son, Jamie.

“Don’t hurt Mommy!”

His son’s voice has no effect on him. He still has the Glock in his right hand, pointed at Alice’s head. His left hand is still steady on the stainless steel wheel as he starts to maneuver the Sundancer away from the dock.

This is the man who once matched her foot to a midnight blue slipper.

This is the man she once loved with all her heart.

She squeezes her eyes shut.

Opens them again at once, and fires.

Fires another time.

And yet another.

Blood spurts on his yellow windbreaker. She sees him crumpling over the wheel. The boat swerves back and bangs violently against the dock. She throws down the gun, and leaps onto the boat, and rushes to her son where he stands trembling just outside the slatted wooden doors leading below. The black woman whose name she still does not know says nothing. Her eyes are darting, calculating.

“Mom?”

Ashley comes from below, her eyes wide.

She glances once at her father where he lies slumped and still over the stainless steel wheel smeared now with his blood. Then she, too, rushes into Alice’s arms.

The black woman hesitates a moment longer, and then suddenly leaps ashore.

“Gee, no,” Carol says, and points the pistol at her head.

 

They have called all
the real estate agents and condo rental offices they could find in the Yellow Pages, and have even visited one personally, but have not come up with any information on a blonde and a black woman having rented any kind of dwelling at any time during the past two months. Or at any time at
all,
for that matter.

So there is nothing to do now but make love again.

Rafe reflects afterward, as they both lie spent and damp on rumpled sheets in Jennifer’s bedroom, that there’s a certain time of day in Florida when a hush seems to come over the entire land. The traffic seems to come to a halt, the streets are all at once deserted, even the insects and the birds seem to fall suddenly still. Overhead, the ceiling fan rotates lazily, scattering dust motes climbing shafts of silvery moonlight. Lying on his back beside her, Rafe thinks that maybe it’s this way everywhere in the world after you’ve just made love to a beautiful passionate woman, maybe there’s just this, well, this sort of serenity that comes over you. A stillness that causes you to believe your heart has stopped, causes you to believe that maybe you’re even dead. And causes you to think.

He knows he’s going to be leaving here soon.

He knows he’s going to get out of this bed, and shower in this lady’s bedroom, put on his Jockey shorts and his jeans and his denim shirt, and his socks and loafers, and then either take a taxi or ask her to drive him to the truck stop where he’s parked the rig, knows he is going to walk out of this bedroom, and out of this house, and never see this woman again. Because no matter what Eminem has to say about opportunity knocking just once or whatever the words were, seize the moment, seize the music, he knows that maybe such dreams are okay for a talented kid on 8-Mile Road, but they’re just not there for people like Rafe who don’t know how to rhyme.

Opportunity may have come knocking when he learned about all those phony bills out there someplace, and maybe it kept knocking and knocking when he found this beautiful passionate woman willing to chase the dream with him, but man, there is no way on earth he is going to find those two chicks sitting on that fake bread, no way in the world at all. He has tried to seize the moment and the music, but his hands have closed on nothing but thin air.

So he knows he will now go back.

Knows he will go back to Carol and the kids, knows in his deepest heart that eventually he will go back to jail, too, that’s what recidivism is all about. It’s all about making the same mistakes over and over again. Going back home again to a woman he no longer loves and kids he never wanted, going back on the shit again, too, and getting caught with it, and going back to jail as a three-time loser who once upon a time heard opportunity knocking, and opened the door to let it in, and found nobody standing there, nobody at all.

It’s kind of sad, really.

It’s kind of so fucking sad.

 

She drives him
to where he parked the rig.

They stand outside the cab in the harsh bright overhead lights, and they hold hands, both hands, his outstretched to hers, hers clasped in his, and he tells her he’s sorry this didn’t work out the way he was hoping it would, tells her he can still think of a hundred and six ways the two of them together could have spent all that money. He tells her he’s never met a woman like her in his entire life, tells her that these few days he’s spent with her have been the happiest days in his life, he wants her to believe that. He tells her that there are a couple of things he still has to straighten out back home in Atlanta, but that as soon as he’s taken care of these few little odds and ends, he’ll be coming back down here to Florida, where he hopes she’ll be waiting for him.

“Wait for me, Jenny,” he tells her, though she’s asked him not to call her Jenny, but he’s already forgotten this.

Still holding both her hands in his, he draws her close to him, and kisses her on the mouth. She kisses him back. They pull apart from each other at last, still holding hands, and he nods silently and solemnly, and finally drops her hands and climbs into the cab and rolls down the window.

BOOK: Alice in Jeopardy: A Novel
6.6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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