Authors: Hilary Norman
âI wish I had more. As it is, it's just a consolidation of what you all already know.'
âYou've concentrated our minds,' Alvarez told him.
âA refresher course on Black Hole.' Jerry O'Dea from Palm Beach was ironic.
âGuess the pressure's on you guys now,' Bobbi Gutierrez from FLPD said to Sam and Martinez.
The meeting continued a while longer, frustration building.
Sam remembered that just two days ago, he'd been bored.
âBe careful what you set your heart upon,' James Baldwin had once said.
Beth Riley came into the office at five.
âSomething I think you should see, Sam.'
A copy of a piece of paper found in Beatriz Delgado's living room.
A note of an appointment on May 11.
âWith Doctor Shrike,' Riley said. âIsn't that Grace's colleague?'
She handed it over.
Sam looked at the phone number written beneath the name.
Not Magda Shrike's number.
Grace's.
Grace's flight touched down at five-thirty p.m.
Sam had made it, was waiting with flowers.
He thought she looked a little weary, but more beautiful than ever.
He told her so, loving the feel and scent of her as she leant against him.
âI've never been happier to see anyone,' she said.
âThere's a small boy waiting in a house on Bay Harbor Island who's going to make you even happier,' Sam said, picking up her bags.
âDoes he know I'm coming?' Grace asked as they headed out through the throng of passengers and redcaps and drivers holding up name cards. âDo you think he missed me? I know it's selfish, but I want him to have missed me a little.'
âWe told him tomorrow,' Sam said. âJust in case you were delayed. So you get to see his little face light up.'
A perfect homecoming.
Joshua wide awake, having wheedled the truth out of his aunt, rushing out whooping when his dad's car drew up, bombing his mom with questions about her airplane, squeezing the breath out of her with joyful hugs.
âI missed you so
much
, Mommy.'
âNot as much as I missed you,' Grace told him.
âHow much?'
âAll the way to Jupiter and back again.'
âMe too,' Sam said.
Claudia had prepared dinner, but was insistent on going home right away, adamant that they needed time alone and that she was ready for her own house.
âI think this may have been the best evening ever,' Grace said a few hours later, sitting in their den, Joshua finally asleep upstairs.
âEver,' Sam agreed.
Except there was one thing he still had to talk to her about, much as he hated to.
No real choice.
âAl and I are meeting Magda tomorrow,' he said.
âHow come?' she asked.
He filled her in, then, finally, asked:
âAny idea why Beatriz Delgado would have had your phone number?'
âI've never even heard her name before.' Grace shook her head. âThat poor, poor woman,' she said. âAnd her daughter.'
In the room of dead things, another doll had been completed.
She had been, before her makeover, a 2006 Teresa doll, a Hispanic friend of Barbie's with a soft vinyl head.
All the easier to operate on.
Her original clothes had gone, and in their place she wore a 1965 Barbie olive-green dress.
Her pretty dark eyes gone now, too, the grotesque tiny sockets stuffed with red-stained gauze, and two dainty little white lace doilies covering them.
Black Hole's task fulfilled once more.
The miniature Beatriz Delgado already in her small white coffin.
Sam and Martinez met with Magda at nine-thirty on Saturday morning.
Beatriz Delgado had not been her patient, and was, in any case, deceased, so Magda was free to talk about her. Though she would not, she stated, disclose any information about the daughter, since as they well knew, Florida recognized psychotherapist-patient privilege, and since she had not even the smallest cause for concern that Felicia Delgado might present a danger to anyone.
She unbent just a little. âI will tell you that, as it happens, I've only had the briefest of conversations with Felicia. On May the eleventh.'
The last day of Beatriz Delgado's life.
âSo are you saying that even if you could talk about her, there'd be nothing worth telling us?' Martinez asked.
âI've said all I'm going to,' she said.
Sam showed her the phone number found in the Delgado house.
