The Hand That Feeds You (12 page)

BOOK: The Hand That Feeds You
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I climbed the five flights to my apartment and found a phone message from the Boston detective. It wasn’t yet five so I called him right away.

“Ms. Prager, I have a few questions for you in the investigation of Susan Rorke’s murder. Is this a good time to talk?”

“As good as any.”

“I’d like to ask you about the weekend she was killed when you met the man you knew as Bennett in Maine.”

“What can I tell you?”

“You said he drove from Montreal to Old Orchard Beach. What time did he arrive?”

“He arrived an hour after I did, around four, but I don’t know if he drove from Montreal.”

“Did you notice anything unusual about his behavior or appearance?”

“He was his usual self, but later I saw a large bruise on his shin. He said he got it moving one of his bands’ equipment, but that was a lie. He didn’t represent any bands.”

“And when did you find out that he lied about his job?”

“And everything else. A few weeks after he died. Have
you
had any luck finding out who he is?”

“We have a protocol to follow in a murder investigation. Have you been contacted again by the woman posing as Susan Rorke?”

“No, but who was
she
? That’s my question for you. And how did she know about Bennett and Susan and me?”

“We’re trying to find out.”

“What
have
you found out? Do you know who Bennett was?”

“I’ll tell you when I know.”

“But you think he’s guilty?”

“Only a judge and jury can find him guilty,” the detective said, “and the dead can’t be tried.”

T
hat night I went to the Turkey’s Nest on Bedford, picked up a guy, and went home with him. This wasn’t a plan, it’s just what I did. The Turkey’s Nest has the least hip jukebox in Williamsburg and caters to the last of the blue-collar crowd. In a moment of splendid irony I put my quarters in the jukebox and selected Patsy Cline singing “Crazy.” As the song ended, a good-looking guy asked me why I’d chosen that song. I had two whiskeys in me already and said, “See who’s crazy enough to ask me to dance to it.”

He reached into the pocket of his tight jeans and produced several quarters, which he fed to the jukebox. “Crazy” started up again and he pulled me to him. “Are you crazy?”

“You don’t want to know,” I said.

“Try me.” He guided me onto the dance floor, a narrow space between the bar and the pool table.

“It’s hard to know where to begin.”

“I always start with my ex-wife,” he said.

“What about her?”

“She cut the right sleeve off all of my shirts.”

“What did your right arm do?”

“Nothing my left arm didn’t. Your turn.”

“My fiancé was engaged to two women at the same time. He gave us each an identical ring.”

“I see your fiancé and I raise you my ex-wife: she painted the word
asshole
across the firehouse doors. I’m a firefighter.”

“I see your ex-wife and I raise you my fiancé: he murdered the other fiancée.”

“Whoa.” The guy stopped dancing. “For real?”

“Looks that way. But I came here to not think about that.”

“Is he in jail?”

“He’s dead.”

The guy took my hand and pulled me back to the bar. “What are you drinking?”

I had two more of what I was drinking, and he kept up with me. He lived in Greenpoint near Transmitter Park with two roommates, both firefighters. Neither was home when we got there. His room was a mess and it suited me. So did his kisses. I hadn’t kissed anyone since Bennett. And that thought wouldn’t leave me alone.

Would I rather have been kissing Bennett?

I knew him as well as I knew this firefighter.

I was stuck in my head again and my body just went through the motions. He stopped while we were both still dressed and said, “You’re not here, are you?” He wasn’t angry.

“I wish I were.”

“Why don’t I get you a cab,” he said, no trace of irritation in his voice.

He put me in the cab and gave the driver a twenty.

“Your ex-wife is wrong about you,” I said.

•  •  •

I was back in the dreaded apartment. Maybe Cilla was right and I should consider moving, but I wasn’t ready, nor could I afford to. She’d had her walk on the wild side, but what steadiness I had now I owed to her. I sat by the living-room window, which looked out onto my neighbors’ backyards—the one with topiary, the one strewn with drying laundry, the one with stones arranged in a Zen garden. There was a half moon and I sat with my untouched cup of tea until dawn.

W
hen I had told Steven that Bennett was suspected of murder, he said, “Those dogs are heroes.” When I told Cilla, she asked if this knowledge helped me forgive myself for what happened. When I told McKenzie, he said, “Now
that
I can work with.”

