Read Stolen Grace Online

Authors: Arianne Richmonde

Tags: #Fiction

Stolen Grace (32 page)

Melinda put her arm around her. “Look, she’s going to be fine. She’s been on a horrible journey but has pulled through. We have to have faith. Like you say, she’s brave. Grace is a fighter. Just stay calm. It’ll be okay, I promise. Look, I’m going to find us something to eat. Being hungry doesn’t help morale. I’ll be right back.”

Sylvia pulled out Tommy’s iPhone from her purse. Another thing polluted by Ruth. This lovely phone that Grace had given him for his birthday—that they’d had engraved—touched and handled by that bitch—her grabby, thieving hands all over it. Ruth was no fool, though. She would have obviously wiped it over for fingerprints—but still, she’d been using it as one of her tools. Sylvia scrolled through the messages. Two old ones from Agent Russo. Four from Tommy, sent to her computer, which of course she hadn’t seen. She looked at the latest and went backwards. The most recent read:

Darling,

Agent Russo wants me to go to the police for questioning. She’s not accusing me of anything but I’m reading between the lines – maybe I’m being paranoid but . . . if I don’t watch my back I could get slung in a Brazilian jail. I think they suspect I’m linked to Ruth in some way and stole your money. I really don’t think that would help anyone if I’m arrested, least of all Grace.

I know you’re furious with me. And I know you’ve gone to find Grace in Nicaragua. I heard about the note from Ruth and that she gave back my iPhone. I’ll keep in touch by e-mail . . . I’m sure the FBI, police whatever, will be joining you there, or maybe they’ve even got there already. Anyway, for that reason I’m not going to come in case they pounce on me – then I won’t be any use to anyone. Plus, I know you don’t want to see my face right now. I have a better plan, just in case this is all a hoax – I’m going to find Ruth. I don’t know how or where but I’m working on it. If Grace isn’t in Nicaragua and Psycho Woman, as you so rightly call her, is taking the piss, then the only way to find Grace is through her, anyway. I know you’re angry with me, and I don’t blame you, I was really thick to not be more on the ball . . . but please, I beg of you, keep in touch and let me know the second you find Grace.

You are my light,

Tommykins

Sylvia scrolled down to the one sent earlier:

My darling,

My heart is heaving with pain. I feel sick about what happened, guilty as if I betrayed you and Grace. I feel that way. But I swear nothing happened. Nothing. For some reason, she set out to destroy us. Please don’t let her win. Please don’t let her take you away from me. I don’t know where you are. I’m at the Copacabana looking for you. I’m desperate.

I love you more than you could ever imagine.

You are my Queen.

Tommy

P.S I’ve just remembered something important. Ruth, aka Ana, kept saying we should look in Central America for Grace, namely Nicaragua. I’m trying to rack my brains about the conversation that night but the gist of it was that she (disguised in the conversation as “the woman who took Grace”) was fed up with playing mommy and couldn’t handle it. And that maybe Grace was fine and eating an ice cream somewhere . . . seemed an odd thing to say at the time. If I remember any more clues I’ll text/e-mail. Will be buying a new phone ASAP.

All my love xxx

Darling,

I’m sitting in an Internet café. My mobile’s been stolen. It was stolen by that woman Ana who I had dinner with last night. Why? Why did she steal my mobile? She seemed well dressed, affluent, didn’t look like she needed money. I mean, she was paying for a room at the Copacabana! What a fucking weirdo. I have no idea what her agenda was – she said she wanted to help me find Grace and then she got all personal on me and ended up not doing anything at all except making off with my phone. Fucking fruitcake! I’ve tried phoning you but you don’t pick up at home. I’ll try your mobile now . . . where ARE you??

Txxx

Sylvia darling,

Met a woman called Ana who says she can help me with translation and we can go to the police. Off to have a bite to eat. You’re not picking up . . . where are you??? Will call again later.

Luv you. Tx

Sent from my iPhone

A wave of relief passed through Sylvia. Tommy had been telling the truth all along. He’d told her about the dinner with Ruth and he really did believe she was called Ana, and was just trying to help. Sylvia could have easily made the same mistake. After all, Ruth had dyed her hair auburn red and had a neat, pretty nose—so different from the photofit image Tommy had of her. It wasn’t his fault. He was on the lookout for Ruth
plus
Grace—how could he have possibly known Ruth would be wandering around on her own, posing as a local from Rio with a fake, very convincing (no doubt) Brazilian accent?

