The Last Flight(82)
*
Traffic into the city is horrible. We progress slowly through the toll booth and up onto the Bay Bridge, walled in on all sides by cars. Alone in the back seat, I stare out the window, my gaze traveling across the water and landing on Alcatraz, small and squat in the middle of the bay, the slate-gray water surrounding it.
The driver adjusts the rearview mirror so he can see me better, his sleeve riding up even higher, and I catch another glimpse of his tattooed arm. “Okay if I turn on the radio?” he asks.
“Sure,” I tell him.
He flips around until he lands on some quiet jazz. I pull Eva’s phone out of my purse to check the time, and see that I have a missed text from Danielle.
I just found out that Mr. Cook’s already got a guy on the ground in Berkeley looking for you. A local, someone who can better blend in with the people there. But I’m told he’s big, with a tattoo sleeve on his right arm. Be careful.
Eva
New Jersey
February
One Day before the Crash
Ellie—or rather, Danielle—did not look as Eva had expected Liz’s daughter to look. Instead of the eclectic woman she’d imagined, a woman who wore long flowing skirts and worked for a hardscrabble nonprofit, Danielle had her dark hair pulled back into a conservative bun at the base of her neck. She wore pearls and a tailored suit with low heels. But the resemblance between mother and daughter was immediate. Danielle had the small stature of her mother, the planes of her face an almost mirror image of the friend Eva had grown to love. But where Liz was calm and centered, Danielle seemed agitated.
Liz stood to give her daughter a kiss. “Are you just getting home from work? It’s late.”
Ignoring her mother’s question, Danielle said to Eva, “I didn’t know you were coming to town.”
The way Danielle said it, like an accusation, rumbled low inside of Eva, warning her to be careful. “A last-minute trip,” she said. “In and out.”
“Because?” Danielle’s gaze held Eva’s.
“Because she wanted to,” Liz interjected, throwing a warning glare at her daughter.
“A quick visit to see some friends,” Eva said, hoping to defuse some of the tension. “I have to head back tomorrow.”
Danielle waited a moment, as if to see if Eva would offer more details. When she didn’t, Danielle said, “Mom, can I see you in the other room?”
Apologetic, Liz turned to Eva. “Make yourself comfortable. I’ll be back in a minute.”
The two women huddled in the living room, the sound of their whispered conversation floating back to Eva in snatches. She rose from the couch and wandered into the kitchen under the pretense of looking at the pictures on the refrigerator.
“What is the matter with you?” Liz hissed.
“I’m sorry. I’m exhausted and stressed, and I’ve still got to pack for a trip to Detroit tomorrow,” Danielle said. “I wasn’t expecting a houseguest.”
“What’s happening in Detroit?”
“The foundation has an event there tomorrow. I was supposed to accompany Mrs. Cook, but I just found out Mr. Cook is sending her to Puerto Rico instead. He wants to do the Detroit trip himself.” Danielle sighed. “I’m sorry to be so snappy with you. But this last-minute itinerary change is making me edgy. Something feels off.”
“In what way?”
“Mrs. Cook has been singularly focused on this trip for months, in a way that’s unusual for her.”
“I think you’re working too hard. Worrying about things that aren’t there.” Liz’s voice sounded soothing, and Eva imagined her taking Danielle’s hand and squeezing it.
“I don’t think so, Mom. There’s been other weird stuff. Her driver told me last month she took the car—alone—to Long Island. The GPS tracked her all the way to the eastern tip. She doesn’t know anyone who lives out there. And I’ve had to cover for her a few times with financial discrepancies. Withdrawals. Receipts that don’t match.” Eva could hear the worry in Danielle’s voice, the tension of watching and waiting for something to happen. “I think she’s going to leave him.”
“Good. Finally.”
“Yeah, but I don’t think the Puerto Rico trip is a part of that. And I’m worried the Detroit trip was.”
“Do you think Mr. Cook knows?”
“No, but if this messes her up somehow…” She trailed off. “I don’t like the idea of her traveling alone, or with people only loyal to the incredible Rory Cook. And now I’ve got to go to Detroit and act as if I’m one of them when I can barely stand to look at the man, knowing how he terrorizes her.”
“If she’s smart, she’ll go to Puerto Rico and never come back.”
Eva had stopped pretending to look at the pictures and was now entirely focused on listening to this story unfold, piecing together the bare bones of an idea.
In two steps, she was across the kitchen and over to the couch, grabbing her laptop and setting it up on the counter so she could still listen in. As the two women continued to talk, Eva Googled Rory Cook, wife, and studied the image that appeared. A beautiful woman, her dark hair framing her face, wearing high-end, trendy clothes, walking down a New York sidewalk. The caption read Rory Cook’s wife, Claire, visits the new restaurant, Entourage, located on the Upper West Side.