And She Was (26 page)

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Authors: Alison Gaylin

BOOK: And She Was
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Over the next hour, Brenna and Sarah discussed Elizabeth’s likes, dislikes, passions, and pet peeves. They talked about her favorite foods (garlicky pasta, fresh tomatoes, crème brûlée) favorite types of music (Sinatra, Rimsky-Korsakov), sense of humor (Marx Brothers, Woody Allen), pets (a series of panicky Chihuahuas, a cat, fussy and obese)—the high and low points of her long, complicated life. Unlike Nelson, Sarah could answer any question Brenna threw at her. She knew everything about her mother and clearly loved relaying the details—from her tiniest quirk to her most important belief, all those things that put flesh to the idea that was Elizabeth Stoller, that made her live again. By the time Brenna was ready to leave, it was as if Elizabeth was in the room with them. And Sarah was smiling, some of the color back in her face. “You’ve given me a lot to work with,” Brenna said.

“Me too.” Sarah put a hand on her shoulder. “Thanks.”

A
s Brenna started up her car, her thoughts moved back and forth from Nelson and Lydia, to Jim and herself, to Sarah Stoller and her mother . . .
Everybody needs that one person.
And then she thought of Carol Wentz. She and her husband barely spoke, her chat room friends only knew her as a fictionalized screen name. Gayle Chandler, whom Nelson had referred to as Carol’s “best friend” . . . Brenna had met Gayle Chandler ten years ago, and at that time she’d positioned herself as
Lydia’s
best friend. “
Check the new condos. Every morning, Lyddie goes there to meditate by the fountain. She’s a very spiritual woman, you know . . .”

Gayle, who, two years prior to that, had falsely informed Carol—for whatever reason—that Lydia was screwing her husband. Brenna didn’t know Gayle Chandler, but she knew a crisis queen when she saw one—a woman with very little life of her own, dying to insinuate herself at the center of any tragedy . . . No, Gayle wasn’t
that one person
, either.

It wasn’t until she was pulling out of the medical center and onto busy Bloomingdale Road that Brenna found herself recalling Carol Wentz’s phone bill—those three thirty-minute calls to Buffalo buried amid all the seconds-long errand calls and brief chats with friends. It hit her that two of the three Buffalo calls—presumably to Carol’s cigarette-smoking aunt Millicent—took place right after a conversation with Klavel, her private investigator.

That one person
. Carol could have been telling Millicent everything she learned that week.
And what exactly was it that Carol Wentz had learned?

Images flooded Brenna’s brain—announcing themselves one by one like a line of light switches flicking on . . . The blue Vivio Bistro at Lydia Neff’s house twelve years ago: Lydia urging Nelson
, Forget you ever saw the car. Forget you were ever here
. Three-and-a-half-year-old M from the police file, telling Morasco that Iris had gotten into Santa’s “happy” car, which had “round eyes and a smile.” The big, pretty-faced cop, in front of the Neff house eleven years ago; driving by the Wentz home this morning, staring through the windshield with his shark’s eyes, his predator’s eyes. Staring through the windshield
of Santa’s happy car.

Then, Brenna recalled the voice of the girl over Nelson’s phone, buried in static but still clear enough.
It was my fault.
The voice of a teenage girl. A sixteen-year-old girl, taking the blame for Carol’s death.

That one person . . .

What if the girl on the phone really had been Iris Neff? What if Iris had been taken away in that Vivio Bistro eleven years ago and had returned two weeks ago? What if, in a bid to escape her captor, she’d phoned Mom’s old confidant Nelson Wentz? What if Carol had answered instead? What if Carol had become
that one person
for Iris—that one person who could listen. The one who might help.

Carol hadn’t called the police . . . Of course she hadn’t. Brenna thought of Lane Hutchins, ten years ago in uniform, standing next to that pretty-faced cop, the cop even Morasco claimed not to have known. Lane Hutchins. Now, chief of police. Then, the muscle.
Of course Carol hadn’t called the police
.

She had called her own “one special person.”

Brenna pulled into a gas station and parked. She closed her eyes and took herself back to the computer room at the Tarry Ridge library—to the smell of Windexed plastic, to Trent’s voice in her earpiece,
“You looking at Buffalo?”
and the scroll of telephone numbers on the screen in front of her . . .

