Chintz and lace. Faded rugs, old, comfortable chairs. An entertainment screen that had seen better days. And, she noted, a statue of The Virgin—mother of Christ—on a table with her serene, compassionate face looking out over the room.
“Mrs. Clooney, I have to ask if your husband’s contacted you.”
“He hasn’t. He wouldn’t. It’s just as I told the other detective. I think, somehow, there’s been a terrible mistake.” Absently, she pushed a lock of brown hair, as faded as the rugs, away from her face. “Art hasn’t been well, hasn’t been himself for a long time. But he wouldn’t do the things you’re saying he did.”
“Why wouldn’t he contact you, Mrs. Clooney? You’re his wife. This is his home.”
“Yes.” She sat, as if her legs just couldn’t hold her up any longer. “It is. But he stopped seeing that, stopped believing that. He’s lost. Lost his way, his hope, his faith. Nothing’s been the same to us since Thad died.”
“Mrs. Clooney.” Eve sat, leaning forward in an attitude that invited trust and confidence. “I want to help him. I want to get him the kind of help he needs. Where would he go?”
“I just don’t know. I would have once.” She took a tattered tissue from her pocket. “He stopped talking to me, stopped letting me in. At first, when Thad was killed, we clung together, we grieved together. He was the most wonderful young man, our Thad.”
She looked toward a photograph, in a frame of polished silver, of a young man in full dress uniform. “We were so proud of him. When we lost him, we held on tight, to each other, to that love and pride. We shared that love and pride with his wife and sweet baby. It helped, having our grandchild close by.”
She rose, picked up another photograph. This time Thad posed with a smiling young woman and a round-cheeked infant. “What a lovely family they made.”
Her fingers brushed lovingly over the faces before she set the photograph down again, sat.
“Then, a few weeks after we lost Thad, Art began to change, to brood and snap. He wouldn’t share with me. He wouldn’t go to Mass. We argued, then we stopped even that. Existing in this house,” she said, looking around at the familiar, the comforting, as if it all belonged to strangers, “instead of living in it.”
“Do you remember, Mrs. Clooney, when that change in your husband began?”
“Oh, nearly four months ago. Doesn’t seem like a long time, I suppose, when you think of more than thirty years together. But it felt like forever.”
The timing worked, Eve calculated, slid the puzzle piece of the first murder into place.
“Some nights he wouldn’t come home at all. And when he did, he slept in Thad’s old room. Then he moved out. He told me he was sorry. That he had to set things right before he could be a husband to me again. Nothing I could say could change his mind. And God forgive me, at that point I was so tired, so angry, so empty inside, I didn’t care that he was going.”
She pressed her lips together, blinked away the tears. “I don’t know where he is or what he’s done. But I want my husband back. If I knew anything that would make that happen, I’d tell you.”
Eve left, canvassed the neighborhood, talked to neighbors, and was given nothing but a picture of puzzled disbelief. Clooney had been a good friend, a loving husband and father, a trusted member of the community.
No one had heard from him—or would admit to it.
“Do you believe them?” Peabody asked as they headed back to the city.
“I believe his wife. She’s too afraid and confused to lie. He knows we’d cover the house. Friends and relatives. He’s not stupid enough to go to any knowns, but I had to check. We’ll go back to Central, run through his data again. Maybe something will click.”
But two hours through, and nothing had. She pressed her fingers to her eyes, thought about more coffee, then opened them and saw Mira in the doorway.
“You’re overdoing it, Eve.”
“My back’s to the wall. I’m sorry, did we have a meeting?”
“No, but I thought you could use my professional opinion on Clooney at this point.”
“Yeah, I could.” She glanced around, sighed. “This place is a dump. I wouldn’t let the cleaning crew in the last few days. Security clearances aren’t enough right now.”
“Don’t worry about it.” Mira made herself comfortable with a hip on the side of Eve’s desk. “I don’t believe he has, or can, change his agenda. He’ll still be focused on you, which means he’ll stay close.”
“He said he wouldn’t kill another cop, too. But he sure didn’t hesitate to slice that knife into Webster.”
“That was impulse rather than calculated. He wanted you, and even then he would have considered it self-defense. You were coming for him. You and a member of Internal Affairs. I believe he’s still in the city, still using whatever considerable skill he has to observe and regroup. Wouldn’t you?”
“Yeah, that’s exactly what I’d do if I’d decided I had to end something, would die trying.” She’d thought it over carefully, in one of her journeys into Clooney’s head. “He means to die, doesn’t he, Doctor?”
“Yes, I think so. He’ll give you until the stated deadline, and if you don’t prove yourself to his satisfaction, he’ll try to kill you. He may finish this by an attempted assassination of Ricker, then he will, almost certainly, self-terminate. He will not be able to face his wife, his colleagues, his priest. But he will face his son.”