‘Good, good.’
‘Would you like me to visit again?’ I asked.
‘Yes, please. The cable channels are fascinating, but I honestly think King Tut has given up all his secrets. The Titanic, too, you know?’ His eyes closed, his chest rose and fell, slowly, rhythmically.
I was tiptoeing toward the door when somebody in the hall outside bellowed, ‘Nick, buddy,’ and barged into the room. When the man saw me, he stopped dead, as if his shoes had suddenly hit a patch of superglue.
‘Well, well, well. This must be your mother.’
‘Shhh,’ I warned, tapping an index finger against my lips like the proverbial librarian, although I’d never seen a real librarian actually do that. ‘He’s asleep. Can we talk in the hall?’
‘And you are?’ I asked as I pulled the door shut behind me.
‘Jim Hoffner, Ms Chaloux. I’m working for Nick.’ He held out his hand.
I didn’t think much of Hoffner’s investigative skills if he mistook me for the elfin Lilith Chaloux. ‘Sorry, my name is Hannah Ives. We’ve spoken on the phone.’
Hoffner’s hand retracted as if I’d zapped him with a gag hand buzzer.
‘And I believe you have visited my home on a couple of occasions.’ I sent icy shards in his direction. After what he’d had done to my house, I wanted to slap the jerk silly, but, for the moment, I was enjoying making the worm squirm. ‘I believe you may have left something behind the last time you were there.’
‘Oh?’
‘Your fingerprints.’
‘I don’t have the slightest idea what you’re talking about Mrs Ives.’ His face grew red beneath a tan that owed more to a tanning bed in a strip mall somewhere, than it did to a week spent lounging on a Florida beach.
‘Your goons, then. I should send you the cleaning bill. Do you know how hard it is to get fingerprint powder off wallpaper?’
‘I…’ he began.
I raised a warning finger. ‘Just stay away from me, Mr Hoffner. Concentrate on squeezing whatever you can out of the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, take your thirty, forty percent, whatever, and stay out of my life.
‘I have nothing to interest you now,’ I announced airily. ‘I just stopped by to tell Nicholas that I was able to locate his mother and return the box of letters you were so interested in getting your hands on directly to her. So…’ I rubbed my palms together. ‘They’re back home where they belong. All’s well that ends well, don’t you agree?’
I left Hoffner sputtering in my wake.
Out in the parking lot I passed a green Ford pickup. The state of Maryland allows seven characters on a vanity plate and James Hoffner had managed to use them alclass="underline" GOTALAW.
I stopped, peered through the window into the cab. Tossed carelessly on the front seat was a New York Yankees baseball cap. A pair of sunglasses with ice-blue lenses dangled by one earpiece from the sun visor. My heart flopped. Had Hoffner followed me to New York City? Had he been the guy watching me from the corner of 5th Avenue and 11th Street the day I found the Simon sisters?
TWENTY
Thursday dawned bright and clear but too damn cold to walk a dog. Too cold to do anything, in my opinion, except slip into a bathtub full of bubbles and try to soak off the oily feeling I got after my confrontation with James Hoffner.
I’d been almost fully immersed, a hot washcloth neatly folded and pressed over my eyelids, when Paul knocked on the door. ‘Would madam care for coffee?’
I raised a corner of the washcloth and peeked out. ‘Madam would. Very much.’
Paul pushed the door open with one foot and eased into the bathroom, a mug of coffee in each hand. He handed one to me, then lowered the toilet seat lid and sat down on its chenille cover. ‘You really shouldn’t have provoked the man, Hannah.’
‘Who? Hoffner?’
‘Who else have you been provoking lately?’
I slid the washcloth completely off my eyes so I could glare at my husband. ‘But he needed provoking. Especially after what he did to our house. And I think he followed me when I went up to New York City, too. The creep.’
‘You can’t prove that he did either of those things.’
‘That’s why he needed provoking.’
‘To what end?’
I slithered down in the tub until bubbles covered everything but my head. ‘The way he smiled, like he was smarter than me. Made my blood boil! He shouldn’t be allowed to think that he can get away with spying, with trashing other people’s houses, even if he has it done by some goons in absentia.’
Using my toes, I turned the tap so that more hot water would trickle into the tub. ‘Help me sort something out.’
Paul leaned back against the toilet tank, extended his long legs and crossed them at the ankles. ‘I have a feeling this is going to take some time, so let me get comfortable,’ he grinned.
‘I’ve been working on a timeline,’ I said, ‘and some things just aren’t fitting in. The Metro crash was on Tuesday afternoon, September seventh.’
‘“A date that will live in infamy,”’ Paul quoted.
I wrung the washcloth out and placed it over my eyes again. ‘And when did Meredith Logan go missing?’
‘I don’t know. We didn’t hear about Meredith until much later, from Emily. I’m assuming that you know the answer to this question.’
‘I do. Meredith disappeared on Tuesday, September seventh, around lunchtime.’
‘And you believe there’s a connection?’
If my eyes hadn’t been hidden under a washcloth, I would have rolled them. ‘What do you think Nicholas Ryan Aupry, aka Skip, was doing on September seventh before he stepped on to a Metro train and sat down next to me?’
‘I don’t know. What?’
‘He told me he was doing genealogical research at the Library of Congress, in the Thomas Jefferson building, just four or five blocks away from the Lynx News building.’ I raised a single finger. ‘Opportunity.’
‘OK, but what’s his motive?’
‘Like me, he’d figured out that John Chandler was his father and he wanted to confront him. Meredith Logan simply got in the way and, I don’t know, maybe something snapped.’
‘You did say that he’d confessed to a murder when he thought he was dying.’
‘Exactly! Yet when I saw Skip in the hospital yesterday afternoon, he claimed he didn’t remember praying with me. But when he said it, his eyes shot right over to the rosary on his bedside table, so I’m convinced he did remember it happening. And if he remembers praying, he also has to have remembered that he confessed to a killing.’
‘He could have been speaking figuratively, Hannah. What were his actual words?’
‘“I think I killed somebody.”’
‘He thinks he killed somebody? How can one be ambivalent about that? Either you killed somebody or you didn’t. It’s not like Skip pushed Meredith off the edge of a cliff then left her lying on the rocks below, not knowing whether she was alive or dead. Meredith’s death was very hands-on. She was strangled.’
‘Motive and opportunity,’ I said. ‘Skip’s number one on my suspect list.’
‘Your theory should be easy enough to prove one way or the other. Don’t you have to sign in at the Library of Congress? Wouldn’t he have to apply for a Reader Identification Card? And there are security cameras all over the joint, as I recall.’
Underneath my washcloth, I nodded, agreeing. ‘Security is really tight. Airport-like. Last time I was there…’ I raised a corner of the washcloth and fixed an eye on my husband, ‘… I was doing research for good old Whitworth and Sullivan, damn them.’
I repositioned the washcloth over my eyes and lay back. ‘Security guards paw through your packages, handbags, backpacks, you name it, coming and going, and you have to pass through metal detectors and theft detection systems, too.’