“I don’t know. The neighbor said they seemed most interested in the garage. Let’s get out of here. I hate this place.”
They walked out into the hallway. Several reporters saw Dance and approached. “Agent Dance,” one woman asked, “is it troubling to know your mother’s been arrested for murder?”
Well, there’s some cutting-edge interviewing. She wanted to fire back with something sarcastic, but she remembered the number-one rule in media relations: Assume everything you say in a reporter’s presence will appear on the six o’clock news or on tomorrow’s front page. She smiled. “There’s no doubt in my mind that this is a terrible misunderstanding. My mother has been a nurse for years. She’s devoted herself to saving lives, not taking them.”
“Did you know that she signed a petition supporting Jack Kevorkian and assisted suicide?”
No, Dance didn’t know that. And, she wondered, how had the press come by the information so fast? Her reply: “You’ll have to ask her about that. But petitioning to change the law isn’t the same as breaking it.”
It was then that her phone sounded. It was O’Neil. She stepped away to take the call. “Michael, she’s getting out on bail,” she told him.
There was a moment’s pause. “Good. Thank God.”
Dance realized he was calling about something else, and something that was serious. “What is it, Michael?”
“They’ve found another cross.”
“A real memorial, or with a future date?”
“Today. And it’s identical to the first one. Branches and florist wire.”
Her eyes closed in despair. Not again.
Then O’Neil said, “But, listen. We’ve got a witness. A guy who saw Travis leave it. He might’ve seen where he went or saw something about him that’ll tell us where he’s hiding. Can you interview him?”
Another pause. Then: “I’ll be there in ten minutes.”
O’Neil gave her the address. They disconnected.
Dance turned to her father. “Dad, I can’t stay. I’m so sorry.”
He turned his handsome, distraught face toward his daughter. “What?”
“They found another cross. The boy’s going after somebody else, it looks like. Today. But there’s a witness. I have to interview them.”
“Of course you do.” Yet he sounded uncertain. He was going through a nightmare at the moment — nearly as bad as her mother’s — and he’d want his daughter, with her expertise and her connections, nearby.
But she couldn’t get images of Tammy Foster out of her mind, lying in the trunk, the water rising higher.
Images of Travis Brigham’s eyes too, cold and dark beneath their abundant brows, as he gazed at his father, as if his character in a game, armed with knife or sword, was debating stepping out of the synth world and into the real, to slaughter the man.
She had to go. And now. “I’m sorry.” She hugged her father.
“Your mother will understand.”
Dance ran to her car and started the engine. As she was pulling out of the parking lot she glanced in the rearview mirror and saw her mother emerge from the door to the lockup. Edie stared at her daughter’s departure. The woman’s eyes were still, her face revealing no emotion.
Dance’s foot slipped to the brake. But then she pressed down once more on the accelerator and hit the grille flashers.
Your mother will understand… .
No, she won’t, Dance thought. She absolutely won’t.
Chapter 14
AFTER ALL THESE years in the area Kathryn Dance had never quite grown used to the Peninsula fog. It was like a shape-shifter — a character out of the fantasy books that Wes liked. Sometimes it was wisps that hugged the ground and swept past you like ghosts. Other times it was smoke squatting in depressions of land and highway, obscuring everything.
Most often it was a thick cotton bedspread floating several hundred feet in the air, mimicking cloud and ominously darkening everything below it.
This was the breed of fog today.
The gloom thickened as Dance, listening to Raquy and the Cavemen, a North African group known for their percussion, drove along a quiet road running through state land between Carmel and Pacific Grove. The landscape was mostly woods, untended, filled with pine, scrub oak, eucalyptus and maple, joined by tangles of brush. She drove through the police line, ignoring the reporters and camera crews. Were they here for the crime, or because of her mother? Dance wondered cynically.
She parked, greeted the deputies nearby and joined Michael O’Neil. They began walking toward the cordoned-off shoulder, where the second cross had been found.
“How’s your mother doing?” O’Neil asked.
“Not good.”
Dance was so glad he was here. Emotion swelled like a balloon within her, and she couldn’t speak for a moment, as the image of her mother in handcuffs, and the run-in with the social worker about her children, surfaced.
The senior deputy couldn’t help but give a faint smile. “Saw you on TV.”
“TV?”
“Who was the woman, the one who looked like Oprah? You were about to arrest her.”
Dance sighed. “They got that on camera?”
“You looked” — he searched for a word — “imposing.”
“She was taking the kids to Social Services.”
O’Neil looked shocked. “It was Harper. Tactics. He nearly got his flunky collared, though. Oh, I would’ve pushed the button on that one.” She added, “I’ve got Sheedy on the case.”
“George? Good. Tough. You need tough.”
“Oh, and then Overby let Harper into CBI. To go through my files.”
“No!”
“I think he was looking to see if I suppressed evidence or tinkered with the files about the Juan Millar case. Overby said he went through your office’s files too.”
“MCSO?” he asked. Dance could read his anger like a red highway flare. “Did Overby know Harper was making a case against Edie?”