PATRICIA CORNWELL. FROM POTTER’S FIELD

‘You’re predictable,’ I heard him say before disappearing around a hedge.

Several minutes later the garage door began to lift and a light went on inside, illuminating yard and garden tools neatly arranged on walls, a bicycle I rarely rode, and my car. I could not see my new Mercedes without thinking of the one Lucy had wrecked.

My former 500E was sleek and fast with an engine partially designed by Porsche. Now I just wanted something big. I had a black S500 that probably would hold its own with a cement truck or a tractor trailer. Marino stood near my car, looking at me as if he wished I would hurry up. I honked the horn to remind him I was locked inside his truck.

‘Why do people keep trying to lock me inside their vehicles?’ I said as he let me out. ‘A taxi this morning, now you.’

‘Because it’s not safe when you’re loose. I want to look around your house before I leave,’ he said.

‘It’s not necessary.’

‘I’m not asking. I’m telling you I’m going to look,’ he said.

‘All right. Help yourself.’

He followed me inside, and I went straight to the living room and turned on the gas fire. Next I opened the front door and brought in the mail and several newspapers that one of my neighbors had forgotten I to pick up. To anybody watching my gracious brick house, it would have been obvious that I was gone over Christmas.

I glanced around as I returned to the living room, looking for anything even slightly out of order. I wondered if anyone had thought about breaking in. I wondered what eyes had turned this way, what dark thoughts had enveloped this place where I lived.

My neighborhood was one of the wealthiest in Richmond, and certainly there had been problems before, mostly with gypsies who tended to walk in during the day when people were home. I was not as worried about them, for I never left doors unlocked, and the alarm was activated constantly. It was an entirely different breed of criminal I feared, and he was not as interested in what I owned as in who and what I was. I kept many guns in the house in places where I could get to them easily.

I seated myself on the couch, the shadow from flames moving on oil paintings on the walls. My furniture was contemporary European, and during the day the house was filled with light. As I sorted mail, I came across a pink envelope similar to several I had seen before. It was note size and not a good grade of paper, the stationery the sort one might buy in a drugstore. The postmark this time was Charlottesville, December 23. I slit it open with a scalpel. The note, like the others, was handwritten in black fountain ink.

Dear Dr. Scarpetta,

I hope you have a very special Christmas!

CAIN

I carefully set the letter on my coffee table.

‘Marino?’ I called out.

Gault had written the note before he had murdered Jane. But the mail was slow. I was just getting it now.

‘Marino!’ I got up.

I heard his feet moving loudly and quickly on stairs. He rushed into the living room, gun in hand.

‘What?’ he said, breathing hard as he looked around. ‘Are you all right?’

I pointed to the note. His eyes fell to the pink envelope and matching paper.

‘Who’s it from?’

‘Look,’ I said.

He sat beside me, then got right back up. ‘I’m going to set the alarm first.’

‘Good idea.’

He came back and sat down again. ‘Let me have a couple pens. Thanks.’

He used the pens to keep the notepaper unfolded so he could read without jeopardizing any fingerprints I hadn’t already destroyed. When he was finished, he studied the handwriting and postmark on the envelope.

‘Is this the first time you’ve gotten one of these?’ he asked.

‘No.’

He looked accusingly at me. ‘And you didn’t say nothing?’

‘It’s not the first note, but it’s the first one signed

cain; I said.

‘What have the rest of them been signed?’

‘There’s only been two others on this pink stationery, and they weren’t signed.’

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