“We’re taking a break,” I said. She looked confused. “You know, a break. We’re state employees; we takes lots of them.”
“Oh, we do?” she asked, raising her left eyebrow to a sharp point.
I called her shortly after returning from my meeting with Molly Thomas. Just prior to calling Anna, I called Tom Daniels and asked him to quietly get the FDLE technicians to examine the chapel floor for trace evidence that might verify Molly’s story. I had no reason to doubt her, but in dealing with inmates and their families I had learned to verify everything. Besides it was an incredible story. I also called Dad and told him about the case and asked him to look out for Molly.
“Okay, so we never do,” I said, “but today we are turning over a new leaf.”
She sipped some more of her Diet Pepsi. Where she’d found a straw, I had no idea.
“You know,” I continued, “I never once saw Susan drink out of a straw. She said it causes wrinkles around the mouth.”
“What?” she asked, rolling her eyes and shaking her head. Anna had never liked Susan, which was difficult while we were married, but wonderful now.
I shrugged. “She was always obsessing about something.”
Anna sucked on the straw even harder; her cheeks drew and gulping noises surfaced from the bottom of the can. Like everything she did, this, too, had the unique blend of sensuality and innocence. I’m not saying she didn’t know she was sexy-she was far too confident in it. But just as those raised in wealth are unaware of their privilege, Anna never seemed conscious of her beauty.
“What we’re really doing here,” I whispered, “is looking around for clues.”
Her eyes widened. “Clues? Like real detectives? Am I playing Watson to your Holmes?”
“Being my partner would make you either Curly or Moe, not Watson.”
“I think I’ll be Moe and let Merrill be Curly.”
“Fine by me,” I said. I then grabbed her nose between my first two fingers and brought my other hand down pretending to hit it and said, “Hey, Moe.”
She smiled that smile. For just a moment, time paused. And the Stooges were the furthermost thing from my mind.
“Actually,” she said, “I should be Nancy Drew or your Girl Friday, you sexist pig,” she said with a different smile.
“You know, you’re right. I almost forgot that you are a woman. I’ll be James Bond, and you can be- “
“I will not be a Bond bitch,” she said, cutting me off.
“I think the term is Bond babe,” I said through a laugh.
“Whatever.”
I sat there preparing to talk to her about the letters. It was more difficult than I would have thought, primarily because of what I thought her reaction was going to be.
“I need to talk with you,” I said finally.
“We are talking.”
“We need to have a serious talk. I want you to really listen to what I’m going to say. I’m not joking.”
“Okay, what is it?” she said, tired of the buildup.
“I’ve received a couple of letters threatening someone that I love. I think they’re about you.”
“What did they say?”
I told her.
“It’s not necessarily about me.”
“No, not necessarily, but I think it’s probably about you. I love you more than anyone within miles of this place, and the letters are coming from within the institution.”
“You’re probably right,” she said soberly. “What do you want me to do?”
“I want you to listen to me. If anything happened to you . . .” The thought just lingered in the air. I regretted saying it.
“Well, then, you’ll just have to stop anything from happening to me.”
“I don’t trust me to do that.”
“I do,” she said, her voice full of certainty. “This is not Atlanta. I’m not convinced that was your fault anyway, but even if it was, it’s time to move on. You’re very good at what you do-at all the different things that you do. I trust you to take care of me, to solve this case, and to continue to do the work of God, too.”
“And on the weekends, I could bring about world peace,” I said.
“It is a lot, but you can do it. I’m serious.”
I could tell that she was. “Thank you,” I said. “I want to talk to you more about the whole Stone Cold Killer thing. Not now, but soon. I know you need to. For now, I want you to be very careful. Play it safe, okay? Don’t go anywhere or do anything alone inside here, okay?”
“Okay. It’s going to be all right. I’m going to be fine. You’re going to figure all of this out. Once again, save the day.”
We drank a little more. I knew that we needed to get on with our search, but I was content just to be in her company. She was refreshing. If being happy is being unable to think of another place you’d rather be than where you are, then I was happy.
“I need to look in some of the rooms down here, and I need someone to cause a distraction, and, honey, you are distracting,” I said.
“You asked me down here just to be a distraction? I’m insulted. I am more than just another pretty face.”
“Without question. You’re a versatile woman who can do anything. And the anything that this situation calls for is distraction. Another time and in another place, you can use your other assets.”
“As long as you don’t forget that I am woman, phenomenally,” she said, alluding to Maya Angelou’s poem, which I wouldn’t have known had it not been for her.
“Phenomenal woman, that’s you,” I said completing the line of the poem. “Now, what I need is for you to talk to the officer in the infirmary. And be as distracting as you can.”
She was.
I decided to look in the caustic storage closets first since this was where the cleaning chemicals were stored. They were both locked. I reached in my back pocket and whipped out my Visa card, slid it down the side of the doorjamb, and the door opened-too easily. Someone had done this before-many times.
I glanced at my Visa before I put it back. It had a tear in it that broke the magnetic strip. I smiled. It was maxed out anyway.
The first closet had a single metal shelf that looked like it should have been in someone’s garage. It was filled with boxes of garbage bags, paper towels, toilet paper, and rubber gloves. The very bottom shelf was filled with white plastic bottles of PRIDE chemicals: wax, stripper, floor cleaner, and glass cleaner. There were also two cans of the cleaning spray that kills HIV and hepatitis on contact surfaces like toilet seats.
I got down on my hands and knees to take a closer look. I resisted the urge to touch them, which made it tough to see well. I moved to the side of the shelf, and then I saw it. On the back side there was a bottle of cleaner leaking, the liquid standing around the base of the bottle, the shelf, and the floor. I had not done a lot of detecting lately, so I wasn’t sure, but I thought this looked a lot like a clue.
Amazingly enough, I was right. It was another reason I had faith-anything’s possible. I was so thrilled about being right and finding an actual physical clue that I decided not to check the other closet.
Daniels would do it with crime scene investigators who were equipped to process it.
I walked back up towards the front. In the long corridor that led up to the infirmary, the elderly inmate orderly named Jones was mopping the floor. He was so quiet and his moves so understated that I probably wouldn’t have noticed him except that he was whistling. It was a very soft, airy whistle. I wasn’t sure, but the tune sounded like “As Time Goes By.” When I arrived at the infirmary control room, Anna was still beguiling the young officer, Ron Straub. He never had a chance.
“How you doing?” I asked him when I walked in.
“Fine. How are you, Chaplain?” he said, not bothering to mask his irritation at the intrusion-the second one in as many days.
“Do you have an inmate in the infirmary named Anthony Thomas?”
He looked away from me very quickly, but it was in the direction of the infirmary, so I couldn’t tell if he was just looking to see if Thomas was in the infirmary or if he was startled by the question.