Through the Darkness (29 page)

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Authors: Marcia Talley

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BOOK: Through the Darkness
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“Eva, at services yesterday, you didn't say where you were going.”

“Until this morning, I hadn't really decided.”

“I'd like to stay in touch while you're away.”

“It won't be easy.” She smiled wanly. “I don't know how long I'll be able to stand the solitude of my own, rather sorry company, but I inherited a cabin from my parents some years ago, up in the Sawtooth Range of Idaho. No phone, no TV, and back then, no electricity, either, although I'm happy to say that particular deficiency was remedied a few years back. We've got indoor plumbing now, too.”

“What about Roger?” I asked.

“I sent his body back to Medina, Ohio,” she said. “He'll be buried there in the family plot.”

“No service?”

She shook her head. “Roger didn't want any service. He felt he didn't deserve it, after all the wicked things he'd done.”

Eva put the books she was holding into a box, nestling them along the sides among some embroidered cushions that had once sat out on the window seat in her office. I'd often seen her sitting there, watching the birds. “I did hear from Roger, you know.”

“You did? I'm so glad.”

“He mailed me a letter, confessing to everything. You know Roger's handwriting.”

I smiled, although I didn't have a clue what Roger's handwriting looked like.

“The post office couldn't read one of the numbers, so they first sent it to the wrong zip code. It didn't find me until yesterday.”

I was dying to know what the letter said, but unless Eva volunteered the information, I would respect my friend's privacy.

“The letter came in one of those videotape boxes,” Eva added. “Do you know what else was in the box?”

I shook my head.

“Roger's gun.” She smiled ruefully. “He wrote that he didn't have the courage to use it.”

Eva wrapped a ceramic pencil cup holder in newspaper and placed it carefully in the box. “It was good to see Dante and Emily at church yesterday. How are things going with them?”

I had no secrets from Eva. “On the mend. I'm taking the children for a week so that Emily and Dante can have some time to themselves.” I paused. “Besides, it will give me time to take Chloe in hand and teach her a little bit about Internet security. Do you know what I found out?”

“No, but I'm sure you'll tell me.”

“That little scamp, and her best friend, Samantha, had profiles on Myspace.com. It's a social networking website,” I added before Eva could ask me. “Thanks to Sam's older sister, who's all of fourteen, anybody in the world could see a picture of Chloe, know her name, what zip code she's from, and that she likes to go to Ben and Jerry's. Hello?

“I made sure she erased her profile,” I added.

“And that woman who kidnapped Timmy?”

“Awaiting trial,” I said. “God only knows when. Connie was slated to get the reward money, you know.”

Eva smiled. “I didn't know, but how wonderful.”

“She turned it down. Told Phyllis to give it all to NCMEC. So she did.”

“I can't think of a better place for it.”

Eva walked to the wall, took down two of the crosses, wrapped them in newspaper and tucked them into the packing box along with the pencil holder. “I saw that psychic on CNN again this morning.”

“You did?” If Montana Martin had been on TV, I was surprised nobody had told us about it.

“You won't believe what she was saying.”

I handed Eva a couple more books. “Try me.”

“It seems she's added the Timothy Shemansky case to her portfolio of cases solved.”

“I don't believe it! Montana's predictions about Timmy's whereabouts didn't even come close.”

Eva dumped the books I'd handed her unceremoniously into the box. “She predicted ‘on or near water,' right?”

I nodded.

“Did you notice the decorative fountain near Barnhorst's apartment complex?”

I groaned. “That fake Victorian monstrosity? Okay. I'll give her points for that. But she also said that Japanese people had taken him.”

“Chinese,” Eva corrected. “Isn't the Joy Luck Restaurant right across the street?”

“This is seriously spooky.” I stared at my friend. “Maybe my mother really did want me to have her emerald ring.”

“Maybe we need to perform an exorcism,” Eva joked. “But let's wait until your father gets back and you've had time to ask him about the ring.”

“Oh, Eva,” I cried, leaping to my feet and giving her a bear hug. “I am going to miss you so much!”

After I'd let her go, Eva rattled on, changing the subject. “I've got an ATV I can drive in Idaho. That way I won't have to hoof it up and down the mountain when I need to get into town.”

“Do they have Internet cafés in your Idaho town?” I asked.

She shrugged. “Never thought to look, but if they do, I'll be sure to e-mail you from time to time.”

“I'd really like that, Eva.”

Eva closed the box she was packing. I held the flaps closed with both hands while she sealed it with tape. “Would you like some tea?” she asked after we had finished with the box. “I've got a kettle on in the church kitchen.”

“That would be nice.”

“I'll be back in a minute, then.”

I helped Eva stack several boxes on a rolling library cart and watched as she pushed the cart down the hall in the direction of the storage closet.

While I waited for Eva to come back with the tea, I puttered. Picking up a book here, a stray piece of paper there. As I moved to toss a dried-up tea bag into the trash, I noticed a tiny, shapely leg sticking out of the jumble of items in Eva's trash can. I bent over and plucked it out. It was Eva's Barbie doll. She'd been thrust down, head first, into a pile of crumpled-up sermons.

I smoothed Barbie's robe over her body, adjusted her surplice, dug around in the mounds of trash until I located her missing stole, and settled that around her shoulders again, too.

