Crimson Shore (Agent Pendergast, #15)(57)



“Anything?” he asked.

“No.” She took a step back. “Careful. Somebody might see you.”

“Who’s to say I’m not just browsing?”

“In a closed store?” Even though they were alone, she found herself whispering.

“I meant to ask—where’s that girl, Flavia, been all this time?”

“Down in the basement, doing inventory. She hasn’t heard a thing—I made sure of that.”

“Do you think they suspect?”

“I don’t know,” she replied. “We’ve always been discreet, but Exmouth’s a small place.” She walked over to the bank of lights, snapped them all off. Immediately, the room grew dim, illuminated only by the glow of a sunless sky.

There was a brief pause, then Gavin said, “You’re right. And all these recent events—the theft of Lake’s wine, Agent Pendergast snooping around, the murders, and the Tybane markings—it’s never been so bad. It’s like living under a microscope. My grandfather liked to say: ‘If you throw out a big enough net, there’s no telling what you might drag in.’ As you said, it’s a small town. These murders have nothing to do with us, but with all this investigation, someone might find out, anyway…by accident.”

Carole nodded. “So—we’re in agreement. Right?”

“Right. Things can’t go on like this any longer. It’s got to be done, as soon as possible. It’s for the best.”

In the half-light, she took his hand in hers.

Gavin had been looking at the ground as he spoke. Now he raised his head, held her gaze. “It’s not going to be easy for us, you know.”

“I know.”

They stood there, motionless, for a long moment. Then Carole gave his hand a squeeze.

“You go first,” she said. “I’ll wait a few minutes, then go myself. I told Flavia to lock up when she’s finished downstairs.”

He nodded, waited for her to open the door, and then—glancing quickly up and down the street—slipped out.

From behind the gauze curtains, concealed from view, Carole watched him stride down Main Street. Motionless, she let five minutes pass, then ten. And then she, too, exited the shop, closed the door behind her, and began making her way in the direction of the lighthouse.





33



Constance’s first indication that Pendergast had returned from his memory crossing was the movement of his limbs on the shingle beach. Then his eyes opened. Despite the length of time he had lain motionless, more still than any sleeper, those eyes retained the bright glitter of the most intense concentration.

“What time is it, Constance?” he asked.

“Half past four.”

He got up, brushed the traces of sand from his coat, and picked up the satchel and metal detector. He spent a moment looking around, as if getting his bearings. And then, motioning her to follow him, he began walking inland from the shingle beach, northwestward, tangential to the line of the Skullcrusher Rocks that lay to their right. He moved with quick, purposeful strides. She noticed that he no longer bothered checking the map or GPS.

Together, they continued to a spot where the beach ended at a rise of land covered with grass and the occasional scrub pine. They climbed to the top, where Pendergast paused to look around. Beyond lay a field of dunes, anchored with grass and low bushes, forming a series of broad, sandy hollows, perhaps fifty feet across. In a moment he descended into the closest hollow. At its bottom, he set down the satchel.

“What are we doing here?” Constance asked.

“If someone on the shore wanted to bury something, this would be the place to do it.” Reaching into the satchel, he pulled out a slender, telescoped rod of flexible steel, which he opened to its full, six-foot extent. He began probing the sand at the bottom of the hollow, sinking the steel rod down at various points as he moved in a steady pattern from one side of the depression to the other. After a few minutes, something stopped the probe. Pendergast knelt and probed in a tighter pattern, sinking the steel tip into the sand in half a dozen locations. Then, rising once again, he took from the satchel a small, collapsible shovel.

“I assume, with all this activity, that your memory crossing was successful,” she said dryly.

“We shall know in a moment.”

Sinking the shovel into the spot of his most recent probe, he began to dig, placing the sand carefully to one side as he did so. He continued digging, making a hole approximately five feet in diameter, to a uniform depth of two feet. Once this circular pit was complete, he began to dig deeper. The sand was damp and loose, making for easy digging. A few moments later, the blade of the shovel hit something with a dull clang.

Quickly, Pendergast put the shovel aside and knelt within the hole. Using his fingers, he swept away the sand, exposing some rusted pieces of metal.

“Iron hull fasteners,” he explained.

“From the Pembroke Castle?”

“I’m afraid so.” He glanced around. “The site seems obvious in retrospect, doesn’t it?”

“How did those fasteners get back here in the dunes? Did the sea wash them in?”

“No. The wreckage of the ship was deliberately carried back here and buried. At least, all that washed in. The turn of the tide would have eventually taken what didn’t wash up here out to sea.”

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