Chapter
52: All the World to Me [64]
Joe
squeezed himself into a narrow restaurant booth. The diner was
crowded and loud at the height of the lunch hour, and he relaxed
somewhat. “So what can you tell me?”
Greg
Hughs looked up as he sat down. “Not a whole lot. We’ve got a
tracer unit on her phone; she’s had five phone calls in the week
since she…disappeared…all of them disconnecting before we could
get a trace. No messages. I drove by Rita's house and it's definitely being watched. I also checked that brownstone Cathy bought
and so far, it's not being watched, though I think that's because it's
obviously uninhabited.” He looked up as the waitress delivered
their menus, then waited until she walked away. “You have any idea
where Cathy is?”
Joe
eyed the other man carefully. They’d known each other for years,
had worked together since his first cases at the DA’s office, and
he knew Greg was as honest as the day was long. But
then, I knew that about John Moreno too,
he thought sourly. “No. She wouldn’t tell me where she was going
and…well, you know Cathy.”
Greg
laughed. “Yeah, I do. Hey, I meant to ask...where'd you get her
keys?”
“Cathy
gave them to me for emergencies after that nutcase damn near killed
her out in the woods. Said it would save her the cost of a few
doors.” Joe fiddled with his straw. “And are you sure you don’t
mind…?”
The
other man shrugged. “Cathy’s good people. And I don’t much like
the good guys being threatened. I was able to pull a few strings to
get the tracing equipment---much more than that, though, and there’s
gonna be questions I might not be able to answer.”
Joe
nodded. “Just keep it as quiet as you can for as long as you can.
The Rotolos got to a sitting DA; no telling who else they might have
gotten to.”
“Yeah,
I hear you. And I’ll keep my ears open too.”
***
Catherine
looked up as Vincent entered the study. “Are you ready?”
She
smiled. “For an afternoon spent canning? It has to be more
interesting than reading these transcripts.”
Vincent
chuckled. “Don’t count on it. It’s a lot of work
but…necessary.”
She
closed the notebook containing almost all her notes on the Avery case
and stood up. “Well, then, let’s get to it.”
“You
might want to tie your hair back,” Vincent suggested. Only then did
she notice that his was pulled back into a long thick ponytail,
bright copper against the worn leather of his vest. The strong column
of his neck, the strangely delicate earlobes, were revealed by the
change in hairstyle. “It gets very hot in the kitchen when we're
all working,” he went on and she smiled inwardly. Not
to mention when you wear your hair like that.
Pulling
her attention back to the matter at hand by force of will, Catherine
remembered their housekeeper, Helen, canning jams and preserves.
Helen had never let her do much more than watch the process, but it
had always been warm when she canned. “Right,” she agreed and
pulled her hair into a ponytail.
The
corridors seemed strangely empty as they walked, though the usual
ricochet of messages continued to clank on the pipes. “Where is
everyone?”
“In
the kitchen, or in the stockroom for the most part, or helping
William with the cooking,” Vincent answered. “We all take turns
helping---even if it's nothing more complicated than keeping an
inventory of what's going into the stockroom or putting the jars on
the shelves, there's always a job for someone.”
She
rolled up the sleeves of her flannel shirt---an older, smaller one of
Vincent's, worn, but comfortable. “Well, then, lead on.”
***
Marisol
greeted them at the entrance to the commons. “Glad you're here,
Vincent,” she said after a quick hug for Catherine. “William and
Father will be having their…discussion again, I’m sure.”
Vincent
folded his arms, a look of arch amusement crossing his face. “The
lists, again?”
“The
lists,” Marisol confirmed. “Frankly, Father needs someone at
least as stubborn as he is to deal with him...at least before William
blows a gasket.”
“The
lists?” Catherine asked, looking from one to the other.
“Father
wants the inventory lists organized alphabetically; William wants
them organized by food type, since that's how they are in the
stockrooms,” Marisol explained, and smiled. “Father has his own
ideas, of course.”
“And
every year, there is this eternal debate,” Vincent said. “It's
become...sort of a running joke. Last year, we had Pascal call Father
out on some 'strange noise' on the pipes, and by the time he
returned....”
“The
lists were organized as William wanted?” Catherine guessed.
