Part 11 (1/2)
”Yeah. I think if we're all going to make this trip together, you kind of have to.”
”That's what I thought.”
More silence.
”So much for no one having a say in what you do,” Kristi said.
Maddy laughed, maybe for the first time that day. Or that month. She lay awake listening as Kristi's breathing deepened. She felt far from sleep now, the body next to her so foreign. The more she thought about Kristi lying next to her, the more wide-awake she felt. She rolled quietly out of the bed and headed upstairs for some water, the cement of the bas.e.m.e.nt floor cold on her feet. The house was dark, but as she stood in the kitchen with a gla.s.s in her hand she heard noises down the hallway to the bedrooms. She put the gla.s.s down and crept toward it. There were three bedrooms, with the doors to the two smaller ones open. The third was at the end of the hall, where a hint of light showed at the bottom of its closed door. As Maddy got closer she heard David's voice.
”Yes, yes. Like that. Good boy, like that.”
Then there were some unintelligible words and other noises. Maddy wasn't naive. She'd watched p.o.r.n on the Internet like everyone else. Tom and David were having s.e.x, obviously. But if Tommy and David were getting it on, what was the deal with Diane the girlfriend? She turned around and tiptoed back to the kitchen before taking another long drink of water. She wondered what else was going on that she didn't know about.
Jan threw her overnight bag into the backseat of her Jeep and climbed in. She put her laptop bag on the seat next to her. She'd been tempted to leave it behind, afraid she'd find herself obsessively searching the Internet for more bad news about Catherine. After throwing up over the first bit of information about Catherine's long-term and apparently well-known relations.h.i.+p with a London artist, Jan had sat back down to torture herself with more news items and photographs of them together. By the time it had grown dark in her apartment, she'd finally had enough. She called Peet.
”I'm headed up to Michigan.”
”I know. I'm going with you, remember?”
Jan could hear Lily in the background. It sounded like Peet was in the car.
”I'm going now. You'll have to meet me up there.”
Peet sighed. ”What's going on, Jan? Did something new come up?”
”I just can't wait any longer. This will give me a head start in the morning. Did you talk to the Harringtons?”
”They're fine with it. Now that they know she's run away and has some money, they're not as anxious. If you can call what they were anxious. At least they still want us to find her.”
”That's big of them,” Jan said. She pulled onto Lake Sh.o.r.e Drive and headed toward the Skyway.
”Where are you headed?”
”There's an area south of Detroit that seems to have a number of groups that have these weekend things.”
”Well, I can't break away now. I'll have to catch up to you. Check in with me in the morning, okay?”
”Right.” Jan threw her phone on the seat. It immediately rang. Jan saw Catherine's name on the screen and when she grabbed it, it felt like a hot coal in her hand. She was speeding down the Drive, just as it sharply curved before Monroe Harbor. Her eyes flicked from phone to road and back again until finally the call went to voice mail. It was the second call from Catherine in the last hour. She'd not allowed herself to listen to the first message, but now she played both.
”Jan, it's Catherine. I'm so mortified that the secretary found us like that. My G.o.d, the word will be all through the office by the time I get in on Monday morning. Well, nothing to be done about it. I'm not saying I'd do anything differently. The fact is that you've been on my mind almost constantly since we were together. I'm sorry if that sounds like too much, but I want to be honest with you. Can we see each other tonight? Call me as soon as you can.”
And the second message: ”It's Catherine again. Sorry if I seem like a pest. I'm just wondering if you got my message earlier. Would love to see you if I can. Maybe you're busy. I suppose you have a whole life I still know nothing about. I'm being presumptuous. Can't help wanting to see you, though. Call me if you can.”
Jan threw the phone back down. She didn't toss it onto the seat, but threw it into the well of the pa.s.senger side, out of reach. She tried to guess what Catherine imagined Jan's life was so busy with that she couldn't call her back. Parties, theater dates, poetry readings, cooking dinner for friends? Those were the kinds of things that probably kept Catherine and her artsy girlfriend busy on the weekends, while Jan patrolled her apartment looking for things to clean. Was Catherine planning on telling Jan about her relations.h.i.+p? Probably not. Jan was a proverbial port in the storm, to be forgotten as soon as Catherine went back to England and her high profile life.
