Public Secrets - Part 256
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Part 256

one thing he could have done differently. It was always timing, he

thought wearily. If he had broken in the door five minutes earlier it

might have changed everything.

He stood again when he saw them come in. Marianne's eyes were red, but

he didn't think she would fall apart. She took the chair Michael

vacated. "I shouldn't have left her here by herseIL"

"It's not your fault," Johnno told her.

"No, it's not my fault. But I shouldn't have left her alone."

Ignoring the signs, Johnno pulled out a cigarette. Once it was lighted,

he handed it to Marianne. "Marianne filled me in on what's been going

on during the flight over. I a.s.sume you're aware that Latimer's been

abusing Emma for more than a year."

Michael crushed the empty Styrofoam cup with his fingers. "I don't know

the details. I'll take Emma's statement as soon as she's up to it."

"Statement." Marianne looked up. "Why does she have to make a

statement?"

"It's procedure." He glanced back toward Emma's door. "Just routine."

"But you'll do it," Johnno put in. "I wouldn't want her to have to talk

to a stranger."

"I'll take the statement."

With the ash growing long on her cigarette, Marianne studied him. He'd

more than lived up to the promise in the newspaper picture of ten years

before. At the moment, he looked tense and exhausted, dark shadows

under his eyes, lines of strain beside them. Despite them, she judged

him as a man to be depended upon. Whatever Emma had said to the

contrary, Michael Kesseiring looked precisely like Marianne's image of a

cop.

"Did you kill Drew?"

He shifted his gaze and met her eyes. More than anything he could

remember, he wished he could have said yes. "No. I was too late."

"Who did?"

"Emma."

"Oh Jesus," was all Johnno said.

"Look, I don't like leaving her alone," Michael said. "I'm going in to

sit with her. You might want to check into a hotel, get some rest."

"We'll stay." Marianne reached up to take Johnno's hand. "We can take

turns sitting with her."

With a nod, Michael went back into Emma's room.

SHE SURFACED AT DAWN. The light, dim as it was, relieved her. There had

been so many dreams, so many strange dreams through the night. Most of

them vanished, midnight mirages that slipped away in the sunlight. But

she knew she'd had the nightmare again. Almost, she could hear the echo

of music and the swish of shadows.

She struggled to throw off sleep, annoyed at first by the heaviness in

her limbs. It was frustrating that she could only open one eye. She

lifted a hand, found the bandage, and remembered.

Panic. It filled her lungs like smoke, almost choking her. She turned

her head, and saw Michael. He was slumped in the chair beside her bed,

his chin on his chest. One of his hands covered one of hers. She had

only to move her fingers to have him jerking awake.