Stuart Woods_Stone Barrington 12
briefcase whom Dino had not noticed approached, appeared at his elbow. He opened the case and produced a sheaf of papers. âThis,â Eduardo said, accepting them, âwill be the settlement agreement between you and Anna Maria. It includes the financial settlement I have just outlined and a guarantee of joint custody. You will have Benito two weekends each month, two days each week and six weeks each summer, all to be mutually agreed on by you and Anna Maria. Anna Mariaâs signature is already affixed and notarized. If you should ever feel that Anna Maria is not living up to the agreementâs provisions, you need not go to a lawyer or judge, simply telephone me. Please read it.â
Dino took a pen from his pocket and signed both copies of the document without reading it. The man in the suit notarized both, handed one to Dino and put the other into his briefcase, then disappeared as quickly as he had appeared.
The two men finished their lunch at their leisure and spoke of whatever came into their minds. It was the only time in the years Dino had known Eduardo that he had ever felt comfortable in his presence.
14
S TONE SPENT THE NEXT DAY working on his cousinâs estate, distributing funds to those named in the will, paying the bills that had come in and dealing with the life insurance company on the two policies that Dick had taken out.
Around noon, the doorbell rang, and two packages were delivered. One bore the return address of the funeral directors who had handled the cremation and obviously contained the familyâs ashes; the other was from Sergeant Young. Stone opened that package.
Inside were a pair of khaki trousers and a plastic bag containing a number of items. A letter from the sergeant said that these were Dickâs clothes and the contents of his pockets, and that Dickâs pistol and silencer were being retained as evidence, pending resolution of his case.
Stone examined the trousers. They were ordinary, from L.L. Bean, and a belt was among the effects. He went through the other effects and found a steel Rolex Submariner wristwatch and bracelet, a wallet, ninety-four dollars in cash held by a money clip, a clump of keys on a ring, a handkerchief, a pocket comb, a silver Mont Blanc pen, a mint Chapstick and a pocket-sized packet of Kleenex.
Stoneâs first interest lay in the fact that Dickâs clothes did not include shoes, shirt or underwear, just the trousers. He imagined Dick being wakened by a noise, slipping on the trousers and coming downstairs, where his killer greeted him with his own gun. He could not think of any other reason why his cousin would be wandering around the house in the middle of the night wearing only trousers. It was still cool at night, and the furnace in the house was programmed not to come on after midnight.
The wallet was small, since Dick had carried his cash in a money clip. He emptied it of its contents, one compartment at a time, and replaced the items in the same order after he had inspected them. There were a Maine driverâs license, American Express and Visa cards, a bank ATM card on Dickâs Camden bank, a membership card from a London club, a pilotâs license for single-engine land and multi-engine land with instrument ratings for both and a third-class FAA medical certificate with the date of Dickâs last examination, two days before his death, from a doctor in Camden. Stone had not known that Dick was a pilot. The wallet also contained business cards, identifying Dick as the agricultural attaché at Londonâs American embassy, obviously a cover job. The last item was a Maine license to carry concealed firearms.
Stone returned the items to their bag and put them in a cupboard in the study, then he looked up Caleb Stoneâs number in the local phone book and called him. Caleb answered.
âItâs Stone,â he said.
âHi.â
âIâve received the ashes from the funeral directors, and you said you wanted to scatter them in the harbor.â
âYes, thank you.â
âThe three were intermingled, according to Dickâs instructions. Would you like me to bring them over?â
âIâll pick them up,â Caleb said. âIs now a good time?â
âYes, come ahead.â The two men hung up.
Five minutes later, the doorbell rang, and Stone ushered Caleb inside and handed him the box.
âI havenât opened them,â he said. âI donât
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