Chapter
47: The Cross of Your Arms [58]
Catherine
leaned back against Vincent’s shoulder as the last strains of the
Canon in D Minor
faded away. “Where have you gone?” he murmured under the noise of
the gathered crowd above them. “You’re…very far away.”
She
smiled at him by way of apology. “I guess I am. Got a lot to face
tomorrow and…I don’t really want to.”
He
combed her hair with gentle fingers. “Tell me.”
“I
have to meet with Internal Affairs in the morning.”
“The
same people who---”
“Suspended
me for three months while they worked with the FBI to find out if I
was involved with Moreno? Yes.”
Vincent
himself remembered little of the incident, she knew; his recovery
from his illness the year before had been lengthy and much of his
recollection of those months was a confused haze of memory and
nightmare. Told of her suspension later, he had been furious that
anyone would believe she had been complicit with Moreno. “What can
they want now?” he asked.
She
shrugged. “I have no idea. They want to meet with Rita as well.
Likely it’s about our accident in New Jersey but…I can’t say
for sure.”
She
felt the muscles of his chest and shoulders bunch in a sudden
upwelling of tension. “Try not to worry,” she went on. “If I’m
suspended again, someone else will have to take on the Avery case---”
“And
Elliot Burch,” Vincent put in dryly.
“And
Elliot Burch, which will also leave me more time to help you work on
our house.”
To
her great surprise, Vincent chuckled. “Only you
could make a suspension sound like a good thing.” He sobered then.
“Do you think it likely?”
Catherine
shook her head. “No.” She looked down at their interlaced hands.
“I’m…considering asking Joe to have someone else assigned to
the case.”
“Why?
You’ve worked so hard, risked so much.”
“I
have,” Catherine said. “But this mess with Elliot…if my
presence is more of a distraction than a help, it might well be
better to turn the case over to a prosecutor with no prior experience
with him. Eventually, we’re going to get to trial, once Avery’s
attorney runs out of tricks and delaying tactics. And Avery's
attorney plays dirty. Always has.”
Vincent
gazed at her, then off into the middle distance. “I can’t deny,”
he finally said, “I would be much happier if you never had to deal
with Elliot Burch again. But you voiced these objections to Joe
before, did you not?”
“I
did,” she replied. “But that was before Elliot decided to show up
drunk at my apartment. There’s so much riding on this case; we
tried and failed to bring Max Avery to justice once before, and now
we’ve been given a second chance. I don’t want my presence on the
case to be used as some sort of tactic for the defense.”
“You
must do what you think is right,” Vincent said. “But I think
there was a good reason you were assigned this case. And I believe in
you.”
That
he could still utter those words, after what the prosecution of Avery
had cost him, after all the worry and fear and frustration, made
tears well unexpectedly in her eyes. What might she have become, she
wondered, without Vincent’s faith in her? “Thank you,”
Catherine managed.
She
felt him nuzzle the crown of her hair; his oldest caress of
reassurance and love. “Hush, now,” he murmured. “You’ll miss
the rest of the concert.”
***
It
was late, quite late, when they made their way back to their chamber.
“Don’t forget we’re meeting Matthew and Annie tomorrow night,”
Vincent said as he dropped the heavy curtain behind them.
“I
have it written down,” Catherine replied. “I can’t believe
we’re starting renovations so soon. It hardly seems possible.”
“Matthew
assures me the awe will wear off,” Vincent replied with a
half-smile. “Nevertheless…I’m looking forward to it.”
“A
place of our own,” Catherine said, brushing out her hair. “It
seems so unreal.”
“Our
place between the worlds...yes,” Vincent agreed, sitting on the bed
to toe off his boots. “Once we find out from Matthew how things
will proceed, I'll post a notice on the board.”
Catherine
nodded. Located on the dividing wall between the kitchen and the main
commons, the bulletin board was usually covered in notices: items
lost and found, people wanting to trade items or chores,
announcements of upcoming foraging trips above, the social minutiae
of this community. “Vincent, I don't want the renovations on our
house to interrupt the work which needs to be done around here.”
She smiled wryly. “Father would never forgive me.”
Vincent
folded his arms, a satisfied expression crossing his face.
“Father...suggested it, as you remember. He would hardly have done
so if he believed it would be disruptive.”
“True
enough,” Catherine agreed. “And you must let me do what I
can---I'm not experienced but I can learn.”
