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Hayward kept her face neutral, not willing to give him anything but a thunderous silence. He was looking older, a little drawn, but his clothes were new and his shirt was well ironed. She wondered, briefly and searingly, who was taking care of him. Finally she said, “The case is settled.”
“Officially, yeah. But this friend said that you were-”
“I don’t know what you heard, and I don’t give a damn. You should know better than to listen to departmental gossip from so-called friends.”
“But, Laura-”
“Refer to me as Captain Hayward, please.”
Another silence.
“Look, this whole thing-the killings, the diamond theft, the kidnapping-was all orchestrated by Diogenes. All of it. It was his master plan. He played everyone like a violin. He murdered those people, then framed Pendergast for it. He stole the diamonds, kidnapped Viola Maskelene-”
“You’ve told me all this before.”
“Yes, but here’s something you don’t know, something I never told you-”
Hayward felt a rush of anger that almost overwhelmed her icy control. “Lieutenant D’Agosta, I don’t appreciate hearing that you’ve continued to withhold information from me.”
“I didn’t mean it that-”
“I know exactly what you meant.”
“Listen, damn it. The reason Viola Maskelene was kidnapped is that she and Pendergast-well, they’re in love.”
“Oh, please.”
“I was there when they met on the island of Capraia last year. He interviewed her as part of the investigation into Bullard and the lost Stradivarius. When they met, I could see this co
“They’ve been seeing each other?”
“Not exactly. But Diogenes lured her here using Pendergast’s name.”
“Fu
“She was trying to protect Pendergast and herself. If it got out that they had a thing for each other-”
“From one brief meeting on an island.”
D’Agosta nodded. “That’s right.”
“Agent Pendergast and Lady Maskelene. In love.”
“I can’t speak one hundred percent about the strength of Pendergast’s feelings. But as for Maskelene-yeah, I’m convinced.”
“And how did Diogenes discover this touching bit of sentiment?”
“There’s only one possibility: while Diogenes was nursing Pendergast back to health in Italy, after rescuing him from Count Fosco’s castle. Pendergast was delirious, he probably said something. So, you see? Diogenes kidnapped Viola to ensure that Pendergast was maximally distracted at precisely the moment he undertook the diamond heist.”
D’Agosta fell silent. Hayward took the time for a long breath and another effort at control.
“This,” she said quietly, “is a story straight out of a romance novel. This isn’t the way things happen in real life.”
“What happened with us wasn’t all that different.”
“What happened with us was a mistake I’m trying to forget.”
“Listen, please, Laura-”
“Call me Laura again and I’ll have you escorted out of the building.”
D’Agosta winced. “There’s something else you ought to know. Have you heard of the forensic profiling firm of Effective Engineering Solutions, down on Little West 12th Street, run by an Eli Gli
“Never heard of it. And I know all the legitimate forensic profilers.”
“Well, they’re more of an engineering firm, and they’re pretty secretive, but they recently did a forensic profile of Diogenes. It backs up everything I’ve told you about him.”
“A forensic profile? At whose request?”
“Agent Pendergast’s.”
“That inspires confidence,” she said sarcastically.
“The profile indicated that Diogenes isn’t through.”
“Isn’t through?”
“All of what he’s done so far-the killings, the kidnapping, the diamond theft-has been leading up to something else. Something bigger, maybe much bigger.”
“Such as?”
“We don’t know.”
Hayward picked up some files and squared them on the desk with a crack. “That’s quite a story.”
D’Agosta began to get angry. “It’s not a story. Look, this is Vi
“That’s it.” Hayward pressed an intercom button. “Fred? Please come to my office and escort Lieutenant D’Agosta off the premises.”
“Don’t do this, Laura…”
She turned to him, finally losing it. “Yes, I will do it. You lied to me. Played me for a fool. I was willing to offer you anything. Everything. And you-”
“And I am so very sorry. God, if only I could turn back the clock, do things differently. I tried my best, tried to balance my loyalty to Pendergast with my… loyalty to you. I know I screwed up a wonderful thing-and I believe that what we had is worth saving. I want your forgiveness.”
The door was opened by a police sergeant. “Lieutenant?” he said.
D’Agosta rose, turned, and exited without even a look back. The sergeant shut the door, leaving Hayward behind her heaped-up desk, silent and trembling, looking at the mess but seeing nothing, nothing at all.
Chapter 29
A dark, chill night had fallen over the restless streets of Upper Manhattan, but even on the brightest noon no sunlight ever penetrated the library of 891 Riverside Drive. Metal shutters were closed and fastened over mullioned windows, and drapes of rich brocade hid the shutters in their turn. The room was lit only by fire: the glow of candelabra, the flicker of embers dying on the wide grate.
Constance sat in a wing chair of burnished leather. She was very erect, as if at attention, or perhaps poised for flight. She was looking tensely at the other occupant of the room: Diogenes Pendergast, who sat on the couch across from her, a book of Russian poetry in his hands. He spoke softly, his voice as liquid as honey, the warm cadence of the Deep South strangely appropriate to the flow of the Russian. “,” he finished, then laid the book down and looked over at Constance. “‘Heart’s memory of sun grows fainter, sallow is the grass.’” He laughed quietly. “Akhmatova. No one else ever wrote about sorrow with the kind of astringent elegance she did.”
There was a short silence.
“I don’t read Russian,” Constance replied at last.
“A beautiful, poetic language, Constance. It’s a shame, because I sense hearing Akhmatova speak of her sorrow in her own tongue would help you bear your own.”
She frowned. “I bear no sorrow.”
Diogenes raised his eyebrows and laid the book aside. “Please, child,” he said quietly. “This is Diogenes. With others, you may put up a brave front. But with me, there’s no reason to hide anything. I know you. We are so very alike.”
“Alike?” Constance laughed bitterly. “You’re a criminal. And me-you know nothing about me.”
“I know a great deal, Constance,” he said, voice still quiet. “You are unique. Like me. We are alone. I know you’ve been blessed and cursed with a strange and terrible burden. How many would wish for such a gift as you were given by my great-uncle Antoine-and yet how few could understand just what it would be like. Not liberation, not at all. So many, many years of childhood… and yet, to be deprived of being a child…”
He looked at her, the fire illuminating his strange, bicolored eyes. “I have told you. I, too, was denied a childhood-thanks to my brother and his obsessive hatred of me.”
Immediately, a protest rose to Constance’s lips. But this time she suppressed it. She could feel the white mouse shifting in her pocket, contentedly curling himself up for a nap. Unconsciously she moved a hand over the pocket, stroking it with slender fingers.