True Evil. Greg Iles
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Chris nodded and stole another glance at his watch. “I’m following you. But what does all this add up to?”
Agent Morse looked intently at him, so intently that her gaze made him uncomfortable. “Nine of the individuals that this divorce lawyer is in business with share a common characteristic.”
“What? Are they all patients of mine?”
Morse shook her head. “Each of them had a spouse who died unexpectedly in the past five years. In several cases, a relatively young spouse.”
As Chris digested this, he felt a strange thrill, an alloy of excitement and dread. He said nothing though, but rather tried to get his mind fully around what she was saying.
“Also,” Agent Morse added, “they actually all died within two and a half years of each other.”
“Is that unusual?”
“Let me finish. All these spouses were white, previously healthy, and all were married to wealthy people. I can show you actuarial tables, if you like. It’s way off the charts.”
Chris was intrigued by Morse’s single-minded intensity. “So, what you’re saying … you think this divorce lawyer is helping potential clients to murder their spouses rather than pay them a financial settlement?”
The FBI agent brought her hands together and nodded. “Or to gain sole custody of their children. That’s exactly what I’m saying.”
“Okay. But why are you saying it to me?”
For the first time, Agent Morse looked uncomfortable. “Because,” she said deliberately, “one week ago, your wife drove to Jackson and spent two hours inside that lawyer’s office.”
Chris’s mouth fell open. A wave of numbness moved slowly through his body, as though he’d been shot with a massive dose of lidocaine.
Agent Morse’s eyes had become slits. “You had no idea, did you?”
He was too stunned to respond.
“Have you been having problems in your marriage, Doctor?”
“No,” he said finally, grateful to be certain of something at last. “Not that it’s any of your business. But look … if my wife went to see this lawyer, she must have had some reason other than divorce. We’re not having any kind of marital trouble.”
Morse leaned back in her chair. “You don’t think Thora could be having an affair?”
His face went red at the use of his wife’s first name. “Are you about to tell me that she is?”
“What if I did?”
Chris stood suddenly and flexed his shoulders. “I’d say you’re crazy. Nuts. And I’d throw you out of here. In fact, I want to know where you get off coming in here like this and saying these things.”
“Calm down, Dr. Shepard. You may not believe it at this moment, but I’m here to help you. I realize we’re talking about personal matters. Intimate matters, even. But you’re forced to do the same thing in your job, aren’t you? When human life is at stake, privacy goes by the board.”
She was right, of course. Many of the questions on his medical-history form were intrusive. How many sexual partners have you had in the last five years? Are you satisfied with your sexual life? Chris looked away from her and tried to pace the room, a circuit of exactly two and a half steps. “What are you telling me, Agent Morse? No more games. Spell it out.”
“Your life may be in danger.”
Chris stopped. “From my wife? Is that what you’re saying?”
“I’m afraid so.”
“Jesus Christ! You’re out of your mind. I’m going to call Thora right now and get to the bottom of this.” He reached for the phone on the wall.
Agent Morse got to her feet. “Please don’t do that, Dr. Shepard.”
“Why shouldn’t I?”
“Because you may be the only person in a position to stop whoever is behind these murders.”
Chris let his hand fall. “How’s that?”
She took a deep breath, then spoke in a voice of eminent reasonableness. “If you are a target—that is, if you’ve become one in the last week—your wife and this attorney have no idea that you’re aware of their activities.”
“So?”
“That puts you in a unique position to help us trap them.”
Awareness dawned quickly. “You want me to try to trap my wife? To get her jailed for attempted murder?”
Morse turned up her palms. “Would you rather pretend none of this happened and die at thirty-six?”
He closed his eyes for a moment, trying to restrain his temper. “You’re missing the forest for the trees here. Your whole thesis is illogical.”
“Why?”
“Those men you think murdered their wives … they did it to keep from splitting their assets and paying out a ton of alimony, right?”
“In most cases, yes. But not all the victims were women.”
Chris momentarily lost his train of thought.
“In at least one case,” said Morse, “and probably two, the murder was about custody of the children, not money.”
“Again, you’re miles off base. Thora and I have no children.”
“Your wife has a child. A nine-year-old son.”
He smiled. “Sure, but she had Ben even before she married Red Simmons. Thora would automatically get custody.”
“You’ve legally adopted Ben. But that brings up another important point, Dr. Shepard.”
“What?”
“How your wife got her money.”
Chris sat back down and looked at Agent Morse. How much did she know about his wife? Did she know that Thora was the daughter of a renowned Vanderbilt surgeon who’d left his family when his daughter was eight years old? Did she know that Thora’s mother was an alcoholic? That Thora had fought like a wildcat just to get through adolescence, and that making it through nursing school was a pretty amazing achievement given her background?
Probably not.
Morse probably knew only the local legend: how Thora Rayner had been working in St. Catherine’s Hospital when Red Simmons, a local oilman nineteen years her senior, had been carried into the ER with