“I have absolutely no idea what the hell you’re talking about!” Losing my temper wasn’t a helpful tactic, but my brain wasn’t working properly as it was and these vague questions were driving me to distraction. “If there’s something in there for me, then you should give it to me, surely?”
Both officers shook their heads in unison. “I’m afraid the room’s a crime scene until the body’s been cleared of any foul play. The letter inside is evidence. We’ll need to read through it thoroughly before we can hand it over.”
“Fine. I don’t even care right now. Can you just get a hold of CPS? The kids are too young for this kind of trauma, and I don’t have a clue how to handle any of it.”
“Gentlemen.” A cold, flat voice slipped over my head, coming from behind me. The accent was even thicker than the officers’, and that was saying something. I turned, and standing in the open doorway of the house was a tall, narrow shouldered man with a pinched face and tufts of gray hair on either side of his otherwise bald head. The coat he was wearing was splattered across the shoulders with droplets of water.
“Mr. Linneman. Surprised it took you so long to get here,” Caruthers said, shifting his position, spreading his legs a little wider, blocking off as much of the hallway as he possibly could. “Ronan’s dead. Not much counsel you can provide him with now.”
“I’m aware of Ronan’s condition,” the sparrow-like man in the doorway said dryly. He said the wordcondition, as if being dead were something Ronan might recover from. “I’m not here to assist him. I’m here for the girl.” His eyes flickered to me, resting somewhere above my head, like he couldn’t actually bring himself to make eye contact with me. “Ronan left very specific instructions should he die while Ophelia was at the house. I didn’t think I would need to come out here at the crack of dawn to execute his will less than twenty-four hours after she showed up, but there you go. Ronan always was quite…unpredictable.”
Officer Hinchliffe snorted under his breath, apparently trying to rein in laughter. His cheeks had gone an unfortunate rosy color. “That’s one word for it,” he said, his voice strained. “Remember that time when he set the McInnes feed store on fire? You could see the smoke from Port Creef.”
Caruthers gave him a swift, sharp dig in the ribs. “Yeah, well. He’ll not be setting fire to anything now, will he? Come on. Help me take pictures. They’ll be here for the body soon.” Both police officers vanished back into Ronan’s study, closing the door heavily behind them. I remained, frozen to the spot, trying to process, trying to come to terms with the fact that Ronan, who was very much alive and happy enough yesterday evening, had hanged himself and was dead. And moreover, no one seemed all that shocked or bothered by the news.
“Come, girl. I have a number of papers I need you to sign. Ronan left a lot of work for you to do, I’m afraid.” Mr. Linneman edged past me down the hallway, into the kitchen, where he placed a very old, worn brown leather briefcase onto the polished marble and snapped the catches open. Looking up at me, he frowned. “I don’t suppose you have a pen, do you? I’ve left mine at home, it seems.”
I didn’t say anything for a moment. Inside Ronan’s study, a loud bang fractured the silence. Sounded like they’d tried to cut him down and dropped his body or something. Linneman flinched but didn’t say anything. He was waiting on me to produce something for him to write with.
“Uh, yes. I’m sure…there must be one around here somewhere.” Where the hell would Ronan have kept a stash of pens in this barely furnished, unlived in monstrosity? I hurried into the kitchen and began pulling drawers open. Eventually I came across a sleek, heavy, metal ballpoint that had The Fletcher Corporation printed neatly in gold down the side. “Here.”
“Wonderful.” Linneman began making small scribbles on a stack of papers he pulled out of his briefcase. “If you could please sign everywhere you see a cross, Ophelia, we’ll be done in no time.”
We wouldn’t, though. The sheets of paper were never-ending, as were the efficient little Xs Linneman was dashing everywhere. “What’s all this for?” I asked. “I already signed an employment contract before I left California.”
“This is so you can assume legal guardianship of the children. Here. This one you have to sign twice, see. One here and one here.” He pointed, showing me something, but I wasn’t paying attention.
“Excuse me? Legal guardianship? I don’t think so.”
More bird-like than ever, Linneman’s head twisted on his neck so that he was looking at me, his body still facing forward. “Oh, yes. Ronan said he spent a great deal of time selecting you for this purpose. He said you agreed to care for the children for a period no less than six months. Is that not the case?”
“I did, yes, but…but I thought he was going to bealivewhile I was looking after them. He said he was going to be writing a book! I don’t…are you saying heplannedthis?”
Linneman shrugged, trickles of water now dripping from the hem of his coat, leaving tiny puddles on the kitchen tiles. “Ronan was a pragmatic guy. He always did consider the future. I suppose that’s why he did so well in New York. Never made any brash decisions with his money there, or so I’m led to believe.”
“He just fucking killed himself!Those cops said he set fire to some feed barn just a minute ago. He clearly wasn’t sane. I can’t look after his kids!”
“Pssshhh. Ronan was eleven when he set that fire. And there was always speculation that it wasn’t even him. A long time’s passed since then.” He didn’t seem to be hearing the part where I told him I couldn’t care for Connor and Amie. He held out the pen to me like it was Excalibur and I was meant to try and yank it out of his hand or something.
“I think given the situation I should probably go back to California,” I said, using my most level voice—the one I reserved for unreasonable five-year-olds who wouldn’t do as they were told.
“I see.” Linneman closed his hand around the pen, dropping his arm to his side. “Well, thatisa shame. Ronan seemed so sure you’d be able to get everything settled here if he were gone.” He paused, and then said, “If you don’t mind, I’ll leave the papers here for you to look over. If you reconsider, you can always call me on my cell and I can come and pick up the documents tomorrow morning, before the social worker gets here.” He said this so breezily, as if it didn’t matter either way what I decided. It did, of course. It mattered a great deal. State care was awful—Connor and Amie were in for a rough time. But I was only supposed to be their tutor. Their nanny. I wasn’t supposed to be legally responsible for their welfare at all times. It was too much to ask. Way too much to even think about right now.
“You’ve got my number, of course,” Linneman said. “Now, I’m sorry for the flying visit, but I have to get going. There’s more paperwork that needs to be signed, and Sully shouldn’t hear the news from those two buffoons in there. Better it comes from me.” He briskly closed his briefcase, leaving the stack of annotated papers behind on the kitchen counter, then hightailed it off down the hallway again, coat tails flaring out behind him, revealing a dusky gray suit underneath.
“Wait, Mr. Linneman? I’m sorry? Who’s Sully?”
Linneman paused, casting a brief glance at me over his shoulder. One of his ruffled, steel gray eyebrows twitched slightly. “You don’t know?” He sighed. “No, well, Ronan wasn’t likely to mention him to you, I suppose. He wouldn’t have brought him up if his life depended on it.” He smiled, perhaps a little ironically. “Sully is the benefactor of Ronan’s will, Ophelia. Sully Fletcher. He is Ronan’s brother.”
CHAPTER EIGHT
Ghost
Sully goddamn Fletcher.
If Ronan had a brother here on the island, then why the hell had he asked his lawyer to makemethe legal guardian of his kids? It made no sense. None whatsoever. And yet I could see his blocky signature, countersigning all of the documents Linneman had left behind, shouting at me like a voice from beyond the grave.Take them! Take them!Wherever he was right now, Ronan was probably having the biggest laugh about all of this. I’d barely known him at all, but I could picturethatjust fine.
“The coroner’s guys can’t get here until tomorrow either now,” Officer Hinchliffe said. I hadn’t heard him leave the study, and my heart jammed itself as far up my esophagus as it could go as a result of my surprise. “We’re going to have to leave him here.”