CAUSE OF DEATH. Patricia Cornwell

Adjoining my bedroom was an office that finally was big enough for me to work in, and I checked it first for faxes and found I had four.

“Anything important?” asked Lucy, who had followed me while Marino was getting boxes and bags.

“As a matter of fact, they’re all for you from your mother.” I handed them to her.

She frowned. “Why would she fax me here?”

“I never told her I was temporarily relocating to Sandbridge. Did you?”

“No. But Grans would know where you are, right?” Lucy said.

“Of course. But my mother and yours don’t always get things straight.” I glanced at what she was reading. “Everything okay?”

“She’s so weird. You know, I installed a modem and CD ROM in her computer and showed her how to use them. My mistake. Now she’s always got questions. Each of these faxes is a computer question.” She irritably shuffled through the pages.

I was put out with her mother, Dorothy, too. She was my sister, my only sibling, and she could not be bothered to so much as wish her only child a happy New Year.

“She sent these today,” my niece went on. “It’s a holiday and she’s writing away on another one of her goofy children’s books.”

“To be fair,” I said, “her books aren’t goofy.”

“Yeah, go figure. I don’t know where she did her research, but it wasn’t where I grew up.”

“I wish you two weren’t at odds.” I made the same comment I had made throughout Lucy’s life. “Someday you will have to come to terms with her. Especially when she dies.”

“You always think about death.”

“I do because I know about it, and it is the other side of life. You can’t ignore it any more than you can ignore night. You will have to deal with Dorothy.”

“No, I won’t,” She swiveled my leather desk chair around and sat in it, facing me. “There’s no point. She doesn’t understand the first thing about me and never has.”

That was probably true.

“You’re welcome to use my computer,” I said.

“It will just take me a minute.”

“Marino will pick us up about four,” I said.

“I didn’t know he left.”

“Briefly.”

Keys tapped as I went into my bedroom and began to unpack and plot. I needed a car and wondered if I should rent one, and I needed to change my clothes but did not know what to wear. It bothered me that the thought of Wesley would still make me conscious of what I put on, and as minutes crept forward I became truly afraid to see him.

Marino picked us up when he said he would, and somewhere he had found a car wash open and had filled the tank with gas. We drove east along Monument Avenue into the district known as the Fan, where gracious mansions lined historic avenues and college students crowded old homes.

At the statue of Robert E. Lee, he cut over to Grace Street, where Ted Eddings had lived in a white Spanish duplex with a red Santa flag hanging over a wooden front porch with a swing. Bright yellow crime scene tape stretched from post to post in a morbid parody of Christmas wrapping, its bold black letters warning the curious not to come.

“Under the circumstances, I didn’t want nobody inside, and I didn’t know who else might have a key,” Marino explained as he unlocked the front door. “What I don’t need is some nosy landlord deciding he’s going to check his friggin’ inventory.”

I did not see any sign of Wesley and was deciding he wasn’t going to show up when I heard the throaty roar of his gray BMW. It parked on the side of the street, and I watched the radio antenna retract as he cut the engine.

“Doc, I’ll wait for him if you want to go on in,” Marino said to me.

“I need to talk to him.” Lucy headed back down the steps.

“I’ll be inside,” I said and put on cotton gloves, as if Wesley were not someone I knew.

I entered Eddings’ foyer and his presence instantly overwhelmed me everywhere I looked. I felt his meticulous personality in minimalist furniture, Indian rugs and polished floors, and his warmth in sunny yellow walls hung with bold monotype prints. Dust had formed a fine layer that was disturbed anywhere police might recently have been to open cabinets or drawers. Begonias, ficus, creeping fig and cyclamen seemed to be mourning the loss of their master, and I looked around for a watering can. Finding one in the laundry room, I filled it and began tending plants because I saw no point in allowing them to die. I did not hear Benton Wesley walk in.

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