The drive from Joshua Tree to Hollywood took more than two hours, but Shane moved through it in a dream state, sliding up and down on-ramps, his hands numb on the steering wheel, the hot air from his Jeep’s open window pushing in on him like breath.
Suicide. Bellamy hadn’t said that on the phone. Shane had learned it from the radio: Movie legend Sterling Marshall—who was suffering from pancreatic cancer—is dead of an apparent suicide. Details after the break.
Shane hadn’t waited for the break. He’d flipped off the radio, the word dialing through his head as he finally hit the Hollywood Freeway, maneuvering his Jeep through traffic that appeared to be out of central casting—the gleaming red Ferrari with its slick-haired driver, text-weaving in and out of the diamond lane; the big, dumb Dunkin’ Donuts truck cutting him off, horn blaring aggressively; the douchebag Hummer clinging to his side and blasting hip-hop, bass amped up enough to inspire road rage. Or ’roid rage. Or both.
Suicide.
Who would have thought that Dad would commit suicide? Dad, who did all his own stunts, famously walking over hot coals to prepare for one film role, wrestling with a live alligator for another. Dad, who had been tortured as a POW in the Korean War. (“It ain’t Hogan’s Heroes,” he used to tell Shane and Bellamy. But nothing more. “You kids don’t need to hear any more about it.”) Dad, who never even accepted Novocain at the dentist. Fearless, pain-taunting Sterling Marshall, killing himself over stage 2 cancer? It didn’t make sense. Unless he had another reason.
Or unless it wasn’t suicide after all.
Shane’s cell phone rang. He glanced at the screen. Kelly, it said. He declined the call—a reflex, like killing a bug. “I’ll call you later,” he whispered, apologizing to no one. Apologizing for his thoughts.
Shane stared at the road and listened to the quiet roar of his tires on the macadam. He tried to clear his head, but Dad’s voice still wormed in, Dad’s voice over the phone two weeks ago, swearing his illness wasn’t serious, that it was treatable, that he planned to fight it, just as he’d fought every bad thing in life and come out a winner. “Stage two,” he’d said with a laugh. “It’s practically a baby.”
Had he been acting? With Sterling Marshall, you never could tell. “Don’t listen to your mother, Shane. You know what a worrywart she is.”
Same old Dad. That same sweetness about him, that same strength. Didn’t matter what was going on. Dad made you feel like everything would be all right. “Shane, can you do me a favor, though?”
“Sure.”
“Can you please give your sister another chance?”
“Dad . . .”
“I know, I know. But she means well. She loves you, son, whether or not she’s able to say it.”
First time Dad had mentioned Bellamy to Shane in years. Why? It wasn’t like him to bring up painful topics . . . Had he brought Bellamy up out of emotional necessity? Was asking his kids to make peace a last request?
“A calming presence.” Many years ago, someone had said that about his father—Shane couldn’t remember who.
The voice had been deep. It was a man who had said it. “Outside of Henry Fonda, your father has the most naturally calming presence of any actor I know.” A kind voice, and so familiar. If Shane could place a name to it, maybe he could get this man to speak at the funeral . . .
“You don’t understand, Dad.”
“I just want my family to get along. It’s the one thing that could . . .”
He’d never finished the sentence.
Shane gritted his teeth. Stop. Drive. Keep it together. What else had he said, Dad’s friend? If he really focused, Shane could almost hear the lilt in the voice, the smile in it. He had smiled, hadn’t he?
“You want to know a secret, kiddo?”
“Sure!”
A car horn shrieked—the Ferrari. Shane had cut him off without realizing it. He sped up, but the Ferrari pulled up, kiss-close behind him.
“Don’t tell the gossip rags.”
Shane pressed on the accelerator, but the Ferrari followed, riding the Jeep’s bumper, flexing its speed. “See, if anybody finds out, they’ll get jealous, but the truth is, your father is the best actor I’ve ever worked with. I’m not kidding around.” The voice shimmered in his mind now. More than thirty years later, but there was still no mistaking it. John’s voice. John McFadden’s voice.
The Ferrari flashed its brights.
“Asshole!” Shane yelled. But it came out a sob, and then more followed—wet, angry sobs that made it hard to breathe, to drive, to see the road.
“SUGAR PLEASE,” SAID THE POLICE DETECTIVE. HE WAS PROBABLY TEN years younger than Kelly—big shouldered and ginger haired, complexion like strawberry ice cream sprinkled with cinnamon. He was too pink for Kelly, too soft. Of course he wanted sugar in his coffee. Probably liked it flavored too. Probably a big fan of hazelnut vanilla toasted caramel Cracker Jack crème brûlée.
Kelly filled a mug with coffee and set it down in front of the detective. She got the carton of sugar out of the pantry and poured some into a bowl. She placed the spoon on top and slid it across the kitchen table to him thinking, Have at it.
