The Whole Truth (29 page)

Read The Whole Truth Online

Authors: Nancy Pickard

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #General

BOOK: The Whole Truth
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I'm too tired to trust my feelings, which are raw.

I lay back on my pillows and stare out my windows at the canal. My bed feels too big for me, alone, and this view is too beautiful to keep to myself. I miss him already, but I know there won't be any give in his position. Why should there be? He's the prosecutor, for heaven's sake, in a capital punishment state, and I knew that going into our relationship. He's not going to change his mind, and I'd be crazy to expect him to. But can I balance passion for him with compassion for Katherine, and for a little boy named Johnnie?

Eventually, I lie awake long enough to remember that I haven't checked my messages since I turned down the ringer on my telephone to accommodate the television crews.

There's one from my editor, and guilt floods me when I hear her voice: "Marie! Were you going to call me today? I can't wait to hear how the book is coming. Call me tomorrow, for sure, okay? If you're not quite finished with the manuscript, maybe you want to send me some chapters?"

I definitely do not want to do that, but I swear I'll call her.

Now my agent has jumped in: "Sweetie! Your editor showed me your new cover today, and I love it, except your name's not big enough, and I told her that's got to be bolder. Give me a call tomorrow, and let me know when I can expect my copy of your manuscript. Bye, love."

I can imagine the conversation between them: "Have you heard anything from Marie ?" "No, have you ?" "Not a word. You don't think she's having trouble with the book, do you ?" "I think she'd let us know." "Yeah, I'm sure you're right, she'd let us know . . ."

I have to let them know, it's only right.

And then I discover I've missed the most important call of all, a second one from the anonymous woman:

"I called once before, looking for Marie Folletino," she says, sounding really nervous this time. There's a long silence while the tape plays, and I wait with my fingers crossed. Finally she says, hesitantly, and so softly she might be whispering into the phone: "She's got to hear what I have to say. She's just got to. I think I can call back at eight o'clock tomorrow night, but that's the last time. I won't be able to call anymore after that. Please ..."

She hangs up.

Feeling so frustrated I could scream, I lie back down on my pillow.

After Ray had his hypnosis session, I got one, too. Turns out I'm not nearly as good a trance subject as he is. Humbling, that. All I "saw" was a dreamlike sequence in which "I" was a baby, lying on a blanket in the backseat of an old-model car. I "saw" the back of a man's head in the driver's seat. Dark hair. It's night in the scene. I'm hot in my baby clothes, but my face is cold. Is the man my father? Maybe that's a memory of him driving me to the motel on the edge of Birmingham where they left me. And maybe it isn't. Maybe it's just a scene from a movie, my own Raintree County.

I wish this weren't happening to me now.

Bad timing, is my last thought before I sleep.

 

11

Raymond

 

"Nothing's going to happen right away," I predict to the Keplers over breakfast on my patio. I've forced Katherine to sit down for once and let me fix them pancakes. We have coffee, and grapefruit picked from a tree in my yard. "So there's no point in sitting by the phone all day. I could be wrong, but I think it would be safe for us to leave the house. Is there anything you'd like to do?"

Mother and daughter glance at each other, as if to ask: Is there?

All of Bahia Beach stretches out around us, on a gorgeous day with the temperature in the low eighties and no clouds in the sky. Now and then we hear a vehicle honk on the bridge, or a boat on the water. There's a faint citrus smell to the air, and a lovely breeze off the canal.

I'm thinking they might like to be distracted for a little while, although I should know better than that, just as I should have allowed Katherine to cook, if she wanted to, if it made her feel better. Foolishly, I'm thinking they might like to do some sightseeing. Maybe I can be excused for thinking that, because I love my hometown so much I want everybody else to enjoy it, too. Already, I know that they think it's too hot and sticky down here, and they're afraid of our crime.

Lots of people feel that way, a sentiment to which I have a knee-jerk defensive reaction: Well, of course, what rational person wouldn't prefer shoveling snow to the bother of washing sand off your feet? It's so annoying to have to keep that hose in the yard, right? As for our crime, not all of it's horrible, some of it's hilarious in its own warped Florida way. My favorite is the gang of transvestites who stole courturier clothing from retail shops some years ago. When caught, they were wearing the evidence. As Dave Barry, one of our famous south Florida writers says, I am not making this up. And as Carl Hiaasen, one of our famous novelists says, in south Florida fiction is just nonfiction waiting to happen.

