I stood lost in thought until I realized Arthur had taken my hand. His wife was across the room talking to my mother.
I was eager to tell Arthur what I’d seen; okay, napkin-folding can’t be used as evidence, but at least I’d get a message to Lynn surreptitiously, an indicator that the police should look Franklin’s way very quickly.
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But Arthur had his own agenda, and in a particu- larly maddening gesture I remembered vividly from our relationship, he raised his hand when I started to talk.
“Roe, that guy is bad news,” he said, fixing me with his flat blue eyes. His voice was low and steady and ab- solutely sincere. “Because of the good times we had to- gether, I’m warning you. Get away from him, and stay away. This isn’t sour grapes on my part. We’ve done a background check on him, and he’s not—” “Arthur,” I said with great force, to stop whatever he was going to say. I was thrown completely off-track. “I appreciate your concern. But I am telling you that I am in love. Now, you listen to this—”
“If you won’t shuck him, I can’t make you.” “You are so right—”
“But you have to know that that man is dangerous.” “Who’s dangerous?” asked Martin with a ferocious cheerfulness.
“Mr. Bartell,” Arthur said, hostility in his voice. “I’m Arthur Smith, a detective on the local force.” Martin and Arthur shook hands, but looked as if they would just as soon have arm-wrestled. If they’d had fur around their necks, it would have been standing on end.
“Glad I met you,” Martin said enigmatically. “Roe, I brought the car around.”
“Thanks, honey,” I said, and Martin slid an arm around me and we turned to go to the car. “Tell Lynn I need to speak to her,” I told Arthur over my shoulder.
“What’s happening, Roe?” Martin said after we’d
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left the Carriage House parking lot. “Are you really feeling sick?”
“No. But something happened tonight, and we have to talk about it.” Who else was more qualified to han- dle dangerous situations than Martin? He was danger- ous himself. Maybe he would have an idea. “Does it concern that policeman? Is he someone you’ve gone out with?”
“He’s married and has a baby,” I said firmly. “I went out with him a long time ago.”
“Was he warning you about me?”
“Yes, but that’s not what I want—”
“He said I was dangerous. Do you believe that?” “Oh, yes. But—”
And suddenly we were in the middle of our first argu- ment, which I couldn’t quite figure out. Somehow he was angry because Arthur had enough feelings for me to want to warn me off Martin, and I gathered it wasn’t the warning but the feelings that upset Martin. And then also, he felt that Lizanne’s engagement ring had over- shadowed the beautiful earrings he’d given me, and he was mortified. And I was trying to tell Martin I loved the earrings and wouldn’t have taken an engagement ring if he’d given it to me, which was completely untrue and a very stupid thing to say. If we had fallen in love like teenagers, we were quarreling like teenagers, and if we had been a little younger, I’d have given him back his let- ter jacket. And his class ring.
And then, just as we pulled into my parking lot, his beeper went off.
Martin said something truly terrible.
“I have to go.” He was suddenly calm.
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“I have to tell you something,” I told him urgently, “about Franklin Farrell. Before tomorrow!” “I can’t believe I said all those things.” “Please come back.” I was almost crying. I’d been through too many emotions in one day, and they were seeking their natural vent.
“As soon as I handle the situation at the plant, I’ll come back.”
“Wait a second,” I said as I slid out of the car. I ran to unlock my back door and ran back to the car. “Here’s my key.” I put it in his hand and closed his fin- gers around it. “I have another I’ll use. Come on in when you get back.”
We looked at each other searchingly. “I’ve never given anyone a key to my own house before,” I said, slamming the car door and running into the town- house.
Madeleine was standing curiously in the cold draft from the door I’d left open, and she rubbed against my legs as I stood in the kitchen area wondering what on earth I was going to do.
I wandered up the stairs, pulling off my finery with little regard for my hair. I left my earrings in, and sat at my dressing table admiring them absently while I tried to figure out what to do.
What if I called the police station and said there was a kidnapped woman in Franklin’s house? Wouldn’t they be obliged to break in to see?
Maybe not. I could hardly call Arthur to find out. Report a fire?
