Body of Evidence. Patricia D Cornwell

“This was taken at Cutler Grove?”

“Yes, at Cutler Grove,” she answered.

I was haunted by Beryl’s face. It was a face too wise and knowing for one so young, a wistful face of longing and sadness that I associate with children who have been mistreated and abandoned.

“Beryl was just a child then,” Mrs. McTigue said.

“I suppose she would have been sixteen, maybe seventeen?”

“Well, yes. That sounds about right,” she replied, watching me fold the sheet of paper around the photograph and tuck both back inside the envelope. “I didn’t find this until after Joe passed on. I ‘spect one of the members of his crew must have taken it.”

She returned the envelope to its drawer, and when she had reseated herself, she added, “I think one of the reasons Joe got on so well with Mr. Harper is Joe was a one-way street when it came to other people’s business. There was quite a lot I’m sure he never even told me.”

Smiling wanly, she stared off at the wall.

“Apparently, Mr. Harper told your husband about Beryl’s books when they began to get published,” I commented.

She shifted her attention back to me and looked surprised. “You know, I’m not sure Joe ever told me how he knew that, Dr. Scarpetta–such a lovely name. Spanish?”

“Italian.”

“Oh! I’ll bet you’re quite a cook, then.”

“It’s something I enjoy,” I said, sipping my port. “So apparently Mr. Harper told your husband about Beryl’s books.”

“Oh, my.”

She frowned. “How curious you should bring that up. It’s something I never considered. But Mr. Harper must have told him at some point. Why, yes, I can’t think of how else Joe would have known. But he did. When Flag of Honor first came out, he gave me a copy of it for Christmas.”

She got up again. Searching several bookshelves, she pulled out a thick volume and carried it over to me. “It’s autographed,” she added proudly.

I opened it and looked at the generous signature of “Emily Stratton,” which had been penned in December ten years before.

“Her first book,” I said.

“Possibly one of the few she ever signed.”

Mrs. Mc-Tigue beamed. “I believe Joe got it through Mr. Harper. Of course, there’s no other way he could have gotten it.”

“Do you have any other signed editions?”

“Not of hers. Now, I have all of her books, have read every one of them, most of them two or three times.”

She hesitated, her eyes widening. “Did it happen the way the papers depicted?”

“Yes.”

I wasn’t telling the whole truth. Beryl’s death was much more brutal than anything reported by the news.

She reached for another cheese biscuit, and for an instant seemed on the verge of tears.

“Tell me about last November,” I said. “It was almost a year ago when she came to speak to your group, Mrs. McTigue. This was for the Daughters of the American Revolution?”

“It was our annual author’s luncheon. The highlight of the year, when we have in a special speaker, an author usually someone quite well known. It was my turn to head the committee, to work out the arrangements, find the speaker. I knew from the start I wanted Beryl, but immediately ran into obstacles. I had no idea how to locate her. She didn’t have a listed telephone number and I had no idea where she lived, had no earthly idea she lived right here in Richmond! Finally, I asked Joe to help me out.”

She hesitated, laughing uncomfortably. “You know, I ‘spect I wanted to see if I could take care of the matter on my own. And Joe was so busy. Well, he called

Mr. Harper one night, and the very next morning my telephone rang. I’ll never forget my surprise. Why, I was almost speechless when she identified herself.”

Her telephone. It hadn’t occurred to me that Beryl’s number was unlisted. There was no mention of this detail in the reports Officer Reed had taken. Did Marino know?

“She accepted the invitation, much to my delight, then asked the usual questions,” Mrs. McTigue said. “What size group we expected. I told her between two and three hundred. The time, how long she should talk, that sort of thing. She was most gracious, charming. Not chatty, though. And it was unusual. She didn’t care to bring books. Authors always want to bring books, don’t you know. They sell them afterward, autograph them. Beryl said that wasn’t her practice, and she refused the honorarium as well. It was quite out of the ordinary. She was very sweet and modest, I thought.”

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