But what's not to love about gorgeous weather, relaxed people, and an easygoing lifestyle? Sure, there are traffic jams, and crowds in the malls, and in high tourist season it can take an hour on a Friday night to drive a mile along the beach, but so what? Big deal. There's a trade-off for everything, right? What's the upside of ten feet of snow, I ask you? Skiing? Pretty leaves in the autumn? Thanks, I'll visit that. I'd rather live in the sunshine. There are so many compensations here—the beach itself, which you can stroll every day if you like, and the canals, and Butterfly World, and Cuban food, and restaurants on the water, and boats, and convertibles, and fresh fruit, and Cuban coffee, and—

Katherine says, "I need to see where my son has been." "Of course," I say, slammed back to the harsh reality of their lives, where sightseeing takes a very low priority. I feel ashamed for even thinking she might be interested in trivial pursuits. "Do you have any place in particular in mind? We can go anywhere you say."

"Can you drive us by the jail where they kept him?" "Yes. And the courthouse is near there." "Good. And what about that place where he worked?" "Checker Crab? I think it's closed, but we can drive out there." "Thank you, and ... I want to see where he killed that poor man."

She's referring to the aging hippie who owned the trawler from where Ray made his phone call to me. I keep my tone carefully neutral. "Okay. Would you want to see where Natty's family lives?"

"Yes, I want to see that, too."

"Mom!"

"I need to see these places, Kim. You don't have to go."

Her daughter looks fearful, undecided, but finally blurts, "I want to go with you, but I just can't. Do you mind if I stay here?"

"Of course not, honey."

So that's what we do: Katherine and I leave Kim at my place, and then I drive her past the recent landmarks of her son's violent life. It takes a long time, because it turns out that she doesn't feel satisfied merely with staring at them from my car. She wants to get out, and actually go into the jail. We have to park, and walk up to the courtroom, slip into a trial that's in progress, see the judge's bench, the table where Ray sat, and get a glimpse of the elevator on which he rode down on the gurney. Then she wants to go down to the basement garage, to see where he staged his attack and escape, to see where he ran, holding his lawyer as hostage.

We follow a path down to the New River.

Katherine wants to sit there for a long, peaceful time, staring at the water and the boats going by, while I sit silently beside her.

Finally, she says, "I've been thinking about what you told me about the pineal gland, Marie. And I put that together with how my son looks from his pictures ... as if he never grew up, not normally, not physically. And I was wondering, do you think that could be why he took it? Out of some strange notion that it might help him develop into a man?"

"It's an interesting theory." It had crossed my mind, but I eliminated it for the reason I'm about to give her. "But the pineal gland is markedly larger in a child under the age of six, and Natty had just turned six. If that's what he was after, I think he would have taken a younger child."

"Maybe he didn't know her age."

"Maybe he didn't." She hasn't mentioned her older son in all the time she's been here, and I've gotten the feeling that Kim doesn't know that part of the tale. "Katherine, how's Cal?"

"Not good." She shakes her head. "He doesn't want to talk about it, he doesn't want to tell anybody, not his wife, not even his sisters. He would die if he knew I had told you and Jack, and if you put it in your book—"

"I'll figure out a way to leave it out."

"I don't know what we're going to do, he's been so badly hurt. How could I let such a thing happen to him? How could I not know? There aren't enough days left in my lifetime to say I'm sorry." She glances at me, and I glimpse pain deep in her eyes. "Marie, all these years I've been grieving for Johnnie, and there was Cal who was hurt, and needing me, too."

"I suspect Cal and Johnnie aren't the only children he ..."

"No, probably not." She takes a breath, to steady herself. "Where did Johnnie go from here?"

We visit the trolley stop where he got a ride.

She even wants to go to the beach, to see the rest room there, which was the last place he was officially spotted by anybody. Over a long lunch down at the beach, she has me tell her again everything I can remember that her boy ever said to me.

