She hadn’t known it then, but now Margot felt it with a certainty that went all the way into her teeth: three years ago, she’d shaken hands with, sat across from, and listened to the lies of a killer.
Her mind raced. She didn’t want to screw up this story with hasty research or reporting on it too soon, which meant she had a lot to do. Because right now, all she had was circumstantial evidence linking Elliott Wallace to two out of three cases. She could place him in Dayton, Ohio, at the time of Polly Limon’s death, and he’d admitted on tape to visiting the stables where she used to ride. Other than that, Margot had the word of Jace Jacobs, who’d refused to go on record, connecting Wallace to January as—of all things—an imaginary friend. While that was enough for her to be sure she was on to something, it obviously wasn’t enough to skewer him. And Margot wanted to do just that: slice him up and serve him to the police on a silver platter.
But before she could do anything, she heard an enormous crash just beyond her door. And then, the shouting began.
TWENTY-THREE
Margot, 2019
Margot threw open her bedroom door and raced out into the hallway.
“Motherfucker!” Luke’s voice bellowed throughout the house.
She followed the sound into the kitchen, where she stopped dead in her tracks, her eyes widening in shock, and everything about the case was blotted from her mind. The only thing she could register was the sight of the kitchen before her. How long had she been holed up in her room? She couldn’t have been in there for more than an hour, but the kitchen looked completely unrecognizable since she’d passed through it earlier.
One of the kitchen chairs was toppled over—the source of the crash, Margot guessed—and every single drawer and cabinet was wide open and empty, the counters covered in their contents. A pile of oven mitts and pot holders sat atop a tall stack of plates. Beside that was a collection of every utensil her uncle had—steak knives, butter knives, forks, soup spoons, serving spoons, ladles. Random objects from the junk drawer—a digital Yahtzee, a bouquet of pencils, an old hairbrush, a pair of rusty scissors—had been relocated to the inside of all his cups. It seemed impossible that the mounds and mounds of stuff had at one time fit into the kitchen at all. At the center of everything, with his back to her, was Luke.
“Uncle Luke?” Margot said tentatively.
Luke spun around furiously, his eyes wide and wild. In his hands was a jar of pickles. “I can’t find it!” he spat.
She lifted her palms gently. “Okay. Okay. What is it you can’t find?”
“Well, what do you think? The goddamn mustard!” He slammed the jar of pickles onto the overflowing countertop, nudging a giant bag of Fritos and a plastic spray bottle of all-purpose cleaner out of the way. He picked up a stack of plastic place mats, looked beneath them, then put them back again.
Margot quickly scanned the contents of the countertops for the mustard, but she didn’t see it anywhere. “Let me see if I can help, okay?” Her throat felt thick and her heart was pounding.
“I don’t see why you’d be able to find it when I can’t.” He spun around, his eyes roving to the other side of the kitchen, then locking on to the oven. He strode over and opened it, bending down to check inside.
“You’re probably right. But I can at least help you look.” As Luke closed then opened the empty kitchen cabinets behind her, Margot strode quietly to the refrigerator. But the mustard wasn’t inside it. Everything but one carton of milk had been removed. And oddly enough, there on the middle shelf was Luke’s wireless home phone. Margot surreptitiously took it out and placed it onto a stack of paper plates.
She checked the freezer next, and just when she spotted the mustard nestled behind a carton of ice cream, Luke walked to the opposite side of the little freezer door and banged it shut. But Margot had been in its way and the sharp corner of the plastic shelf slammed against her cheek, hard.
Pain, cold and searing, sliced into her. Margot gasped, clapping a hand against it.
Luke stepped around the freezer door, which, after banging against her, had swung back open. “Rebecca?” He stared at Margot, his brow furrowed, his body still.
Margot’s breath came in ragged gulps as the pain sharpened and concentrated. She felt as if she’d been sliced by a knife and her cheek felt slick beneath her fingers. When she pulled her hand away, it was bright with blood.
“Rebecca?” Luke said again. This time there was a tremble in his voice. “Are you—”
Before he could finish, there was a knock at the front door.
“Fuck,” Margot said through clenched teeth. She scanned the kitchen for the paper towels and found a roll stuck between the toaster and blender. She tore off a square and pressed it to her throbbing face.
Another knock came at the front door, harder and louder this time.
“Coming!” Margot shouted as she mopped up her bloody cheek, threw the balled-up paper towel into the trash, and strode to the door. As she reached to open it, whoever was on the other side knocked again. “Jesus Christ,” she hissed, swinging the door wide. “What?”
Standing in the doorway, blinking in alarm, was Pete.
“Oh.” Margot’s face grew hot. “It’s you. What’re you doing here?”
“Uh.” He raised his eyebrows. “I could ask you the same thing.”
“What?” Then it dawned on her. “Oh shit. You’re here to check on Luke. I’m sorry. I forgot to text. I’m back from Chicago.”
Pete nodded. “I see that. You’re also bleeding.”
Margot touched her fingers to her cut. “It’s fine.”
Pete glanced over her shoulder into the house. “Why don’t I come in for a bit? I’m not on patrol today, so I have a few minutes.”
“This isn’t a good time, Pete.”
“Yeah.” He gave her a look. “I sorta got that.”
Without waiting for a response, Pete pushed past her into the entryway. When he saw the kitchen, his expression widened in surprise, but he corrected it quickly as Luke walked over.
“Hi,” Pete said brightly. “I’m Pete Finch.” He extended his hand to shake and Luke took it gently in his. Margot could tell by the vacant way her uncle smiled at him that he didn’t recognize Pete from his visit yesterday. “I’m friends with Margot.”
“Nice to meet you,” Luke said, his voice sounding unusually small. Then he looked at Margot. “Kid? You’re bleeding. What happened?”
Margot shook her head. “Nothing. I’m fine.”
Beside her, Pete shot a glance toward the disastrous kitchen. “So.” He clapped his hands. “You guys doing some cleaning? You need a hand?”
For the next two hours, Margot, Pete, and Luke put the kitchen back together. Most of it fell to Margot, though, as she was the only one who knew or could remember where anything was supposed to go. Throughout the afternoon, the three of them held steady, idle conversation, most of which was Pete telling them long, meandering stories of office minutiae. Margot knew he was doing it for her benefit, keeping her uncle preoccupied while she cleaned. During it all, she couldn’t tell if she was more embarrassed or grateful—embarrassed that she’d been so preoccupied with the case she hadn’t known her uncle was spinning out of control just outside her door; grateful for the kindness of this almost-stranger.
By the time they were done, it was a little after five and they were all hungry, so Margot ordered a pizza. Though she set the table for three, when Luke saw this, he said, “Why don’t you two catch up? I’ll watch TV while I eat.” But Margot could tell as he took his two slices into the living room that really, he just needed a break. He looked tired to his bones. These episodes, she was learning, did that.
Margot watched her uncle as he sank onto the couch, turned on the TV, and took a bite of pizza, his eyes peeled to the screen. When she turned her attention back to the kitchen again, she saw Pete grabbing two beers from the refrigerator.
“Beer?” he said.
“Absolutely. The bottle opener’s in that drawer there.”
Pete popped the tops off, handed her a bottle, then slumped into the chair opposite her.