Marisol
nodded. “Si.
But I doubt that'll work this year.”
“Yeah,
I don't see Father falling for the same thing twice,” Catherine
agreed. She glanced at the two of them, a pair of unlikely
conspirators. “So what's the plan? If you have to distract Father,
who's going to do it?”
Marisol
sighed and looked at Vincent. Vincent briefly raised his eyes
heavenward. “Oh, I see,” Catherine said, grinning.
Vincent
took her hand. “The game's afoot, it would seem.”
***
Joe
glanced at the note on his desk. It had arrived earlier in the week,
a short note written on heavy bond paper, like his grandmother used
to use. Joe—I'm safe.
Radcliffe. Which was
fine, in that he hadn't expected her to write a long letter from
where she was, wherever she was, and he was glad to know she was all
right. But the niggling questions just wouldn't be stopped---how had
the letter arrived? He'd stepped out to buy a soda from the kiosk
downstairs just as the sandwich guy was showing up,
and when he'd
returned, there was both a sandwich he hadn't ordered on his desk and
this note, folded into neat thirds right under it. The
sandwich guy? Naaahhh...it couldn't be. Could it? What's his
connection to Cathy?
He
leaned back in his chair, thinking. There were---there always had
been---many things about Cathy's life which just didn't add up,
starting with her ten-day disappearance in the aftermath of her
assault. He'd read the initial police reports as part of her
background check and found them...perplexing, putting it mildly. But
Moreno had wanted her hired---best
thing that SOB ever did---and
Joe had shoved his doubts into a far corner. Later, she'd become his
friend and there had been no good way to ask Cathy---upright, honest,
fierce---if she'd lied to the police. So he hadn't.
She
also had a surprising knack for turning up witnesses, something he'd
hardly have expected from a pampered former corporate lawyer.
Witnesses who had every reason in the world not to trust the police
or attorneys, trusted her.
And there were other mysteries too---times she'd disappeared for days
on end, only to reappear with just the right witness, just the
evidence they'd needed. It was nothing short of remarkable. She
was nothing short of remarkable.
There
were other questions too---who had rescued her from that sinking car
in the lake? Someone surely had, and if Cathy didn't know...The
rubber band he'd been playing with snapped in his hand, stinging. She
knew. She knew and was protecting whoever it was. Why? Cathy's
keys---two for the deadbolts, one for the lock---rested inside his
pocket, but at the moment, they felt heavy far beyond their actual
weight.
Joe
knew he could go to her apartment and dig through her things, and try
to find an answer to all the mysteries, all the careful stories when
he'd sensed he hadn't been told the full truth. But he wouldn't.
Cathy trusted him. He opened a desk drawer and placed the keys and
the note inside it and resolutely ignored them both. There was work
to be done.
***
The
canning room was located in a wide, long space right off the main
kitchen. Large cauldrons rested in the center of the floor; steam
coiled from the bubbling water and rose through the natural
ventilation shafts in the high arched ceiling. Catherine could just
barely hear the clink of glass---canning jars, she thought---as they
bumped against each other in the hot water. Boxes of canning jars
were stacked on one table and Catherine watched as Valerie and Lena
opened the boxes and set the jars into a neat row, unscrewing the
caps and setting them aside. “So where do I start?”
“Best
start with the jars,” Marisol said with a wink. “Without them, we
won’t have anything to can with.”
Catherine
nodded and Marisol guided her over to the table. “Ah, Marisol found
a new victim, I mean, volunteer, did she?” Valerie teased.
“Guilty,”
Catherine said, chuckling. “What are you doing?”
“Getting
the jars ready to be sterilized,” Lena said as she made room for
Marisol on the long bench.
Catherine
studied the jars, which seemed far newer than almost anything else in
the tunnels. “Aren't they already clean?”
“Yeah,”
Valerie said. “Out of the box, they sure are, but they need to be
sterilized before any food goes into them.”
“Got
it,” Catherine replied. “Any particular way I should line them
up?”
Valerie
shook her head. “No. Whatever works is fine. The jars on that
table”---and she pointed to a long table just outside the entrance
to the kitchen--- “have already been sterilized; these are waiting
to go in.”