She couldn’t remember his name. He’d introduced himself at the door, but everything he’d said after Detective and before LAPD Homicide had flown clear out of her head. Bruce or Brian or Barry . . . she thought it began with a B. Brûlée. First man she’d seen in a tie since . . . Well, probably since she last met with her parole officer. This detective’s tie was gray, a spatter of red polka dots on it that made Kelly think of . . . Shane never wore ties.
He spooned in the sugar—two, three, four, five spoonfuls before Kelly’s stomach went sour and she had to look away. As though on cue, the washing machine shifted cycles, thump-thump-thumping in time with her heart. “Thank you for letting me in,” he said. “I know we usually call first, but I was in the area.”
Thump, thump . . . “I don’t have a lot of time.”
“This won’t take long,” he said. “By the way, I’m sorry for your loss.”
He scooped another heaping spoonful of sugar into his cup, which felt almost like an obscene gesture. (How many was that? Nine? Ten?) But he wasn’t focused on the coffee. Scoop after scoop, his eyes stayed trained on her face. Technique. Everybody had a technique for talking to Kelly—journalists, psychiatrists, prison guards, cops. Especially cops. Especially sugar-spooning cops in spatter ties who couldn’t stand anything bitter in their lives, not even coffee.
“Thank you,” Kelly said. Was that the right response to say to someone being sorry for your loss? Thank you for being sorry? The washing machine thumped. Kelly wanted to throw something at it.
“You all right?” The detective said it in a probing way, made it sound like a trick question. All those years at Carpentia, Kelly had longed to speak to someone who didn’t talk to her like this, who wasn’t trying to pry something out of her brain with the penetrating gaze, the deliberate gesture, the expertly placed question designed to catch her off guard . . . The detective said, “You look pale. Like you didn’t get a lot of sleep.”
The washing machine made a socking sound, almost as though something alive were trapped inside, struggling to get out. Kelly’s sneakers. Her bloodstained sneakers. “I slept fine,” she said. “I’m good as can be expected. Under the circumstances.”
“Doing some laundry?”
She didn’t reply.
“You don’t mind answering a few questions, Miss Lund?”
“Mrs. Marshall.”
“Huh? Sorry, that machine of yours is kind of noisy.”
“My name. It isn’t Lund. It hasn’t been for the last fifteen years. You can call me Mrs. Marshall.”
“Fair enough.” The detective blew on his coffee, took a tentative sip. “So, Mrs. Marshall,” he said, “any reason why you aren’t at your in-laws’ house with your husband?”
“Only immediate family should be there.”
“And you aren’t?”
“Excuse me?”
“You’ve been married to his son for fifteen years. You’d think at that point, they’d have accepted you as one of their own.” He swallowed more coffee, eyes fixed on her face as the thumping grew more insistent, the whole machine jumping with it, until it suddenly, mercifully eased into a lower cycle. “Are you sure you’re all right?”
“I told you. I’m fine.”
“Okay. When was the last time you spoke to Sterling Marshall?”
“I don’t know.”
“You ever text him? E-mail? Snail mail?”
“Not recently.” In her mind, she saw Sterling Marshall’s name in gold embossed letters on thick, creamy stationery. He’d written her in prison once, only once, a long time ago. She remembered his careful handwriting and what he’d told her in the letter. Another drawer flew open . . .
“Did you speak to Mr. Marshall often? Did your husband?”
“Maybe.”
“Can you give me more of an idea than ‘maybe’?”
“You would have to ask my husband.”
In the letter, Sterling Marshall had called John McFadden “a dear friend and one of the great directors of our time.” Kelly remembered that phrase as though she were looking at it for the first time. A dear friend. Her stomach clenched up. He had talked about Kelly, how she hadn’t “been in control of her senses” and so he understood. He knew she was sorry. But she wasn’t sorry. She would never be sorry.
“. . . once a week? Twice a month? Or was it more like a holiday-type thing?”
The doctor at Carpentia has informed me of your very recent “news.” Another line from that letter, still burned into Kelly’s brain. The quotes around the word news. Want to demean something in one step? Put quotes around it.
“From what you knew of your father-in-law, would you say he had any enemies?”
I trust Shane doesn’t know yet. I trust you’ll do the right thing.
Kelly heard herself say, “Suicide.”
The detective jumped a little. “Pardon?”
“The news reports. They said it was suicide.”
“We haven’t released any official comment to news outlets.”
“What did he say?”
“Huh?”
“Sterling Marshall. What did he say in the note?”
He exhaled. “I’m not here to talk about what you read on the Web.”
“Was there a note?”
“When was the last time you spoke to your father-in-law?”
“I told you. I don’t know.”
