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We are what we always were in Salem, but now the little crazy children are jangling the keys of the kingdom, and common vengeance writes the law!
-THE C CRUCIBLE
June 2000 Salem Falls, New Hamps.h.i.+re Addie paid ten dollars for a copy of Jack's first conviction, but didn't know what she was going to do with it. Keep it in the fire-safe box where Chloe's birth and death certificates were? Burn it, in some kind of ritual? Bury it in the yard, with all her other dreams?
A night of tossing and turning had convinced her that Jack had spun lies as easily as a silkworm crafted threads, and the result was something just as beautiful to behold. She couldn't blame him for telling her that he hadn't had a relations.h.i.+p with Catherine Marsh, or that he hadn't raped Gillian Duncan, or even that he loved Addie. A lie took two parties-the weaver of the tale and the sucker who so badly wanted to believe it.
The clerk of the Grafton County Superior Court handed Addie a receipt. "Here you go," he said. "State of New Hamps.h.i.+re v. Jack St. Bride." "State of New Hamps.h.i.+re v. Jack St. Bride."
Addie thanked the man and looked at the court records. "Jack St. Bride?" a voice said to her left.
The tall man wore a police uniform. He had salt-and-pepper hair, a nose that was too big for his face, and many laugh lines crinkling the corners of his eyes. "Yes," Addie answered.
"You know him?"
Her fist gripped the paper so tightly it bunched in her hand. "I thought I did."
Addie noticed there was something about Jack's name that brought a sad shadow to the man's eyes, just like it did to hers. "I know," he said finally. "So did I."
It was the first time Addie could recall sitting in a diner as a patron rather than as an owner. Jay Kavanaugh ordered an entire breakfast, but Addie wasn't hungry. She had to fight the overwhelming urge to stand up and get her own coffee from the burner.
"Doesn't surprise me," Jay said, after hearing that Jack had again been charged with rape. "s.e.xual perps tend to be repeaters. What does surprise me is that I fell for it the first time around." Shaking his head, he added, "I'm a cop, so I have this incredible sixth sense-like I can tell it's bulls.h.i.+t, pardon my French, from half a mile away. And I swear to G.o.d, I believed hook, line, and sinker that Jack was just some struggling prep school teacher-you know, an ordinary guy. Then it comes out that his family is rich as the Rockefellers and that in his spare time he wasn't doing lesson plans but seducing students."
"The Rockefellers?" Addie said. "Jack's broke."
Jay glanced up. "That's just something else he told you." He shrugged. "It's good to hear he's a career con artist. Makes me feel less like a moron."
He continued talking as the waitress set down his plate. "Jack was Mr. Spontaneous all the time-Go climb a mountain? Sure! Cover some teacher's cla.s.s that period? No problem!-But every time I suggested we go out for a beer or to play a game of racquetball after his soccer practices, he turned me down. Couldn't go until late at night, he said. Told me he had a standing engagement at seven-and never, not once, did he back down from that. I figured it was some faculty meeting or something. 'Course, later on, the girl said that was when they met. Every night, seven P.M. P.M., in the locker room."
It was both liberating and depressing to find this man, another casualty of Jack's. Yet no matter how grievously wronged Jay Kavanaugh felt, he had not let Jack slip beneath his defenses, into his heart, into his body. He had not heard Jack say I love you I love you. He had not listened, wide-eyed, and believed it.
"Hey," Jay said. "You're a million miles away."
"No, just thinking."
"About Jack?"
Addie shook her head. "About how much I don't like men."
"Don't judge us all by Jack. Most of us are a lot stupider than he is and don't have nearly the finesse to carry off that kind of ruse." Jay smiled gently. "Hindsight's always twenty-twenty. And it doesn't hurt as much, after a while. I've had ten months to think on this. But I still remember sitting at my desk after I had to arrest him-my best friend!-and wondering how the h.e.l.l this had slipped by me."
Addie watched him spear the yolk of an egg. It ran across the plate, a yellow pool dammed by a wall of hash browns. "How is the girl now?"
"She left Wes...o...b..ook. I hear that she's being home-schooled and that she doesn't keep in touch with friends who are still in Loyal." He paused, then added quietly, "I think she just wants to forget this ever happened."
That was when Addie remembered Catherine Marsh had believed she loved Jack, too. "She won't be able to," Addie whispered.
In her hotel room, Addie packed up her suitcase again, with Rosie O'Donnell keeping her company on the TV. She folded her s.h.i.+rts and stacked them on top of her jeans. She tucked her boots into plastic bags so that they did not get anything else dirty.
"I swear, John," Rosie was saying, "I'm going to win. I've been practicing." Addie looked up as the comedienne's face filled the screen. "Kelsey Grammer and Joy Behar," she said, "do you know your potent potables?"
"What's a potable?" her bandleader asked.
