get into their heads.
“I’m worried it’s someone who knows him, Kay.”
“These days anybody can know anybody, Benton.”
“A paleontologist has vanished and is presumed dead, and you’re sent a photo of a severed ear,” he says. “Mildred Lott has vanished, her husband on trial for her murder, and then his helicopter films you while you’re getting Peggy Stanton’s body out of the bay just hours before you’re supposed to testify. I’m worried whoever’s doing this—”
“Whoever? As in one person?”
“Connections. There are too many. I don’t believe it’s coincidental.”
“You think it’s one person doing all of it?” I ask.
“If you want to get away with something, do it by yourself. And I worry this person knows Marino, knows you. Maybe knows all of us.”
“It doesn’t have to be someone who knows him or any of us,” I disagree. “If you search Peter Rocco Marino on Twitter you can find him. You can find so much about any of us on the Internet it’s rather terrifying.”
“Why would this person look for him on Twitter to begin with? Unless there’s a personal reason to get him into serious trouble?”
“Lucy set him up on Twitter in early July. When he moved into his new house,” I recall. “When did he and Pretty Please start tweeting each other?”
“He claims she tweeted him first. He says this was late August, close to Labor Day, maybe the weekend before. That she said she was, quote, ‘a fan.’”
“A fan of Jeff Bridges’ or of Marino’s?”
“Exactly. Because he’s such an idiot,” Benton says. “Using the avatar of a character from some bowling movie, calling himself The Dude. From which Marino instantly concluded that she must be a bowling enthusiast, meaning they have something in common.”
I slow to a stop in Peggy Lynn Stanton’s neighborhood, the headlights shining through rain, illuminating the dark street and the cars lining both sides of it.
“I’ll go through all the tweets, his e-mails, his phone records, whatever it takes,” Benton says. “Because I’m the one who will get him out of this mess he’s made, isn’t that the irony?”
Houses are old but not historic or expensive for Cambridge, single-family and occupied, charming and pristinely kept, and so close together it would be difficult for a person to walk between them.
“He assumed she bowls, or she said she did?” I ask.
Yards are small or nonexistent, parking coveted. Neighbors would be keenly aware of vehicles that don’t belong here.
“I don’t know in detail what was tweeted back and forth between them, but he seems to have the impression she’s an avid bowler. Or was.”
I try to imagine forcing a woman from her house, and I can’t see it. I can’t imagine someone screaming or causing any sort of disturbance that wouldn’t be witnessed. We sit in silence in the drumming rain, distant lightning like a flash going off as thunder rolls. I don’t believe Benton thinks Peggy Lynn Stanton was killed in her house or abducted from it, and I ask him that.
“The fact is we don’t know,” he says. “Doug has her own opinion, but it’s not necessarily mine.”
“Tell me yours.”
“I’ll tell you who.”
“Do you have a suspect in mind?”
“I know who he is, in his late twenties at least but probably older.” Benton scans where we are on the dark rainy street. “Intelligent, accomplished, blends in but is isolated emotionally. Doesn’t get close. Those who think they know him don’t.”
“‘Him’?”
“Yes.” Benton looks at cars; he looks at houses. “Familiar with boating. Likely has a boat or access to one.”
I think about Marino’s obsession with the CFC getting a boat, and I wonder who else he’s said this to.
“Needs no help operating it, is skillful enough to pilot it alone.”
Benton rolls down his window and stares out at the dark.
“A smooth talker, glib, completely confident he can convince anyone of anything, including police, the Coast Guard.”
He’s unmindful of the rain blowing in.
“If his boat broke down or he got stopped while he had a dead body on board, he would be certain he could charm and convince and no one would know. Someone fearless. Someone with financial means.”
Marino has a captain’s license issued by the Coast Guard.
“A narcissistic sociopath,” Benton says, to the rain and the night. “A sexual sadist whose arousal comes from causing fear, from tormenting, from degrading, from controlling.”
“So far I’ve found no evidence of sexual assault,” I let him know.
“He doesn’t sexually assault them. He has a physical aversion to his victims because they’re beneath him. He makes sure they know how