Authors: Patricia Cornwell
Tags: #Women Sleuths, #General, #Suspense, #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction
"I wish we'd never moved here. Nothing good happens in this house," she said.
"What will you do, Miss Harper?" The emptiness of her eyes chilled me. "Will you stay here?"
"I have no place else to go, Dr. Scarpetta."
"I would think selling Cutler Grove wouldn't be hard," I answered, my attention wandering back to the portrait over the mantel. The young girl in white smiled eerily in the firelight at secrets she would never tell.
"It is hard to leave your iron lung, Dr. Scarpetta."
"I beg your pardon?"
"I'm too old for change," she explained. "I'm too old to pursue good health and new relationships. The past breathes for me. It is my life. You are young, Dr. Scarpetta. Someday you will see what it is like to look back. You will find it inescapable. You will find your personal history drawing you back into familiar rooms where, ironically, events occurred that set into motion your eventual estrangement from life. You will find the hard furniture of heartbreak more comfortable and the people who failed you friendlier with time. You will find yourself running back into the arms of the pain you once ran away from. It is easier. That's all I can say. It is easier."
"Do you have any idea who did this to your brother?" I asked her directly, desperate to change the subject.
She said nothing as she stared wide-eyed into the fire.
"What about Beryl?" I persisted.
"I know she was being harassed months before it happened."
"Months before her death?" I asked.
"Beryl and I were very close."
"You knew she was being harassed?"
"Yes. The threats she was getting," she said.
"She told you she was being threatened, Miss Harper?"
"Of course," she said.
Marino had been through Beryl's phone bills. He hadn't found any long-distance calls made to Williamsburg. Nor had he turned up any letters written to her by Miss Harper or her brother.
"Then you maintained close contact with her over the years?" I said.
"Very close contact," she replied. "At least, as much as that was possible. Because of this book she was writing and the clear violation of her agreement with my brother. Well, it all got very ugly. Gary was enraged."
"How did he know what she was doing? Did she tell him what she was writing?"
"Her lawyer did," she said.
"Sparacino?"
"I don't know the details of what he told Gary," she said, her face hard. "But my brother was informed of Beryl's book. He knew enough to be extremely out of sorts. The lawyer agitated the matter behind the scenes. Going from Beryl to Gary, back and forth, acting as if he were an ally with one or the other, depending on whom he was talking to."
"Do you know the status of her book now?" I asked carefully. "Does Sparacino have it? Is it in the process of being published?"
"Several days ago he called Gary. I overheard snatches of their conversation, enough to ascertain the manuscript has disappeared. Your office was mentioned. I heard Gary say something about the medical examiner. You, I suppose. And at this point he was getting angry. I concluded Mr. Sparacino was trying to determine whether it was possible my brother might have the manuscript."
"Is that possible?" I wanted to know.
"Beryl would never have turned it over to Gary," she answered with emotion. "It would make no sense for her to have relinquished her work to him. He was adamantly opposed to what she was doing."
We were silent for a moment.
Then I asked, "Miss Harper, what was your brother so afraid of?"
"Life."
I waited, watching her closely. She was staring into the fire again.
"The more he feared it, the more he retreated from it," she said in a strange voice. "Reclusiveness does peculiar things to one's mind. Turns it inside out, puts a spin on thoughts and ideas until they begin to bounce off center and at crazy angles. I think Beryl was the only person my brother ever loved. He clung to her. He had an overwhelming need to possess her, to keep her wedded to him. When he thought she was betraying him, that he no longer had power over her, his madness became more extreme. I'm sure he began to imagine all sorts of nonsense she might divulge about him. About our situation here."
When she reached for her wine again, her hand trembled. She was talking about her brother as if he had been dead for years. There was an edge to her voice when she spoke of him, the well of love for her brother lined with hard bricks of rage and pain.
"Gary and I had no one left when Beryl came along," she continued. "Our parents were dead. We had no one but each other. Gary was difficult. A devil who wrote like an angel. He needed taking care of. I was willing to facilitate his desire to leave his mark on the world."
"Such sacrifices are often accompanied by resentment," I ventured.
Silence. The light from the fire flickered on her exquisitely chiseled face.
"How did you find Beryl?" I asked.
"She found us. She was living in Fresno at the time with her father and stepmother. She was writing, was obsessed with writing."
Miss Harper continued staring into the fire as she talked. "One day Gary got a letter from her through his publisher. Accompanying it was a short story written in longhand. I still remember it well. She showed promise, a germinal imagination that simply needed shepherding. Thus the correspondence began, and months later Gary invited her to visit us, sent her a ticket. Not long after that, he bought this house and began to restore it. He did it for her. A lovely young girl had brought magic into his world."
"And you?" I asked.
She did not reply at first.
Wood shifted in the fireplace and sparks popped.
"Life was not without its complications after she moved in with us, Dr. Scarpetta," she said. "I watched what went on between them."
"Between your brother and Beryl."
"I did not want to imprison her the way he did," she said. "In Gary's relentless attempts to hold on to Beryl and have her all to himself, he lost her."
"You loved Beryl very much," I said.
"It is impossible to explain," she said, her voice catching. "It was very difficult to manage."
I continued to probe. "Your brother didn't want you to have contact with her."
"Especially during the past few months, because of her book. Gary denounced and disowned her. Her name was not mentioned in this house. He forbade me to have any sort of contact with her."
"But you did," I answered.
