Part 7 (2/2)
”I asked you this once before, Gloria. Now tell me again. Did you kill Rory?”
”Of course not.”
No hesitation, no heated objection to my asking. An unequivocal denial. I release a breath. ”Why drag David into it?”
This time there is a pause. ”I told you. I called him because I knew he'd be on my side. Then, when the story broke, if David and I were together, no one would believe Rory and I had-”
”Had what? Been f.u.c.king around?”
My first impulse, to tell her what a b.i.t.c.h I think she is, is interrupted by a second possibility. Another flash of inspiration like the one yesterday that had Gloria promising not to talk trash about me to David. This one is even better. I can use Gloria's desperation to my advantage. I can get rid of her once and for all.
”Okay, Gloria. I'll come by the jail and see you this morning. If you want my help, there will be conditions.”
”What are they?” The tone is muted, resigned, as if she already knows or suspects what I'm about to say.
”First, you cut David loose. For good. He deserves better.”
”I know.”
”I mean it. No calling him. No sneak visits. If he calls you, you hang up. You don't answer his messages. You don't send him a birthday card. He is out of your life.”
”Okay.” Tiny voice.
”Second, I expect to be paid for my services.” I do some quick, mental arithmetic. How much could I soak her for? May as well make the aggravation worth my while. ”Two hundred an hour, plus expenses. Starting now.”
”Agreed.” So quickly? s.h.i.+t. I should have asked for more. I shrug it off and continue, ”Anybody as rich as O'Sullivan will have made enemies along the way. What can you tell me about him?”
”Nothing.”
”What do you mean nothing? You invested a good chunk of change in that restaurant. You must have checked him out beforehand.
Or at least had your lawyer check him out.”
There's a few seconds of profound silence before that tiny voice comes back. ”My lawyer only researched what was pertinent to our deal. I was interested in opening a restaurant, and Rory was there with the funding and the know-how to make it happen.” A bit of a whine creeps into her tone when she adds, ”I told you this before.”
”What about when you two were together? What did you talk about?”
”Nothing, really. We'd discuss the restaurant. Furniture. Staff. Business stuff.”
”I mean when you were f.u.c.king, Gloria. He ever let anything slip? Ever mention trouble with other business partners or at home?”
The whine morphs into irritation. ”We didn't talk all that much.”
This is getting us nowhere. I glance at my watch. It's almost eight. ”I can be at the jail at ten. When do you see your lawyer?”
”In about fifteen minutes. He's going to try to set a bail hearing after the arraignment. I'll either be back here or at home by ten. I'll let you know.”
We ring off. I place the phone on the kitchen counter and pick up the paper to finish reading the article about O'Sullivan's death. I need the distraction. My gut is screaming that I've made a huge mistake agreeing to help Gloria. At least, whatever the outcome, David will be rid of her once and for all. If I find nothing and Gloria has been lying and she really did kill O'Sullivan, David still comes out ahead. Gloria will be in jail.
I scan the article. O'Sullivan is portrayed as a sterling citizen, reputable businessman and loving husband and father. Gloria, on the other hand, is characterized as a spoiled home wrecker who killed O'Sullivan when he refused to leave his wife. No surprise there.
That description is offered by the grieving widow who knew of her husband's affair-one she had been told was over. According to her, O'Sullivan had come back to the bosom of his family weeks ago only to be hounded by a scheming Gloria who would not leave him alone.
That's too much for me to swallow. I hate Gloria. I also know Gloria. She's too vain and self-centered to go begging after any man. Especially when she had a backup. She might have had a dalliance with O'Sullivan, but chase him? No. Not with David waiting in the wings.
David.
I s.n.a.t.c.h up the phone again and call David's cell. It goes right to voice mail. Then I try the office number and punch in the code to check messages. There's one.
From David.
”Left town. Don't know when I'll be back. Don't try to get in touch.”
Ah, how like David. Short, sweet and completely devoid of any useful information.
I don't give up that easily. I know he has a cabin in the Cuyamaca Mountains. I also know the caretaker's telephone number.
The guy answers on the first ring. I tell him I'm David's mother and there is a family emergency. David has turned off his cell and would he be so kind as to walk over to the cabin so I could talk with him?
I've never met the person behind the gravelly voice but I thank him profusely when he agrees. There's about two minutes of silence while I picture the guy walking the hundred yards or so from the caretaker's house to David's cabin. No small talk. I like that.
Then I hear the knock on the door, his explanation of why he disturbed David, and in another few seconds, David is on the line.
”Mom? What's wrong?”
”Uh, sorry, David. It's me.”
Silence.
”I wanted to be sure you were all right. Not like you to disappear.”
”No, that's more your style.”
His tone is clipped, hard. He's more upset than I thought. ”Okay. I deserve that. I admit, I've disappeared off the radar a few times-”
”A few times? I've always respected your privacy. I thought you'd show me the same courtesy.”
His voice is tremulous. With anger? With sadness? I wish I could see his face.
I wait a beat, then say, ”I'm sorry about Gloria.”
The bark that comes across the line holds more disbelief than humor. ”Right. You're sorry about Gloria because she's such a good friend of yours.”
Okay. Now his att.i.tude is beginning to p.i.s.s me off. ”It's hardly my fault that you didn't see before this what a conniving b.i.t.c.h Gloria is.”
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