Part 21 (2/2)

Long Time Gone J. A. Jance 66930K 2022-07-22

”Just over ten years. Elvira finally reached a point where she didn't want to work so hard. Sifting through the grant applications and working on fund-raising got to be too much for her. She was glad to relinquish some of the responsibilities, and I was here to pick up the slack.”

”Did Elvira ever mention her sister-in-law, Mimi, the one who was murdered out here in your driveway in May of 1950?”

The abrupt change of subject was calculated. I wanted to see Raelene's reaction. My use of the word ”driveway” was also deliberate. The official story had always claimed that Madeline Marchbank had died in her bedroom. Given the layout of the building, that room could well have been the one where we were sitting now-Raelene's ultramodern office.

Raelene took a deep breath. ”Madeline,” she corrected. ”Her name was Madeline, not Mimi.”

Not as far as Bonnie Jean Dunleavy was concerned, I thought.

”Her death at such a young age was a tragedy that never went away,” Raelene declared. ”She was several years older than Tom, so my husband knew of her rather than knowing her directly. From what I've been told, Madeline was a kind, thoughtful, hardworking girl. Devoted to her invalid mother. Just an all-around nice person.”

If Raelene knew the truth about Mimi's death, her coolly measured response was nothing short of an Emmy Awardwinning performance. On the other hand, her lack of reaction could have come from her never having been apprised of the real story to begin with.

”If Madeline's death was so hard on everyone, why didn't the Marchbanks ever sell this place?” I asked. ”It seems to me they would have unloaded it at the first opportunity.”

”Because they wouldn't have gotten what it was worth,” Raelene said promptly. ”Once prospective buyers know something bad has happened in a house, property values drop like a rock. Their strategy was to keep this one. They also bought up the house next door. Albert and Elvira remodeled that one and lived there, then they turned this place-the old family home-into company offices for Marchbank Broadcasting. When company growth necessitated a move downtown, the foundation took over this s.p.a.ce.”

”Thus keeping it all in the family,” I said.

If Raelene heard the snide undercurrent in my statement, she ignored it. ”I suppose,” she said.

”I'd like to speak to your husband,” I said, once again changing the subject. ”Is he available?”

”He's certainly not here,” she said defensively. ”As I told you, he's retired. Besides, why do you need to talk to him? He wasn't here. He didn't even see Elvira on Wednesday.”

”You said Tom was like a son to Elvira-the son she never had. Does that mean he's a beneficiary under her will?”

That provoked a reaction. Raelene's dark eyes flashed fire. ”What are you implying?” she demanded.

”I'm asking the usual questions,” I said. ”When someone dies unexpectedly and under somewhat mysterious circ.u.mstances...”

”The detectives said she fell!” Raelene insisted. ”There's nothing mysterious about it.” She stood up. ”Now I think it's time you left,” she said. ”I have nothing more to say to you.”

”Thank you,” I said, allowing myself to be booted out of her office. ”I appreciate your taking the time to talk to me.”

”You're welcome,” she said, but I could tell she didn't mean it.

I went back outside feeling as though I had landed in a nest of vipers. In 1950 a brutal murder had occurred right there, within mere feet of where I was standing. A conspiracy of silence surrounding that murder had held for more than fifty years. Now, due to Sister Mary Katherine's revelations, that silence was crumbling under its own weight-and yet another person had died in the house next door.

Walking the length of the driveway, I saw that both houses sported new siding. The bas.e.m.e.nt window through which Bonnie Jean Dunleavy had watched the unfolding drama had been covered over, but behind the house, the garden shed Sister Mary Katherine had described as a tumbledown wreck had been rebuilt and turned into a genuine greenhouse. Seeing the place where Bonnie Jean had hidden from her pursuers struck me. The hair rose on the back of my neck the same way it had when I found Mimi's bloodied ap.r.o.n in the cold case evidence box.

The perpetrators of Madeline Marchbank's murder were both dead, but obviously there was more to the story than that. I wanted all the answers. Only that would help redress Mimi's awful death and Sister Mary Katherine's years of silent suffering.

I walked back to the Taurus and sat in it for a while, thinking. For more than fifty years Elvira Marchbank thought she and her husband had gotten away with murder. Having an eyewitness show up on her doorstep to say otherwise must have come as a terrible shock. I tried to put myself in Elvira's position. What would I do? Once I showed Sister Mary Katherine out, would I sit there and keep my own counsel, or would I turn to someone else? Raelene claimed there had been nothing out of the ordinary about that afternoon. If that was the case, it seemed likely Elvira hadn't turned to the younger Mrs. Landreth for help. And why would she? It was far more likely that she would look to one of her fellow conspirators.

Yes, Wink Winkler had turned up in his cab before Sister Mary Katherine had a chance to drive away. Was Elvira the one who had summoned him? And if Wink had arrived in a cab, how had he left? Had another taxi been dispatched to take him somewhere else?

I took out my phone and called Sister Mary Katherine. ”How are you?” I asked, knowing that the news that her father had succ.u.mbed to bribery had hit her hard.

”Better,” she said. ”I'm feeling much better.”

”Good, so maybe you can help me. I need to ask you about your visit with Elvira on Tuesday. Did she make any phone calls while you were there?”

”Not that I remember,” Sister Mary Katherine said.

”Did she leave the room at any time, or did you?”

”She went into the kitchen to bring us tea,” Sister Mary Katherine said. ”She was gone several minutes, heating the water and so forth. I suppose she could have made a call then.”

”And what was her demeanor like when you introduced yourself and told her who you were?”

”She was surprised.”

”Did she cry, break down, or anything?” I asked. ”Was she afraid or upset?”

”I'd say she was emotional but not upset-relieved more than anything. I think what she and Albert did has been on her conscience for a very long time. She was ready to unburden herself.”

”Did she happen to mention how that unburdening might affect any other people?” I asked.

”What other people?” Sister Mary Katherine said. ”I saw it. Albert and Elvira Marchbank were the only ones there.”

”They may have been the only ones at the scene,” I told her. ”But they weren't the only ones involved. There were other people who profited from maintaining their silence.”

”Other people besides my parents?” Sister Mary Katherine asked.

”Yes.”

”So they weren't the only ones who were bribed?”

”No.”

”I suppose that should make me feel better,” she added after a pause. ”But it doesn't. And no, Elvira didn't say anything about her actions impacting anyone else.”

”I don't suppose she would have. Thanks for your help.”

”Just a minute,” Sister Mary Katherine said. ”Before you hang up, have you heard any more about that little girl who ran away, about Heather?”

”Not yet,” I said. ”We're working on it.”

I wasn't actually working on Heather's disappearance right then-wasn't even allowed to be working on it, but I figured I could be forgiven for the use of the royal ”we” in that instance. Not only did it keep me from telling Sister Mary Katherine the absolute truth, it kept the truth from me as well.

Determined to do some follow-up work, I headed back to the office. While I was crossing the 520 Bridge, my phone rang. The caller was Andy Howard, my insurance agent.

”Just finished talking with our adjuster,” he said. ”He says your Porsche is totaled. It would cost more to repair it than it's worth. If you want to go ahead and fix it...”

I thought about it. Hanging on to the 928, even though it wasn't the original one Anne had given me, had been a way of hanging on to her. Maybe it was time I stepped away from her and moved on. That momentous decision-one I had avoided making for years-came after only a moment of reflection and before I hit the end of the bridge.

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