"In a very limited way," she said with difficulty.
"That must have been very painful for you. To be cut off from someone so dear to you."
She looked away from me, interested in the fire again.
"Miss Harper, when did you find out about Beryl's death?"
She did not reply.
"Did someone call you?"
"I heard about it on the radio the next morning," she muttered.
Dear God, I thought. How awful.
She said nothing more. Her wounds were beyond my reach, and as much as I wanted to offer a word of comfort, there was nothing I could say. So we sat in silence for what seemed a very long time. When I finally stole a glance at my watch, I saw it was almost midnight.
The house was very quiet--too quiet, I realized with a start.
After the warmth of the library, the entrance hall was as chilly as a cathedral. I opened the back door and gasped in surprise. Beneath the milky swirl of snow the drive was a solid white blanket, with barely perceptible tire tracks left when the damn cops had driven off without me. My state car had been towed long ago, and they had forgotten I was still inside the house. Damn! Damn! Damn!
When I returned to the library, Miss Harper was placing another log on the fire.
"It appears my ride went off without me," I said, and I know I sounded upset. "I'll need to use a phone."
"I'm afraid that won't be possible," she answered unemphatically. "The phones went out not long after the policeman left. It seems to happen quite often when the weather's bad."
I watched her stab the burning logs. I watched ribbons of smoke curl out from under them as sparks swarmed up the chimney.I had forgotten. It hadn't occurred to me until now.
"Your friend ..." I said.
She jabbed the log again.
"The police said a friend was on her way, would be staying with you tonight..."
Miss Harper slowly straightened up and turned around, her face flushed from the heat.
"Yes, Dr. Scarpetta," she said. "It was so kind of you to come."
Miss Harper returned with more wine as the tall case clock on the landing outside the library chimed twelve times.
"The clock," she seemed compelled to explain. "It's ten minutes slow. Always has been."
The mansion's phones really were out. I had checked. The walk to town was several miles through what was now at least four inches of snow. I wasn't going anywhere.
Her brother was dead. Beryl was dead. Miss Harper was the only one left. I hoped it was a coincidence. I lit a cigarette and took a swallow of wine.
Miss Harper didn't have the physical strength to have killed her brother and Beryl. What if the killer were after Miss Harper, too? What if he came back?
My .38 was at home.
The police would be staking out the area.
In what! Snowmobiles! I realized Miss Harper was saying something else to me.
"I'm sorry," I said, forcing a smile.
"You look cold," she repeated.
Her face was placid as she seated herself on the baroque side chair and stared into the fire. The high flames sounded like a wind-whipped flag, and infrequent gusts of wind sent ashes blowing out on the hearth. But she appeared reassured by my company. Were I in her shoes, I wouldn't have wanted to be alone, either.
"I'm fine," I lied. I was cold.
"I'll be glad to get you a sweater."
"Please don't trouble yourself. I'm comfortable-- really."
"It's quite impossible to heat this house," she went on. "The high ceilings. And it isn't insulated. You grow accustomed to it."
I thought of my gas-heated modern house in Richmond. I thought of my queen-size bed with its firm mattress and electric blanket. I thought of the carton of cigarettes in the cupboard near the refrigerator and of the good Scotch in my bar. I thought of the drafty, dusty dark upstairs of the Cutler Grove mansion.
"I'll be fine down here. On the sofa," I said.
"Nonsense. The fire will go out soon enough." She was fidgeting with a button on her sweater, her eyes not leaving the fire.
"Miss Harper," I tried one last time. "Do you have any idea who might have done this? To Beryl, to your brother. Or why?"
"You think it's the same man."
She presented this as a statement of fact, not a question.
"I have to consider it."
"I wish I could tell you something that would help," she answered. "But perhaps it doesn't matter. Whoever it is, what's done is done."
"Don't you want him punished?"
"There has been enough punishment. It won't undo what has been done," she said.
"Wouldn't Beryl want him caught?"
She turned to me, her eyes wide. "I wish you had known her."
"I think I did. I do know her in a way," I said gently.
"I can't explain ..."
"You don't need to, Miss Harper."
"It could have been so nice ..."
I saw her grief for an instant, her face contorted, then controlled again. She didn't need to finish the thought. It could have been so nice now that there was no one to keep Beryl and Miss Harper apart. Companions. Friends. Life is so empty when you are alone, when there is no one to love.
"I'm sorry," I said with feeling. "I'm so terribly sorry, Miss Harper."
"It is the middle of November," she replied, looking away from me again. "Unusually early for snow. The thaw will come quickly, Dr. Scarpetta. You will be able to get out by late morning. Those who forgot you will remember by then. It really was so good of you to come."
She seemed to have known that I would be here. I had the uncanny impression she had somehow planned it. Of course, that wasn't possible.
"One thing I will ask you to do," she said.
"What is that, Miss Harper?"
"Come back in the spring. Come back when it is April," she said to the flames.
"I would like that," I answered.
"The forget-me-nots will be in bloom. The bowling green will be pale blue with them. It is so lovely, my favorite time of year. Beryl and I used to pick them. Have you ever studied them up close? Or are you like most people who take them for granted, never give them a thought because they are so small? They are so beautiful if you hold them close. So beautiful, as if made of porcelain and painted by the perfect hand of God. We would wear them in our hair and put them in bowls of water in the house, Beryl and I. You must promise to come back in April. You will promise me that, won't you?"