Brenna dug her nails into her palms and she was back in the present, Aunt Millicent’s number still fresh in her head. She picked up her phone and tapped it in.
Okay, Aunt Millicent. Tell me what you and Carol were talking about.
She hit send.

“We’re sorry. The number you have reached is no longer in service at this . . .”

Must be some mistake
. Brenna stared hard at the phone, and tapped it in again, making sure she got each number right.

“We’re sorry . . .”

Could she have seen it wrong on the screen? Brenna called Trent, asked him to read the number back to her . . .

“Same one I remembered,” she whispered.

“There a problem?” Trent said.

“It’s disconnected.”

“The aunt’s phone? But she was just talking to her last week.”

Brenna said, “Can you do a reverse directory on that number?”

“You gonna go up to Buffalo now?” Brenna could hear his fingers clacking away at the keyboard.

“Don’t know.”

“You sound kinda weird. You on to something, Spec?”

“Not sure. And don’t call me Spec.”

He sighed. “The address is 811 Mulberry Street, Buffalo.”

Brenna’s breath caught. Her mouth went dry. “Mulberry.”

“I don’t see any apartment number.”

“That’s because it’s the whole house.”

“How do you know that?” Trent said, with Brenna’s mind already answering, already pulling her back into the Las Vegas airport at 1
A.M.
on September 30, returning home after finding Larry Shelby, the air-conditioning chilling her bare arms as she approached her gate . . .
Brenna glances up at the two TVs flanking gate A23 as she nears it. CNN coverage of a fire in upstate New York. On each TV, the image of a blazing, four-story house at night. The screens glow like devil eyes.
Why is cable news so pyromaniacal?

A female voiceover intones, “A fire claimed the lives of five residents of 811 Mulberry—a group home for recovering addicts in Buffalo, New York, early this evening, with two more rushed to the hospital in critical condition. Firefighters are still trying to control the blaze, believed to have been set by one of the residents . . .”

Brenna flips her MP3 player back on, Iggy Pop singing about his Chinese rug, as an elderly black woman appears on the screen . . .

“You there?” Trent was saying.

“What is Millicent’s last name?”

“You mean the aunt?”

“Millicent,” Brenna said. “The one with the Buffalo number.”

The elderly black woman is talking animatedly, tears in her eyes, her head shaking and shaking, as if she’s in her own world—a world of no-this-can’t-be-happening—as if she doesn’t know the camera is there.

“Her name is Millicent Davis,” Trent said.

Brenna said the last name along with him, her mind still in the airport, with Iggy Pop shouting about success in her ear and white letters appearing under the distraught woman’s face “MILLIE DAVIS, OWNER, 811 MULBERRY.”

“Millie Davis isn’t Carol’s aunt. She’s the owner of a group home for addicts,” Brenna said.

“Huh?”

“A week after Carol called her there, the whole place burned down.”


What?

“You heard me,” Brenna said, another idea gaining strength.
A group home for addicts . . .
“Trent, did you get anywhere on that search for Lydia Neff?”

“Nope—very weird. I’ve run traces on her credit cards, her phone—nothing’s been used in the past two years. It’s like she dropped off the planet.”

“Look on other planets then.”

“Huh?”

“I’m serious, dude.”

Brenna ended her call. She was ten minutes away from the Tarry Ridge library, and it closed in twenty. She needed to get there, fast.

T
he library was of the same smooth white stone as the police station, with Ionic columns out front as some kind of symbol of higher learning. The architecture was that cold blend of classical and modern—synagogue-meets-mausoleum. Like most other buildings in Tarry Ridge, it seemed just a little too big for its own good—as Brenna recalled from her previous visit, there weren’t anywhere near enough books in the place to justify its sprawl. Out front, a long table stretched out, laden with pies, cookies, and stacked-up brownies, three middle-aged socialites lined up behind it, pimping the library bake sale at the top of their lungs. “
Pleeeease
donate to the library!” yelled one—a barrel-chested blonde in pink shirtdress. “Lemon Lulu cake is only seven dollars!” hollered another—this one younger and skinnier, her style somewhere between high school cheerleader and subway panhandler. “The Lulu cake is
spectacular
! You will
not
be sorry.” It always amazed Brenna how enthusiastic the rich were about raising money. They could be fighting tooth and nail against the estate tax, but give ’em a tin can and a relatively pointless cause—more money for an already overly endowed library, for instance—and they were on you like Lincoln Tunnel hookers.

