Henry stayed up too late last night transcribing every word of his conversation with Emily and then going over and over and over it, looking for subtext. He had his concerns about the recorder, but it caught almost every word, even inside his shirt. It looked like some sort of abstract pendant, and nobody had mentioned it yet. He charged it every night, and just kept it running every day, but this was the first time he wanted the full transcript.
The laptop wasn’t forbidden. It couldn’t connect to anything, anyway, and his typing was both faster and neater than his handwriting. He couldn’t print it, but he could scroll, and make notes, this time by hand on one of his cheap paper tablets.
Emily had done everything but ask him to put baby oil on her back. She came to the front of the lodge in big sunglasses, an enormous hat, sandals—no heels this time—and a tiny bikini, holding a towel, and she even lowered those sunglasses and winked at him before spreading the towel and stretching out on it. “Okay, I’ll bite,” she called up to the porch, adjusting the brim until it flopped to her liking. “What are you knitting?”
“A sweater. Do you knit?” So she used his own bait against him, in a way, and threw out her own.
Her figure was totally the kind that could entice someone like Aaron Gladieux away from his hot young girlfriend. And seriously, she moved like a cat, every gesture purposeful and predatory.
She didn’t knit, so they talked about that a bit. It wasn’t actually his mom who’d taught him, but he’d picked that as his story because hey, Annabeth Deschain was sort of a mother figure to Dani Jay, and whoa, boy, were mothers a conversation starter with Emily. Henry sipped his coffee and scrolled through the transcript again, looking for some of the more telling gems.
My mom basically foisted me off on my older sister, you know? So she didn’t have to do all the mom stuff. I wish she’d done something like teach me to knit.
Some of my friends got pregnant right out of college and they were happy about it. Like, girl, these are the best years of your life!
She totally baby-trapped him.
Emily then asked Henry if he knew what that meant, and clarified with the most vindictive description Henry thought he’d ever heard.
Gold. Pure gold.
And it made sense, didn’t it? An Annabeth Deschain who went after her employer, even though he was in a relationship and clearly had a child with his girlfriend, who also totally lived in the house, could be expected to need male attention during this month-long retreat. Possibly while Gladieux got rid of his girlfriend.
Henry wished he had the internet so he could check for updates there. Dani Jay was old news by now, but if anyone caught a moving van in the driveway and half of the belongings being carted out …
He’d even managed to seamlessly maneuver the conversation onto parents who killed their own children, going for Caylee Anthony instead of Dani Jay, but it worked. “See, that’s exactly my point!” Emily told him, and she even aimed a finger up at him to skewer that exact point. “Some women shouldn’t even become mothers! They abandon their kids, or let someone else raise their kids, or—God forbid—kill their own kids! And it’s not just mothers. My father? Absent. Totally took off. Which guys can, easier than girls, and then girls are left holding the baby and trying to figure it out, and sometimes they can’t, but they’re the ones who get stuck.”
Henry’s wince wasn’t on the recording. “Sounds like it’s personal.”
Emily’s smile wasn’t on the recording, either, but it was secretive and knowing. And then, later, another juicy sound bite: “It’s why I prefer older men. They’ve got a better idea that actions have consequences.”
Man oh man. Henry highlighted those two sentences bright yellow.
Seriously, it was like she had no idea how much she was saying. Like she thought she was being coy instead of putting it out there in blinding neon. Women abandon their kids? Sure, because Annabeth Deschain was a nanny, and Dani Jay wouldn’t need a nanny if her mom was being a mom. Baby-trapping a guy? Maybe it hadn’t really worked for Dani Jay’s mom, because her last name wasn’t Gladieux, but certainly Annabeth Deschain thought the relationship was either a sham or had long gone sour. And older men? Well then. The age gap …
Maybe the Dani Jay story wasn’t as popular in this peninsula. Or maybe Emily thought it wasn’t as popular. The whole conversation had the air of an in joke, or maybe a joke she was playing on him and didn’t think he’d get. It was like she thought she’d distracted him with the fact that she’d worn so little and laid herself out for him to keep looking at.
Annabeth Deschain was the sort of young woman who thought Aaron Gladieux was in love with her, but maybe she thought that all men would be in love with her. Or at least lust after her. And, honestly, if they were anywhere but here …
If they were anywhere but here, Emily wouldn’t have a one in three chance of being a murderer.
Even though he really tried not to, Henry couldn’t help picturing the scene: Emily, who wouldn’t have been in her teeny bathing suit that early in the year, maybe lounging on some expensive sofa like she was posing for Playboy, ignoring Dani Jay. Or had she been outside with the little girl and lured her toward the hot tub? He knew that Dani Jay’s favorite toy, a stuffed lion cub for some reason wearing a scrap of green cloth around its neck like a shawl, was also found in the water, although he didn’t know if it was floating next to the dead child. If the toy had fallen in, and Dani Jay climbed after it …
Except there wasn’t evidence that anyone other than Dani Jay had been in the hot tub, and there were disagreements about the timeline. Was Annabeth Deschain still on the clock when the three-year-old died, or had she been passed over to her mother? Dina—not Diana or Tina: Dina—Lauritsen insisted that she went looking for her daughter because Annabeth hadn’t brought her along. Dina had, in fact, gone looking for both of them.
There were questions, certainly. Why had the hot tub lid been pushed aside? It wasn’t opened all the way. If it had been even half open, with one side flopped back, then Dani Jay could’ve gotten out, or at least climbed up on one of the molded plastic seats, kept her head above water, and screamed for help. Except the other argument was that all it took was for her to slip and gasp in surprise, and it would have been over even if the lid was all the way off. But then, why had she been left alone near the hot tub, anyway? She wasn’t supposed to be out on the deck by herself, and there was a gate that should have kept her from getting there from the backyard playset.
The problem with going to trial was the fact that so much depended on which woman was believed. There weren’t cameras in the Gladieux home and no outsider was able to confirm what happened during the last day of Dani Jay’s life. Aaron was out of the house and arrived just after the ambulance and police cars. The paramedics had to deal with the three adults of the household, all apparently suffering various degrees of shock, because Dani Jay was clearly dead.
Dani Jay was autopsied, cremated, and buried in a hastily purchased plot. The autopsy revealed drowning but no other injuries. There was nothing suspicious. It was a terrible accident.
Henry couldn’t really blame Aaron for going ahead and trying to bring a case against Annabeth, because publicly he was in a relationship with Dina, and who was going to believe the girl’s actual mother let her only child drown? The police went through the house with a vengeance, and Annabeth’s diary became evidence, and Dina disappeared from public sight while her sister reported on her emotional breakdown, and Annabeth just … disappeared.
Nobody missed Annabeth. Unless Aaron was secreting Annabeth away somewhere until such a time as he was allowed to publicly miss her. With the way Emily displayed herself on her towel yesterday, Henry couldn’t say he was entirely sure that Annabeth Deschain missed Aaron Gladieux back.
Cold Comfort: Saturday, July 6, 2024 – Agatha, coming July 17