There
was a thread of something
in their bond; she was not as skilled as interpreting its nuances as
Vincent was, but the overriding emotions---love, desire---were clear
enough. “What?”
Vincent
smiled. “I was picturing you with paint on your nose and mastic on
your hands and sawdust in your hair.”
“And?”
“I
think...you would still be so beautiful.”
“Well,
you've seen me shot, half-drowned, drugged and beaten. Being covered
in construction dust would be a definite improvement,” she answered
dryly. “But thank you. You're very sweet.”
He
chuckled. “That's...not something often said about me.”
“Mmmm,
really? So they say you’re cute instead?”
It
was an old joke from their time in Connecticut. “I am not cute,”
he rumbled, though his smile bellied the words.
Catherine
walked over to where he sat and rested her hands on his shoulders and
was not at all surprised to feel his arms pulling her close against
him. “This want of you…” he murmured.
Vincent’s
hair was wild and soft under her hands. “I know.”
He
leaned back a bit, breathing just a little ragged, voice hoarse. “I
should let you rest. Forgive me. It’s late and---”
It
was
late---the pipes nearly silent---but she couldn't bear his retreat.
Catherine stopped him in the simplest way: she kissed him. “Oh,
love. Trust what you feel, how I feel when I’m with you. And trust
one more thing.”
His
eyes were dark, the color of the midnight sky. “What?”
That
rasp to his voice. That
tone. There.
She loved it. “If I’m too tired, I’ll tell you.” She kissed
him again. “And…um…I’m not tired.”
With
a swift movement, so fast she hardly had time to blink, he pulled her
into his lap. “We can do something about that, you know.”
There
was such joy in this, in his pleasure in the giving and the receiving
of their love, the delight he no longer feared to reach out for.
“Promise?” she murmured, tracing the lines of his ears.
“Always,”
he breathed against her neck.
***
“Joe,
you got a minute?” Catherine asked the next morning. It was long
before even the earliest workers would be at their desks but she knew
Joe would be there.
He
nodded. “Yeah, Radcliffe. And a happy Monday to you.” He raised
the pot of coffee---the office brew, which she was halfway convinced
was used as roofing tar---and she shook her head. He eyed the pot,
then set it back down. “Doc says I’m supposed to cut back on my
caffeine anyway. Much more of this and my heart may never recover.
What gives?”
She
told him of her encounter with Elliot Burch over the weekend. When
she’d finished, Joe nearly dropped his coffee mug. “That’s…wow.
I wonder what got into him?”
“Unless
I miss my guess, a couple of bottles of bourbon and probably some
whiskey too,” Catherine replied dryly. “I poured him into a cab
and I haven’t heard from him since.”
“He
hasn’t called you to apologize?”
“Well,
he might have,” Catherine replied, considering, “but my husband
and I were busy all weekend. I didn’t check the answering machine.”
She gazed at him, serious and intent. “Joe, are you sure I should
still be on this case? I don’t want my…relationship with Elliot
Burch to be a distraction.”
“Because
he can’t hold his liquor? Cathy, Burch is carrying a torch for you.
So what?” He sat his mug down on the edge of a desk already covered
in files, notebooks, and motions. “Do you want off the case?”
“No,”
she replied immediately. “But you know how Graham Sparks likes to
play games in court. It’s going to come up. Somehow, he’ll find a
way to get my alleged ‘undue influence’ admitted.”
“So
have Rita handle Burch’s cross-exam. Hard for it to come up if
you’re not the one cross-examining him. Besides,” Joe continued
as he tossed his ball of rubber bands back and forth, “Burch’s
behavior only reflects badly on Burch. He’s the one who got sloshed
and showed up at your apartment. It makes him look like a fool, not
you.”
She
nodded. “And you worry too much about what people think,” Joe
went on gently. Her head jerked up at that. “Look, Cathy, I’ll
admit---I didn’t think much of you when Moreno hired you. I thought
you were some rich uptown girl, come down here to slum with us, then
head off to lunch when things got too tough.”
Catherine
chuckled, a bit ruefully. Prior to Vincent, prior to her assault, the
description wouldn’t have been too far off. What
was I really doing then?
“I know,” she said. “Edie told me.”
