Authors: Carolyn Haines
Cousins!
It was like some bad parody of the South. All I needed was August humidity, kudzu, a run-down plantation, and a heroine of virginal innocence. Hell, I had all of it--except the virginal innocence. Which I wasn't certain was actually a necessary ingredient anyway. Faulkner managed without it.
"It was good of you to come to the jail to get me out," Harold said, breaking the hour-long silence between us. It was a nice opening, but the only thing it accomplished was throwing wide the door of my anger.
"Why didn't you tell me she was your cousin? Everyone in town thinks you're sleeping with her, Harold. They know you've been staying at her house."
He kept his gaze on the flat, straight stretch of road that was bordered by fallow cotton fields. "I'm not responsible for the conclusions to which people jump.
He was so damn proper. Even his diction. Anger buzzed in my head. "How long have you known about her?" Scenes flipped through my mind. Brianna at his reception after
"
"How did the Rathbones manage to adopt her? I mean she looks just like--" I swung my gaze at him. He didn't respond, just kept his eyes on the road and his hands on the wheel. "Layton Rathbone is her father. He and Lenore were lovers long ago. She never got over him."
"You've got the mind of a true romantic, Sarah Booth. For some reason that comforts me."
The whole thing was suddenly so clear. The ultimate betrayal to Lenore. "It was after
"Lenore had spent her life dreaming of the day when
"Why didn't he marry her?"
"
We were arriving at the city limits of
"It's hard to believe that Lenore's parents would have sacrificed her happiness for the sake of propriety," I finally said. My parents would have accepted Sam the Sham, if he'd been the man I loved.
Harold laughed softly. "Spoken like a girl who had her parents' unconditional love and approval. You had a rare and wondrous childhood, Sarah Booth. Never forget that, and never believe that others shared it. Especially not Brianna. I know you believe her to be a criminal, but can you imagine what it must have been like, growing up with a mother who took every opportunity to show that she didn't love you? And never knowing why."
Harold was pushing his luck. I would not feel sorry for Brianna Rathbone. No way. "She didn't know about this?"
"She still doesn't."
"What?" I was astounded.
"I didn't tell her. I couldn't."
He wouldn't have to. "She'll find out soon enough if she reads that manuscript. Judging from the page I read,
"
"I'm afraid you're wrong about that."
"The biography only concerns his years in
Harold was right about that, but he was wrong about
"The night
"
Harold shrugged. "
"No kidding," I said. I didn't mention the little loan he'd engineered for her. It could wait until she was behind bars. And I still wasn't buying that
"There's the cemetery." Harold pointed toward a sloping meadow shaded by beautiful live oaks and marked by elaborate gravestones. Cemeteries weren't exactly my favorite place. I had one in the backyard where I often imagined my dead relatives spinning in their graves at my behavior. It wasn't large, but some of the graves were very old, and as I gazed at it, I was touched with a sense of serenity.
"It's lovely," I said.
"My family is buried here. Unlike the landed gentry, we didn't have family plots."
"And you get perpetual maintenance. But if you miss the lawn care, you can come to Dahlia House and pull weeds."
"I might take you up on that." Harold parked the car and we got out. The sun's last grip on the sky was a vivid swirl of pink and purple and mauve, mingled with a dash of gold and blue. Against the sky the gravestones took on a solemn trust. There were angels and lambs and cherubs, all looking out with stony eyes. Suddenly I was awash in sadness. This is where love took Lenore Erkwell.
"Sarah Booth," Harold said gently as he took my elbow and turned me to face him, "she's been dead a long, long time."
"I know. That makes it even sadder."
The tears were cold on my cheeks and Harold gently wiped them away. "I should have known where the manuscript was hidden by the line of poetry he quoted me. It was Poe. 'The Raven.' The poem for a lost love, Lenore."
A Daddy's Girl would have dissolved in tears and allowed Harold the masculine privilege of comforting her. That was the only thought that saved me. I was no DG, and Harold had no obligation to shore up my womanly emotions. Straightening my back, I gave him a smile. "Let's find that book. I'm freezing."
To my surprise his lips brushed my cheek, a whisper of warmth on my cool skin. "It's your independence that really makes me admire you."
With that he began to move through the graves until we came to a strange figure, a woman's torso, head, and arms with a swan's wings and lower body. Granite tears seemed to slip down the woman's lovely cheeks. "How remarkable," I said. The stone was a work of art, a masterpiece. "You know it looks like those statues that were in the Sunflower Hotel. They were from Greek mythology, my father said."
"Yes, and this one, too. Leda and the Swan. Do you remember?"
"Zeus came to her as a lover in the guise of a swan. Leda was hideously punished by Hera, Zeus's wife." I did remember. "And the sculptor?"
"
The earth felt as if it had turned slightly, tilting to the right. I knew it was only the emotional power of what I'd just discovered. "
"He loved my aunt all of his life." Harold put his hand on the face of the statue. "Once she met
"She can't write," I pointed out.
Harold shook his head. "
The last warm colors of day were fading from the horizon. There was a finality to the sky that was as potent as the conclusion of the lives of these people I'd come to care about. It gave me no pleasure at all to say what had to be said.
"She killed him, Harold. You know that."
"I fear she did."
He bent to the statue, to the granite foundation that looked as solid as the rest of it. It took a bit of effort, but he removed a slab and pulled out a plastic-wrapped bundle.
He handed it to me and in the last rays of the December day, I peeled back the plastic to the title page.
The Romantic: The Life of a Writer, Artist, and Spy
by
Harold's voice held pride. "
His hand reached out and touched the manuscript that I held, the fingers moving across the title as if he were feeling the words, connecting somehow with the man who wrote it.
I shivered in the darkness and clutched the manuscript to my chest. "We should have gone after her with Coleman. She's probably skipped the country by now."
Harold put his arm around me and led me back to the car. "In a way, I hope she is gone. Nothing we do to Brianna will bring
All along Harold had underestimated Brianna's capacity for self-preservation. She still had
And Dean Joseph Grace was very dead. Drowned in
For Harold, there was no good ending. But there was justice, and Brianna Rathbone had a judgment coming her way.
27
Driving up to the courthouse where I'd left my car, Harold and I both saw Coleman standing outside, a big, solid man framed in an overhead light. To the west, a full moon hung behind the courthouse rotunda. It was huge and pale, a winter moon to mark the ending of a year.