Lifeguard - James Patterson [41]
“I’ll be right there. . . .” He looked up at her and smiled. Then back to Ellie: “I’m afraid our money-wasting moment is over now, Agent Shurtleff.” He stood up. “We’re getting the house ready for a little gathering Saturday night. The Shoreline Preservation League, wonderful cause. You should come. We just got our settlement from the insurance company. There’ll be all sorts of new art on the walls. I’d like your opinion.”
“Sure,” Ellie said. “You overpaid.”
Stratton kept looking at her with a smug smile. He put his hand in his trouser pocket and came out with a wad of bills, credit cards, some change and left it on the desk. “As long as we understand: one of my jobs, Agent Shurtleff, is to protect my family from people making accusations about our private affairs.”
Ellie scooped up the evidence bag and was about to put it back in the envelope. Something made her stop and stare.
“You a golfer, Mr. Stratton?”
“Play at it, Agent Shurtleff.” Stratton smiled. “Now if you’ll excuse me . . .”
Among the wad of bills and loose change Stratton had dumped on his English leather desk was a black golf tee.
Chapter 47
WHEN I LEFT PHILLY’S, I jumped in Dave’s Subaru. I figured I had some time before the bodies were detected—a day, at most—and by then I had to be miles away. But miles where?
I drove wildly, seeing over and over again the horrible image of my brother sitting there like some kind of gutted animal. Knowing I had dragged him into this. Seeing his stuff all over the car—schoolbooks, a pair of beat-up Nikes, CDs, Dave’s Muzak.
I ditched the car in some podunk town in North Carolina and found some salesman in a used-car lot who sold me a twelve-year-old Impala for $350, no questions asked. I went into the men’s room of a roadside diner and dyed my hair. Then I carefully sheared most of it off.
When I looked in the mirror, I was a different person. My thick blond hair was gone. Along with a lot of other things.
I thought about ending my life on that trip. Just making a turn off some remote stop on the highway, driving this old ruin of a car off a cliff, if I could find a cliff. Or a gun. That actually made me laugh. There I was, wanted for seven murders and I didn’t have a gun!
And I might have—ended it on that trip. But if I did, everyone would think I was guilty and had killed the people I loved. And if I did, who would look for their murderer? So I thought maybe I’d just go back to Florida, where it all had started.
In a twisted way it made sense. I’d show them. The cops, the FBI, the whole world. I didn’t do it, didn’t kill anyone—well, except that one murderer up North.
So about a day later I rumbled my clunker over the Okeechobee Bridge into Palm Beach. I parked across from the Brazilian Court. I sat staring at the yellow-hued building, smelling the breeze off the gardens, realizing I’d come to the end of my journey—right where it all had started.
I closed my eyes, hoping some karmic wisdom would hit me about exactly what to do next.
And when I opened my eyes, I saw my sign.
There was Ellie Shurtleff coming out the front door.
Chapter 48
THERE WERE A couple of ways she could play it, Ellie decided.
Turn what she had found over to Moretti and let him handle it. After all, the Tess McAuliffe homicide wasn’t even their case. Or toss it in the lap of the Palm Beach PD. But Ellie had already seen the star treatment Stratton seemed to get from them.
Or she could do what every cell in her body was crying out to do.
Take it a step forward. Just one or two more steps . . . What could that hurt?
She had the assistant she shared at the office print a photo of Stratton from the Internet and jammed it in her purse. She left word for Moretti that she was headed out for a few hours. Then Ellie climbed in her office Crown Vic and headed up the highway, back to Palm Beach.
She knew Moretti would have a coronary, and a smile crossed Ellie’s lips: Fuck the art!