Brenna rushed through the marble foyer, around the expansive checkout desk, her footsteps echoing—through the reference section, left at Books on Tape, and back into the computer room, the super-sized librarian standing up at her desk to give her the stink eye.

Brenna smiled up at the librarian. She had to be at least six-foot-five. “Have you grown taller since the last time I saw you?”

The stink eye intensified.

“Computer password, please,” Brenna said. “Sorry I can’t chat, but I’m in a hurry.”

The librarian handed her a piece of paper with a password typed on it and crashed back down on her chair, glaring.

Brenna took a seat at the first computer, the idea burning through her as she logged on.
Why was Carol having half-hour-long conversations with a group home owner?
Brenna went to Google News and typed in 811 Mulberry. A slew of articles about the fire popped up. She clicked on the one from the
Buffalo News
, reading it all the way through, her heart pounding. When she finished, she closed her eyes.
I was right . . .
For several seconds, she was back in Nelson’s living room, just a few hours ago, Nelson expounding on Lydia, the Scotch floating off his breath
. . .


Her past. Her wild college years. Her ex-husband, Iris’s father. A genius, but wrecked his brain with drugs—methamphetamine, I think . . .”

Five residents of 811 Mulberry—all recovering addicts—had perished in the fire.
“. . . Timothy O’Malley. Lydia’s ex-husband—that’s his name . . .”
One was listed in critical condition, at Sisters of Charity Hospital in Buffalo. His name was Timothy O’Malley, and the fire was believed to have originated in his room.

“He was in an institution back then. I don’t know that she told anyone else about him, other than me.”

Brenna went to Google images, typed in O’Malley’s name and then the address 811 Mulberry. In a follow-up news article, she found a picture—the face gaunt, the long hair thinning, dark circles under the eyes like bruises, but still . . . it was the same young man from the family portraits in Carol’s folder.

811 Mulberry was a group home. All residents shared a phone. Carol had been talking to Iris’s father. She’d bought him a carton of cigarettes, probably to get him to talk more.

Brenna picked up her cell phone and started keying in the number. The librarian stood up.

“I’m calling the police so you’d better not freakin’ shush me,” Brenna snapped.

The librarian sat down so fast the room shook a little.

Brenna asked Fields to connect her with Morasco, and he was on the line fast, his voice strange, cold.

“Nelson didn’t kill Carol,” she said. “Her death was a part of something else. Something bigger.”

“How do you know?”

“Iris’s father spoke to Carol on the phone. Less than a week later, Nick, five days after Carol’s death . . . Iris’s father’s home burned down.”

“Timothy O’Malley?”

“Yes. He’s in critical condition.”

Morasco inhaled sharply. Brenna could hear his breathing shake as he let the air go. “My God,” he whispered.

“Listen,” she said quietly. “I know you don’t want to do any more damage to your job than you’ve already done. I get that. But if you could just give me the name of that cop I told you about—the one with the mole . . .”

“I don’t know who you’re talking about.”

Brenna pressed on. “I’m not asking you to get involved, Nick. But I think that cop might have had something to do with Iris’s disappearance. And since he seems to be the only one around here who can still
talk
—”

“I swear to God, Brenna. I don’t know who that is.”

“Christ, are you that afraid? You said yourself we’re on the same side.”

“You don’t understand.” Morasco said it through his teeth, and so quietly she had to press the phone to her ear. “I need to ask you something.”

Brenna exhaled hard. “What?”

“Graeme Klavel. The investigator whose number you found in Carol Wentz’s files.”

“Yes?”

“Did you ever talk to him? Find out if he’d done any work for her?”

“No,” she said. “He never called back.” She closed her eyes. “We have Carol Wentz’s cell phone records, though.”

“You do?”

“Don’t ask how,” she said. “Carol spoke to Klavel repeatedly—five times during the last week of her life. His office was in Mount Temple. He was probably the man she met at the diner.”

Morasco took another deep breath, and Brenna listened—a slow inhale and release, as if he was trying to calm them both. “Coincidences happen all the time.”

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