Read The Little Death Online

Authors: PJ Parrish

Tags: #USA

The Little Death (33 page)

A stroke?

“I haven’t seen him in public since,” Swann said, “but I heard he’s pretty much… what do you call it when they can’t move their arms or legs but their brain’s still working?”

“I don’t know,” Louis said softly.

“Anyway, from what I hear, he’s got his own medical clinic up there on the second floor of that old house,” Swann said. “The best doctors, a steady supply of drugs, twenty-four-hour nurses to wipe his drool and change his diapers.”

Louis was quiet.

“And a pretty wife just sitting around and waiting for him to die,” Swann said. “Kind of sad, isn’t it?”

The tide was coming in, and Louis watched the ebb and flow of the water.

“Sad isn’t the word for it,” Louis said.

Chapter Twenty-eight
 

It was almost time.

Would she be ready? Her heart was beating fast,
too fast. Could she stand it much longer? Of course she could. The moments just before were part of the experience. The tickle of palpitations in her breast, the shivers between her legs, the burn of her own skin when she touched herself. A lonely yet amazing kind of foreplay.

She moved across the room with a deliberate flourish, her steps soundless in the satin slippers, the brush of her white chiffon skirt like feathers against her thighs.

It was silly, she knew. The ruffles, the satin sashes, and the hours spent coiling her hair into sausage curls.

Oh, how long she had waited for this night. And this boy.

Bianca had promised he would be different from the last one. Bianca had promised he had learned the social graces, the art of a caress, and most important of all—and maybe as silly as the miniature bows but still important to her because it had never been important to Dickie—his breath would be sweet and clean.

Dickie… she wouldn’t have to worry about him tonight. She had been so happy when he told her he had been invited to some big real-estate party at Mar-a-Lago. He didn’t even care when she had begged off with a headache. She had sat at the window and watched him pull away in his ugly big Rolls, watched the parade of cars along the beach road going into Mar-a-Lago. And then, finally, she had gone to get her special room ready.

Tink turned on the small bedside lamp and admired her boudoir. The Hills of Provence vanity with its padded silk bench. The white antique iron canopy bed, draped in pink netting and covered by a satin comforter. And to complete the fantasy—and, of course, she understood
that it was one—were her two beloved stuffed bears, Boo and Berri.

This was not the bedroom she shared with Dickie. That place—that awful place—had a dark four-poster bed, wider than even the biggest king and set on columns the size of redwoods. In the corner was a heavy dark armoire built to house three televisions and other pieces of electronic equipment. And as if the room needed topping off, Dickie had hung that trashy LeRoy Neiman painting of a bullfighter.

Tink closed her eyes.

Big ugly things for a big ugly man.

“Miss Tinkie?”

His voice came as tender as the hum of a fading violin. Was he early?
Or was she late? No matter. He was here.

She started toward the bedroom door, then paused, hand poised over a wooden music box on the chest of drawers. It was a Nicole Frères, hand-made in 1814, an exquisite piece of lustrous black ebony with intricate ivory scrollwork.

Tink ran her finger across the lid. It had been sent to her from London on her tenth birthday, a gift from her beloved grandfather
.
It had been the last gift Poppy had sent her, and it was the only thing she had taken with her when she left her childhood home in Philadelphia.

Her hand went out to lift the lid, but she froze. She
so
wanted to play the music now as he entered, but she didn’t dare. He might think her rude for not waiting, and there was no excuse for being rude, not even in sin.

“Miss Tinkie?”

He was standing at the door.

Slender and tall, with the soft white shirt lying against the hard muscles of his chest. His face was smooth and boyish in the glow of the lamp, his eyes as dark as her music box. He bowed his head and looked up at her from under a hank of silken black hair.

Tink smiled. He was shy. Could he be more perfect?

She lifted the lid on the music box and held out a hand to him. The melody of
“Un bel di”
filled the silence. His eyes slipped to the music box before they settled back on her. He seemed bewildered.

“It’s from
Madama Butterfly,
” Tink whispered. “You recognize it, don’t you?”

He set the orchid on the dresser, next to the music box, and turned again to look around the room. It was as if he just couldn’t resist looking. Of course he couldn’t, she knew. None of them could. Wasn’t it every man’s dream to have a virgin?

She moved to him and touched his face to bring his gaze back to her. Her other hand rested on his chest, her fingers inside his collar.

“Are you nervous, Byrne?” she whispered.

He lowered his head. She thought he would lean in and kiss her, but instead, he took her hand and held it firmly against his body. She pressed her lips to his cheek, wanting to feel the heat of his skin and breathe in his smell—his wonderful soapy smell—but he was steeled against her touch.

Something was wrong.

She drew back. He was looking at the bed again, a small twitch rippling his cheek, his eyes filmed with a dullness she had seen before.

He was repulsed.

She was the freak.

And if she didn’t do something, he would leave.

“Please,” she whispered. “Just close your eyes and pretend. We’re sixteen. It’s midnight, and we’ve just left the cotillion, and for the first time in days, we are alone.”

He managed a small nod and closed his eyes, willing, she supposed, to put his mouth on her as long as he didn’t have to see her. His lips were dry, his kisses without passion. He wouldn’t carry her to the bed, as she asked, but walked her with no ear for the beautiful melody.

But she had asked him to be sixteen. Could she fault him for being so good at that?

He gently touched her breasts through the ruffled bodice of the dress.

“No,” she whispered. “Like a boy, like a boy.”