"A drink," Rosie said. "If you were destined to be the celebrity Jeopardy! Jeopardy! champion, you'd know that, as well as the largest lake in Africa and the fact that the queen in the Netherlands is second cousins to the Archduke Francis Ferdinand. I'm making that last one up, John, but see, only a celebrity champion, you'd know that, as well as the largest lake in Africa and the fact that the queen in the Netherlands is second cousins to the Archduke Francis Ferdinand. I'm making that last one up, John, but see, only a celebrity Jeopardy! Jeopardy! champion like myself would even champion like myself would even realize realize this." this."
Laughter from the audience. Addie felt her heart contract as she heard Jack's voice in her head. They water down the questions for the celebrity tournament, They water down the questions for the celebrity tournament, he'd told her. he'd told her. Because otherwise, none of those stars would get a single one right. Because otherwise, none of those stars would get a single one right.
Jack would have. Most of us are a lot stupider than he is, Most of us are a lot stupider than he is, Jay had said. "Seven Jay had said. "Seven P.M P.M. tonight, here on ABC," Rosie announced. "I'm telling you, John, this could be a whole new career for me."
Addie remembered Jack telling her about prison, how his knowledge of trivia had saved him from being abused. She remembered unsuccessfully trying to distract him with her body during the show. All that trivia in his head, All that trivia in his head, she used to think. she used to think. How can there be room for me? How can there be room for me?
Suddenly, she began to tear through the papers on the table welcoming her as a guest to this hotel. There was a small guide to the DartmouthSunapee region of New Hamps.h.i.+re, and a flyer from an outlet store, and a placard from a pizza place that would deliver until three in the morning. From underneath the mess of blankets and sheets on the bed, she unearthed the complimentary local newspaper. Scanning the pages, she finally found what she was looking for-the little grid of local television programming.
In Loyal, Jeopardy! Jeopardy! was syndicated and aired on ABC. At 7 was syndicated and aired on ABC. At 7 P.M. P.M.
Addie did not know nearly as much as Jack did about geography or presidents or even potent potables. She did not know if a discrepancy like this would have ever stood up in a court of law. But she did know that for one half hour a day, nothing would come between Jack and a television trivia show.
Not even Catherine Marsh.
The occult bookstore smelled like an apothecary, and rows of gla.s.s jars with small scripted labels held things that Selena really didn't want to consider. Books were jammed into the narrow shelves, with t.i.tles like Anastasia's Grimoire Anastasia's Grimoire and and Transfiguration for Beginners Transfiguration for Beginners and and The Solitary Witch's Guide The Solitary Witch's Guide. A cat with a bell around its neck stalked the countertop, and an opiate cloud of incense hung in the air.
Stars.h.i.+ne glanced at the untouched cup of tea in Selena's hand. "Go ahead. It won't turn you into a toad."
She seemed to be a cross between an earth mother and a flower child, with stray braids dotting her silver hair and a ring on every toe. It made Selena nervous. She kept expecting to be zapped into nothingness, or for this woman to wiggle her nose.
She glanced around at the walls of the store. "You get a lot of teenagers in here?"
"Too many," Stars.h.i.+ne said, and sighed. "The spells attract most of the kids. They hear the word witch, witch, and immediately think they'll be able to wave a wand and hurt the bullies in school or to make the star of the basketball team fall madly for them." and immediately think they'll be able to wave a wand and hurt the bullies in school or to make the star of the basketball team fall madly for them."
"Something tells me they're not running home to tell Mom and Dad they're Wiccans."
"No," Stars.h.i.+ne agreed, "and it goes right back to the Inquisition, I'm afraid. Being a witch is not something that invites confidence, because too many people misunderstand what it means if you say that you are one. And unfortunately, I think teenagers are attracted to that part of Wicca-doing something, even something natural and innocent, behind their parents' backs."
"Does Gillian Duncan come in here often?"
The older woman shrugged. "Just recently, she came in looking for belladonna."
"Belladonna? The poison?"
Stars.h.i.+ne nodded. "She wanted it for an obsolete recipe, once used for out-of-body experiences and psychic visions. Needless to say, I tried to redirect her focus."
"How?"
The cat leaped into the woman's lap; she stroked its fur until its eyes slit shut. "I told her to celebrate the upcoming sabbat instead."
"Do you remember when that conversation occurred?"
"Right before Beltane," Stars.h.i.+ne said, then noticed Selena's blank look. "The night of April thirtieth."
"What if she found it somewhere else?" Jordan asked. He and Selena sat on a teak bench in his backyard, watching a blue jay fight a flock of finches at the bird feeder. They sat side by side, and Jordan could have told her exactly how many centimeters of s.p.a.ce separated their bodies from shoulder to hip to thigh. Christ, the electricity between them was enough to keep the mosquitoes at bay.
Selena didn't seem to notice. Or if she did, she was doing a d.a.m.n good job of hiding it. "The belladonna?" she asked.
"Yeah. What if she made her recipe and pa.s.sed it out the night of April thirtieth? Then Jack stumbles by, drunk, and Gillian hallucinates the a.s.sault."
Selena frowned. "It must have been some pretty good s.h.i.+t, then, to conjure up the s.e.m.e.n on her thigh."
"Okay," Jordan conceded, "that's a sticking point."
"No pun intended?"