We were back at Champs. I had asked him to meet me there. I now wanted him to defend George, too.

“Who is Bennett alleged to have killed?”

I had passed beyond my initial shame at having been duped. “His other fiancée.” I watched this information register with McKenzie. He was studying me to gauge how I was doing. It felt dishonest not to tell him, though I didn’t want to come across as a victim. Ha!

“How did she die?”

I told him what I knew, and he said he’d send for the police report.

“You’ll see in the report that he used a different name with the woman the police think he killed.”

I gave him the name of the Boston detective to contact. I gave him the name of the victim. I could give him no name for my former fiancé.

When I asked if he could defend George, too, he refused to sugarcoat George’s chances, but said he would do what I wanted. This interrupted my despair. I was aware of a kind of intimacy that comes from two people aligned with each other fixing their gaze on something outside themselves. We wanted the same thing.

He walked me outside, and before I headed down Lorimer Street, I offered my hand to shake. But he gave me a hug. That it lasted a couple of beats longer than expected was something that I would think back on in the months to come.

•  •  •

Usually I walk off bad news, and after leaving McKenzie, the feeling of his arms around me propelled me through the neighborhood. I needed to restock my kitchen; I wanted staples, even though I never cooked. I headed for C-Town on Graham and passed the diner where the old couple sat out front every afternoon. The bench was for customers only, but no one at the diner was willing to send them on their way. A fixture, they had a kind greeting for people who walked by. They were kind to each other, too—every time I saw them I had the same thought: they still love each other. They were the type of old couple meant to elicit just such feelings, and I pushed back against having the response I was meant to have.

A guy with a tattooed spiderweb covering half his face came out the diner door. The old woman said to her husband, “He certainly has made a commitment to his lifestyle.”

•  •  •

I checked Lovefraud when I got home and found this e-mail:

I have been following your postings about the man you call “Bennett” and I am begging you to stop. Whatever information you think you have about him will not interest me. This man is the last person I would be afraid of, and your implying that he deceives women is a lie. I am engaged to him. I did not pretend to be Susan Rorke, but if you continue to seek her out, you might do better to quiz her crazy friends. I will, however, be willing to talk with you but only because I owe it to him.

I felt as though I were living on the other side of the wall, that I had slept too close to it and, during the night, had passed through into the other world.

I met Samantha the next day at one of the Pain Quotidiens on the Upper East Side. I could never read the sign with its French pronunciation; to me it signified
pain
, and thus I found it fitting that she had chosen it as our meeting place.

Because we met on a weekend morning, the small, private tables were all taken. We would have to sit at the long communal table. I scanned the patrons for a woman with an empty seat beside her. Three women fit that description. One had her purse carelessly open on the table beside her; one was on a cell phone texting, her nails painted black; one was rearranging a sweater on the back of her chair. The one with the open purse was conventionally beautiful, her features played up by carefully applied makeup. She looked to be about my age, but she also looked too high maintenance for “Bennett.” The one with the black manicure was too Goth for him. That left the nervous woman who, having rearranged her sweater, was now rearranging her silverware. As the knife and fork gleamed, so did the stone in her engagement ring. I watched her until she looked up and met my eyes. She flushed and looked away for a moment—a flush of anger, not embarrassment.

I walked toward the empty chair. “Samantha?”

“I only have fifteen minutes.”

When I agreed to meet Samantha, I wanted to see who else had captured his heart. I wanted to see who else had been taken in by him. I wanted to compare the damage we had suffered at his hands. I wanted to release these women from the illusion of Bennett’s devotion to them. I wanted them to know they were safe. And an ugly part of me wanted to be the one to tell his other women that he was dead.

I flagged a waiter and mouthed, “Cappuccino.”

Not one to bury the lead, and mindful of her fifteen minutes, I told her straight off that “Bennett” was dead.

“No, he’s not,” she said with certainty.

I took out the picture of Bennett I had shown the detective in Boston and asked the woman if this was her fiancé.

She said nothing.

“He died six weeks ago.”

“He sent me flowers.”

“I found the body.”

