The Coffin Dancer (Lincoln Rhyme 2) - Page 144

Sachs said nothing. She lifted the jack out of the engine compartment and set it on a table, absently wound it closed.

Three pieces of metal slipped into place around the engine and Percey applied her screwdriver like a conductor's baton. Her hands were truly magic. Finally she said, "It's about him, isn't it?"

"Who?"

"You know who I mean. Lincoln Rhyme."

"You think I'm jealous?" Sachs laughed.

"Yes, I do."

"Ridiculous."

"It's more than just work between you. I think you're in love with him."

"Of course I'm not. That's crazy."

Percey offered a telling glance and then carefully twined excess wire into a bundle and nestled it into a cutout in the engine compartment. "Whatever you saw is just respect for his talent, that's all." She lifted a grease-stained hand toward herself. "Come on, Amelia, look at me. I'd make a lousy lover. I'm short, I'm bossy, I'm not good looking."

"You're--" Sachs began.

Percey interrupted. "The ugly duckling story? You know, the bird that everybody thought was ugly until it turned out to be a swan? I read that a million times when I was little. But I never turned into a swan. Maybe I learned to fly like one," she said with a cool smile, "but it isn't the same. Besides," Percey continued, "I'm a widow. I just lost my husband. I'm not the least interested in anyone else."

"I'm sorry," Sachs began slowly, feeling unwillingly drawn into this conversation, "but I've got to say . . . well, you don't really seem to be in mourning."

"Why? Because I'm trying my hardest to keep my company going?"

"No, there's more than that," Sachs replied cautiously. "Isn't there?"

Percey examined Sachs's face. "Ed and I were incredibly close. We were husband and wife and friends and business partners . . . And yes, he was seeing someone else."

Sachs's eyes swiveled toward the Hudson Air office.

"That's right," Percey said. "It's Lauren. You met her yesterday."

The brunette who'd been crying so hard.

"It tore m

e apart. Hell, it tore Ed apart too. He loved me but he needed his beautiful lovers. Always did. And, you know, I think it was harder on them. Because he always came home to me." She paused for a moment and fought the tears. "That's what love is, I think. Who you come home to."

"And you?"

"Was I faithful?" Percey asked. She gave another of her wry laughs--the laugh of someone who has keen self-awareness but who doesn't like all the insights. "I didn't have a lot of opportunities. I'm hardly the kind of girl gets picked up walking down the street." She examined a socket wrench absently. "But, yeah, after I found out about Ed and his girlfriends, a few years ago, I was mad. It hurt a lot. I saw some other men. Ron and I--Ron Talbot--spent some time together, a few months." She smiled. "He even proposed to me. Said I deserved better than Ed. And I suppose I did. But even with those other women in his life, Ed was the man I had to be with. That never changed."

Percey's eyes grew distant for a moment. "We met in the navy, Ed and I. Both fighter pilots. When he proposed . . . See, the traditional way to propose in the military is you say, 'You want to become my dependent?' Sort of a joke. But we were both lieutenants j.g., so Ed said, 'Let's you and me become each other's dependents.' He wanted to get me a ring but my father'd disowned me--"

"For real?"

"Yep. Real soap opera, which I won't go into now. Anyway, Ed and I were saving every penny to open our own charter company after we were discharged and we were completely broke. But one night he said, 'Let's go up.' So we borrowed this old Norseman they had on the field. Tough plane. Big air-cooled rotary engine . . . You could do anything with that aircraft. Well, I was in the left-hand seat. I'd taken off and'd got us up to about six thousand feet. Suddenly he kissed me and wobbled the yoke, which meant he was taking over. I let him. He said, 'I got you a diamond after all, Perce.' "

"He did?" Sachs asked.

Percey smiled. "He throttled up, all the way to the fire wall, and pulled the yoke back. The nose went straight up in the air." Tears were coming fast now to Percey Clay's eyes. "For a moment, before he kicked rudder and we started down out of the stall, we were looking straight up into the night sky. He leaned over and said, 'Take your pick. All the stars of evening--you can have any one you want.' " Percey lowered her head, caught her breath. "All the stars of evening . . . "

After a moment she wiped her eyes with her sleeve, then turned back to the engine. "Believe me, you don't have anything to worry about. Lincoln's a fascinating man, but Ed was all I ever wanted."

"There's more to it than you know." Sachs sighed. "You remind him of someone. Someone he was in love with. You show up and all of a sudden it's like he's with her again."

Tags: Jeffery Deaver Lincoln Rhyme Mystery
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