"I can't explain the s.e.m.e.n. But that's not my job. All I have to do is make the jury think for a nanosecond that there might be another explanation for what happened that night, other than rape. And the victim's credibility is called into question if we prove that her recollections are drug-impaired."
"Still, Jordan," Selena argued, "it's not like there are occult suppliers on Main Street. Belladonna's a poison. It isn't easy to come by."
"She could have subst.i.tuted another hallucinogenic drug."
Selena snorted. "From the local pharmacy?"
"From the high school dealer," Jordan corrected, and then smiled slowly. "Or from Daddy."
It took three and a half hours for the Reverend Marsh to leave the house, three and a half hours that Addie spent sitting behind a small clot of hydrangea in the front yard. She waited until he had driven off in his Buick and then she knocked on the door.
"You lied," Addie said, the minute Catherine Marsh opened it.
"I don't know what you're talking about."
"You didn't have a relations.h.i.+p with Jack St. Bride. You never slept with him. I don't know why, Catherine, and I don't know how, exactly, but you somehow got this rumor started and managed to ruin his life."
"He told me ... he told me ..."
"He didn't tell you anything he wouldn't have told any other student."
Catherine started to protest but then crumbled. There was no other word for it-the edges of her mouth waffled in, her eyes drifted shut, and all her bravado collapsed. "I didn't mean for this to happen," she whispered. "My father ... he found birth control pills in my underwear drawer, and it made him crazy. Then he found my diary ... and read that, too." Catherine swallowed. "It was only pretend. I mean, we all had crushes on Coach. When my boyfriend broke up with me ... Coach took extra care to make sure I was okay, to let me cry on his shoulder. I pretended it was because he liked me, you know, that that way, a little. So I wrote about him. I wrote about us." way, a little. So I wrote about him. I wrote about us."
"Fiction," Addie said, to clarify, and Catherine nodded miserably. "And when your father went to the police? Did you ever think that maybe you ought to tell them?"
"I did. But they all thought I was just trying to keep him out of jail because I loved him." She dashed a tear from her cheek. "When I was lying, they hung on every word. And when I told the truth, no one listened."
"Catherine-"
"I am so ashamed," the girl whispered. "I am so sorry I did this to him."
Addie fought for control. "Then help him now."
"You're the last guy I expected to see," Charlie said, holding the door open so that Jordan could walk inside.
"That's because I'm not here as an attorney," Jordan answered. "Just as a dad."
Charlie invited Jordan to sit down on a floral couch with an afghan hanging over the back. "That's right. I forget you have a kid."
"Bad news, I guess." Jordan grinned. "We defense lawyers can procreate."
That surprised a laugh out of Charlie. "Your boy's in, what? His freshman year?"
"Yeah." Jordan could feel himself sweating through the back of his short-sleeved polo s.h.i.+rt. He had absolutely no proof of what he was about to tell Charlie-this was a pure hunch, one that he hoped would prey on the detective's parental sensibilities and net Jordan a windfall. Short of this white lie, he didn't know how else to confirm his intuitions. "Charlie, first things first. This is all off the record, all right?"
The detective nodded slowly.
"My son-Thomas-has been seeing Chelsea Abrams."
"Oh?" Charlie said easily. "She's a sweet kid."
"Yeah. Well, he certainly thinks so, anyway." They both laughed. "This is a little awkward, Charlie," Jordan said, exhaling heavily. "Thomas came home with some information I thought I should pa.s.s along."
At that, Charlie sat up, immediately alert.
"Chelsea said that the night the girls were in the woods, they were doing drugs."
Charlie didn't move a muscle. "My daughter doesn't ... she wouldn't do that."
"I didn't think so. And you have to know, given our circ.u.mstances right now, this was about the last thing I figured you'd want to hear from me. But as a father-well, h.e.l.l, if someone knew that about Thomas, I'd want to be told." He stood, wary of overstaying his welcome. "It's probably a misunderstanding."
"Probably." Charlie led the way out of the house. He watched the lawyer walk down the slate path that led to the driveway. "Jordan."
For a moment, the two men simply stared at each other.
"Thank you," Charlie said.
As laboratory technician, Arthur Quince had enough trouble trying to keep afloat at Duncan Pharmaceuticals without investigators coming along to foul up the rhythm of his day. Especially investigators who arrived with a light in their eyes, intent on linking your place of business to a crime. First the rape of his boss's daughter, and now a drug case right here in Salem Falls? What was this world coming to?
"I don't know if I'll be able to help you," Arthur told Selena Damascus. "On any given week, we might be making six drugs at a time."
"Like which six?"
Jesus, the woman was like a dog with a bone. Arthur punched up records on his computer and pointed to the screen. "Recently, we've been making fentanyl citrate, lidocaine hydrochloride, and phen.o.barbital sodium."
"What about before that?"
He scrolled up to the previous three-week period, starting the week of April 24. "Acyclovir, pemoline, risedronate, and atropine were in various stages of production."
"Are any of those hallucinogens?"
"We're not in the habit of making drugs that are sold on the street."