There was more on the Internet about Catherine than just her relations.h.i.+p with the painter. There was the news that Catherine had been an officer at MI6, the British security agency. She'd left the agency four years earlier, a fact revealed in an Evening Standard piece on ”The Painter and the Spy.” The gay and lesbian websites had a lot of fun with that, though Jan didn't imagine it went down well in MI6 headquarters. She wondered why Catherine left. Surely not to join Chartered Global Security. It was a step down, as far as Jan could tell.
Halfway to Detroit, the phone rang again, still out of reach. She pulled into the emergency lane and scooped up the phone. It was Catherine again, and Jan waited for her voice mail.
”Now you'll think I'm a clingy, needy thing who can't stop ringing you. You'll have the constables called on me. But I'm not needy or clingy as a general rule; you can feel safe about that. I am, I'm afraid, rather desperate to talk to you, though, and I'm not quite sure what that's about. I just have a bad feeling. I feel deep down that you would call if there weren't something wrong. Would you put me out of my misery please and give me a ring?”
Jan felt her resolve weakening. She pulled back on to the interstate and tried to empty her mind of everything except Maddy Harrington. She'd find her or find something out about her from someone. She'd follow the lead, which would then take her to another lead, and so on until she found Maddy. She understood how to do that and felt confident. What she didn't know how to do was let Catherine know she'd found out about her girlfriend. She wouldn't admit to Catherine that she'd managed to break her heart after one night together. She threw the phone under the seat.
Chapter Six.
Jan checked out of the Super 8 Motel and headed south out of Ypsilanti. She'd plotted a course that would take her through several counties of southeastern Michigan, each of which contained at least a few of the advertised gathering spots for the known militia and survivalist groups. She knew from scouring Maddy's Internet activity that she'd concentrated on the websites of two or three groups in particular, and it would take most of the day to cover the ground necessary to reach their locations.
She felt relieved to be on the road. The long night in the motel had amped up her already agitated state. She spent all her waking time on the Internet, rereading the articles on Catherine as if compiling more evidence of her callousness would make her feel better. She didn't miss the irony of thinking Catherine was callous, a label she'd been pasted with herself by more than one bed partner. And wasn't that what she was to Catherine, a bed partner? Well, so what? That would have been the att.i.tude she'd normally have herself. But there had been too much fire the couple of times she'd been with Catherine to compare it to any past experience, and the idea of not having more of it was causing too much pain. She stood a far better chance of finding Maddy than of finding a solution to her Catherine problem.
After an hour on Highway 23, she veered east and pulled into a gas station in a tiny town along a county road. She picked up some bottled water and paid for her gas in the store. The clerk was a spotty teenager with a cigarette hanging out of his mouth and his camouflage cap pulled low.
”Quiet around here,” Jan said.
He squinted at her through the smoke. ”Tell me about it.”
”I'm trying to find an outfit called the Third Regimental Militia. I think they train around here. You know anything about them?”
”Nope.” He handed over her change and turned away to continue stocking condoms on a rack.
”Does that mean you've never heard of them?”
He glanced back at her. ”I've heard of them. I just don't know anything about them. Ain't my business.”
”You never thought of joining up?” Jan asked.
”h.e.l.l, no. Bunch of losers. They're all like my dad's age. It's pathetic.”
”So you don't agree with their philosophy?”
”I don't know s.h.i.+t about their philosophy. I just know I won't be caught dead running around the woods playing army. They come in here sometimes after they've been out training. It's so sad.”
Jan pa.s.sed a photo of Maddy across the counter. ”You ever see this girl around here?”
The boy studied the photo. ”You mean with these Third Regiment guys? You're joking? She's like my age. And a girl.”
”That's a no?”
He stubbed out his cigarette and laughed. ”It's a no. If you're thinking these guys are some sort of evil gang kidnapping girls and s.h.i.+t, you're way wrong.”
”Why do you say that?”
”You know how you can tell people are bada.s.ses? These guys aren't that. I think they just like to play with guns.”
Jan left him with a card and the photo and got a promise that he'd call if Maddy showed up. She headed back on the county road and followed it through a densely wooded stretch before braking sharply to pull into a small gravel parking lot that served as a trailhead. The lot was full of pickup trucks, and at one end of it a card table was set up with a sign that said ”Third RegimentSign In.” A middle-aged man sat at the table wearing cammies, and he appeared to be the only person around. He watched as Jan parked and walked toward him, his hand reaching for a walkie-talkie sitting on the table.