Magda nodded. âMrs Delgado initially called for an appointment with Grace. I told her that she was away, but that we have a mutual
locum tenens
arrangement. Mrs Delgado seemed anxious not to wait.'
âThe poor kid's definitely in bad shape now,' Sam said. âShe hasn't spoken to anyone since she was found wandering on the beach.'
Magda shook her head, but said nothing.
âCan you comment on the mother-daughter relationship?' Martinez ventured. âFrom the mom's point-of-view?'
Magda said that she could not.
Though she remembered very clearly the remark made by the fourteen-year-old, when she had seemed to align herself with her mother.
âBoth crazy,' Felicia had said.
A disturbing statement from a young teenager, deeply troubled even before her mother had been murdered.
âTwo things I think I can tell you,' she said. âMrs Delgado said that Felicia had refused to see a doctor the day before they came to me. She mentioned no name, but it would probably have been because of an eye infection.'
Sam noted that, thanked her.
âThe second thing?' Martinez asked.
âMrs Delgado phoned on the evening of the eleventh to make another appointment, but then, quite abruptly, she said she had to go, and hung up.'
âWhat time was that?' Martinez asked.
âJust after six-thirty.'
âDid you hear anything in the background at her end?' Sam asked.
âNothing,' Magda said. âMy guess was that Felicia had come in.'
âYou didn't try calling her back?' Martinez asked.
âIt would have been inappropriate,' Magda said. âWith rare exceptions, we don't chase patients or their guardians. If they want to speak to us, they call back.'
Not this time.
In the corridor outside his daughter's hospital room, Carlos Delgado told Sam and Martinez that he knew nothing about any recent visits to a doctor by Beatriz or Felicia, though the report of his daughter's refusal did not surprise him.
âAnother thing they shared,' Delgado said. âAvoiding doctors. In fact, I'm surprised Beatriz managed to get her to the psychologist.'
âYour wife obviously wanted to help her very badly,' Sam said.
Delgado leaned heavily against the wall. âBeatriz loved Felicia very much. I never doubted that.'
âOne more thing,' Martinez said.
âAnything,' Delgado said.
âDo you know if your wife ever had beauty treatments at home?'
âOr maybe massage or physiotherapy,' Sam added.
âNot that I know of. But I wouldn't know, unless I paid for it.'
They asked him to check credit card and bank details with that in mind.
âIt could be important,' Sam said.
âIs that what you think happened?' Delgado's forehead creased deeply. âYou think maybe someone like that came in andâ'
âIt's just one line of inquiry,' Sam said.
âBut important,' Martinez emphasized. âEven just so we can rule it out.'
âShe used to go out to the hairdresser,' he said. âI don't know where.'
âWhat about her nails?' Sam asked.
âI don't know anything like that.'
âOne last thing,' Sam said. âAs the person who knows Felicia better than anyone, have you been able to get any sense as to whether this shutting down is from shock, or because she might possibly be too frightened to talk?'
âYou mean if she saw the killer?' Delgado shook his head. âI don't know what's going on inside my child's head right now, Detective. I'm not sure I've ever known. Shock, for sure, but I don't know what else. I wish to God I did.'
Delgado's alibi for the evening before the killing was holding up, so far as it went.
His neighbor had confirmed having heard his TV most of the evening of the eleventh, remembered because it had been a noisy sport event.
âCould have gone out and left the TV turned on,' Martinez had pointed out.
The surveillance cameras in the building's underground garage had recorded Delgado's BMW entering at five-ten p.m. on May 11, and not leaving until just after eight-forty next morning to go to his office, where the school had reached him an hour or so later.
âCould have gone out anytime before that without his car,' Martinez said, back in the office on Saturday afternoon.
âI know,' Sam said.
âBut you're not getting a bad feeling about him,' Martinez said.
âI'm not.'
âMe neither.' Martinez paused. âWhich is more than I can say about the daughter. I hate to say it, but she creeps me out, lying there with those glasses.'
âShe has a phobia.' Sam shook his head.
âI know it,' Martinez said. âBut still, if the mom were the only victim . . .'
