"But," he went on, "there's an easy way to do that, and it's done all the time, and not necessarily to defraud an insurance company. All you have to do is get in your car and drive into a bridge abutment. I don't know what the best guesses are as to percentages, but the conventional wisdom holds that a whole lot of unwitnessed single-car accidents are nothing but suicide, whether preplanned or spontaneous. It's a foolproof method for killing yourself and being buried with the full rites of the Catholic church, and it would be just as effective in getting double payment from John Hancock and his friends."
I thought of the earnest lady from the Hemlock Society. "And for city dwellers who don't have cars—"
"There's always the subway. You lose your balance and fall in front of it. Here's the kicker, though. Say you're determined to make it look like murder. Unless your name is Ed Hoch or John Dickson Carr, you're not going to turn it into a fucking locked room murder, are you?
Because that's what this is. The security's so tight, between the bodyguards and the burglar alarm, nobody can figure out how the hell Will got in there to drop the poison in. It's so obviously impossible that half the city's convinced Adrian must have done it himself, which is just what he's supposed to have attempted to conceal. Does that make any sense to you?"
"Wherever Adrian is now," I said, "if he needs an attorney, I think he ought to pick a guy named Gruliow."
"I'm right, though, wouldn't you say? Makes no sense."
"I agree."
"Well, let me frost the cupcake for you. All his coverage was term insurance, and there wasn't a single policy with a double-indemnity clause. Case closed."
* * *
He was convincing, but I wasn't entirely convinced. I'd seen too many people do too many illogical things to rule out any act by a human being on the grounds that it didn't make sense.
Meanwhile, there was still Will to be considered. Even if Adrian Whitfield had died by his own hand, you had to give Will an assist at the very least. One columnist argued, perhaps facetiously, that the anonymous killer was getting more powerful every time. He'd had to get out there and kill his first three victims all by himself, but all he'd had to do was point a finger at numbers four and five. Once targeted by Will, they were struck down with no effort on his part, Rashid by an enemy within his gates, Whitfield by an even more intimate enemy, the one who lived within his own skin.
"Pretty soon he won't even have to write letters," Denis Hamill concluded. "He'll just think his powerful thoughts in private, and the bad guys'll be dropping like flies."
Funny, I thought, that we hadn't heard from him.
Tuesday morning I was up before Elaine, and I had breakfast on the table when she got out of the shower. "Great cantaloupe," she pronounced. "Much better than yesterday."
"It's the other half of the one we had yesterday," I said.
"Oh," she said. "I guess it's the preparation."
"I put it on a plate," I said, "and I set it in front of you."
"Yes, that's just what you did, you old bear. And nobody could have done it better, either."
"It's all in the wrist."
"Must be."
"Combined with a sort of Zen approach," I said. "I was concentrating on something else while I just let breakfast happen."
"Concentrating on what?"
"On a dream I can't remember."
"You hardly ever remember your dreams."
"I know," I said, "but I woke up with the feeling that there was something this dream was trying to tell me, and it seemed to me it was a dream I'd had before. In fact—"
"Yes?"
"Well, I have the sense of having been dreaming this dream a lot lately."
"The same dream."
"I think so."
"Which you can't remember."
"It had a familiarity to it," I said, "as if I'd been there before. I don't know if it's the same dream each time, but I think I keep dreaming about the same person each time. He's right there, and he's looking very earnest and trying to tell me some thing, and I wake up and he's gone."
"Like a puff of smoke."
"Sort of."
"Like your lap when you stand up."
"Well…"
"Who is he?"
"That's the problem," I said. "I don't remember who he is, and no matter how much I try to remember—"
"Quit trying."
"Huh?"
She rose, moved to stand behind me. She smoothed my hair back with the tips of her fingers. "There's nothing to remember," she said.
"Just ease up. So don't try to remember. Just answer the question.
Who'd you dream about?"
"I don't know."
"That's okay. Imagine Adrian Whitfield."
"It wasn't Adrian Whitfield."
"Of course it wasn't. Imagine him anyway."
"All right."
"Now imagine Vollman."
"Who?"
"The one who killed those kids."
"Vollmer."
"Fine, Vollmer. Imagine him."
"It wasn't—"
"I know it wasn't. Humor me, okay? Imagine him."
"All right."
"Now imagine Ray Gruliow."
"I didn't dream about Ray," I said, "and this isn't going to work. I appreciate what you're trying to do—"
"I know you do."
"But it's not going to work."
"I know. Can I ask you a couple of questions?"
"I suppose so."
"What's your name?"
"Matthew Scudder."
"What's your wife's name?"