About
midway through her second box, a booming voice echoed from the
kitchen. “Hot stew ready!” The assembled crowd picked up the
cleaned jars and went into the kitchen.
“You’ll
be hearing that a lot today,” Marisol said dryly. “From what I
hear, he’s got jams, a couple of preserves and some vegetable stew
ready to can.”
Valerie
cut open a fourth box of jars with quick, deft motions. “It’ll be
nice to have the stew later on, though.”
“How
long does canned food last?” Catherine asked, unscrewing the tops.
“If
you do it right, a hundred years,” Marisol said. “But nothing
here lasts that long, not with all of us.”
***
The
afternoon wore onto early evening and slowly, the once-empty tables
began to fill with jars labeled and ready for the stockroom. The
canning crews had rotated a few times in the last hours: Lena had
left and been replaced by Warren, who was helping Vincent maneuver
the large cauldrons back into the kitchen. Livvy had replaced Kanin
at filling the jars and Jamie, Rhys and Jeremy, freshly released from
their sentry duties, were now loading the canned jars onto carts
destined for the storage rooms.
Catherine
stood and arched her back and saw Vincent emerge from the kitchen
only to be involved in an earnest discussion with Father. Marisol
followed Catherine’s glance. “Oh, here we go.”
“The
inventory lists?” Catherine asked as she sat back down.
“What
else?” Marisol replied as she attached a label to the latest group
of canned jars---winter squash, Catherine noticed, thinking of
Gertrude’s gardens. “It’ll be interesting to see who wins this
one,” Marisol went on. “Vincent and Father are more than a match
in terms of stubbornness.”
“You
don’t say?” Catherine said dryly and Marisol laughed. “I forget
you know them so well.”
“Well
enough to know that ‘stubborn’ hardly covers it,” Catherine
said, grinning, and began to fill out her own set of labels. She
looked around. “Where’s Mouse?”
“Banned
from canning,” Valerie answered. “Or rather, Arthur is, but since
Arthur goes where Mouse goes…”
“Do
I even want to know the story behind that one?” Catherine asked.
“A
few years back, we’d gotten a surplus of fruit from one of our
helpers who owned a farm upstate,” Valerie began. “Fruit was
sometimes difficult to come by, especially in winter, so William
decided we needed to can the lot of it. He’d just cooked it down
into a jelly---”
“Strawberry
jelly,” Marisol put in. “It made the kitchen smell so good.”
“It
did,” Valerie agreed. “And when William’s back was turned,
Arthur snuck into the jam.”
“Caught
red-pawed, as it were,” Marisol said, chuckling. “William was
furious.”
Catherine
laughed, picturing the scene. The sound of a raised voice distracted
her—Father? All around her, heads turned to see Father nearly
nose-to-nose with a flustered, surprised William. “The stockrooms
don’t belong to you, William,” Father was saying, too loudly, not
a trace of amusement in his tone. I
thought this was a running joke, Catherine
thought. Only then did she realize how utterly still the room had
become----the others were as startled as she was. “You’re not the
only one who has to find things in there.”
“But
I’m the one who does the cooking---” William began.
“That
doesn’t make you more important,” Father shot back with
unexpected savagery.
Vincent
stepped between them. “William. Father.
This quarrel…stop it.”
“It’s
not your concern,” Father retorted and a shocked hush fell over the
room.
Even
seated on the far side of the room, Catherine could hear the ominous
rumble under Vincent’s words, feel his confusion and concern, the
anger he controlled so fiercely. “If you’re going to act like a
thwarted child,” Vincent said with a deceptive calm, “it is. If
you two are going to…discuss…this matter, perhaps you might do so
in private?”
William
glanced between the two of them uneasily. “Come on, we've argued
about this for years, it's not a serious thing, nothing worth really
fighting over. If Father wants the inventory lists alphabetical,
then…”
Father
nodded in satisfaction and left, seemingly oblivious to the rush of
murmuring. Catherine bit her lip, worried. This was not the man who’d
offered such wise counsel not a week before, nor the leader who’d
guided the tunnels through nearly forty years of adversity and
danger. What’s really
going on? she wondered
and saw the same worries on Marisol’s face, on Valerie’s as they
bent once again to their tasks. Something
is very, very wrong.
