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Военное дело
Trace - Cornwell Patricia - Страница 15
"Women do all sorts of things. Right now we don't know if it was a man or a woman. Several head hairs were found on the mattress in the bedroom, black curly ones. Maybe five, six inches long."
"Well, we'll know soon enough, right? They can get DNA from the hair and find out it's not a woman," she says.
"I'm afraid they can't. The kind of DNA testing they're doing can't determine gender. Possibly race, but not gender. And even race will take at least a month. Then you think you might have put on the body lotion yourself."
"No. But he didn't. I wouldn't have let him do it. I would have fought him if I'd had a chance. He probably wanted to do it."
"And you didn't put the lotion on yourself?"
"I said he didn't and I didn't and that's enough. It's none of your business."
Benton understands. The lotion has nothing to do with the attack, assuming Henri is telling the truth. Lucy enters his thoughts, and he feels sorry for her and is angry with her at the same time.
"Tell me everything," Henri says. "Tell me what you think happened to me. You tell me what happened and I'll agree or disagree." She smiles.
"Lucy came home," Benton says, and this is old information now. He resists revealing too much too soon. "It was a few minutes past noon, and when she unlocked the front door, she noticed immediately that the alarm wasn't armed. She called out to you, you didn't answer, and she heard the back door that leads out to the pool bang against the doorstop, and she ran in that direction. When she got into the kitchen, she discovered the door leading out to the pool and the sea-wall was wide open."
Henri stares wide-eyed past Benton, out the window again. "I wish she'd killed him."
"She never saw whoever it was. It's possible the person heard her pull up in the driveway in her black Ferrari and ran…"
"He was in my room with me and then had to go down all those stairs," Henri interrupts, staring off with wide eyes, and at this moment, it feels to Benton that she is telling the truth.
"Lucy didn't park in the garage this time because she was only stopping by to check on you," Benton says. "So she was in the front door quickly, came in the front door as he was running out the back door. She didn't chase him. She never saw him. At that moment, Lucy's focus was you, not whoever had gotten into the house."
"I disagree," Henri says, almost happily.
"Tell me."
"She didn't drive up in her black Ferrari. It was in the garage. She had the California blue Ferrari. That's the one she parked out front."
More new information, and Benton remains calm, very easygoing. "You were sick in bed, Henri. Are you sure you know what she drove that day?"
"I always know. She wasn't driving the black Ferrari because it got damaged."
"Tell me about the damage."
"It got damaged in a parking lot," Henri says, studying her bruised toe again. "You know, the gym up there on Atlantic, way up there in Coral Springs. Where we go to the gym sometimes."
"Can you tell me when this happened?" Benton asks, calmly, not showing the excitement he feels. The information is new and important and he senses where it leads. "The black Ferrari got damaged while you were in the gym?" Benton prods her to tell the truth.
"I didn't say I was in the gym," she snaps, and her hostility confirms his suspicions.
She took Lucy's black Ferrari to the gym, obviously without Lucy's permission. No one is allowed to drive the black Ferrari, not even Rudy.
"Tell me about the damage," Benton says.
"Someone scratched it, like with a car key, something like that. Scratched a picture on it." She ^rarrs clown at her feet, picking at her yellowish big toe.
"What was the picture?"
"She wouldn't drive it after that. You don't take out a scratched Ferrari."
"Lucy must have been angry," Benton says.
"It can be fixed. Anything can be fixed. If she'd killed him, I wouldn't have to be here. Now I'll have to worry the rest of my life that he's going to find me again."
"I'm doing my best to make sure you'll never have to worry about that, Henri. But I need your help."
"I may never remember." She looks at him. "I can't help it."
"Lucy ran up three flights of stairs to the master bedroom. That's where you were," Benton says, watching her carefully, making sure she can handle what he is saying, even though she has heard this part before. All along, he has feared that she might not be acting, that none of what she says and does is an act. What if it isn't? She could break with reality, become psychotic, completely decompensate and shatter. She listens, but her affect isn't normal. "When Lucy found you, you were unconscious, but your breathing and heart rate were normal."
"I didn't have anything on." She doesn't mind that detail. She likes reminding him of her naked body.
"Do you sleep in the nude?"
"I like to."
"Do you remember if you'd taken off your pajamas before you got back into bed that morning?"
"Probably I did."
"So he didn't do it? The attacker didn't. Assuming it's a he."
"He didn't need to. I'm sure he would have, though."
"Lucy says that when she saw you last, at about eight A.M., you were wearing red satin pajamas and a tan terry-cloth robe."
"I agree. Because I wanted to go outside. I sat in a lounge chair by the pool, in the sun.
More new information, and he asks, "What time was this?"
"Right after Lucy left, I think. She drove off in the blue Ferrari. Well, not right after," she corrects herself in a flat tone and stares out at the snow-covered, sun-dazzled morning. "I was mad at her."
Benton slowly gets up and places several logs on the fire. Sparks fly up the chimney and flames greedily lick the bone-dry pine. "She hurt your feelings," he says, drawing the mesh curtain shut.
"Lucy isn't nice when people get sick," Henri replies, more focused, more poised. "She didn't want to take care of me."
"What about the body lotion?" he asks, and he has figured out the body lotion, he's pretty sure he has, but it is smart to make absolutely sure.
"So what? Big deal. That's a favor, now isn't it? You know how many people would love to do that? I let her as a favor. She'll only do so much, only what suits her, then she gets tired of taking care of me. My head hurt and we were arguing."
"How long did you sit out by the pool?" Benton says, trying not to get distracted by Lucy, trying not to wonder what the hell she was thinking when she met Henri Walden, and at the same time he is all too aware of how impressive and bewitching sociopaths can be, even to people who should know better.
"Not long. I didn't feel good."
"Fifteen minutes? Half an hour?"
"I guess half an hour."
"Did you see any other people? Any boats?"
"I didn't notice. So maybe there weren't any. What did Lucy do when she was in the room with me?"
"She called nine-one-one, continued checking your vital signs while she waited for the rescue squad," Benton says. He decides to add another detail, a risky one. "She took photographs."
"Did she have a gun out?"
Yes.
"I wish she'd killed him."
"You keep saying 'he.'"
"And she took pictures? Of me?" Henri says.
"You were unconscious but stable. She took pictures of you before you were moved."
"Because I looked like I had been attacked?"
"Because your body was in an unusual position, Henri. Like this." He straightens out his arms and holds them over his head. "You were facedown with your arms stretched out in front of you, palms down. Your nose was bleeding, and you had bruises, as you know. And your right big toe was broken, although that wasn't discovered until later. You don't seem to remember how it got broken."
"I might have stubbed it going down the stairs," she says.
"You remember that?" he asks, and she has remembered nothing or admitted nothing about her toe before now. "When might this have happened?"
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