Long Road to Mercy (Atlee Pine, #1)(51)
From her perch and using binoculars, Pine had seen the names on the shopping bags: Gucci, Dior, Louis Vuitton, and Hermes. The hall of fame of fashion.
Pine had never owned a single thing from those brands. She was more of an Under Armour girl. Yet even if she had wanted to, she doubted she could afford anything they sold. She doubted she could afford the bags the stuff came in. And her physical dimensions did not meet high-fashion standards. She was big where societal norms told women to be small, and small where the ladies were supposed to be big.
As the woman turned and walked down the street, carefully navigating the lumpy laid brick pavers in her stilettos as she checked her phone, Pine got out of the Kia and strode down the street, paralleling the woman. She timed it so that they would intersect at the next block.
“Excuse me, ma’am?” said Pine.
The woman, jolted from her digital bubble, looked askance at Pine in her jeans and windbreaker and boots.
“Whatever you’re selling I don’t need,” she said immediately, in a deep, well-cultured voice.
“It’s not that.”
“And I don’t have any cash if you need a handout. Bye-bye.”
The woman proceeded on her way. Pine followed.
The woman stopped and held up her phone, which had a gold cover. “I will call the police if you don’t leave me alone.”
“I am the police,” said Pine, holding up her FBI shield.
The woman slowly lowered her phone. “You’re with the FBI? No way.”
“I really am.”
The woman ran her severe gaze over Pine and said, “You don’t look like you are.”
“That’s sort of the point when you’re on a stakeout.”
“You’re watching someone?” The woman looked horrified and then blurted out, “What’s Jeffrey done?”
“Jeffrey?”
“My husband. He’s a money manager. They’re always doing something illegal. He’s my second husband,” she added, as though that exonerated her from any associated liability she might have. A hand fluttered to her bosom. “Thank God I kept my assets separate. The little sneak.”
“I’m not here about Jeffrey. I’m here about your neighbor.”
“My neighbor? Which one?”
“Ben Priest.”
The woman gazed at Pine in a new light and then gave her a knowing look. “He’s an interesting fellow, that one.”
“What’s your name?”
“Melanie Renfro.”
“Have you lived in your house a long time?”
“Yes. Twenty years. Jeffrey moved in with me after we got married. He lived in DC. Capitol Hill. You couldn’t pay me to live there. Taxes are twice Virginia’s. It was either he moved here or there wasn’t going to be a marriage.”
“You want to grab some coffee?”
“That’s where I was going, actually.”
Pine followed Renfro into a coffee shop on King Street, the main avenue that bisected Old Town and ended at the Potomac River. They ordered, got their coffees, and headed back outside to sit in an enclosed area of tables. They were the only ones there, though people were passing them on the street. Mostly moms with strollers and some men and women in suits and carrying briefcases.
Renfro took a sip of her coffee and patted her lips with a paper napkin. “What has Ben done?”
“You said he was an interesting fellow?”
Renfro nodded and looked around as though they were in a movie and she was checking on eavesdroppers. When she caught Pine staring, she grinned and said, “This is so thrilling. The most exciting part of my day today was supposed to be a hair coloring and a waxing. This is so much better. And far less painful than a waxing.”
“Glad I could do that for you. So, Priest?”
“Right. He moved in about, oh, seven years ago. I was still married to Parker, he was my first husband. He died of a heart attack four years ago. I married Jeffrey two years later. Some of my friends thought it was too soon. But at my age, hey, you don’t know how much time you have left. Burn the candle to the end, right?”
“Right. So you knew Priest?”
“Oh, yes. I’ve had him over for dinners, cocktail parties, barbeques, that sort of thing. I have a wonderful caterer, if you ever need someone.”
“What was your impression of him?”
“Oh, that he’d been everywhere, done everything. Could talk eloquently about any number of subjects. He knew several languages. And he was tall and very handsome. I used to invite him because I knew he would be fascinating for the other guests and eye candy for some of my girlfriends. He would flirt with them, nothing serious, but they loved it. He seemed to know how to play a role, work a room.”
“Did he tell you what he did for a living?”
“He told me he’d taught over in England, Cambridge or Oxford, anyway, one of them. Then he’d made money in investments and traveled the world. I thought he was independently wealthy. He kept odd hours. Gone for long periods of time and then I’d see a cab dropping him off at two in the morning.”
“He never mentioned working for the government?”
“Look, if you are with the FBI, I want to help you. But, I really don’t know you at all. And these days fake badges and stuff can look really genuine.”