I suspected that behind that answer crouched a murderer.
“WIRE TRANSFERS.”
“Hi, I’m looking for Kelly Morgan.”
“One moment, please.”
Soothing music.
“Kelly Morgan.”
“Kelly. Hi. Tommy, Tommy Baker, from the Ardmore branch here. Latitia Clogg said if I had some questions I should get hold of you. Said you were the only one up there who knew what the hell was going on.”
“She’s right about that. How are you doing?”
“Good, better than good. I got – let me see – five hours left and then I’m out of here for a week’s vacation. And let me tell you, Kelly, I could use it.”
“Couldn’t we all, Tommy, couldn’t we all.”
“Here’s my problem. Before I get out of here, I have to finish up a ream of paperwork sent to me by Legal. You ever get mixed up with that crew?”
“I try not to.”
“I hear you, Kelly. Well, there’s this account they’ve got questions about. It’s that Hailey Prouix, you hear about her?”
“Not that I know of.”
“Girl shot in the heart out here in Ardmore?”
“Oh, yeah, the boyfriend did it, didn’t he? What was he, married to someone else and he shacks up with her and then kills her?”
“That’s what they say.”
“Nice guy. Sounds like the ones I end up with.”
“Not you, Kelly.”
“You don’t want to know, trust me. What do you need?”
“Apparently she wire-transferred some funds out of her account on February eighteenth of this year. Account number 598872, wire transfer number WT876032Q. Legal wants to know where they went.”
“Hold on a second, let me see here. Account number…?”
“ 598872.”
“Yeah, I see it. Went to a bank in Las Vegas, something called Nevada One. Into account number 67ST98016. The branch address is Paradise Road in Las Vegas, 89109.”
“That is so great, Kelly, thanks.”
“Anything else?”
“No, this is enough to get Legal off my back.”
“Enjoy your vacation, Tommy.”
“Believe you me I will.”
OUR LIFE stories are always lies. How could we be the heroes of our lives if all we told was the truth? We shade an incident here, invent a rationale there, leave out the telling detail that changes everything. Is there anything less reliable than the memoir? Eichmann was following orders. Clinton did nothing wrong. Our life stories are our great fictions, and so I knew to take, even as I was hearing it, Hailey’s life story with a bucket of salt. Oh, I could fill in some of the gaps. Her high school years were probably not so idyllic – are anyone’s? College was not the grind she claimed – college girls who look like Hailey don’t live hermits’ lives. And I could imagine that the affair with the partner at her first law firm was more torrid, more painful, and ended with more difficulty than she let on. Oh, I had no trouble believing that her life story was more fiction than truth, considering she herself told me not to trust anything she said.
“Why do you care?” she asks me as we lie side by side in the bed where we pass our stories like kisses atop the pillow, the shades pulled to keep out the afternoon light, her scent swirling about me like a drug.
“I want to know you,” I say.
“No you don’t.”
“I don’t?”
“All you want is to confirm what you already believe. Last thing you want are any surprises.”
“Are there any?”
“Do you want them?”
I think on that for a moment. Do I want the surprises? Do I want to peer at the sad, unvarnished hollows in her heart? It all comes down to what are we doing in that bed? Are we playing out a fantasy in our otherwise reality-drenched days, or are we looking for a piece of the real in a life of artifice?
“I don’t know,” I say.
“Then there aren’t any.”
And she laughs, as if my indecision justifies everything.
But now she was dead, and the mystery of her death had become my new reality, and I very much needed to learn every secret, every truth, everything she had never wanted me to know. It was time to go behind the lies.
“NEVADA ONE, Paradise Road Branch. How may I direct your call?”
“Customer Service.”
“One moment, please.”
“Gerald Hopkins here.”
“Hi, Gerald, this is Tommy Baker at First Philadelphia Bank and Trust. I wonder if you could help me. I have a client sitting right here at my desk who also has an account at your bank. She had us wire in some funds on – what was it? – oh, yes, February eighteenth of this year, and she wants to be sure everything worked out. Could you check that for us? Her name is Hailey Prouix and her account number with your bank is 67ST98016.”
“What was the date of that transfer?”
“February eighteenth.”
“All right. Let me check that out for you.”
“What’s the weather like out there?”
“Hot. Spring here lasts about a week. Okay, yeah, here it is. We got the transfer on February eighteenth. Money went in that day, went out a few days later. Everything looks fine.”
“You have a balance on that account, Gerald?”
“Yeah sure. Twenty-seven thousand, six hundred and sixty seven.”
“Good, that matches what she expected. One last thing, she wants to know if the fee on her safe-deposit box is overdue? She doesn’t want to miss a payment.”
“Let me see. No, it’s fine. The fee was paid last month out of the account.”
“Perfect. Thanks, Gerald.”
“Oh, and Tommy. Give Ms. Prouix my regards. I remember her well, I personally opened her account for her. How is she doing?”
“Fine, great. I mean, I can’t say anything about her personal life, but she looks like a million bucks.”
“That she does.”
“I’ll send along your regards, Gerald. Thanks.”
I STARED for another long moment at the picture of the stranger on the driver’s license. It didn’t look like Hailey, but it looked like someone. I didn’t know who, but it surely looked like someone. I told Ellie I’d be right back and I stepped out of my building and into the bookstore right next door. From the rack of reading glasses I searched among the pairs until I found one that matched, somewhat, the glasses in the photograph. Then I went back up to my floor and entered Beth’s office.
“Do me a favor,” I said. “Pull your hair back and bind it with a rubber band.”
“Why?”
“Just do it.”
She looked at me like I’d gone over the edge and then went into her drawer and took out a rubber band. Beth’s hair was black and shiny and fell down about to her shoulders, so she was able to make a short ponytail of it.
“All right,” I said, “now put these on.”
She took the glasses and peered at them for a long moment. “What’s this all about?”
“Humor me,” I said.
When the glasses were on, I compared what I saw with the picture. It wasn’t a perfect match by any means. Beth’s eyes were green, not blue, and she was slightly taller. But there was a resemblance, an undeniable resemblance.
“How are you feeling, Beth? You a little tired?”
“No.”
“Worn down by your frantic pace? At the end of your rope?”
“No.”
“Are you feeling overwhelmed by life?”
“Not at all.”
“Funny, I am, too. You know what we should do? We should chuck it all for a bit and get out of here. Not just the office but the city, the state. Aren’t you sick of the East Coast?”
“Victor, what are you talking about? We have a trial to prepare for. Did someone spike your morning coffee? Are you sane?”