She shuts her door and starts the engine. "Hopefully the bar is closed," she replies. ''If I drink anything, it will only make matters worse because I can't think. What has happened, Marino?" She pulls away from the curb, the lights from Edgar Allan Pogue's house moving behind her. "He's been living in this house. Didn't anybody know? He's got a woodshed full of human remains and nobody ever saw him in the backyard going into the shed, nobody ever did? You telling me Mrs. Paulsson never saw him moving around back there? Maybe Gilly did."
"Why don't we just swing around to her house and ask her?" Marino says, looking out his window, his huge hands in his lap, as if he is protecting his injury.
"It's almost midnight."
Marino laughs sarcastically. "Right. Let's be polite."
"Okay." She turns left on Grace Street. "Just be prepared. No telling what she'll say when she sees you."
"She ought to be worried about what I say, not the other way around."
Scarpetta does a U-turn and parks on the same side of the street as the small brick house, behind the dark blue minivan. Only the living room light is on, glowing through the filmy curtains. She tries to think of a foolproof way to get Mrs. Paulsson to come to the door and decides it would be wise to call her first. She scrolls through a list of recently made calls on her cell phone, hoping the Paulsson number is still there, but it isn't. She digs inside her bag until she finds the scrap of paper she's had since her first encounter with Suzanna Paulsson, and she enters the number in her phone and sends it along the airways or wherever calls go, and imagines the phone ringing beside Mrs. Paulsson's bed.
"Hello?" Mrs. Paulsson's voice sounds uneasy and groggy.
"This is Kay Scarpetta. I'm outside your house and something has happened. I need to talk to you. Please come to the door."
"What time is it?" she asks, confused and frightened.
"Please come to the door," Scarpetta says, getting out of the SUV. "I'm outside your door."
"All right. All right." She hangs up.
"Sit in the car," Scarpetta says into the SUV. "Wait until she opens the door, then come out. If she sees you through the window, she's not going to let us in."
She shuts her door and Marino sits quietly in the dark as she walks to the porch. Lights go on as Mrs. Paulsson passes through the house, heading to the door. Scarpetta waits, and a shadow floats across the living-room curtain. It moves as Mrs. Paulsson peeks out, then the curtain flutters shut and sways as the door opens. She is dressed in a zip-up red flannel robe, her hair flat where it was pressed against the pillow, her eyes puffy.
"Lord, what is it?" she asks, letting Scarpetta in the house. "Why are you here? What's happened?"
"The man living in the house behind your fence," Scarpetta says. "Did you know him?"
"What man?" She looks baffled and scared. "What fence?"
"The house back there." Scarpetta points, waiting for Marino to show up at the door any second. "A man has been living there. Come on. You must know someone's been living back there, Mrs. Paulsson."
Marino knocks on the door and Mrs. Paulsson jumps and grabs at her heart. "Lord! What now?"
Scarpetta opens the door and Marino walks in. His face is red and he won't look at Mrs. Paulsson, but shuts the door behind him and steps inside the living room.
"Oh shit," Mrs. Paulsson says, suddenly angry. "I don't want him here," she says to Scarpetta. "Make him leave!"
"Tell us about the man behind your fence," Scarpetta says. "You must have seen lights on back there."
"He call himself Edgar Allan or Al or go by some other name?" Marino says to her, his face red and hard. "Don't be giving us a bunch of crap, Suz. We ain't in the mood. What did he call himself? I bet the two of you were chummy."
"I'm telling you, I don't know about any man back there," she says. "Why? Did he…? You think…? Oh God." Her eyes shine with fear and tears, and she seems to be telling the truth as much as any good liar seems to, but Scarpetta doesn't believe her.
"He ever come to this house?" Marino demands to know.
"No!" She shakes her head side to side, clasping her hands at her waist.
"Oh really?" Marino says. "How do you know if you don't even know who we're talking about, huh? Maybe he's the milkman. Maybe he dropped in to play one of your games. You don't know who we're talking about, then how can you say he's never once been to your house?"
"I'm not going to be talked to like this," she says to Scarpetta.
"Answer the question," Scarpetta replies, looking at her.
"I'm telling you…"
"And I'm telling you that his damn fingerprints were in Gilly's bedroom," Marino replies aggressively, stepping closer to her. "You let that little redheaded bastard in here for one of your games? Is that it, Suz?"
"No!" Tears spill down her face. "No! Nobody lives back there! Just the old woman, and she's been gone for years! And maybe somebody's in there now and then, but nobody lives there, I swear! His fingerprints? Oh God! My little baby. My little baby." She sobs, hugging herself, crying so hard her bottom teeth are bared, and she presses her hands against her cheeks, and her hands are trembling. "What did he do to my little baby?"
"He killed her, that's what," Marino says. "Tell us about him, Suz."
"Oh no," she wails. "Oh Gilly."
"Sit down, Suz."
She stands there and cries into her hands.
"Sit down!" Marino orders her angrily, and Scarpetta knows his act.
She lets him do what he does so well, even if it is hard to watch.
"Sit down!" He points at the couch. "For once in your goddamn life tell the goddamn truth. Do it for Gilly."
Mrs. Paulsson collapses on the plaid couch beneath the windows, her face in her hands, tears running down her neck and spotting the front of her robe. Scarpetta moves in front of the cold fireplace, across from Mrs. Paulsson. "Tell me about Edgar Allan Pogue," Marino says, loudly and slowly. "You listening, Suz? Hell-o? You listening, Suz? He killed your little girl. Or maybe you don't care about that. She was such a pain in the ass, Gilly was. I heard about what a slob she was. All you did was pick up after her spoiled little ass…"
"Stop it!" she shrieks, her eyes wide and red and glaring as she stares hate at him. "Stop it! Stop it! You fucking… You…" She sobs and wipes her nose with a trembling hand. "My Gilly."
Marino sits in the wing chair, and neither of them seems aware that Scarpetta is in the room, but he knows. He knows the act. "You want us to get him, Suz?" he asks, suddenly quieter and calmer. He leans forward and rests his thick forearms on his big knees. "What do you want? Tell me.
"Yes." She nods, crying. "Yes."
"Help us."
She shakes her head and cries.
"You aren't gonna help us?" He leans back in the chair and looks over at Scarpetta in front of the fireplace. "She isn't gonna help us, Doc. She don't want to catch him."
"No," Mrs. Paulsson sobs. "I… I don't know. I only saw him, I guess it was… One night I went out, you know. I… I went over to the fence. I went over to the fence to get Sweetie, and a man was in the yard back there."
"The yard behind his house," Marino says. "On the other side of your back fence."
"He was behind the fence, and there's cracks between the boards, and he had his fingers through, petting Sweetie through the fence. I said, Good evening. That's what I said to him… Oh shit." She can hardly catch her breath. "Oh shit. He did it. He was petting Sweetie."
"What did he say to you?" Marino asks, his voice quiet. "He say something?"
"He said…" Her voice goes up and vanishes. "He"… he said, I like Sweetie."
"How'd he know your puppy's name?"
"'I like Sweetie,' he said."
"How'd he know your puppy's name was Sweetie?" Marino asks.