The Last Word (25 page)

Read The Last Word Online

Authors: Ellery Adams

BOOK: The Last Word
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Billinger tried to finish her thought. “Love at first sight?”
Mabel’s finger rose, hovered over the cabin, trembling a little. “No. Evie was so pretty that her parents fretted over her. She was raised to be careful, modest, to not even talk to older men outside the family. But when their eyes met, Henry’s and hers, it was as if they recognized each other. Something deep inside each of them reached out to the other. No power on this earth could’ve stopped it, no matter how foolish folks thought they were. I’ve never seen anything like it, and it was a long, long war.”
Her finger came so close to touching the painted cabin that Olivia almost moved to interfere, but she merely held her breath and waited.
“The way they were when they were together . . . so easy, so sure. They were just like this little house—all light and laughter and warm rooms in the middle of a crazy, cold world that couldn’t seem to comfort any of us, especially when the food started running out and then telegrams came and half the town dressed in black.”
Olivia met Billinger’s eyes. Mabel, who’d known both the players in this drama, had taken one look at the browns and yellows that Kamler had blended together to create the cabin and had immediately recognized it as a pledge from one lover to another.
“Then why did Henry leave Evelyn?” Olivia asked, reluctantly playing devil’s advocate. “Why try to escape? Were they planning to elope?”
Mabel put her hand back on the armrest of her wheelchair and shook her head firmly. “She would have told me. Evie was . . . broken by what happened that night. On the last day I saw her, she swore on her Bible that Henry didn’t want to escape, that he’d never kill that guard . . . Oh, I can’t remember his name . . .” The realization that there was a gap in her memory disconcerted Mabel so greatly that she stopped speaking, only making soft scratching sounds in the back of her throat.
Billinger tried to coax Mabel back by asking after her family, but her eyes had grown misty again, her thoughts blanketed by a fog too thick to be shaken off by the professor’s voice speaking the cherished names of children and grandchildren.
Gently, Olivia turned the painting over and placed it back on Mabel’s lap. “I think Henry wrote this note to Evie.” She read it aloud and watched for a reaction. Nothing.
“Mabel?” Billinger whispered and then shook his head at Olivia. “This is how it’s been. She fades in and out.”
The professor left the bench and strolled away to exchange a few words with the nurse. Olivia lifted Kamler’s watercolor from Mabel’s lap, but the older woman didn’t even seem to notice when the weight of it was no longer there.
Olivia repackaged the work of art, slipped it into the canvas tote, and sat back on the bench with a sigh. Thinking that Haviland would be delighted that their visit had been so short, she waited for Billinger to wrap up his conversation with the nurse.
Noises spilled out of the closest set of double doors, and a family of five stepped onto the sun-dappled patio. A little boy of five or six came running over the flagstones, his arms outstretched as he raced toward an elderly man leaning on a walker.
“Jimmy!” the man called in a cheery albeit tobacco-rough voice and smiled as the child hugged his skinny leg. His family encircled him, and the three adults began to chat as the two children tried to one-up each other in volume and enthusiasm. There was a baby too, held in the protective cradle of the mother’s arm. Olivia assumed he was quite young, for his small limbs were encased in a blue cotton sleeper with feet, as if the parents feared the effects of the light on the fragile, new skin.
Using his right hand to steady himself on the walker, the grandfather reached out with his left to touch the baby’s plump cheek. The mother pivoted the child so that his face was turned toward the old man. Their eyes met, the two males separated by a gulf of age, united by blood. The baby held still and then sucked in a great breath only to release it in an ear-splitting wail.
The mother laughed, embarrassed, and unobtrusively comforted her child. Next to Olivia, Mabel stirred in her chair, somehow awakened by the child’s cry.
“Oh, Evie!” The older woman’s eyes pooled with tears. “After they sent you away, things were never the same. I missed you so much. I still miss you . . .”
Olivia looked from the baby, who was quickly responding to his mother’s kisses and hushed assurances that all was well, to Mabel’s stricken face, her eyes focused on the infant. Billinger had turned when he caught the sound of Mabel’s grief floating through the honeysuckle-scented air of the garden, but Olivia shook her head, silently warning him not to move.
“I’m sorry Evie was sent away,” she whispered and laid a hand on Mabel’s. “What happened to her child?”
The tears overflowed, ribbons of water wetting the older woman’s cheeks. “She never came back. I never saw her again. My Evie . . .”
Mabel clammed up again, adrift in the painful memory of losing her best friend. Her lip trembled, but her tears quickly ran dry and her eyes fastened on an iridescent blue gazing ball in the garden bed opposite the bench.
Olivia could picture Mabel as a young woman, filled with hope that the war was coming to an end, rushing to the Whites’ house to share some piece of news with Evelyn, only to find no one at home.
Bewildered and more than a little afraid by the sense of emptiness clinging to Evelyn’s home, Mabel might have ridden her bike into town in search of information. The people she’d known for all of her nineteen years would be unable to meet her desperate eyes. Instead, they’d murmur something about the Whites having to move in haste because of a job offering or a sick relative or some other acceptable untruth.
Racing home to ask her mother, Mabel would be forced to consider the real reason the Whites had left town. For the last two months, Evie had been acting strange. At first, Mable thought her friend had grown pallid and despondent due to a broken heart. Heinrich was now gone and worse, he was a fugitive. Evie hardly left her room, and each time Mabel went to visit, she complained of being sick to her stomach and too wounded by Henry’s disappearance to face the judgmental stares of the townsfolk.
Naturally, Mabel would have tried to comfort her friend. She’d hold Evie while she cried, pass her tissues, and try to distract her with the latest gossip. But inside, she’d begin to wonder. Had Evie gone too far with the German boy? Could she truly have been that reckless? That foolish?
