"A picture of you and Bobby together. Some of the lettering from the back of the Kodak paper had stained the drawer. He might have told you he kept it there. Either way, you had to get it back. Because if he died and the photo was discovered, people might start putting the pieces together about your husband's death. And even if you weren't to blame for that, no one would believe you. And maybe it seemed pretty ironic your ending up with Remmy's wedding ring. Did you ever wear it in the privacy of your home?"
"Okay, that's it! Get out! Now!"
King didn't budge. "And did you really have to kill Kyle? What, was he trying to blackmail you?"
"I didn't kill him. He was stealing from me!"
King glanced over at the coatrack. "You were doing Hinson's post the night Battle was killed. You said Kyle came to the morgue that night, but you didn't mention that you'd seen or spoken to him, only that he'd accessed the door, and that was recorded on the security log."
"I never saw him. I was in the back working on Hinson."
"Not around ten o'clock you weren't. And that's probably what Kyle saw, or, more to the point,
"That's crazy. And I wanted to perform the autopsy as quickly as possible. The body will only give clues for a certain period of-"
"Save the lecture for somebody who cares," said King. "I'm betting Kyle put all this together and tried to blackmail you. So you came to me with the perfectly true fact that he was stealing drugs and selling them, and I told you I'd have Todd see Kyle the next day. Only by then you'd killed him. Maybe you went right after we finished dinner. And during the post you conveniently found enough evidence to make it look like murder. And of course there was Dorothea ready to take the blame, which I'm certain was your intent. In fact, I bet you recognized her at the Aphrodisiac and knew she was Kyle's drug client."
He looked over at her. She was simply staring blankly at him now. "But was it all worth it for a monster like Battle? Was it, Sylvia? You were just one in a hundred. He didn't love you. He didn't love anyone."
She picked up the phone. "Unless you leave right now I'm calling the police."
King rose. "Oh, just so you know, Eddie put me onto this. He knew you'd killed his father; that's why he was going to kill you."
"So now you're listening to convicted murderers?"
"Ever heard of a guy named Teet Haerm?"
"No."
"He lived in Sweden. Maybe still does. He was accused of killing some people back in the eighties. He was arrested and convicted, but it was later overturned and he was set free."
"And what exactly does that have to do with me?" she said icily.
"Teet Haerm was the
"And you can't prove one word of anything you've said."
"You're right, I can't," conceded King. "At least not right now. But let me tell you something, lady, I'm not going to stop trying. In the meantime I hope your guilt will ruin your life."
King walked out the door, shutting it firmly behind him.
CHAPTER 101
KING AND MICHELLE BOARDED the small plane and flew down to South Carolina. From there they drove an hour to the maximum security prison Eddie Battle had been transferred to and where he would spend the rest of his life. Michelle chose to wait outside while King went in.
Eddie was brought in wearing shackles and surrounded by four beefy guards who never took their eyes off him. Eddie's hair was shaved to the scalp, and there were scars and wounds on his face and forearms which King knew had been inflicted since he'd been incarcerated. He wondered how many others were hidden under the jumpsuit. He sat down across from Eddie. They were separated by inch-thick Plexiglas. King had already been instructed on all the visitor's rules, chief of which was to make no sudden moves and never ever try to have any physical contact with the prisoner.
King knew he'd have no trouble following those procedures.
"I'd ask you how it's going, but I can see."