“I
was wrong,” Joe said simply. “And I should have been fairer to
you, not sent you out on all those investigations. I asked more of
you than I would of almost anyone else. I knew you wanted to prove
yourself, and…I took advantage. Sometimes, I think you still
believe you have a lot to prove and you just…don’t. So what if
Avery’s attorney tries to get your prior relationship admitted
somehow, or tries to use it against you? It doesn’t matter. Avery’s
still guilty as sin. And Elliot Burch is far from the only witness.
He’s an important witness, yes, but this case isn’t going to rise
or fall on the strength of his testimony.”
It
was quite possibly the longest discussion she’d had with Joe in
months, since he’d returned from his own suspension to find himself
appointed the acting DA. How much their lives had changed in just the
space of a year. “Thank you, Joe. I needed reminding.”
He
smiled. “We all do, now and then. What time are you meeting with
Internal Affairs?”
“Nine
a.m.,” Catherine replied.
“That’s
still a ways off,” Joe said. “Let me buy you a bagel and some
real coffee downstairs.”
“Deal,”
Catherine agreed.
***
Vincent
looked up from the pipe he was patching and made a mental note to
talk to Matthew; the pipe and a few others in this cluster wouldn’t
survive another winter. He fought a yawn; Catherine had made it to
work early, but he had fallen asleep after she left and nearly
overslept for his shift on the maintenance crew. “You look tired
there, Vincent,” Cullen said, annoyingly chirpy considering the
hour. “Some people actually use the nights for sleeping, you know.”
“How’s
your hangover?” Vincent asked pointedly.
“Mostly
gone now but man, you should have heard Valerie. Between her and
Father… I didn’t think she was ever going to stop.”
When
will you
stop? Vincent thought,
irritable, then immediately chastised himself. Cullen’s banter was
as much a part of pipe maintenance as Mouse’s perpetual search for
a gizmo; his friend meant no harm. He looked up, startled, when
Cullen clapped him on the shoulder. “I think this pipe will hold
for now. Let’s go get some coffee, eh? Looks like you could use
it.”
“That
sounds…very good,” he acknowledged.
“I
bet,” Cullen said. “It must be…difficult when you can’t
sleep.”
Vincent
darted a look at him, saw the other man’s wry, friendly smile, and
relaxed. “No. Not when the…alternative is worth it.”
“Yeah,”
Cullen said. “Hold up a sec, Vincent.”
Vincent
stopped, leaning up against the corridor wall. “What is it,
Cullen?”
“I’m
no good with this sentimental stuff, but I wanted to say I’m really
happy you and Catherine finally got together. When I came here, you
were so…alone all the time. Bet you thought you always would be,
right?”
“Yes,”
Vincent replied. “I had…good reason to think so.”
“I
know,” Cullen said. “After Betty…” he shrugged. “I wouldn’t
have thought I’d ever find someone else who would take me as I am,
good and bad. Then you and Catherine…it’s good to see.”
Vincent
remembered Winslow’s words from so long before: “What's
between you two is something I've never known for myself, but seeing
it, I know it's real.”
[59] How amazing it continued to be that their love---which he’d
long thought impossible for himself---was something others believed
in as well. “Thank you, Cullen.”
***
Catherine
entered the small conference room. Two men sat there, files and
notepads in neat piles between them, and with an uneasy shiver she
noticed one of them was the same investigator who’d sat in on her
interrogation after Moreno’s arrest the previous year. “Ms.
Chandler?” He glanced at her wedding band. “Or is it Mrs. now?”
Vincent
had no last name; he’d never needed one. “Ms. is fine, thank you.
It’s been a while, Mr. Marsh.”
The
chill in his eyes didn’t as much as thaw. “So it has. You’ve
flown high, prosecuting Max Avery.”
Catherine
seated herself at the conference table and folded her hands, forcing
a calm she didn’t entirely feel. She’d once spent anxious days in
this little room with her lawyer trying to convince Marsh and a team
of FBI agents that she hadn’t known Moreno was on the take, hadn’t
realized he was purposely burying cases. Marsh, she knew, had doubted
her innocence then and from the looks of things, doubted it now.
“Someone had to, Mr. Marsh.”
“Forgive
my…colleague,” the other investigator said with an uncomfortable
glance at the other man. “When the good Lord handed out manners,
I’m afraid he was absent that day. Geoff, for the love of God, sit
down already and rein it in some, will you? Ms. Chandler’s the
victim here.” He held out his hand. “I’m Samuel Hernandez.”
