THE MAZE by Catherine Counlter

“Okay. We’ll keep walking everywhere and when the media catches up to us, we’ll wave to our mothers and smile really big. Speaking of mothers, do you think your mother really saw Marlin kissing Belinda in the driveway?”

“No. Actually, I have no idea what she saw or if she even saw anything. I think you’re right about the attention bids. My father was there and she wanted him to focus on her. It was an excellent way to go about it.”

“So you don’t believe your father would ever try to run her down?”

“I don’t know. But I think she loves him. I could be wrong.

It’s nuts, isn’t it? Maybe she did see someone perhaps speak to Belinda in the driveway, but Marlin?”

“Do you think your father prosecuted Erasmus Jones ten years ago?”

“Oh yes. My father’s firmly planted in the here-and-now, no matter how unpleasant it can get. He doesn’t make stuff up. If he said Erasmus Jones was in his courtroom, then he was. The question is-Is it possible that Erasmus Jones has anything to do with this?”

Savich said slowly, “There’s a tremendous resemblance between father and son. Is it possible that just maybe your mother saw Erasmus with Belinda, not Marlin?”

“I have no idea. But she didn’t have any reaction at all to Erasmus Jones’s photograph.” “No, she didn’t.”

Over egg rolls and fried wonton, half with meat and half vegetarian, Savich said, releasing her hand, “Your fingers are cold.”

“All of me is cold.”

“Next summer we’ll go to Louise Lynn Lake with Quinlan and Sally. I want to see you in a bikini. A blue one. I want to buy it for you. I want to put it on you and take it off.”

Next summer, she thought: a lifetime away from a Chinese restaurant in Boston where, she prayed, Marlin Jones was lurking somewhere, waiting for her to come out. Cops were stationed at short intervals all around the restaurant.

She gave Dillon a huge smile. “Thank you,” she said, stood on her tiptoes, and kissed his mouth. Then she sat down again, took a huge forkful of garlic pork, and chewed while Savich just sat there, staring at her, bemused.

Princess prawns and garlic eggplant arrived. While Savich was spooning rice onto his plate, he said, “What do you think about Douglas?”

“I really don’t want to think about him right now. I just want to eat”‘ She sighed, as she speared a princess prawn on her fork. “Everyone is accusing everyone else of killing Belinda. We go down one passageway, then another.” She waved her fork, flinging rice onto the table. “The only thing I am sure about is that Isabelle didn’t do it. My money would be on Candice if she’d only been around seven years ago.”

“I find myself still going back and back yet again to your nightmare, to your experiencing exactly what happened to Belinda.”

“I try not to anymore. It’s too scary. It makes me sweat. Do you think we could go work out after dinner?”

He grinned at her over a forkful of garlic eggplant, which had been nicely prepared. “My soul mate,” he said. “Your delts still need work. Your thighs are really nice, though. Those triceps of yours make me hard.”

“I love it when you talk gym to me.”

They didn’t fly back to Washington until the next afternoon. Not a single sign of Marlin Jones. He was still at large.

They stopped off to see Captain Dougherty at the station on their way to Logan International. “It seems to me that someone has to be helping him,” Savich said.

“Yeah,” said Captain Dougherty. “Everyone is coming to that conclusion now. There haven’t been any murders or robberies that haven’t checked out. Since Marlin didn’t have any money, he would have to get some if he remained alone. He didn’t so far as we know. So, someone must be helping him. Someone’s hiding him, a someone who has enough money to keep him out of sight. But who? We’ve checked with the people at the lumberyard where he worked. He didn’t have any close friends that they knew of, at least no one close enough to go out on this long a limb for him.”

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