“Mr. Bender? This is Erica Pearl again, from Channel Four. We’re about to file our story, and I would so appreciate it if you’d talk to me. I know you want your side of the story to be revealed, and I’m just down the street. Could we come talk?”
Shit. The woman is persistent, he’ll give her that.
He disconnects the call, then, for good measure, removes the phone from the cord.
A list of questions begins to form in his mind. First among them, what the hell should he do next? The way this is going, a lawyer, definitely. He calls Lindsey, whose phone goes to voice mail.
“Linds, I need your help. Call me the moment you get this.”
He looks at the coffeepot, the black sludge accruing in the bottom, opens the cabinet, and pulls out the half-empty bottle of Dalmore 12. It burns going down, but the warmth makes him feel steadier. He drops into his chair, fighting back the urge to scream, and pokes at his cell phone, calling Olivia again.
This time, she answers. “Park, I’m sorry. I’m upset, and I was cruel. I apologize. I should never throw Perry in your face.”
The fight leaves him. They have to stick together; they have to be a team. That’s how they get through this, how they’ve always gotten through their troubles. “I’d call it even, then. Apology accepted. Honey, where are you? I need you. We really do have to come up with a plan.”
“I’m in the car on the way to meet with the sketch artist. Come to the police station.”
“I was hoping we could avoid—”
“Park, another woman has gone missing.”
21
THE WIFE
At the police station, Olivia talks and describes and corrects, and it doesn’t take long for the artist to put together a reasonable facsimile of the man calling himself Griffin White.
“It’s him. His beard is a little darker, though, and the eyes are wrong.”
“Okay,” the artist says patiently. Thin and narrow-shouldered, his name is Roger, and he gives off a calm, steady vibe that’s helping her relax. “Eyes are the hardest to replicate accurately, as I’m sure you can imagine. The windows to the soul. Tell me again.”
Olivia appreciates his cool, collected manner right now, because she is freaking out inside, and she just wants Park’s traitorous arms around her. She can’t take much more of this. She’s never been inside a police station before, and the tension coming off the cops is palpable. Until Lindsey answers her damn phone or Park shows up, Olivia is feeling very much alone in the world.
Roger the artist shows her the sketch again. “Better?”
“Closer. If you can draw him without a soul, it would work. He just looked mean inside, you know? Cold. Shrewd. Excited. But flat and empty, too. He’s a handsome guy on the outside but void inside. I doubt you can capture that.” She wraps her arms around her torso and walks the small room. Outside the open door, phones ring, piercing through the low hum of voices from many people chattering at once. The high-pitched whine of a light bulb about to blow comes from overhead; the fluorescent flickers every few seconds. It’s all making her nerves jangle.
“You’d be surprised.” Roger tweaks a bit more, and when she looks again, a chill parades down her spine. He’s managed Griffin White’s emptiness perfectly.
“Yes,” she whispers. “Like that.”
Moore knocks on the doorframe, making Olivia jump. She has changed into a much more formal black pantsuit with a white silk blouse underneath, which strikes Olivia as strange.
“Court this afternoon,” Moore says, noticing Olivia’s confusion. “Your husband’s here.”
Park strides through the door, and Olivia launches herself at him. He catches her in his arms and holds her close, head bent to hers. He is warm, and smells of cedar, and bleach of some sort. She feels safe for the first time in hours. She doesn’t understand herself, these wild swings of emotion. Love, or habit?
“I’m so glad you’re okay,” he says quietly.
“Me, too. I didn’t realize there was any danger at the time. I just want to go home. Can we?” she says to Moore.
“In a few. We want to chat a little more. With another woman missing, the case has obviously taken a turn. Things are moving quickly. We’d like to clear up a few more loose ends.”
“We’re done here, Joey, if you want to use this room,” the artist says. “I can give this to Will and let him get started running down this guy.”
“Thanks, Roger. Appreciate it.”
Joey. What a cute name for a girl, Olivia thinks, cataloging it in her mental filing cabinet of baby name possibilities almost without realizing she’s done it. Park grips her hand as if he knows exactly what she’s thinking.Your fault.She tries to ease her hand from his, but he holds on tight.