Sylvia closed her eyes and sucked in a deep breath. She’d read so many self-help books over the years, thought them all fascinating, and then popped them back on the bookshelf and forgot most of the wisdom. Easier said than done to be sweet, spiritual, and continually forgiving. Random tidbits now resurfaced in her mind.

She enveloped herself in a ball of virtual pink light, and let it radiate around her body. She brought Tommy and Grace into her aura and imagined them all together, hugging and smiling. Melinda was there, Jacqueline, and her aunt. Even Mrs. Wicks from next door, and LeRoy, all smiling at them in their triangle of happiness and light. “Please make it well again, please bring me Grace and Tommy, bring my family back to me—they’re all I have,” she pleaded to whatever Higher Power was listening.

She knew she was meant to send a healing pink ray of light to Ruth, too, but she just couldn’t bring herself to go that far. Sylvia was no saint.

Because secretly, she wanted Ruth dead.

CHAPTER 40

Tommy

T
ommy tried to imagine himself in Ruth’s shoes. Like a game of chess, he needed to envisage the gamut of possibilities open to his opponent and pre-empt her next move. What would she do now? What does she want? Where would she go? He made a mental list:

a.) She has an inflated ego which could be her downfall.

b.) Wants her novel to be published at all costs.

c.) Needs to head to a country where there’s no extradition treaty with Brazil or America.

He mulled over his last supposition. It was true, she’d be hard-pressed to get on a plane—the airports would be on red alert. Yet he also suspected that she felt invincible, uncatchable. Her ego was as tough as oilskin. Maybe she’d been breaking the law her whole life and it was second nature, and she was unable to tell the truth. Unable to not steal, to not lie.

He remembered Sylvia telling him that Ruth had traveled extensively, backpacked through Asia. Thailand housed some pretty unsavory characters, Vietnam too. Hadn’t Gary Glitter been arrested on charges of pedophilia? Even there, they were clamping down on criminals. Cambodia? Laos? Burma? Ah yes, Burma, now called Myanmar. That would be a clever place to hide. Even though Aung San Suu Kyi had taken public office, after years of Burma being a police state and of not giving a damn of what other countries thought, they wouldn’t waste their time ingratiating themselves with the FBI or any other foreign law enforcement body. They wouldn’t have the resources or the time—they had other issues to attend to. Tommy could just see Ruth journeying up the Irrawaddy River, fancying herself as George Orwell, or hiding out in a jungle somewhere, maybe lording it over some pretty Asian boy. Bribing policeman, buying herself merit, the way corrupt officials did, to reach Nirvana faster. Tommy remembered reading about that, how Burmese Buddhists bought caged doves and set them free (even though they’d end up flying straight back to the cage they knew)—the officials totting up their spiritual bank account. He could just envisage Ruth doing that. Perhaps setting herself up in a tree house, simple and rustic, like the cabin Tommy imagined on the beach in Nicaragua. Remote but pleasant. A nice peaceful life for a writer—he almost envied her.

That guy Lucho, the surfer she mentioned in the note Agent Russo had told him about—Tommy bet he was a sort of toy-boy for her—someone for Ruth to dispose of when she got bored.

Tommy felt ashamed, just loathed to admit it, but there was an attractiveness about Ruth—vulnerability mixed with a sort of integral strength. No way did she look her age, either. The type of woman he would have easily jumped into bed with before he got married. Ugh, it made him queasy just thinking about that dinner with her. The proximity. She was right there! Why hadn’t he seen the signs? She was telling him her
whole story
and he was too dense to pick up on it.

He needed to know more about her. He got out the new iPhone he purchased that morning and sent a message to Sylvia:

Darling,

Tell me everything about the book Ruth was writing. Plot, characters etc. Was she working on anything else? Favorite places she’s visited?

xxxT

Sylvia replied not long after. The bleep made his heart race. They were communicating, at least, though it was clear that she was still enraged with him. Or disappointed. “Disappointed” was somehow even worse.