Out of loyalty and fear, Mabel would have dismissed the notion, for if Evie were pregnant, then her reputation would be ruined forever. It was already stained by the fact that she was besotted by a foreigner capable of stabbing a local man in the back, but the community would end up forgiving her by blaming it on her youth and naivete. They’d dole out a measure of this blame to her parents as well for allowing Evie to receive art lessons from a prisoner, regardless of his talent.
A shiver ran down Olivia’s neck. She picked up Mabel’s hand and stroked it lightly, caught up in the tide of heartache. A young couple in love, a childhood friendship, the White family’s place in the community—all torn asunder by one event, the murder of a guard on the night Heinrich Kamler and Nicklaus Ziegler escaped.
If Heinrich were truly innocent, then he’d lived an entire lifetime separated from the girl he’d dreamed of marrying and the child his lover had born in secret in some town far from Oyster Bay.
“Damn it,” Olivia murmured, tears pricking her eyes. Her throat tightened, and she could not stop herself from seeing right through the canvas tote back to the cabin on the hilltop, to the hope of home, knowing now that the traveler had never made it up the narrow path. The loved one within had waited and waited for the familiar footfall outside the door and no one had come.
The war ended, the prisoners were sent overseas, the Whites’ house was sold and relocated and sold again. And the children of wartime, like Evelyn and Mabel and Ray Hatcher, grew older, bearing the weight of their memories like women carrying heavy jugs home from the well.
At some point, Billinger appeared and rejoined Olivia on the bench. The nurse came to collect Mabel, and Olivia was deeply sorry to release the older woman’s hand. She bent over and placed a wisp of a kiss on Mabel’s forehead before letting go. Mabel smiled, the pain evaporating from her features like a shadow chased off by a bright moon.
Billinger had the good grace to wait until they were in the car before asking, “What happened back there?”
“I believe Evelyn White might have had a baby out of wedlock. Her family left town abruptly, but I have no idea where they went or what became of the child.” She turned to the professor in appeal. “Can you find out?”
He touched her arm. “I’ll do my best. You have my word on it.”
Olivia nodded. She instinctively knew that Billinger would work relentlessly to help her.
The afternoon was on the wane as she drove west toward the ocean, toward home, toward a killer.
When she stepped into the welcoming cool of her house, she noticed that her answering machine was blinking furiously. Rawlings had called an emergency meeting of the Bayside Book Writers for that evening. Olivia checked her watch. She had less than an hour until her friends would arrive at the lighthouse keeper’s cottage and she desperately wanted to take a shower, to rinse off the fine dust of sadness that coated her body.
Slipping her feet from her shoes, she picked up the phone, dialed The Boot Top, and paced across the floor, relishing the feel of the tiles against her skin. Olivia politely interrupted the hostess as she began her honey-tongued greeting and asked that Michel pick up the kitchen phone. Moments later, his voice ricocheted down the line, a frantic blend of passion and protestations.
“Michel!” Olivia cut him off with a bark. “I do
not
care to discuss your infatuation with Laurel at the moment. I’m calling because she and the other writers are coming over tonight and I have nothing to offer them by way of an impromptu dinner. Can you help?”
Vowing that he’d see to it personally, Michel cried, “I love her, you know!” and slammed the phone down.
Olivia rolled her eyes to the ceiling, fed Haviland his supper, and then trudged up the stairs. She shrugged out of her clothes and into the warm embrace of the shower stream. After washing her hair, she ran conditioner through the short strands and waited the recommended thirty seconds before rinsing it out. The glass panels of her shower stall fogged over completely, and she could barely make out Haviland’s black form as he sank onto the bath mat for an after-dinner repose.
Closing her eyes, she arched back into the rush of water, feeling the tension ebb from her shoulders, the images of Kamler’s cabin and Mabel’s stricken face receding.
Suddenly, she heard a sharp crash followed by a violent thump from the first floor. Haviland leapt to his feet and was off in a blur of black fur and angry barking. Olivia knew from the hostile tone that the poodle was genuinely alarmed. She turned the water off with a jerk, stuffed her arms into a robe, and raced to the landing.
Haviland was going wild in the kitchen. She could hear his enraged barks and snarls bouncing off the cabinets and terra cotta tiles. Without another second’s hesitation, Olivia grabbed her Browning BPR rifle from the coat closet, loaded it, and raised it to eye level. If someone were foolish enough to be in the kitchen when she turned the corner, they’d come face-to-face with the yawn of a gun barrel and a woman who was fully prepared to fire her weapon.
But no one was there.
Olivia lowered the gun but did not set it down. Tucking the stock under her right armpit, she approached the jagged hole in the glass of her closed kitchen door. She rapidly shuffled her feet into the shoes she’d discarded earlier and whipped the door open, crunching shards of glass beneath her heels. A large brown stone sat overtly on the welcome mat, discarded haphazardly by the intruders in their haste to gain entry to her house.
Realizing what this meant, Olivia swung around, her eyes targeting the wide pine table upon which she’d laid the canvas tote bag containing the watercolor before heading upstairs to shower.
It was gone.
Chapter 14
It is by going down into the abyss that we recover the treasures of life.
—JOSEPH CAMPBELL
 
 
 
 
 
R
awlings showed up out of uniform, wearing a Hawaiian shirt upon which cobalt sharks swam across a field of pale blue. His khaki shorts were covered with paint splatters, but his eyes were all business. While Officer Cook dusted for prints, Rawlings sat at Olivia’s kitchen table with an untouched cup of coffee, his fingers smoothing the pine surface as he took her statement.
“What am I going to tell Harris?” Olivia whispered miserably when they were done.
The chief covered the back of her hand with his warm palm. “We’ll get it back. The fact that it was stolen reinforces my belief that Mr. Plumley’s death was more about money and less about his profession.”

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