“Did you meet any monsters on the way?”
“Not many,” Charles said. “Give me another clue what we’re talking about.”
“Did you pass any police hurrying by?”
“Police hurrying. With their sirens, you mean?”
“Yes, sir.”
“We got it? The Odyssey?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Good! Good for you, Morgan. Very good!… Well, maybe. How much was it?”
“Seventeen hundred forty.”
“So if I’d stayed at fifteen, we would have missed it. I can’t wait to see it.”
“Do you think it was really worth that much?”
“Maybe not. But I always hope! When will we get it?”
“I paid right away, and I asked the seller to send it overnight. We should have it tomorrow.”
“Very good, Morgan! So that will take away a little of the sting of losing the Melville. I’ll go down and pack up Moby-Dick.”
“Use a big box,” Morgan said.
“Hey, boss.”
“Oh. Good morning, Angelo.” Charles looked at his watch. “Are you ready to go?”
“I’m ready to take the book.”
“I’m sorry, I lost track of time. Let me wrap it.”
“What are you doing with that book, boss?”
“I was reading it.”
“What do you read all these books for?”
“I like to, Angelo.”
“For what in the dark?”
“Oh, I don’t know. It is less distracting. Or maybe I should say that it makes the book the only thing there is.”
“What do you read in these books?”
“Everything. Everything there is. And there is always something new.”
“In these books that are old?”
“Yes, especially. It is like being hungry and these are food. I am hungry to read these. And it is also like they are friends and I want to be with them and talk to them.”
“That is what the people say about the drugs.”
“It is a little like that. But these aren’t bad for you. And they’re legal.”
“I will read one sometime.”
“Yes, Angelo, please do. All right, here it is, all wrapped up. Do you have the receipt for them to sign?”
“I have that.”
“Angelo, be very nice to this man. This is a very special, very expensive book. I would go with you but I have another appointment. Try to make the man feel like it is a special book.”
“How do I make a man feel a way?”
“Treat the book very carefully. Hand it to him like you are handing him diamonds from that jewelry store. Act very grateful that he is buying it and say thank-you like you mean it. Look him right in the eye, but not to make him afraid. Make him feel that you are proud of him. Be proud and grateful that he is buying it. Do you feel like this book is precious?”
“It is lots of money.”
“Because it is worth it. It really is.”
“Okay, boss, but the man will feel the way he wants.”
“Do the best you can.”
The wind was just as wild across the Potomac, and clouds had joined it. Charles paddled undaunted through the canyon streets and the whitewater breezes.
He docked at the District of Columbia Police station’s grim landing and came ashore into its joyless lobby. But one smile greeted him.
“Hi! Mr. Beale! Morning. How are you doing?”
“Very well. Thank you, Mr. Kelly.”
“I already told them we were coming. I won’t even have to sneak you in.”
In plain sight, the two passed the gauntlet of desks and halls; Frank Kelly showed his FBI badge twice at strategic moments. It was a very busy building and there were many policepersons.
A criminal would not have felt welcome.
On the third floor they came finally to a large room of desks and file cabinets, and once more the magic badge was shown.
“Most of this stuff is online,” Mr. Kelly said. “But I don’t have a password. It’s easier to just drop in.”
A file folder was retrieved and they chose a desk to take it to. Frank Kelly opened it and flipped pages, selecting a few to pull out. Charles sat and waited.
“Okay. Here are the ones you want.”
He pushed a dozen papers across the desk.
“I may read them?” Charles said.
“Go ahead. Those you’re allowed to see. And I took out the gory stuff.”
“Thank you.”
He started. It was a mash; everything about a murder scene and the people involved, circling out layer by layer to the outer reaches of Derek’s life. There were interviews, narratives, forms, lists and descriptions.
Charles read for twenty minutes. Then he pushed the papers back across the desk.
“That’s enough,” he said.
“Not real great reading,” Mr. Kelly said. “That answer your questions?”
“I suppose. There were five burglaries in the neighborhood in three weeks and they were all the same. Someone broke a window and climbed in, moved through the house very quickly and took small, valuable objects, and was out in just a few minutes.”
“Those houses, they had plenty of small valuable objects.”
“And the power had been cut.”
“Right,” Mr. Kelly said. “Which was not easy. It had to be done at the electric meter because all the lines are either underground or inside.”
“Do most burglars know how to do that?”
“I don’t think so. So that sure sets it off from a regular break-in. It must have been someone good. But most burglars aren’t after antiques anyway.
“So usually the security company gets an alarm when the power goes out, but nothing happens at the house.” Frank was looking through the pages. “The company calls the owners, and the owner probably just tells them no problem, the power’s out. But the guy was gone in five minutes anyway, and it’s too late even if the police do get called.
“So. At 2:15 in the morning something cut off the power at the Bastien residence, which set off an alarm back at the surveillance desk. We have that from the alarm company. Derek Bastien had instructed them to not immediately notify the police, which is a normal instruction. They were supposed to call his cell phone for further instructions, and if he didn’t answer, then they would call the police.
“According to the alarm company, they did call and he answered. There was some kind of password he gave them to verify who he was. He told them to wait five minutes for him to call back and if he didn’t, to send the police. He didn’t call back.
“Apparently, he started looking around. He went into the office. The burglar must have heard him coming. By the angles, it looks like he was hiding behind the door when Bastien came in. He hit Bastien on the head with the marble statue, and that killed him. He probably never knew what hit him.”
“I hope not,” Charles said.
“Yeah, that’s the part I never liked.” Frank Kelly looked appropriately sad. “There’s the victim, knowing he was about to get hit or killed. That must be a rotten feeling.”
“It must be.”
“At least it wouldn’t last very long. Lots of blood on the desk, and lab analysis said it was all his.”
“Mr. Kelly, would they have taken the desk to a lab to do that analysis?”
“Taken the desk?” Kelly scratched his head. “I don’t think so.” He looked through the papers still in the folder. “No. It was a pretty big desk. They just wiped samples of the blood. Crime scene techs would have done it. They didn’t take the whole desk.”
“Whoever paid so much for it, I’d hate to think it had been banged around and damaged being moved.”
“They didn’t take it. They only took the statue. ‘Early eighteenth century Florentine marble statuette of James the Second of England, fourteen inches, thirty-five pounds.’ No fingerprints. He would have been dead already, after he’d been in exile.”
“In exile?” Charles was confused. “The burglar or Derek?”
“James. The Second. After he got deposed.”
“Oh. Of course.”
“Louis the Fifteenth had dozens of those statues made and sent them everywhere. Little presents to all his friends, you know, to stick the needle in George the First whenever he could. Eight thousand dollars market value. Wasn’t sold at the auction. I guess they still have it here in evidence storage.”