Well, the firemen wouldn’t recognize the vases, as indeed most of the policemen wouldn’t. Of course, we
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didn’t have photographs of them, and my mother had only a general memory of their shape and position on the night tables.
Tomorrow Martin would be taken in for question- ing if I couldn’t draw attention to Franklin now. Day after tomorrow, Franklin would take the vases to At- lanta and sell them or drop them in the river on the way, if he hadn’t done it already.
He’d be out of his house tonight, with Miss Glitter. I stood there in the bathroom with my fists balled, trying to steel myself against the decision I was about to make.
Okay. I’d have to do it.
Thinking harsh thoughts about how incredibly stu- pid I was, I pulled on heavy socks and blue jeans and a T-shirt and a sweatshirt. I zipped up my black boots and found an old jacket with deep pockets. I found a knit scarf that had a hood for the head and then two long ends that tossed around the neck, which I pinned so I wouldn’t have to keep fooling with them. Every- thing I had on was black or dark brown or navy blue. I looked like someone who’d dressed with only a tiny amount of light in the closet, just enough to pick out dark colors, but not the right dark colors. Amina would have a fit, I thought wryly.
I did keep on my beautiful earrings.
Downstairs I trudged, terrified and determined, to stuff my pockets with screwdrivers and anything that looked as if it might be helpful in breaking into Franklin Farrell’s house.
I added a heavy, fist-sized rock to my collection of potential burglary tools. I’d brought it home as a sou-
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venir of a trip to Hot Springs, and it was dark with a protrusion of clear crystal. Then I remembered a crow- bar in a box of Jane Engle’s tools I’d had stored in my extra bedroom.
I dumped everything into the car. It was eleven o’clock, my dashboard informed me. I am a law- abiding person, I told myself grimly. I don’t litter. I don’t even jaywalk. I never park in handicapped spaces. I pay my taxes on time. I only lie when it’s polite. Lord have mercy on me for what I’m about to do. That thought, from my saner self, sent me right back inside. I took a piece of paper and a pencil and wrote, “Martin: Franklin Farrell is the man who killed Tonia Lee Greenhouse. I am going to go break into his house and get back the vases he took from the Anderton place. Eleven o’clock. Roe.” Somehow writing this note made me think I was being much more prudent, a totally unjustified feeling. But I locked the door to the townhouse before I shut it, thus burning my bridges behind me, since I’d forgotten to get my extra key and Martin now had mine.
I left my car two blocks south and one block east of Franklin Farrell’s house, which was inconveniently lo- cated (for me) on a main thoroughfare, where no parking was possible. Franklin had an older home on a street that was now almost all commercial, but he had painted it an eye-catching combination of dove gray and yellow, and tricked it up with expensive antiques and gadgets until it was now one of the town’s notable homes. Entrance to it was very restricted, though. Franklin entertained women there sometimes, it was generally understood, but had only one social gathering a year in his home. It was
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carefully planned, lavish, and invitations were much prized. Otherwise, Franklin entertained clients and other business associates at restaurants. He never asked unin- vited guests in, no matter how attractive they were, a quirk of his that was much discussed and secretly envied by those who were too cowardly to do likewise. All this I knew about Franklin. All this, and now much more.
I probably wasn’t particularly silent as I stole across his backyard and up to his back door. But in that cold, who had their windows open to hear? I was shivering as I tried the back door knob, just for the hell of it. Of course, the door was locked. Franklin’s car wasn’t there, so I assumed he and Miss Glitter were having a good time. I hoped it was real good, and that he’d stay the night. I had no plan to conceal the break-in, because I thought I’d be damned lucky to get in at all, much less try to be clever about it. So after an attempt or two with the screwdrivers, I just smashed a pane in the kitchen door window with my souvenir rock, which I popped back into my pocket. I reached in carefully and un- locked the door. It should have opened then, but it didn’t. Though my coat and sweatshirt gave my arm some protection, I became worried that the glass re- maining in the frame would cut me as I prodded around inside, trying to discover what was still holding the door. Finally I risked using my flashlight. With my face pressed against an upper pane and flashing the light up and down the inside of the door, I discovered at long last that Franklin had put a sliding bolt at the top of the door. The moment I saw it, I switched the flashlight off. I was too short to reach the sliding bolt.