Out in the hall, Eva was still pushing the cart with the squeaky wheel down the hallway. I dashed after her, clutching the Barbie. “Eva! You left this! Don't you want to take your Barbie?”

With a tiredness born of disappointment and regret, Eva slowed. She brushed at her cheeks before turning around, trying, without much success, to hide her tears from me. She raised her voice slightly so that I could hear. “No, I don't think I'll need it.”

Still holding Barbie, I hustled down the hall, catching up with my friend near the door to the kitchen. “But Pastor Barbie was a gift from your sister.”

“Yes, but every time I look at her now, she reminds me of my failures. I failed myself, my husband, and my church. But most painfully of all, I've failed my God.”

“You're too good a priest to leave the Church for good, Eva. Maybe after you've been away for a while, you'll see your way clear to come back.”

“Maybe,” she said, but she didn't sound convinced.

Eva reached out and smoothed Barbie's hair. Then, just as suddenly, she snatched her hand back as if she'd been burned. “Just throw it away,” she said.

I watched Eva, stooped, slump shouldered, and defeated, as she turned away from me and continued pushing her cart down the hall.

Holding her by her feet, I brought Barbie's face up to meet mine. “Well, Barbie, what do you say?” I opened my handbag and tucked Pastor Barbie toes first into the pouch that normally contained my cell phone.

Eva might never return to St. Catherine's, I thought with an ache in my heart, but someday Pastor Eva would come back to God. And when she did, Pastor Barbie would be at my house, waiting for her.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Thanks…

As always, to my husband, Barry, for the galvanized stomach that gets him through the fast food stages of my peripatetic writing life.

To the Rev. Margaret Waters, priest, longtime friend, and ought-to-be-published novelist, for keeping me straight, liturgically speaking.

To Special Agent Marina Murphy, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Annapolis Regional Authority, who answered all my questions about FBI policy and procedures with intelligence and sensitivity.

If I got it wrong, it's entirely my fault, not theirs.

To Perverted-Justice.com,
Dateline NBC
, and reporter Chris Hanson, whose “To Catch A Predator” television specials both inspired and informed this story.

To the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, Nation's Missing Children Organization, Child Quest International, Beyond Missing, America's Most Wanted, Laura Recovery Center, The Polly Klaas Foundation, The Jimmy Ryce Center for Victims of Predatory Abduction, the Maryland Center for Missing Children, and similar organizations throughout the United States and abroad who work tirelessly to make the world a safer place for our children.

To Linda Jones of Bedford, England, massage therapist extraordinaire, whose hands ought to be insured by Lloyds of London; and to Barbara Holderby, for a truly inspirational “Girls Day Out” at the Spa at Pinehurst in North Carolina.

To my writers groups—Sujata Massey, John Mann, Janice McLane, and Karen Diegmueller in Baltimore and Janet Benrey, Trish Marshall, Mary Ellen Hughes, Ray Flynt, Sherriel Mattingly, and Lyn Taylor in Annapolis—for tough love.

To my amazing editor, Sarah Durand; her excellent assistant, Jeremy Cesarec; my can-do publicist, Danielle Bartlett; and everyone at HarperCollins who makes it such an incredibly supportive place for a mystery writer to be.

To my web diva and lunch buddy, Barbara Parker. Come see what Barbara can do at
www.marciatalley.com
.

To Erika E. Rose, attorney at law, whose generous bid at a charity auction sponsored by the Friends of the Annapolis Symphony Orchestra earned her a starring role in this book.

And to Kate Charles and Deborah Crombie, without whom…

PRAISE
Resounding praise for Agatha and Anthony Award winner
MARCIA TALLEY
and
HANNAH IVES

“A writer to watch.”

Laura Lippman

“A writer and a character we want to see again—and soon.”

Washington Times

“Hannah Ives is an appealing, believable heroine who would rather face a killer than her own post-cancer emotions, and Marcia Talley perfectly catches her ambivalence.”

Margaret Maron

“[Characters] so real they must exist somewhere beyond the page.”

Anne Perry

“Talley's thoughtful handling of Hannah's bout with breast cancer and the emotional and physical recovery … add depth… [Her] characters shine.”

Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel

“[Her] characters are well drawn and the dialogue sparkles.”

Baltimore Sun

OTHER WORKS

Hannah Ives Mysteries
from Marcia Talley

T
HIS
E
NEMY
T
OWN

I
N
D
EATH
'
S
S
HADOW

O
CCASION OF
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EVENGE

U
NBREATHED
M
EMORIES

S
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I
T TO
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B
ONES

COPYRIGHT

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2006 by Marcia Talley

ISBN-13: 978-0-06-058741-3

ISBN-10: 0-06-058741-5

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

Avon Trademark Reg. U.S. Pat. Off. and in Other Countries, Marca Registrada, Hecho en U.S.A.

HarperCollins® is a registered trademark of HarperCollins Publishers Inc.

EPub Edition © DECEMBER 2011 ISBN: 9780062189301

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Marcia Talley is the author of five previous books featuring Hannah Ives. A winner of the Malice Domestic writing grant and an Agatha Award nominee for Best First Novel, Ms. Talley won an Agatha and an Anthony Award for her short story “Too Many Cooks” and an Agatha Award for her short story “Driven to Distraction.” She is the editor of two mystery collaborations, and her short stories have been published in numerous magazines and anthologies. She lives with her husband in Annapolis, Maryland.

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