The Dark Half(75)
'Nothing. I got his answering machine - which allows me to deduce that the man is still alive
- and that's all. I left a message.'.Liz settled back in her chair, clearly disappointed.
'What about my tests?' Thad asked. 'Did Hume have anything back? Or wouldn't he tell you?'
'He said that when he had the results, you'd be the first to know,' Alan said. He grinned. 'Dr Hume seemed rather offended at the idea of telling a county sheriff anything.'
'That's George Hume,' Thad said, and smiled. 'Crusty is his middle name.'
Alan shifted in his seat.
'Would you like something to drink, Alan?' Liz asked. 'A beer or a Pepsi?'
'No thanks. Let's go back to what the state police do and do not believe. They don't believe either of you is involved, but they reserve the right to believe you might be. They know they can't hang last night's and this morning's work on you, Thad. An accomplice, maybe - the same one, hypothetically, who would have worked the tape-recorder gag - but not you. You were here.'
'What about Darla Gates?' Thad asked quietly. 'The girl who worked in the comptroller's office?'
'Dead. Mutilated pretty badly, as he suggested, but shot once through the head first. She didn't suffer.
'That's a lie.'
Alan blinked at him.
'He didn't let her off so cheaply. Not after what he did to Clawson. After all, she was the original stoolie, wasn't she? Clawson dangled some money in front of her - it couldn't have been very much, judging from the state of Clawson's finances - and she obliged by letting the cat out of the bag. So don't tell me he shot her before he cut her and that she didn't suffer.'
'All right,' Alan said. 'It wasn't like that. Do you want to know how it really was?'
'No,' Liz said immediately.
There was a moment of heavy silence in the room. Even the twins seemed to feet it; they looked at each other with what seemed to be great solemnity. At last Thad asked, 'Let me ask you again: what do you believe? What do you believe now?'
'I don't have a theory. I know you didn't tape Stark's end of the conversation, because the enhancer didn't detect any tape-hiss, and when you jack up the audio, you can hear the Penn
Station loudspeaker announcing that the Pilgrim to Boston is now ready for boarding on Track Number 3. The Pilgrim did board on Track 3 this afternoon. Boarding started at two thirty-six p.m., and that's right in line with your little chat. But I didn't even need that. If the conversation had been taped on Stark's end, either you or Liz would have asked me what the enhancing process showed as soon as I brought it up. Neither of you did.'
'All this and you still don't believe it, do you?' Thad said. 'I mean, it's got you rocking and rolling - enough so you really are trying to chase down Dr Pritchard - but you really can't get all the way to the middle of what's happening, can you?' He sounded frustrated and harried even to himself.
'The guy himself admitted he wasn't Stark.'
'Oh, yes. He was very sincere about it, too.' Thad laughed.
'You act as though that doesn't surprise you.'
'It doesn't. Does it surprise you?'
'Frankly, yes. It does. After going to such great pains to establish the fact that you and he share the same fingerprints, the same voice-prints - '
'Alan, stop a second,' Thad said.
Alan did, looking at Thad inquiringly.
'I told you this morning that I thought George Stark was doing these things. Not an accomplice of mine, not a psycho who has somehow managed to invent a way to wear other people's finger.prints - between his murderous fits and identity fugues, that is and you didn't believe me. Do you now?'
'No, Thad. I wish I could tell you differently, but the best I can do is this: I believe that you believe.' He shifted his gaze to take in Liz. 'Both of you.'
'I'll settle for the truth, since anything less is apt to get me killed,' Thad said, 'and my family along with me, more likely than not. At this point it does my heart good just to hear you say you don't have a theory. It's not much, but it's a step forward. What I was trying to show you is that the fingerprints and voice-prints don't make a difference, and Stark knows it. You can talk all you want about throwing away the impossible and accepting whatever is left, no matter how improbable, but it doesn't work that way. You don't accept Stark, and he's what's left when you eliminate the rest. Let me put it this way, Alan: if you had this much evidence of a tumor in your brain, you would go into the hospital and have an operation, even if the odds were good you'd not come out alive.'
Alan opened his mouth, shook his head, and snapped it shut again. Other than the clock and the soft babble and coo of the twins, there was no sound in the living room, where Thad was rapidly coming to feel he had spent his entire adult life.
'On one hand you have enough hard evidence to make a strong circumstantial court case,' Thad resumed softly. 'On the other, you have the unsubstantiated assertion of a voice on the phone that he's 'come to his senses', that he 'knows who he is now'. Yet you're going to ignore the evidence in favor of the assertion.'
'No, Thad. That's not true. I'm not accepting any assertions right now - not yours, not your wife's, and least of all the ones made by the man who called on the phone. All my options are still open.'