Brady.â
âOf course you wouldnât. Do you have any idea why Jake would leave suddenly like that and go rent a room in a motel on Route Nine?â
âNo. Iâve been trying not to let my imagination get the best of me. I donât think I want to know. I canât think of a good reason. A lot of bad reasons, but no good ones. I guess he just needed to be alone for a while. Away from me.â
âHe called me on Tuesday,â I said. âHe sounded excited, as if heâd learned something. He wanted to meet with me. We made an appointment for the next day, but he didnât show up.â
âWhat could he have learned?â she said.
âI donât know. I was hoping you might have an idea.â
âWell,â she said, âI donât. Not a clue.â
âIt might be important.â
âI know. But as far as I know, the only person Jake mightâve wanted to kill was himself.â
âHow did Jake and Sprague get along?â
âGet along? Like would Jake want to shoot him?â She laughed quickly. âThey got along great. Jake liked Ed. Respected what he did. He coached Brianâs soccer team. He was a good coach. The kids had fun playing for him. Ed really cared about kids. Jake appreciated that.â
âThat morning,â I said. âSunday. The day he left. Was anything different?â
âDifferent?â
âDid he mention Sprague?â
She shook her head.
âDid Jake say or do anything unusual? Anything that might explain whyâ?â
âWhy he left?â She shrugged. âNot really. He went upstairs, and when he came back down he had a suitcase. Said he was leaving, and he left.â
âDid he seem angry?â
âNo. Sad, distracted, maybe. Depressed, I guess. We both were. But no, not angry.â
âHe stayed in Brianâs room longer than he usually did, you said.â
She shrugged. âIt seemed like it.â
âAnd you saw him lying on the bed.â
âSo?â
âI donât know.â
âBefore he went upstairs, did you have any sense that something was different?â
âNo.â
âSomething bothering him? Other than â¦â I waved my hand.
She shook her head.
âSo something happened upstairs.â
âWhat could happen?â
âI donât know. Something to make him decide to leave.â
âI assume he just got the idea he wanted to leave, thatâs all. He thought of it, and he lay down on the bed to think about it some more, and then he decided to do it.â
âSure,â I said. âMaybe heâd been thinking about it for a while.â
âMaybe,â she said. âBut if he had been, I didnât have a clue. I still donât. Not a clue.â
While we were talking I finished my burger and Sharon emptied her wineglass. She hadnât touched her salad. The waitress appeared and asked us if we were finished. Sharon waved the back of her hand for the waitress to take away her salad and asked for another glass of wine. I asked for more coffee.
âIâm drinking too much,â Sharon said after the waitress left.
âIs it helping?â
âYes.â
The waitress brought Sharonâs wine and my coffee, and we lapsed into a silence that was not uncomfortable. I drank my coffee and smoked a couple of cigarettes, and Sharon sipped her wine. She kept touching the condensation on the outside of the glass, staring down into it, and I watched her, thinking how young and pretty she looked, too damn young to have to endure the sudden death of her only child and the strange disappearance of her husband, who was now a murder suspect.
When we slid out of the booth to leave, she grabbed my arm. âGeez,â she said. âI maybe shouldnâtâve had that last glass of wine.â
I helped her into her jacket, and she held on to my arm as we walked out.
âIâll
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