On Sunday, the whole family were at Cathy and Saul's for brunch.
Rain forcing them to stay inside, a little cramped, but no one complaining.
Food in this apartment by Cathy or, sometimes, by Mel Ambonetti, Saul's girlfriend, an anthropology student. Furniture by Saul, who'd given up studying medicine some years back to learn woodcraft, and was now a modestly successful cabinet maker with a small workshop off North Bay Road.
Mildred was refusing to talk about her eyes, which left too much time for Grace to tell the family about her trip, and Cathy said she should do more lecturing, and Grace agreed that she wouldn't mind participating in the occasional future seminar.
âNo more trips to Europe, though,' she said.
âSam could go with you next time,' Saul said.
âI might cramp her style,' Sam said. âPut off the gorgeous young men.'
Grace made a dismissive sound.
âWhat was his name again, Gracie?' Sam persisted, teasing.
âYou mean there was a guy?' Cathy asked.
âNo need to sound so surprised,' Mildred said.
âWith a beautiful woman like Grace,' David said, âit's almost inevitable.'
âOh, stop,' Grace said.
âShe's blushing,' Saul said.
âTell us,' Mel said.
âThere's nothing to tell,' Grace said. âSam's just teasing me.'
âHis name was Thomas Chauvin,' Sam said. âA Frenchman.' He grinned.
âSeems he and Gracie just kept bumping into each other everywhere they went in Zurich.'
âIt's a small city,' Grace said.
âAnd then Gracie saved his life,' Sam said.
âThat's just nonsense,' she said.
âNow even I need to know more,' Mildred said. âAnd I'm nowhere near as nosy as the rest of this family.'
âIt was nothing,' Grace said. âHe was crossing the street, took a tumble on a tramline and I went to help him.'
âShe omits to mention there was a tram bearing down on them,' Sam said.
âGrace, that sounds dangerous,' David said.
âIt wasn't,' she dismissed. âThe driver stopped in time.'
âBut you didn't know he would,' Claudia said.
âIt sounds very brave, Aunt Grace,' Robbie, Claudia's younger son, said.
âIt sounds very
Grace
, period,' Mike, his older brother, said.
âIt sounds stupid to me,' Cathy said.
Sam glanced at her, saw consternation in her eyes, their cornflower blue so uncannily similar to Grace's that strangers always assumed they were biological mother and daughter.
âSweetheart, it really was no big deal,' Grace told her.
âAfter all we've been through,' Cathy said, âI'd just think you'd know better.'
âI have to agree,' Claudia said.
âIt's hard to leave another human being in trouble,' Mel said, âif there's something you can do about it.'
âBut what if the tram hadn't stopped?' Saul said.
âIt did,' Grace said. âZurich is a very safe place.'
âMaybe we should change the subject?' David suggested.
âCan't I just mention the flowers?' Sam said.
âOh, for heaven's sake,' Grace said.
At fifteen minutes after three, in North Miami Beach, a young woman, responding to a buzz that she had been anticipating, opened her front door and let two callers into her apartment.
âI'm not sure if I'm looking forward to this or not,' she said.
âA lot of clients get a little nervous,' one of the callers said, âbut there's really no need.'
They went into the living room to get organized.
âIf you are a little tense,' the other visitor said, âwe have just the thing.'
All organic, apparently.
A kind of tea made from an herb that grew exclusively in Guatemala.
âWe're not talking dope, are we?' the young woman checked.
âI'll show you the packet, if you like,' the first visitor said. âDo you have any honey? It tastes great with honey.'
âI'm feeling really weird,' she said a little later.
âThe tea does sometimes have a slightly stronger effect on sensitive people,' one of the visitors said. âBut you don't need to worry, it'll wear off soon.'
âAre you sure . . .?'
âJust relax and enjoy.'
The young woman's pretty blue eyes were closing.
She was already semiconscious when the two visitors assisted her into her bedroom.
Which had been made ready.