In the letter, Sterling Marshall had told Kelly that he’d helped Shane to start a photo archive business. He’d promised to keep supporting him, to make sure he’s always taken care of, but only if you do what needs to be done. Underneath the table, Kelly’s fists clenched up.
“Were you aware that Mr. Marshall owned a gun?”
She looked at him. “No.”
“Did you ever see or hear about a gun when you visited him at his house?”
Kelly opened her mouth, closed it again.
“Maybe at a family get-together? Did he ever tell your husband about it?”
“About what?”
“Owning a gun,” he said.
“Not that I know of.”
“You’re aware, aren’t you, that your father-in-law was a pretty big antigun activist? You’ve heard of the John McFadden Fund.”
The washing machine rumbled.
“I’ve heard,” she said, “of the John McFadden Fund.” She made herself say the name clearly, deliberately. As though it had quotes around it. She met his gaze and saw something there, an uneasiness.
The detective cleared his throat. He slid back in his chair, which gave Kelly a type of sad satisfaction. Good. Be uneasy.
“Sterling Marshall was very close to the man you shot in the head.”
She nodded at him. “Yep.” He couldn’t shake her. If the washing machine couldn’t shake her, if the memory of that letter couldn’t shake her, then nothing could, including him, especially him—Barry Brûlée or whatever his name was. He was made of cinnamon. She was made of rock.
“Would you say that you got along well with your father-in-law?”
“Sure.”
“Really? Give me an idea of how close you were. Did you call him Sterling? Mr. Marshall? Dad?”
“This is how it’s going to be, huh?”
“I’m asking pretty basic questions.”
“Are you going to talk to my husband? Will you at least show him the suicide note?”
“Bellamy Marshall says that you and her father were not on the best of terms. Is she lying?” Kelly looked at him—the gold-spun eyebrows, the faerie green eyes. The pale pink hands, hovering over his mug.
He said, “Can I ask you something?”
“No.”
“Did you ever feel like . . .”
“I said you can’t ask me something.”
“Did you ever feel like Sterling Marshall chose John McFadden over you?”
She stared at him. “I don’t care if he did.”
“Mr. Marshall gave an interview two days ago. In the Times. It was for the fifth anniversary of your release. I’m sure you read it. He said he still misses his old pal John. But he doesn’t blame you, not anymore. You were just a kid after all. Raised by an uncaring, irresponsible mother. Tragically lost your twin just a few years before, and besides, you were on drugs. A teen addict. Didn’t know right from wrong.”
Kelly heard a noise outside the kitchen window—a swooping hiss. Turkey vulture. “He never said that about my mother.”
“Where were you this morning, between the hours of midnight and three A.M.?”
“Here.”
“You mean, in this house?”
“Yes.”
“Can anyone verify your whereabouts? Your husband, maybe?”
She shut her eyes. Behind her lids she saw a fuse box—the same one she’d made up in her mind at seventeen when she’d stood outside the courthouse, surrounded by strangers, her whole future crashing in, turning to dust. Cameras flashing at her and men with mean voices shouting her name, but all she’d heard was the hum of that imaginary fuse box. All she’d seen were the two long rows of switches, shutting down one by one.
And she’d smiled.
“Mrs. Marshall,” he said. “Were you at your father-in-law’s last night?”
“You need to leave,” she said. “You have no right to be here. You have no right to question me in my house, without a lawyer present.”
The detective took a long drag off his supersweet coffee, then placed the cup back onto the saucer. The clink hurt Kelly’s ears. The whole time, he never took his eyes off of hers, the green of them glittering with something . . . knowledge or hate. Or maybe it was both. That’s what all this technique was, wasn’t it? A combination of knowledge and hate, cooked up and heaped on you like teaspoons of sugar.
“We’ll be in touch, Ms. Lund,” he said.
AFTER HE LEFT, KELLY LOCKED THE DOOR. AND AS SHE TRANSFERRED her clothes and shoes into the dryer, she thought of Sterling Marshall’s letter again—the only letter he’d ever written her, outside of the holiday cards addressed and signed by Mary, his wife. A letter sent to a prison fifteen years ago, when Kelly was thirty-two but still seventeen inside because prison locks you up in other ways, not just physically. And so, before starting to read Sterling Marshall’s words, Kelly had spent a good amount of time marveling at the creamy paper, the glossy ink. She’d run her fingertips over the gold-embossed name and felt, for a time, special. A letter from the Sterling Marshall. Written in his own hand. To her.
She remembered how beautiful Sterling Marshall’s signature had looked, even after she’d read the letter—a letter asking her to get rid of her baby and not to tell her husband about the pregnancy, ever.
She remembered what Sterling Marshall had written, just before signing it: Family means everything to me.
To this day, she still had no doubt he’d meant it.