She
shook his hand, on her guard. Absently she wondered just how old the
game of “good cop/bad cop” really was. “Pleased to meet you,
gentlemen. Why did you schedule this meeting?”
“Geoff
and I were going over the accident report from the incident in New
Jersey and we just have a few questions.” He pulled out a manila
folder and removed a sheet with six anonymous faces on it---a photo
line-up. “Do you recognize any of these men?”
Catherine
stared at it. Her attention was drawn to one photo; pale, with
longish blond hair and faded blue eyes. She couldn’t remember his
name but he’d always been polite and helpful on the rare occasions
when she’d needed to sign out a pool car. She tapped his picture
with her fingernail. “This man…I think he works in the city
garage.”
Hernandez
nodded, making a note on a legal pad. “He’s the clerk responsible
for the pool cars, yes, and he checked your car out to you when you
went to interview your witness. His girlfriend reported him missing a
week ago.”
“Oh,”
Catherine replied. “I’m sorry to hear that. Was he…mixed up
with Avery somehow?”
The
two men exchanged looks. “The police are still investigating that
aspect of it. He had gambling debts and large child support
obligations,” Hernandez said.
Someone
who could have been bribed or coerced to tell Avery’s men where we
were, Catherine
translated. “I see. Was there anything else?”
“Were
you at all aware you were being followed?” Geoff Marsh asked.
“Not
until just before the accident, no,” Catherine said. “At first I
thought it was just a careless driver, driving too close for the
conditions, but…” She shrugged. “This is all in the report Rita
and I gave to the police in New Jersey. I’m sure it’s not news to
you gentlemen.”
“No,”
Hernandez agreed. “Was there anyone besides the garage clerk who
knew exactly where you were going?”
Catherine
thought. “Our boss, Joe Maxwell. But the information about Herman
Mueller is inside the case file, which is accessible to any number of
attorneys and staff, and Rita and I both had to arrange for coverage
of our hearings. It wasn’t a secret what we were doing.”
“Sounds
like you all did everything but announce it on a billboard,” Marsh
said, rolling his eyes.
Before
Catherine could make an angry retort, Hernandez put a restraining
hand on his colleague’s arm. “Stop it, Geoff. There was no reason
for them to keep this interview a secret. Listening to you, you’d
think they’d asked for what happened to them.” He shuffled some
papers, stuffed the line-up back in its folder. “I think that’s
all for now, Ms. Chandler. I’ll contact you if I have any further
questions.”
***
Vincent
made it to the threshold ladder just as Catherine was climbing down
it. She stopped on the fifth step and turned to launch herself into
his arms. “Oh, I missed you.”
The
warmth of her… the feel of her against him…. He
buried his face in the softness of her hair. “I
missed you too. Did everything go all right with your interview?”
“I'm
not suspended if that's what you're asking,” she replied, smiling.
“The interview wasn't particularly fun...but I think I answered at
least a few of their questions. Am I late for our meeting with
Matthew and Annie?”
“No.
If we start walking now, we should even be a little early.”
“Well,
then,” Catherine replied, “let’s go see our home.”
Click here for Chapter 48...
_____
[58]
“A Song of Despair,” by Pablo Neruda
[59]
“To Reign in Hell,” first season episode
6 comments:
"This want of you…" he murmured. Vincent’s hair was wild and soft under her hands. "I know." He leaned back a bit, breathing just a little ragged, voice hoarse. "I should let you rest. Forgive me. It’s late and---" . . . . That rasp to his voice. That tone. There. She loved it.
Ooooooooh, Krista! I just LOOOOOOOOOOOVE this!
MOOOOOOOOOORE! (I know. Not a very profound review, but YOWZA, I really like this!)
Best regards, Lindariel
LOL, Lindariel! I think that's a fine review---who needs profound when you've expressed yourself so clearly? ;)
Those two...they're just so...well, you know :)
Thanks for stopping by :)
I love that particular poem of Neruda's! I don't know how you do it, but I'm always surprised when the chapter ends because I'm so completely there. I agree with Lindariel - YOWZA! :)
Hi R1!
That's one of my favorite poems of Neruda's too. (Imagine that :D)
Thank you so much for the compliment--that's one of the nicest things you could say to a writer. Thank you for reading and continuing to comment. :)
I third that YOWZA!!! No one writes their love like you do Krista :-)
Hugs
Awwww, Linn, you all are making me teary here. :) Thank you...let's just say I have great material to work with :)
Thank you again! :)
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