her. “You’re being straight with me?”
“Of course I am, Jack. When have I not been straight with you?”
Wright seemed to weigh his options. As far as Jeffrey could see, it was a no-brainer: jail or cooperation. Still, he imagined Wright wanted some semblance of control in his life.
“That thing that was done to her car,” Wright said.
“What’s that?” Moon asked.
“That word on her car,” Wright clarified. “I didn’t do that.”
“You didn’t?”
“I told my lawyer, but he said it didn’t matter.”
“It matters now, Jack,” Moon said, just the right amount of insistence in her voice.
“I wouldn’t write that on somebody’s car.”
“Cunt?” she asked. “That’s what you called her in the bathroom.”
“That was different,” he said. “That was the heat of the moment.”
Moon did not respond to this. “Who wrote it?”
“That, I don’t know,” Wright answered. “I was in the hospital all day, working. I didn’t know what kind of car she drove. Could’ve guessed it, though. She had that attitude, you know? Like she was better than everybody else.”
“We’re not going to get into that, Jack.”
“I know,” he said, looking down. “I’m sorry.”
“Who do you think wrote that on her car?” Moon asked. “Somebody at the hospital?”
“Somebody who knew her, knew what she drove.”
“Maybe a doctor?”
“I don’t know.” He shrugged. “Maybe.”
“You being straight with me?”
He seemed startled by her question. “Hell, yeah, I am.”
“So, you think somebody at the hospital might have written that on her car. Why?”
“Maybe she pissed them off?”
“She piss a lot of people off?”
“No.” He shook his head vehemently. “Sara was good people. She always talked to everybody.” He seemed to not remember his earlier comments about how conceited Sara was. Wright continued, “She always said hey to me in the hall. You know, not like ‘How you doing’ or anything like that but, ‘Hey, I know you’re there.’ Most people, they see you but they don’t. Know what I mean?”
“Sara’s a nice girl,” Moon said, keeping him on track. “Who would do that to her car?”
“Maybe somebody was pissed at her about something?”
Jeffrey put his hand to the glass, feeling the hair on the back of his neck rise. Moon picked up on this as well.
She asked, “About what?”
“I don’t know,” Wright answered. “I’m just saying I never wrote that on her car.”
“You’re sure about that.”
Wright swallowed hard. “You said you’d trade the gun for this, right?”
Moon gave him a nasty look. “Don’t question me, Jack. I told you up front that was the deal. What have you got for us?”
Wright glanced toward the mirror. “That’s all I have, that I didn’t do that to her car.”
“Who did, then?”
Wright shrugged. “I told you I don’t know.”
“You think the same guy who scratched her car is doing this stuff in Grant County?”
He shrugged again. “I’m not a detective. I’m just telling you what I know.”
Moon crossed her arms over her chest. “We’re gonna keep you in lockup over the weekend. When we talk on Monday, you see if you’ve got an idea who this person might be.”
Tears came to Wright’s eyes. “I’m telling you the truth.”
“We’ll see if it’s the same truth on Monday morning.”
“Don’t send me back in there, please.”
“It’s just holding, Jack,” Moon offered. “I’ll make sure you get your own cell.”
“Just let me go home.”
“I don’t think so,” Moon countered. “We’ll let you stew for a day. Give you some time to get your priorities straight.”
“They are straight. I promise.”
Moon did not wait for more. She left Wright in the room, his head in his hands, crying.
Saturday
25
Sara woke with a start, not certain where she was for a brief, panicked second. She looked around her bedroom, keeping her eyes on solid things, comforting things. The old chest of drawers that had belonged to her grandmother, the mirror she had found in a yard sale, the armoire that had been so wide her father had helped her take the hinges off the bedroom door so they could squeeze it in.
She sat up in bed, looking out the bank of windows at the lake. The water was rough from last night’s storm, and choppy waves rode across the surface. Outside, the sky was a warm gray, blocking the sun, keeping the fog down low to the ground. The house was cold, and Sara imagined that outside was even colder. She took the quilt from the bed with her as she walked to the bathroom, wrinkling her nose as her feet padded across the cold floor.
In the kitchen, she started the coffeemaker, standing in front of the