You never left me, all these years. Not for a single second. Our thoughts have always been entwined. I know it was me all along who nurtured you. The one you truly wanted. The others were just the playthings who threw themselves at you. They were candy to make you smile. But it was me, your Maggie Mae, your Mags, who was your music. Who gave you the will to do what had to be done.
Who was your true music!
She saw movement coming from the car. Charlie and his brother got out and went inside.
Well, wait till you see what the music has in store for you now, Charlie.
Her thighs felt alive, moist for the first time in years. Isn’t that what you said, my love? That nothing could ever be evil, not if it comes from love.
And what greater love could I have shown for you? This is my gift. I am yours whenever you want me. I always have been.
I know you can hear me, Russell. There are walls, but what is between us cannot be kept out. It knows no walls.
“No one knows when the master will choose to come back, or in what manner.”
I have never forsaken you for a second, my love. You gave me the gift of love back then. You protected me.
You left me behind.
Now I give it back to you. In full.
Chapter Sixty
A short while later, Sherwood knocked on the apartment door and I spotted him through the blinds.
I was glad he had come alone. Charlie had barely moved in twenty minutes, sunk into the couch, his head in his hands, staring into space.
I let him in.
“You all right?” he asked, giving me a look that was different from any I had seen from him before.
“Yeah. Thanks.” I nodded grimly, blowing out my cheeks.
“And Gabriella? I checked at the hospital.”
“She’s doing okay too. Take a seat.”
He glanced at Charlie, lowering himself on the threadbare ottoman. “You said you had something important for me to see?”
“I think you’ll think so, Sherwood.” I handed him the photos Charlie had shown me of the woman named Sherry. He leafed through them, stoically and detached at first, then wincing once or twice as he grew increasingly somber. “Who is she?”
I looked at Charlie to reply, but he just stared straight ahead.
“Her name was Sherry,” I answered. “She was a friend of my brother’s from a long time ago. They were together back then. On the Riorden Ranch.”
“Oh.” Sherwood nodded, putting together what these photos, sent to Charlie, meant. “How did you get these?”
“In the mail,” Charlie said from behind his hands. “Just after Evan was killed.”
“You know who sent them?” Sherwood inspected the envelope. The postmark was local. No identifiable markings. No return address.
He shook his head. “No.”
“You must have some idea.” He glanced through them again, waiting for Charlie to answer. “When was the last time you were in touch with her?” he asked after a stretch of silence.
Charlie shrugged. “Over thirty years ago. We stayed together for a couple of months after we moved on from the ranch. We hitchhiked across California. To Arizona. Sedona, if I remember.”
“If you remember?”
“We were only together for a couple of months. I hitched around everywhere back then. We hung around for a while in the desert. Did a lot of drugs. Then I moved on.”
“You moved on?”
“Picked up.” My brother shrugged. “With someone else. I never knew what happened to her.”
“So only someone who knew you from back then-from the ranch,” Sherwood said, “could have put the two of you together?”
Charlie nodded weakly. “Yes.”
“And how would that same person know where to send these to you now?”
This time Charlie looked up. His face was a beaten blank. “I don’t know the answer to that question, detective. These past days, I’ve asked myself that a hundred times.”
“But you now know why…?” he pressed, and glanced at me. “ Why they would have sent this to you?”
“Yes,” Charlie said, moistening his lips. “I know why.”
“Her name was Sherry,” I said, picking up the photos, “but she went by the name Katya back then. You remember how Susan Pollack said everyone had their own names on the ranch? Susan was Maggie, short for Magdalena. Houvnanian was what?” I looked at my brother.
“Paul,” he said softly.
“Paul,” Sherwood said. “You mean like from the Gospels?”
“No.” Charlie sniffed with a slight smile. “McCartney. He thought he wrote directly to him.”
Sherwood smiled drily too. “So who is this woman?” The detective looked at Charlie and then at me.
“Initially, the police were led to Houvnanian by the threats he had made against Riorden,” I answered. “And by Riorden’s sister. Also, the ranch’s white van was spotted in the vicinity of the crime scenes. He and a few of his inner circle were picked up and held in the local jail on trespassing and minor drug possession charges. Walter Zorn and his team went around the ranch and questioned people there. Some of them closed ranks. Others apparently decided to talk. It’s all in Greenway’s book. Katya- Sherry, ” I said, correcting myself, “was one of them.”