Tommy,

Ruth is aiming for an epic saga type of novel. She was managing 6,000 words a day. That’s a lot. So I can’t imagine it being particularly literary. I only read the first few chapters. She wants to write a doorstop book which is not fashionable right now – it’ll be hard to find a publisher. Normally, they want around 90,000 words for first time novelists. She’s aiming for 2 – 3 times that. Her title was
The Jewel.
It was a sort of thriller cum love story about a man who finds his grandfather’s diaries and it flashes back to his love story set against the 1957 revolution in French Cameroon (I think it was around then) when several women fought for freedom. The female protagonist, Ruth decided, should be played by Thandie Newton (don’t you love the arrogance – she’s already cast the movie).

And then there was the modern day romance between an Indiana Jones character and a young Catherine Deneuve type. I wish now I’d paid more attention. She was also planning a non-fiction book based on her experience with the IVF miracle that was about to happen – she said she had publishers interested. Then there was yet another project which she seemed to have abandoned, a chick-lit novel called
Sex Addict Anon
- its title speaks for itself! (Get the double-entendre, get her brilliance? Anon, as in “bye, see you around” (like in Shakespeare plays) and anon (as in “anonymous”).

She said that she was going to give herself six months to find an agent and if she didn’t have any luck she’d self-publish. She told me she had a list of agents she was going to target once finished . . . how I wish I’d gotten that list when I had the chance. Who could have known?

What were you thinking, Tommy? To approach every New York and London literary agent and ask them to rummage in their slush piles for her manuscript? Funny, the same thing crossed my mind. I did mention that to Agent Russo but I don’t know if she’s following that lead. What else? She’s bulimic, has an eating disorder. Was engaged 4 times. As you know, speaks 3 languages, each one like it was her mother tongue.

Good luck.

Keep in touch,

Sylvia

No kisses, no love, just,
Keep in touch,
Sylvia
. He wondered if he would ever be able to win her trust again. He wanted her back. All of her. Losing his wife was not an option for him.

Sylvia had not been an easy woman to catch. He wooed her for months in an old-fashioned manner: dinners galore, trips to the movies, cards, books of poems. At first, he thought her arrogant, standoffish; her peerless demeanor made him feel as if he didn’t stand a chance. She’d had, as far as he knew, only one boyfriend. Later, he found out that she had a fragile heart, and her haughtiness was her way of protecting herself. Tommy didn’t consider himself ambitious but he was focused when something was important. The scholarship for university, and later, Sylvia. The moment he met her, he made up his mind that she would be his wife. He became obsessed—winning her became his mission.

He asked himself how much of his quest at that time was about love, and how much was about achieving a goal. Like a hunter catching his prey. He had been determined to win his prize. He became obsessed with claiming her, fucking her, making her his. And he finally won. When they married, he felt like his mission was accomplished, forgetting that a marriage was work—a garden that needed to be watered and nurtured. He could sense her drifting away now, like snowflakes in a cool breeze. The idea of losing her completely made him feel as if he had a hole in his solar plexus.

During their marriage he’d never stopped to wonder how much he loved her because she was always there. But her aloofness was now punishing. It wasn’t his ego that craved her, but his soul. Perhaps it was all too late. What he’d been
playing
at, sending all those childish, ridiculous messages to that young Marie, the “Bel Ange” –he now had no idea. It seemed like a mystery what had been going on in his head. He felt pathetic, ashamed. He had a beautiful family and he’d really bungled things.

Going off to LA was a bad plan anyway, chasing a half-baked idea, selling his dreams short. If only he hadn’t gone, none of this would have happened. And now, with Grace kidnapped and all this Ruth horror, mixed with his stupidity, everything had become even more poisoned. If they got Grace back, he had a chance to mend things with his wife. If not, why would Sylvia even bother with him? Then, he would have lost everything in the world that mattered to him.

Ruth. Rocío. Ana. He felt so humiliated. Dishonored. Disgraced. After reading Sylvia’s e-mail, he needed to add another point to her list:

Other books

Harbinger by Jack Skillingstead
Such Sweet Thunder by Vincent O. Carter
Always Enough by Borel, Stacy
Double Cross by Stuart Gibbs
The Child Left Behind by Anne Bennett
Trauma Queen by Barbara Dee