"He could survive for a long time, couldn't he?" she asks me.

"It sounds as if he could," I agree.

"He did survive for a long time, before any of this."

"Yes, I guess he did, Katherine."

"And Donor Miller taught him how."

She shakes her head, as if there are no words to describe the hideous irony of that. "I want to see that boat now, where he killed that man."

"Are you sure?"

"Yes, and then show me where the McCullens live."

"Okay, Katherine."

 

The trawler that the old hippie called home is still tied up to a mooring on a canal just outside of Bahia. When Ray called me he was only fifteen miles away from my house, a fact I have been slow to grasp until now, as I stand beside Katherine five feet from the deck of the boat. It is strung with multicolored drapes of old fabric, so it looks as if the biblical Joseph has strung his coat over it.

"The old man's body was found in the river," I tell her.

"Why do they think Johnnie killed him?"

I hesitate before answering her. These are very difficult things to tell a mother. "He died the same way Natalie did, with pressure to his carotid artery. Things are knocked around inside," I point to the boat, "As if they struggled. But he was a lot older than Ray and probably couldn't have put up much of a fight."

She reaches for my hand.

"I'd like to say a prayer, Marie."

Under the broiling Bahia sun, the mother of the killer offers up a prayer for the soul of his most recent victim.

"Amen," I echo.

"Okay," she says, in a tiny voice. "Now let's go see where the little girl lived."

This time we only drive by, because Katherine doesn't want Tony or Susan to see us. There's nobody visible on the whole cul-de-sac. It's as if all the parents have become afraid to let their children play outside. Katherine urges me to drive around it quickly, and then head back out again. I tell her that they wouldn't know who she is, but she's afraid they could have seen her on television, and she's scared to death of offending them. She turns and looks behind her until we have driven far out of sight of their house.

It's another world back along the New River.

It's late afternoon by now, and Katherine and I have driven into a place of shade and coolness, of Spanish moss hanging from tall trees, of twining vines as thick as your arm, and huge, green leaves that fold in on themselves like hands. There are dank aromas here, and a sense of a million things crawling, eating, flying, biting. We have the windows rolled down, and our elbows hanging out, and we hear bird calls and twitters, and a murmur of verdant life, always moving, never still in the backwoods.

"It's beautiful," she says, "but I don't like it very well."

I know what she means. Although I have friends who live in wonderful homes back in secret places like this, I don't think I could do it. I need salt water and sunshine and fresh air; in a place like this, I'd go to sleep worrying about what might be crawling over the sheets to bite me. These are subtropical regions, where even cute little lizards or frogs can be poisonous, and snakes and spiders proliferate.

I've been out here once before, on research for the book.

The road turns and turns again, and suddenly we're there, at a barbed wire fence in ill repair, with a "gate" that's only an open drive with nothing to block the entrance. There are indications that there may have been an actual gate at one time, but Donor Miller didn't keep it, or anything else, in good repair. There's no sign saying checker CRAB, but we drive past other signs saying NO TRESPASSING and PRIVATE PROPERTY, KEEP OUT.

The owner's gone; there's nobody to keep us out.

"Is it okay to be here, Marie?"

"No reason not to."

We see the buildings: the office, the repair shed, and an outbuilding that's falling down and wasn't used for anything. As we move in closer, the docks come into view, but now all of the boats are gone except for the water taxis.

I say, "It's not much to look at, is it?"

"How long was Johnnie here?"

"That's hard to say, Katherine. Donor Miller told the police that Johnnie showed up here about a year to a year and a half before the murder, but we know now that's probably not true. He may have been here the whole time Donor was here, and I believe Donor bought this place about ten years ago."

She knows the police are now tracing Miller's past life.

For now, we still don't know where he went after he left Kansas with Ray, or where they went after that, although we suspect they came directly to this state.

"I'd like to get out and walk around," she says.

We both get out of the car, and walk toward the marina.

I try to follow close enough to answer any questions she may have, but far enough away to give her a little private space. When we get to the river, she turns to me, and asks, "Which boat was it?"

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