A
shadow fell over the table---Vincent, tense and concerned. Catherine
capped her pen. “Is it okay if I take a break?”
“Go
on,” Valerie said with a forced smile, casting a nervous glance
where Father had once stood. “You’ve been here for hours. I think
it’s time we all took a break.”
***
“What
was that all about?” Catherine asked once they were back in their
chamber, the solid wooden doors shut behind them.
Vincent
sank down onto the couch in the antechamber, his head in his hands, a
thousand thoughts tumbling over each other in his mind. “I’m…not
sure,” he said slowly. “It’s so unlike Father to act this way.
A disagreement is one thing, but this…tantrum.
It’s not like him, not at all.”
“Is
he…feeling all right?” she asked.
“I
don’t know. Father doesn't discuss such things,” Vincent replied.
His
hands clenched, the sharp nails biting deep into his skin. Catherine
touched his hand. “Don’t, love.”
Vincent
looked at her then, saw the understanding, her love. “No,” he
said and forced his hands to unclench. “I don't know what to say,
what to do. It's...uncharacteristic.”
“It
is,” Catherine agreed. She looked down at their joined hands then
back at him. “You’re going to have to talk to him, aren’t you?
Everyone has their bad days, but if it’s more than that…you’ll
know and can proceed from there.”
A
dark rebellion rose---Why
is it always my job?---and
was quickly subdued between one breath and the next. There was,
simply, no one else who could talk to Father and expect to get an
answer. Peter was Father's oldest friend, but he was also a doctor
and knowing Father's utter unwillingness to discuss his own health,
Vincent didn't want to involve him unless there was some good reason.
“You’re right,” Vincent said. “But I want to talk to the
others first. It's possible there have been other...incidents I
wasn't aware of.”
“How
could that be?” Catherine asked, genuinely perplexed.
“I
no longer...see him as much as I did.”
Catherine
shook her head. “No, love. I won't believe that you---you of all
people---would have ignored trouble with Father merely because you'd
gotten married. That's not you.”
Vincent
looked away for a time, guilt and fear roiling in his gut. If
something was seriously wrong…
“Perhaps.”
“There's
no 'perhaps' about it, love,” Catherine replied firmly. “You have
been busy—legitimately so---but if you'd sensed anything wrong,
you'd have done your best to help. Whatever's going on, it's
subtle...and not something you should blame yourself for missing.”
She loosened the tie which had kept his hair tied back. “When will
you talk to the others?”
The
feeling of her hands in his hair was soothing and Vincent began to
relax. “Soon, but not right now. You know how fast the rumor mill
works here, Catherine. Doubtless there’s already a story of how
Father and William challenged each other to a swordfight, or
something equally outrageous. If I start asking questions…”
“You
don’t want Father undermined,” Catherine said quietly.
“Yes,”
Vincent said. “He still leads us. I don’t want anyone questioning
his fitness to do so, or believing that I do, unless...”
Catherine
wasn’t one for false reassurances and Vincent was grateful.
“Whatever happens, whatever comes,” she said instead, “know
that I love you.”
He
looked up at her. “Quoting my words?”
“They’re
good words,” she insisted, smiling. “Come on, love. Let’s get
back to the canning.”
Click here for Chapter 53...
Click here for Chapter 53...
__________
[64]
Dar Williams, “I Have Been Around the World”
2 comments:
Ah, some very interesting and worrying developments with Father. I sure hope this isn't a serious health problem, but perhaps an unconscious reaction to the change in Vincent's life status. Father has lost control over Vincent's life in crucial ways, and while he is clearly pleased for his son's happiness, I can see the possibility that his frustrations with losing control could work themselves out in other ways.
And Joe with Cathy's keys in his pocket. Hmmm . . . good to know he's a trustworthy friend!
More!
Regards, Lindariel
Hi Lindariel!
Um, well...it could be both. Or neither. *insert crazed author's laugh [here]* ;)
One of the many things I wish we'd seen more of onscreen is the Joe-Cathy friendship. Joe really is a decent guy, and whatever his initial reservations about her, he accepted her quickly enough once she proved herself. I'd like to think that Cathy would trust him enough with her spare set of keys, knowing full well he'd never trespass unless it was a true emergency. :)
Thank you again so much for your comments! :)
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