Schulz lifted his jacket flap and took out a folded slip of paper. He said, “Take a look at this. I got them to fax it up to me.”
I opened the slippery, shiny sheet of paper. It was from the Bureau of Vital Records, State of Utah. The words and numbers swam before my eyes.
I said, “Who else knows about this?”
Schulz said, “Don’t know who does. Don’t know who does not.”
The paper said that Baby Boy Harrington had been born eighteen years before in Salt Lake City. Parents listed were Brian Harrington and Adele Louise Keely, her name before she married General Farquhar.
26.
Call it intuition. Call it projection.
Call it fear.
I had to see Arch. I felt like a fool leaving him in that house. Too much was happening; too much was coming to light. Someone he trusted could hurt him before John Richard got there. He could be in terrible danger from people who had been around him—Julian, Weezie, Adele, the general. Or whoever had murdered Brian Harrington.
I said to Schulz, “Ï need to go get Arch.”
“But I thought you said your ex had him. I don’t want you alone with John Richard Korman.”
I thought for a moment. What had John Richard said? Lunchtime. I checked my watch: two o’clock. All the warning signals about John Richard’s unreliability went off at once. I bolted for the van.
Schulz trotted to his car and then to the van. He handed me a can of Mace and a house key. He said, “Get Arch and go to my place. Then call me on the mobile line.”
I stashed the key and the Mace, then revved the van. I said, “What are you going to do?”
“Call the coroner. See if he has any idea yet how Brian Harrington died.”
I waved and spun the van through a corona of dust. Terror gripped my heart so acutely that when I took the Aspen Meadow exit off 1-701 could not remember where I was headed. After our divorce, John Richard had moved into a house in the older section of the country club area. I set the van in that direction and broke speed limits.
The new girlfriend answered the door. She pulled the collar of her bathrobe around her neck and gave me an impassive face.
“What do
“My son. Arch. Is he here?”
She let out an impatient breath.
“I don’t know where he is. Or John Richard, either. His secretary told me he left the office twenty minutes ago to get his son. What’s going on?”
I did not stay to answer.
When I pulled up at the end of Sam Snead Lane, John Richard’s Jeep was sitting outside the Farquhars’ security gate. There were no cars in the Farquhars’ driveway. There was no sign of Arch. I hated to think what kind of mood my ex-husband would be in if he had been here waiting even for ten minutes. The driver-side door of the Jeep flew open. I gripped the Mace.
I knew better than to get out of the van. I rolled up my window and locked the doors.
“Get out of that damn car!” he shrieked at me. He pounded on the glass. His face was livid, contorted with rage that I knew only too well.
“What do you want?” I screamed back.
“Arch isn’t here! Nobody’s answering. I’ve been here for fifteen minutes. If somebody was here, don’t you think they’d open the gate? You bitch! You didn’t give me
I let go of the Mace and waved him off, then started the van and eased it slowly from the curb. I took care to wait until John Richard had stepped away from my window. Much as I would have liked to run over his feet, that only would have made matters worse.
My fingers trembled when they pressed the correct buttons to get through the gate. John Richard said he had rung the buzzer, to no avail. Where everyone was I did not know.
I took comfort in one thing. Arch knew I worried about him; he knew it only too well. There was one admonition I had drilled into him since the time he could write. It was: Always leave Mom a note. Even if you’re just going to play, going to the convenience store, circling the block on your bike. Let Mom know what’s up.
I prayed that he had.
The gates opened with their smooth buzz. Talk about magic. John Richard trotted up beside the van. I cautiously rolled down my window.
“Do you want me to stay or not?” he demanded. Heat and anger had made his face shiny with sweat.
When I opened the doors to the garage I saw only the general’s Range Rover. I eased the van in alongside. When I alighted I noticed something was missing from the walls. I looked around. The snow shovels were in place; ditto the garbage cans, tool shelves, and all the attendant tools. The mulcher, fertilizer, gardening equipment—all were where they belonged. But there was a gap, an empty space usually occupied by. . . I looked around carefully, closed my eyes, and tried to imagine the garage as it usually was.