“You don’t understand. He sent me flowers three days ago. I got an e-mail from him this morning. He’s in hiding thanks to those incompetent Boston detectives. And thanks to Susan Rorke’s crazy friends.”

Her certainty about Bennett’s being alive threw me off-balance. In the moment before I righted myself, I sped through a what-if scenario. What if the body had not been Bennett’s? No one could identify it. No face. No fingerprints. What if Bennett were alive? The possibility made me sick and scared, but the chance to confront him excited me.

I confronted Samantha instead. “You didn’t answer my question.” I held up the photo. “Is this your fiancé?”

“Why do you have a picture of him?”

“I was engaged to him, too.”

She snorted. “Did one of Susan Rorke’s friends send you the photo? Did one of them send you to meet me? Are you trying to flush him out for the police? I know what entrapment is.”

I opened my purse and took out the tiny leather box, lined in velvet, that held the ring Bennett had given me. I slipped it onto my finger to show her that it fit. I moved my hand next to hers.

“So you’ve got Susan’s ring. Her friends will do anything to frame him.” Her voice was louder than the murmur at the communal table. I was aware of people looking and listening. “I already know about that. Susan wouldn’t return his grandmother’s ring so he had a copy made for me.”

Shortly before Bennett died, I had driven my Zipcar into the rear of the taxi stopped in front of me. I had been looking straight ahead, yet realized at the moment of impact that I couldn’t see what was right in front of me. Samantha was the driver now. I realized I could show her any amount of proof of Bennett’s duplicity and she would not see it. I tried a different track.

“Who do you think killed Susan Rorke?”

“Susan Rorke killed Susan Rorke. She told him that if he didn’t go through with the wedding, she would kill herself and make it look like murder. She even scratched the window frame where she jumped to make it look as though there had been a struggle. Desperate bitch.” Her voice was so loud I wanted to shush her, but I didn’t dare interrupt now that she was finally saying something.

“She could have taken the high road, but, no—Susan Rorke took everyone down with her. She had no shame. She couldn’t bear that we were happy and planning our own wedding. Do you know what she did the morning before she killed herself? She had an announcement of her engagement published in the
Boston Globe
.”

People were no longer hiding their eavesdropping. In Samantha’s agitation, her exaggerated hand gestures knocked over a pepper mill. She kept on talking. I sensed those hands might be capable of pushing a body out a window.

Samantha was still on a tear, and we had been talking for well over her designated fifteen minutes. “And another thing. Susan volunteering at the homeless shelter was self-serving. She didn’t care about the poor. She cared about getting promoted at work and thought it would look good on her CV.”

I interrupted, “What kind of volunteer work do you do?”

“How do you know I volunteer?”

“Do you?”

“All I’ll say is that it has nothing to do with my résumé!”

A waiter came over and asked if Samantha would lower her voice.

“I saw a woman change her baby’s diaper on a table in here and no one scolded her!” Samantha said.

Nevertheless, she asked for the check and then delivered a bombshell. “Maybe you should talk to his ex-wife.”

“He was married?” I noted the power shift between us.

“Your fiancé never told you he’d been married? Susan knew.”

Collecting our things to leave gave me a moment to collect my thoughts. “How can I reach her?”

“She’s in the book. Sag Harbor. Uses her maiden name. Loewi, Pat.”

Samantha said a brusque good-bye. I watched her back and felt that my suspicion would be confirmed; I would tell the Boston detective about her. How else would she have known about the fingernail scratches on the window frame?

•  •  •

I hadn’t read Shakespeare since high school but opened a volume of the collected plays to take another look at
Othello
. In the play, Othello’s embittered ensign, Iago, makes the general believe that his wife, Desdemona, has been sleeping with a lieutenant in Othello’s army. Believing this lie, the enraged Othello strangles the innocent Desdemona with his bare hands. Not until graduate school did I learn of Othello syndrome, a type of morbid jealousy that ends in violence. Not all societies punish crimes of passion. For instance, if a woman in Hong Kong discovers her husband isn’t being faithful, she is legally allowed to kill him, but she can use only her hands. However, the husband’s lover is allowed to be killed in any manner the wife chooses. This ancient law is still on the books. According to crime statistics, jealousy is one of the top three motives for murder.

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