‘What’s Kernan?’ Connie asked.
‘It’s the biggest rehabilitation hospital in Maryland,’ Dennis explained. ‘They specialize in trauma of all kinds. Brain, spinal cord, multiple fractures, you name it.’
‘His condition?’
‘Upgraded to serious, but they expect him to survive.’
‘Thank you, Dennis.’ Relief washed over me in waves.
He saluted me with a spoon. ‘No problem. So, Hannah,’ he asked before attacking his dessert once again, ‘what do you plan to do now?’
‘Telephone his mother, of course. That’s step number one.’
‘Why hasn’t that happened already?’ Dennis wondered.
‘I suspect he didn’t want his mother to know.’ I said. ‘They weren’t on the best of terms.’
‘What’s step number two?’ Connie wondered.
‘I’m going to buy some flowers and a Wishes-for-a-Speedy-Recovery balloon and pay Mr Aupry a visit.’
‘Hannah thinks she’s found evidence that John Chandler is Aupry’s biological father.’ Paul tipped his chair back from the table and laced his hands across his chest.
‘Chandler? The And Your Point Is? Chandler?’ Connie whooped.
‘It’s true,’ I said. ‘I’m absolutely convinced of it. But I went to see him the other day, and Chandler’s not owning up to it.’
Dennis scowled. ‘Why should he? Chandler is your enigmatic Zan? Preposterous!’
‘The information’s out there, Dennis. I found it on the Internet. And it’s persuasive.’
Paul held his wine glass out for a refill and Dennis obliged. ‘Nicholas Aupry had access to the same basic information you did, Hannah – his mother’s letters and the Internet. I wonder if he’s reached the same conclusion as you have about Zan?’
‘Only one way to find out, I guess. When I pay a call on the patient, I’ll grill him. But Aupry didn’t hold the trump card like I did.’
‘Trump card? What trump card?’ Connie wanted to know.
‘Elspeth and Claire Simon.’ I stole a quick look at my husband. ‘And the clue of the squiggles.’
I left it to Paul to explain about čárkas and háčeks and went off to the kitchen to telephone Lilith with the good news and brew up another pot of decaf.
Whenever I get within ten miles of Baltimore, I have to drop in on my little sister, or when she finds out, I never hear the end of it. Georgina, the baby of our family, lived with her husband and four kids in the Roland Park section of the city.
When I called to say I was stopping by, Georgina told me that the twins were at soccer practice with their dad, a successful CPA, but that ‘the girls’ were at home.
When I let myself in through the kitchen door, I found my niece Julie, now eleven going on thirty, perched on a stool at the kitchen counter playing a game on the family computer. ‘Where’s your mom?’ I asked, peering at the screen over Julie’s shoulder.
‘Doing laundry in the basement.’ She manipulated the mouse, and a panel of miniature chairs appeared on the screen, each with a price tag attached. Julie clicked, then dragged an ornate chair into a house she was building on the screen.
‘What are you playing?’
‘The Sims.’ She tapped the screen with a chubby index finger. ‘Look, Aunt Hannah, that’s you and that’s Uncle Paul.’
On the screen, the avatar known as Paul seemed to be preparing a meal in a vast Jacobean-style kitchen, while Hannah swam laps in a backyard swimming pool. Julie clicked her mouse a few times and the swim ladder disappeared from the pool. ‘If I do that,’ Julie grinned impishly, ‘Hannah will drown! She’ll turn into a tombstone in the back yard!’
‘Oh, I hope not!’
‘Just kidding.’ Julie giggled, clicked the mouse a few times and restored the ladder.
As I watched, Hannah used the ladder to climb out of the pool. She turned around three times like Diana Prince transforming into Wonder Woman, and emerged wearing a gray business suit. ‘Off to work, now!’ Julie ordered as Hannah rode off in a car. Back in the virtual kitchen, Paul was washing his dirty dishes.
‘I’ve made houses for everybody,’ Julie told me. ‘Aunt Ruth has a store in Pleasantville, too.’ She looked up, wide-eyed. ‘Wanna play?’
‘Sweetie, a game like that would eat my brain right up. Although it would be nice if your Uncle Paul did the dishes like that.’
Georgina suddenly materialized from the basement carrying a wicker basket heaped with clean laundry. ‘Have you done your homework, Miss?’
Julie looked ceiling-ward, rolled her eyes elaborately, and flounced off to her room. Obviously not.
On the computer screen, Paul and Hannah’s life seemed to go on. Hannah returned from work and took a shower. Paul watched TV. Eventually he headed for the exercise equipment Julie had installed for him in the family room and Hannah picked up the telephone to order some pizza. Maybe I should build a cottage and move a Sim named Lilith Chaloux into it; construct a house nearby for John and Dorothea Chandler; add a condo for Skip then click ‘Play,’ stand back and wait to see what happens.
‘How’s everyone?’ I asked Georgina as I helped her fold a king-sized sheet into a compact, origami-like package.
‘Hunky dory. And I’m volunteering as a tour guide at Evergreen House, so that keeps me out of trouble.’
Evergreen House was a Baltimore gem, a magnificent nineteenth-century Gilded Age mansion formerly owned by John Garrett, a B &O railroad tycoon. Its exterior, Georgina told me, had been the inspiration for the Haunted Mansion at Disneyland. She oohed and ahhed over the library, the theater and the twenty-three-carat gold-plated bathroom, then segued into the current exhibit called ‘Cheers! The Culture of Drink in Early Maryland,’ which must have reminded her of the upcoming holidays because she suddenly switched gears and asked, ‘You’re coming to us for Thanksgiving, right?’
‘Well, duh.’ I put the towel I had folded on top of the pile.
‘Good. Which reminds me, why are you here today? When you called, you didn’t say.’
‘I’m going to visit somebody in the hospital. At Kernan.’
She snapped the wrinkles out of an undershirt, folded it into neat thirds. ‘Anybody I know?’
‘No. It’s the guy I was sitting next to when the Metro train crashed.’
Georgina’s head shot up. ‘Wow! You found him, then!’
‘Dennis did,’ I said, giving my brother-in-law full marks.
‘It’s certainly an advantage having a cop in the family, that’s what I always say.’ Georgina stacked the folded laundry in the basket, picked the basket up, and balanced it on one hip. ‘I’m glad the guy made it. How’s he doing, anyway?’
‘As soon as I find out, I’ll let you know.’
From Georgina’s, it was a quick six-mile drive to the sprawling, multi-acre Kernan Hospital campus just off Windsor Mill Road. I parked in the visitors’ lot.
I hadn’t been kidding about the flowers and balloons. Before I left Annapolis, I’d popped into the Giant near I97 and made what I thought was a suitable selection – an arrangement called Autumn Daze, and a Mylar ‘Get Well’ balloon in a cheerful yellow. I hauled them out of my trunk, locked, then strolled up the sidewalk past a flagpole and into the main entrance of the hospital, with the balloon bobbing gaily overhead.
‘I’m here to visit Nick Aupry,’ I told the volunteer at the information desk. ‘I’m his Aunt Hannah, from Iowa. I just got off the plane, and hoo-boy! I don’t know why I bother to fly. I could have walked here faster than that. I was supposed to be here yesterday,’ I rattled on. ‘And Delta Airlines? Don’t get me started! You know what they say?’ I paused for breath. ‘They say Delta means Don’t Expect Luggage to Arrive!’ I chuckled. ‘Isn’t that good?’