He hesitated. “I don’t understand what you want,” he said.

She wanted to cry in frustration. “I want you to be sixteen. Can you do that, please?”

“I don’t know—”

“Like the first time you did it,” she whispered. “Can you remember what that was like? That is what I want. Like we are sixteen, please!”

When he started again, it was different. This time, it was right. He pawed at her; he panted. He rubbed her, groped her, and finally, he hurt her.

And then, as she asked, he left her on her back, her lips raw from his hard kisses and her gown crumpled around her hips.

She lay there, listening to the rustle of his clothes as he dressed. When he was finished, she heard his footfalls
as he crossed the room, then the soft click of the door as it closed behind him.

As the quiet returned, she realized that the melody in the music box was dying. Just
ping
s that became slower and slower as the cylinder made its last turns.

She was drifting, almost asleep, when a voice boomed from the hall, rocketing her to a sitting position.

“Who the hell are you?”

Dickie. My God, Dickie’s home!

Tink jumped off the bed, ran to the door, and flung it open. Dickie stood on the landing, a giant blur of black-and-white tuxedo. He had Byrne crushed against the wall with a hand to his throat.

“Stop it!” Tink cried.

Dickie raised an arm to backhand her, but she ducked and retreated into her room. Tink watched in horror as he smacked Byrne with an open palm. Byrne tried to fight, but all he could hit were the thick slabs of Dickie’s arms.

“Who the fuck are you?” Dickie shouted, bouncing Byrne against the wall. “What the fuck were you doing here?”

“I was invited!” Byrne yelled.

“Invited!” Dickie spat. His eyes swung to Tink and then down to her disheveled white dress. “What the hell are you wearing?”

“It’s my gown!” Tink cried. “It’s my special gown!”

Dickie pushed her back inside her bedroom and yanked the door closed.

She stood, eyes squeezed shut, hands over her ears. But she could still hear them. No matter how hard she pressed her hands against her head, she could still hear them.

“Get up!” Dickie yelled. “Get up on your feet!”

Byrne was crying now, mumbling things she couldn’t understand. She couldn’t bear it; she had to see what was happening. She opened the door and peeked out.

Byrne was on his hands and knees, gasping, the cream-colored carpet under his head speckled with blood. He was groping blindly for something to pull himself up with, but when he touched Dickie’s pant leg, Dickie kicked his arm away.

“I oughtta make you crawl down those goddamn steps,” Dickie said, “but I’m going to save you some time.”

Dickie jerked Byrne to his knees and kicked him in the belly. Byrne screamed and started to crawl. Dickie kicked him again, catapulting him off the top step.

Tink put her fist at her mouth to keep from screaming, listening to the horrible thumping of Byrne’s body hitting the wall as it tumbled down two flights.

Help him. You can help him, you stupid girl. There’s a phone right here. Use it! Help him!

Hands shaking, she picked up the phone. But she couldn’t remember which speed-dial button it was. She had been told a hundred times, but now she couldn’t remember. Three. Yes, it was number three.

She punched the number and fell back against the wall. As the voice answered, her legs gave out, and she crumpled to the floor. She began to sob.

The woman on the other end of the line was telling her to calm down, to take a breath, that everything would be all right.

“No, it won’t,” Tink said. “He’s going to kill him.”

Chapter Twenty-nine
 

You all right, Andrew?”

Swann took a moment to look up. The sunglasses hid his eyes, but Louis knew they were bloodshot. When he had roused Swann from the sofa back at Reggie’s this morning, Swann’s eyes had looked like a road map.

“I’m fine.”

“You’re a little green under that tan.”

“I’m said I’m fine.”

Louis leaned on the doorbell again. They had been standing outside the Osborn house for almost ten minutes, and so far no one had answered. In the driveway was a white Bentley, a silver Mercedes, and the same blue Camry Louis had seen on his first visit. The Mercedes, Louis noticed, had a government plate, so he assumed it belonged to Carolyn. Louis hit the doorbell again.

Swann let out a belch and a groan.

“Tequila will kill you, you know,” Louis said.

“I’m okay, damn it. Let’s just get this over with and get out of here, okay?”

The door clicked, and a face poked out. It took Louis a second to retrieve the guy’s name from his fuzzed brain.

“Good morning, Greg,” Louis said.

Bitner’s eyes narrowed. “What do you want?”

“Greg, Greg, where’s your holiday spirit?” Louis said.

“The senator isn’t here,” Bitner said.

“I’m not here to see your boss,” Louis said. “We want to talk to her husband.”

Bitner glanced at Swann. “Is this official police business?”

Swann nodded. “We just need to talk to Mr. Osborn.”

Bitner hesitated, then opened the door. They stepped into the cool white entranceway. The red orchid was still there on the table.

“Wait here,” Bitner said. “I’ll go—”

Louis’s eyes swung upward. Tucker Osborn was coming down the stairs. He was dressed in white shorts, shirt, and tennis shoes, his hair wet, his face flushed. He slowed as he saw them.

“What’s going on here?” he asked.

Swann took the initiative. “I’m Lieutenant Swann, Palm Beach PD. We just need a few moments of your time, sir.”

Osborn was looking at Swann, and Louis wondered if he recognized him from the domestic incident years before. Louis could almost see Osborn weighing his options. Finally, Osborn turned to Bitner.

“Go find something to do,” he said.

Bitner reddened, his eyes flicking to Louis. Then, without a word, he turned and left.

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