Even Frank was impressed with her audacity. Walcott was simply confused.
“I’m sorry, Miss Brandt, but Anna… Something terrible has happened and-”
“It’s Mrs. Brandt, and I know what happened to poor, dear Anna,” she told him. “I’ve come to see if there is anything I can do to help. I’m sure Mrs. Walcott must be very upset, and I thought I might be of some assistance to her. Is she receiving visitors?”
“She’s out shopping,” Frank informed her.
Mrs. Brandt raised her fine eyebrows to express her surprise at such a thing
“I’ll be sure to tell her you called,” Mr. Walcott assured her hastily.
“The other lodger is pretty upset,” Frank offered. “Maybe she’d appreciate a visit.”
Mrs. Brandt’s eyebrows rose higher, probably to express her shock that Frank had asked for her assistance, but she was gracious enough not to betray any other reaction.
“Are you a friend of Miss Porter’s, too?” Walcott asked her suspiciously.
Frank never got to hear what bold-faced lie Sarah Brandt might have told because just then someone else started pounding insistently on the front door.
“Reporters,” Walcott muttered furiously, and this time he didn’t wait for the maid to answer.
Striding purposefully back out into the foyer, he opened the door, prepared to do battle with a member of the Fourth Estate. Instead, a very distraught middle-aged man pushed his way into the house. “Where is she?” he demanded.
Walcott seemed genuinely alarmed. “This isn’t an opportune time, Mr. Giddings,” he said, hurrying over and closing the door to the parlor in Frank’s face. But if he’d thought the act would give him privacy, he was mistaken.
“Don’t try to stop me,” Giddings shouted, his voice clearly audible through the door. “I have to see her. Where is she?”
“She isn’t here,” Walcott said anxiously. “You must leave. The police-”
“Don’t threaten me with the police! Do you think I give a damn about them? I’ve got to see her. Anna!” he cried. “Anna, come down here!”
Walcott said something Frank couldn’t understand, and then he heard the sounds of a scuffle. In another moment, footsteps pounded up the stairs, and Giddings was calling for Anna again.
Frank exchanged a questioning glance with Mrs. Brandt.
“I think you should be the one to deal with him,” she said generously. “I’ll see if I can find out anything from the maid.”
It galled Frank, but he said, “See if that other girl lodger is still here. Maybe she knows something, too.”
Frank opened the parlor door and found Walcott staring helplessly up the stairs, as if unable to decide upon a course of action. Giddings was throwing open doors on the second floor and calling Anna’s name.
Frank shouldered Walcott out of the way and started climbing the stairs. By the time he’d reached the top, Giddings was standing in the open doorway of one of the rooms, staring stupidly into it. Hearing Frank’s approach, he turned accusingly.
“Where is she?” he demanded. Then he realized Frank wasn’t Walcott. “Who are you?”
“Detective Sergeant Frank Malloy with the New York City Police,” he said. His tone wasn’t particularly menacing, but it didn’t have to be. Those words were enough to strike fear into a normally law-abiding citizen who had been causing a disturbance.
Giddings stiffened. “I’ve done nothing wrong,” he insisted.
“Besides forcing your way into someone’s home?” Frank inquired mildly.
“I was just-”
“Who are you looking for?” Frank asked sharply.
“I… Really, it isn’t important.” Giddings was starting to sweat in spite of the coolness of the day. He was probably remembering stories he’d heard about the police and how they treated people they arrested, innocent or not. Frank supposed he owed the press a debt of gratitude for their sensational stories if they put the fear of God into people like this Giddings.
“Were you looking for Anna Blake?” Frank asked.
“I… Yes, I was concerned about her. I haven’t seen her for several days and-”
“What is your relationship to her?”
Giddings needed a moment to think about that. “We’re… that is… She’s my fiancée,” he finally decided. He sounded oddly defensive.
Frank did not betray his surprise. “Then I suppose you haven’t seen the morning papers.”
“What does that have to do with anything?” Giddings asked impatiently.
“Because if you had, then you’d know… Well, I’m sorry to have to tell you, but Anna Blake was murdered the night before last.”
Frank watched his face carefully. He’d interrogated enough people that he knew a genuine reaction from a phony one, and the emotions played across Giddings’s face in exactly the right order. First shock, then disbelief.
“There must be some mistake,” he insisted, his mind unable to grasp such a horrible truth. “She was… She couldn’t be…”
“I assure you, there is no mistake. Anna Blake is dead.”
For a moment, Giddings couldn’t seem to get his breath. He reached out blindly for the doorframe and grabbed it for support. “How? When?” he asked faintly, the blood draining from his face as he slowly accepted what Frank had told him.
“Maybe you should sit down first,” Frank suggested. He glanced down the stairs and saw Walcott waiting, listening intently to every word. “Is this Anna’s room?” he asked Giddings, nodding toward the doorway where he stood.
The man nodded. Frank found it interesting he knew this fact if he’d never visited Anna’s room, as Walcott had insisted. He took Giddings’s arm and led him inside, closing the door behind him. Walcott would have to come upstairs and put his ear to the panel if he wanted to eavesdrop.
There was a chair in the corner of the sparsely furnished room, by the window, and Frank deposited Giddings into it. Then he perched on the edge of Anna’s carelessly made bed and waited. Human nature being what it was, he knew Giddings would break the silence very soon.
Frank took the time to study Giddings. His clothes were good quality. He was a man accustomed to dressing well, although his suit was a bit wrinkled, and his linen far from fresh. He’d been wearing it more than one day, which was probably unusual for a man of his obvious position in life. His hat was on crooked, and he hadn’t thought to remove it, a gesture that would have come naturally to him under other circumstances. He was well-fed but haggard, with dark circles under his eyes and a tightness around his mouth. A man of comfortable circumstances who found himself dealing with a crisis he couldn’t resolve.
Then, to Frank’s surprise, Giddings reached into his coat pocket and pulled out a silver flash. With practiced ease, he removed the top and took a healthy swallow. He didn’t offer to share before placing the flask safely back into his pocket.
“How did she die?” he asked when he’d given the whiskey a moment to work.
“Someone stabbed her. It happened in Washington Square.”
He started in surprise. “Who did it?”
“We don’t know yet.”
“But if someone stabbed her in a public place like that, someone must have seen who did it!”
“It happened at night. No one found her until morning.” He let that sink in, and then he said, “Do you know why she was out alone at that hour?”
“Of course not!”
“She wasn’t going to meet you, then?”
“I’d never expect a female to go out alone at night to meet me,” he insisted, affronted. “That wouldn’t be safe. I always called on Anna here at the house.”
“You said you were engaged,” Frank reminded him. “When were you planning to get married?”
Giddings blanched again, proving Frank’s theory that this had been a lie. “I… We… we hadn’t yet set a date,” he hedged.
“Is that because you’re already married, Mr. Giddings?” Frank inquired.