But that man, he’d been out there early, before dawn. She looked out at the moonlight, bright now with the moon right overhead. She could go even earlier; he wouldn’t be out in the middle of the night, would he? Maybe no one would. She could hurry up the hills to Genelle Yardley’s house and hide in the bushes until the old lady woke up. Until Ms. Yardley turned on a light in the morning or came out to get the paper. If anyone bothered her she’d kick them in the groin, the way Mama taught her.
As Lori bricked herself back into the basement room again and set her little alarm for one in the morning, five blocks away the kit pressed the two brown envelopes up between a floor joist and a plumbing pipe. Secure just inside the vent grid where a cop could reach in, they would not be seen by the casual passerby. Now, with the envelopes safe, the kit circled the underhouse again, frantic to get out. She circled, pawing uselessly at the other two vents, but both were fixed tight to the wall. With screws, she thought. She hooked her claws in but couldn’t pull them out.
Studying the concrete foundation, wondering how deep it went, she found a soft place in the dirt where she could smell the old, dry scent of squirrels, where their digging had made the ground soft.
Thanking the little rodents that normally she would eat, she began to excavate the churned earth, kicking dirt behind her like a terrier. Her panic at being trapped was worst of all when she did nothing; she needed to move, it eased her to dig even if she had to dig to China. Listening for his car, she clawed down and down, wondering if he was coming back or if he was gone for good. She thought the time was past midnight. She dug straight down for nearly a foot, fighting the dirt away from the concrete wall, trying to find its bottom, scraping the skin from her paws until they bled again. And still the concrete went deeper.
After a long, long time of digging she found a straight edge to the concrete, where it turned under. Her paws hurt bad. She was very thirsty. And hungry. But the discovery of the bottom of that concrete filled her with terrible joy. Pausing, she thought she would just rest for a little while before she dug on through and up the other side. Soon enough she’d be free, be out of there and free.
13 [��������: pic_14.jpg]
Above the courthouse tower the clouds moved away; the full force of moonlight washed down across the parapet, caressing the two cats, etching Dulcie’s black and brown stripes like a black ink drawing. She lay licking her paw, watching Joe, her ears back in a thoughtful frown but trying to remain silent, letting Joe come to his own conclusion.
“Maybe you’re right about Harper,” he said at last. “If we tell the cops about the child, they’ll have little choice, they’re bound by law to call child welfare-if the kid’s really all alone, if there’s no family.” He studied Dulcie, his yellow eyes narrowed and appraising. “But Wilma’s retired, she’s a free agent, she’s not beholden to the law. She can do as she pleases.”
“But what would she do? You know how she feels about help from the proper officials, she’s all for it.”
“Maybe. But she isn’t stupid. She knows how twisted some of those agencies can be. You get one bad apple�”
Dulcie shrugged. “I suppose. So frustrating that I can’t ask Lori questions. That I can only hope she tells me more. I don’t know why she doesn’t want anything to do with child welfare. And the man she talks about, she just sayshe.I don’t know if someone’s stalking her, or if the man is family. I tried to find her last name in the library database for library cardholders, for children’s cards with the first name Lori. Took me all night, those computers are so temperamental. Why don’t they make a steadier machine, one that doesn’t go off in a hundred directions?”
“A cat-friendly computer.”
“Exactly. Someone ought to write to Bill Gates. Well, there’s no library card for Lori, not one Molena Point child named Lori in the system.” She told him how she had discovered Lori in the first place, when the scent of peanut butter and jelly drew her across the library basement to the bricked-up wall behind a little bookcase.
“It was late, after the library closed, ten days ago. That’s where I’ve been. She gets so lonely, especially at night. And it’s dark in there all day. It took a lot of resolve for the kid to hide there, and I think it takes a lot more to stay.”
Her green eyes were big with concern. “She’s not playing, Joe. She’s made a safe little home for herself; she’s thought it all out. She keeps her toothbrush and extra clothes and a bedroll in her backpack, and hides it in a rough niche in the wall-I think she must have dug the loose bricks out herself, maybe with a pair of scissors from the workroom. There are bits of concrete scattered on the floor, which she’s pushed into a heap. And the hole where she enters her little basement, she fits loose bricks back into that really carefully.”
Dulcie smiled, her pale whiskers gleaming in the moonlight. “She does her laundry in the ladies’ room after the library closes at night, hangs it in her basement from the rough, sticking-out bricks. Folds and hides the dried clothes when she wakes up in the morning, before the library opens, her little socks and panties, or a blouse, afraid someone might move the bricks and look in.
“It’s hard,” Dulcie said, “with librarians working just on the other side of the wall. Hard to stay there in the dark and cold, alone. To only come out at night and early in the morning to use the bathroom and get books. She has everything she needs, though. And she never lets herself look seedy, never misses brushing her teeth, combing her hair, keeping her clothes fresh. She took a little lamp from the library storeroom, and she has a big tin can she empties at night to use as a makeshift bathroom in the daytime. Most children wouldn’t do all that. There’s an electric plug in there, but her lamp is the battery kind. Maybe the room was part of the library basement once or of the basement across the alley.”
Joe frowned but said nothing.
“That room is underneath the alley, it has to be. I think it must have once joined the basement of the other building.”
“Why would someone build-”
“It was originally all one house, in the 1800s. Gardens, stables, a carriage house. A little estate that filled the whole block. I found pictures in a history of Molena Point. The alley was a carriageway between the big house and the servants’ quarters, where those apartments and the men’s shop are now. Genelle Yardley’s parents deeded the main house to the village for a library, but kept the servants’ building for rentals. Genelle has lived partly on that income since her husband died and she retired.
“Somewhere along the way, the lane became a paved service alley. Maybe it was then that the basement beneath was walled off. Maybe something to do with ownership or property rights. Or the weight of the garbage trucks on top of the basement, who knows.”
“You did a lot of research.”
“I wanted to know where that room came from. And where it might once have led.” She looked up past the little parapet roof at the slowly dropping moon. “I wanted to know if there might be another way in or out of there, but there doesn’t seem to be.” Talking about Lori made her sad. Lori, with her little heart-shaped face and the way her mouth tilted up at the corners, and her dark, huge eyes. Dulcie always wanted to touch her with a soft paw, rub her face against Lori and purr. When Lori’s tears came, Dulcie had to snuggle close; and when the child pressed her face into Dulcie’s fur, Dulcie licked her shining brown hair. “Somehow,” Dulcie said, “she got hold of someone’s library card, maybe stole it. With that she can open the card lock to the women’s bathroom. She brought a flashlight with her, and even extra batteries, and she has a little battery-operated clock. And sheknowsthat library, Joe. Knows her way around.