Выбрать главу

As soon as he was connected, he moved the cursor to the address window and clicked on the arrow to its right. Approximately thirty Internet addresses appeared and Justin leaned forward, squinting to read them.

"Listen, will you do me a favor?" he asked.

"What?"

"Do you have the last issue of the Journal? The one with the obit Susanna wrote about the actor in the old-age home?"

"Probably."

"Will you go home and get it?"

"Will you keep an eye on Kenny?"

Justin glanced back at the room full of enthralled children and nodded. Deena said, "I'll be back in fifteen, twenty minutes."

As she walked out the door, Justin felt a twinge of guilt. He didn't need the obit; he'd practically memorized it and remembered all of the key details. But he didn't want her privy to what he was searching for. And as soon as he'd seen the sites in the address window, he knew he was on the right track.

Two or three people had used this computer to log on since Susanna Morgan had used it. So he skipped the first three addresses. The next four entries were, in order: William Miller, Best Supporting Actor, Oscar Winners, and Internet Movie Database. He wanted to see things in the order that Susanna had seen them, so he let the cursor linger for a moment, then clicked on International Movie Database. Immediately, the address came up: http://www.imdb.com. Then he was connected to the site. He ran down the list of categories. You could get daily movie grosses and reviews and updated show business news. He tried to retrace Susanna's thought process, so in the window that was labeled "search," he typed in: Oscar Winners. When that site came up, he could hear in his head-clear as a bell-Wallace P. Crabbe ranting and raving about the 1938 Oscar winners, so he typed in the year 1938, just as he was certain Susanna had done. When the list came up, sure enough, William Miller's name was not among the nominees. He remembered Crabbe screaming about Miller's movie The Queen of Sheba, so he typed that in the search window and double-clicked. Crabbe had been right again. There was no 1938 movie with that title. There was no talkie with that title, either. There was one Hollywood film called The Queen of Sheba and that was obviously not the right one. It was a silent film made in 1923. Miller would have been two years old.

Impatient now, Justin decided to cut to the chase. He typed the name "William Miller" into the search window and clicked. Moments later, Miller's bio appeared on the screen. Justin Westwood began to read. And as he read, his mouth dropped open. This was wrong, he thought. This couldn't possibly be correct. He went back to the home page, typed in just the name Miller. He thought there'd be another William Miller, maybe with a middle initial, or there'd be a Bill Miller- something to differentiate the actor who'd died in East End Harbor from the man whose bio Justin had just seen on the screen. But no, there was only one William Miller, and the details of his life and career reappeared on the screen. Justin read through all the information, tried to absorb the specifics, then read through it all again, still not convinced he was seeing what was right in front of his eyes. He tried to imagine what Susanna Morgan had done when she'd reached this page on the Web site. He tried to imagine her forcing herself to believe that what she saw could possibly be the truth. Just as he was doing.

In William Miller's filmography there was a string of films with titles Justin had never heard of. The titles were followed by the dates the movies were made and the name of the character played by Miller. The first few titles read:

In the Land of Plenty (1922)… Charles Robertson

The Runaway (1922)… Police Chief

The Safest Place (1922)… Professor Allen "Smitty" Smith

Blue Boy (1923)… Roger Darris

Justin felt disoriented. The dates made no sense. But he kept scrolling, and there it was, just as it had been the first two times he'd scrolled through the info. The next film on the list: The Queen of Sheba (1923)… The Prince

He blinked. Rubbed his eyes to make sure they were clear and that he was reading correctly. He barely noticed the rest of the credit roll. There were several films in the 1930s, just a couple in the forties. In the 1950s there was a subhead that read Television Work, and listed from the years 1953 through 1955 was the series Cowboy Bill.

Justin began to scroll faster. He scanned the mini-biography. Saw the highlights of Miller's life. Saw that he'd been married. Saw the date his wife died. He saw-and read the line over three times-that the couple had never had any children. Saw that for The Queen of Sheba he had not received an Academy Award-the award hadn't even come into existence yet-but he was voted Screen magazine's "Favorite Non-Leading Man of the Year." Screen's honor would certainly have been a memorable one for the young actor. Was it memorable enough so, as he got older, it led the old man to tell people he'd won the Oscar? Maybe. One more crazy "maybe" to add to the growing list.

Miller's theater credits were listed, too. Justin remembered that the obit had said he was in a 1970s revival of two Clifford Odets plays. William Miller had indeed been in those plays. But not in the 1970s. In the 1930s. In the original productions.

It was impossible.

But there were other matches, too. The Miller he was reading about was married to an actress named Jessica Talbot. She'd appeared with him in The Queen of Sheba and she died in 1972. Exactly as Susanna Morgan had written in her obituary. Exactly as Bill Miller must have told her.

He scrolled back up, read the line one more time: no children.

No Bill Miller, Jr.

This had to be the guy Susanna Morgan had known and written about. It had to be. There were too many details that connected. But how could it be? The answer was that it couldn't. That was the only thing that made any sense at all. It simply couldn't be.

Justin got to the end of the bio. Saw that William Miller had been born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Saw that there was no date of death yet listed.

For what seemed like the hundredth time, he read the date of William Miller's birth.

"Jesus Fucking Christ!" Justin Westwood said, and he said it slowly and clearly and very loudly.

When he realized that his words were reverberating throughout the library, he turned around, saw twenty small children and one grown man with a monkey puppet on his hand all staring at him in shocked silence. He saw Deena Harper, clutching a newspaper, freeze as she stepped through the front door of the building. And he watched as Adrienne the librarian's eyes opened as wide as they could possibly open.

The oppressive silence lingered as Justin turned back to the computer screen. He forced himself to read, one more time, the last line of William Miller's biography.

Justin thought of the headline in Susanna Morgan's obituary. The obituary he was more and more certain had gotten her killed. cowboy bill dead at 82.

One last time, he stared at the line on the screen in front of him:

Date of birth: 1888.

Impossible, inconceivable, and illogical.

But there it was in black and white. The proof was staring him right in the face. And there were only two possibilities.

One: The guy who died wasn't Bill Miller. But what sense did that make? Why would he lie?

Which left possibility number two: The guy who died wasn't eighty-two years old.

Because if the old man in the retirement home was who he said he was, Cowboy Bill Miller lived until he was 114 years old.

10

Justin Westwood knew exactly how Susanna Morgan had felt when she left the library two days earlier. His legs were wobbly and his head was spinning. His mind kept racing around in circles, but there was no logical end to the race. He could come up with no reasonable conclusion or pattern to any of the information he had just gathered. He wanted a drink as badly as he'd ever wanted anything in his life. And even more than that, what he really wanted was to step back in time. He wanted to go back to the moment he'd seen Susanna's lifeless body on the floor of her bedroom, to ignore the various signs that had pointed to her murder. He wanted to shut out the voice that had told him to go up to Susanna's roof and wipe out the fact that he'd seen Deena Harper, heard her describe the murder. He wanted to forget the fact that he'd ever met anyone named Wallace P. Crabbe and, more than anything else, he wanted to eradicate from his brain the fact that he'd just verified the impossible on an out-of-date computer in the rinky-dink East End Harbor Library.