"That woman I read about?" Linda asked. "Who is she?"
"We don't know. Apparently blond and young. Age is roughly midtwenties."
"So he's got a new girlfriend," Rebecca said. "That's our Daniel. Never without one."
Kellogg said, "We don't exactly know the relationship. She was probably a fan of his. Apparently prisoners, even the worst, get plenty of women throwing themselves at their feet."
Rebecca laughed and glanced at Linda. " You get any love letters when you were inside? I didn't."
Linda gave a polite smile.
"There's a chance," Dance said, "that she isn't a stranger. She'd've been very young at the time the Family was together but I was wondering if she could be somebody you know."
Linda frowned. "Midtwenties now…she'd've been a teenager then. I don't remember anyone like that."
Rebecca added, "When I was in the Family, it was only the five of us."
Dance jotted a note. "Now, I want to talk about what your life was like then. What Pell said and did, what interested him, what his plans were. I'm hoping something you remember will give us a clue as to what he's up to."
"Step one, define the problem. Step two, get the facts." Rebecca's eyes were on Dance.
Both Linda and Kellogg looked blank. Dance, of course, knew what she was talking about. (And was thankful that the woman wasn't in the mood to deliver another lecture, like yesterday.)
"Jump in with whatever you want. If you have an idea that sounds bizarre, go ahead and tell us. We'll take whatever we can get."
"I'm game," Linda said.
Rebecca offered, "Shoot."
Dance asked about the structure of life in the Family.
"It was sort of a commune," Rebecca said, "which was weird for me, growing up in capitalistic, sitcom suburbia, you know."
As they described it, the arrangement was a little different, though, from what a communist cadre might expect. The rule seemed to be: From each according to what Daniel Pell demanded of them; to each according to what Daniel Pell decided.
Still, the Family worked pretty well, at least on a practical level. Linda had made sure the household ran smoothly and the others contributed. They ate well and kept the bungalow clean and in good repair. Both Samantha and Jimmy Newberg were talented with tools and home improvement. For obvious reasons-stolen property stored in a bedroom-Pell didn't want the owner to paint or fix broken appliances, so they had to be completely self-sufficient.
Linda said, "That was one of Daniel's philosophies of life. 'Self-Reliance'-the essay by Ralph Waldo Emerson. I read it out loud a dozen times. He loved to hear it."
Rebecca was smiling. "Remember reading at night?"
Linda explained that Pell believed in books. "He loved them. He made a ceremony out of throwing out the TV. Almost every night I'd read something aloud, with everyone else gathered in a circle on the floor. Those were nice nights."
"Were there any neighbors or other friends in Seaside he had a particular connection with?"
"We didn't have friends," Rebecca said. "Pell wasn't like that."
"But some people he'd met would come by, stay for a while, then leave. He was always picking up people."
"Losers like us."
Linda stiffened slightly. Then said, "Well, I'd say people down on their luck. Daniel was generous. Gave them food, money sometimes."
You give a hungry man food, he'll do what you want, Dance reflected, recalling Kellogg's profile of a cult leader and his subjects.
They continued reminiscing but the conversation didn't trigger any recollections of who the houseguests might've been. Dance moved on.
"There are some things he searched for online recently. I was wondering if they mean anything to you. One was 'Nimue.' I was thinking it might be a name. A nickname or computer screen name maybe."
"No. I've never heard of it. What does it mean?"
"It's a character out of the King Arthur legend."
Rebecca looked at the younger woman. "Hey, did you read us any of those stories?"
Linda didn't recall. Nor had they any recollection of an Alison-the other name Pell had searched for.
"Tell me about a typical day in the Family."
Rebecca seemed at a loss for words. "We'd get up, have breakfast…I don't know."
Shrugging, Linda said, "We were just a family . We talked about what families talk about. The weather, plans, trips we were going to take. Money problems. Who was going to be working where. Sometimes I'd stand in the kitchen after breakfast, doing dishes, and just cry-because I was so happy. I had a real family at last."
Rebecca agreed that their life hadn't been very different from anyone else's, though she clearly wasn't as sentimental as her sister-in-crime.
The discussion meandered and they revealed nothing helpful. In interviewing and interrogation, it's a well-known rule that abstractions obscure memories, while specifics trigger them. Dance now said, "Do this for me: Pick a particular day. Tell me about it. A day you'd both remember."
Neither could think of one that stood out, though.
Until Dance suggested, "Think of a holiday: Thanksgiving, Christmas."
Linda shrugged. "How about that Easter?"
"My first holiday there. My only holiday. Sure. That was fun."
Linda described making an elaborate dinner with food that Sam, Jimmy and Rebecca had "come up with." Dance spotted the euphemism instantly; it meant the trio had stolen the groceries.
"I cooked a turkey," Linda said. "I smoked it all day in the backyard. My, that was fun."
Prodding, Dance asked, "So there you are, you two and Samantha-she was the quiet one, you said."
"The Mouse."
"And the young man who was with Pell at the Croytons'," Kellogg said. "Jimmy Newberg. Tell us about him."
Rebecca said, "Right. He was a funny little puppy. He was a runaway too. From up north, I think."
"Good-looking. But he wasn't all there." Linda tapped her forehead.
A laugh from her comrade. "He'd been a stoner."
"But he was a genius with his hands. Carpentry, electronics, everything. He was totally into computers, even wrote his own programs. He'd tell us about them and none of us could understand what he was talking about. He wanted to get some website going-remember, this was before everybody had one. I think he was actually pretty creative. I felt bad for him. Daniel didn't like him that much. He'd lose patience with him. He wanted to kick him out, I think."
"Besides, Daniel was a ladies' man. He didn't do well with other men around."
Dance steered them back to the holiday.
"It was a pretty day," Linda continued. "The sun was out. It was warm. We had music going. Jimmy'd put together a real good sound system."
"Did you say grace?"
"No."
"Even though it was Easter?"
Rebecca said, "I suggested it. But Pell said no."
Linda said, "That's right. He got upset."
His father, Dance supposed.
"We played some games in the yard. Frisbee, badminton. Then I put dinner out."
Rebecca said, "I'd boosted some good Cabernet and we girls and Jimmy had wine-Pell didn't drink. Oh, I got pretty wasted. Sam did too."
"And we ate a lot." Linda gripped her belly.
Dance continued to probe. She was aware that Winston Kellogg had dropped out of the conversation. He might be the cult expert but he was deferring to her expertise now. She appreciated that.
Linda said, "After dinner we just hung out and talked. Sam and I sang. Jimmy was tinkering with his computer. Daniel was reading something."
The recollections came more frequently now, a chain reaction.
"Drinking, talking, a family holiday."
"Yeah."
"You remember what you talked about?"
"Oh, just stuff, you know…" Linda fell silent. Then she said, "Wait. That reminds me of one thing you might want to know about." She tilted her head slightly. It was a recognition response, though from the focus of her eyes-on a nearby vase filled with artificial amaryllis-the thought was not fully formed. Dance said nothing; you can often erase an elusive memory by asking someone about it directly.
Читать дальше