Train got up and began to pace around in the study after Karen finished telling him about her encounter with Jack Sherman. She was sitting on the couch with that oversized handbag at her feet.
“So he admits he was in on what happened to you out in Great Falls?” he asked.
“Yes. He denies having anything to do with what happened to Elizabeth or Galen Schmidt. But only because Galantz didn’t ask him to. He did appear at the funerals on Galantz’s instructions.”
Train nodded. “We’re going to have to find out what the historical connection is between Galantz and Sherman’s son.
You said they first met at recon school?”
“That’s what he said.”
“That, we can check out. I’m sure Galantz was there as an instructor or something. I wonder if Jack Sherman’s BCD had anything to do with Galantz.”
“There’s something I haven’t talked about yet,” Karen said in a tone of voice that made Train turn around. She told him about her outburst with the .45.
Train grinned in spite of himself. “Wahoo,” he said. “I think I’d like to have seen that, Counselor.”
But Karen wasn’t laughing. “I think I wanted to kill him.
Hell, I know I wanted to kill him. Train, I’ve never had an impulse like that before.”
He went over to her and sat down on the couch, he said, reaching for her hand. “If not for some fortuitous accidents the other night, you’d be dead now, and that little piece of crap up_ there on Cherry Hill wouldn’t be giving it a second thought. You’re upset to find yourself getting down to his level, but remember, he’s the one who provoked it.
Now, where’s the -forty-five?”
She reached into the bag and produced the Colt, holding it by the slide.
At that moment, Hiroshi knocked on the study door and opened it to report that lunch was ready.
When he saw the huge automatic in her hand, he stopped in mid-sentence.
“It’s okay, Hiroshi,” Train said hurriedly. “Tell Kyoko we’ll be right in.”
Hiroshi withdrew carefully while Train slipped out the magazine and worked the slide to eject the chambered round. “We need to clean and reload this thing,” he said. “Maybe I shouldn’t be carrying it,” she said. “I don’t have a license or anything.”
Train laughed at that, kissed her on the cheek, and went over to the shotgun cabinet in the corner of the study and began fishing around in a drawer. “Given what’s been going down, I’d feel better if you did have it with you. A concealed-weapons-violation beats a body bag every time.”
He did a quick cleaning job on the pistol and then found a box of .45 auto to reload the clip. But when he turned around, Karen had her face in her hands. He finished up ith the weapon and went back to her and held her for a w minutes, telling her it was okay, that nobody got hurt, and next time to take him with her when she went out into the weeds.
Over lunch, they kicked around her idea about telling Mcnair about Jack Sherman and what he had said. Train was for telling the police what they knew. “Mcnair’s been pretty straight with us,” he said. “We owe it to him to return the favor. At the very least, the cops will want to sweat young Jackie boy, because they’ll think he can lead them to Galantz.”
Karen wasn’t so sure now. “I don’t think Jack Sherman can lead himself to the bathroom most of the time. The cops aren’t even going to get close to Galantz through him.”
“But he admitted being part of a kidnap and attempted murder-namely, yours.”
“I know. But right now, that’s hearsay. If you could have seen him, Train, you’d know that he is nothing but a pawn.
Galantz has some kind of hold on him, but otherwise he’s a dysfunctional mess. Besides, there’s another problem with telling the cops about Jack.”
“Which is?”
“If they pick him up, either they or we have to tell Admiral Carpenter that Sherman’s son is in fact mixed up in the homicides. Right now, they have Sherman sidelined on a selection board just because there’s a whiff of scandal.
But if this gets out, they’ll force him to resign and take his homicidal relatives with him.”
Train was silent for a moment. “Yeah, but you’re forgetting that Sherman himself is missing. His goose may already be cooked. Let’s do this: Let’s talk to Mcnair, tell him about the son, and lay out the political ramifications for him. That way, we’re straight with him, but maybe we-can mitigate any collateral damage done to Shehnan senior. I think we can convince Mcnair that his real target is still Galantz and not some whacked-out kid.”
“And what do we tell Admiral Carpenter?”
Train shrugged. “That’s a tougher question. The good news is that we’re supposed to be sitting here on the sidelines. I don’t see that we need to talk to Carpenter at All right now. We’re better off talking to Mcnair first-before something happens to that kid.”
“Happens? Like what?”
“I don’t know. But if galantz finds out that you and Jack Sherman have had a quiet little chat, Jackie boy might become surplus gear.”
Karen was folding her napkin, staring pensively across the dining room.
“What I’d really like to do is find Admiral Sherman,” she said.
Kyoko came in to clear the table and Train suggested they go for a walk around the grounds before calling Mcnair. As they were stepping out through the front door, the telephone began ringing. Train paused to see who it was. Hiroshi came through the main hallway. “Detective Mcnair,” he announced with a stiff face. Train realized he would have to deal with the problem of injured feelings before the day was over. Karen followed him back to the study.
“Mcnair,” Train said. “We were talking about calling you.’ “Trouble?”
Mcnair asked.
“Not exactly. But we’ve located a new player in the Sherman puzzle-Admiral Sherman’s son. We need to talk.”
“What’s the connection?”
“He’s been helping Galantz.”
There was a moment of silence on the line. “You told your Navy people about this?”
“Not yet. I figured this is first and foremost police business. “
“Good thinking,” Mcnair said.
Karen was trying to tell him something. “Hang on a’ sec.
What?” he asked.
“Tell him we need to find Admiral Sherman,” she said.
Train relayed her message.
“Believe it or not, that’s why I was calling,” Mcnair said. “How do you two feel about making a little drive2”
“Like where?”
“Like to a Saint Martha’s Hospice Center, about five miles outside of a little town called Hamey, Maryland, right up on the Pennsylvania border.”
“A hospice center?” he asked.-Karen was staring at him.
“What the hell, Mcnair?”
“I’ve got an all-day court deal today,” Mcnair said.
“The hospice center is right on the main drag. I think it’s Route 134, just north of Hamey. Meet me there, say, five P.m. Give me the number for your ear phone in case I get delayed. Commander Lawrence is with you, right?”
“Yup.’ “Good. Keep it that way. I’ll see you there at five.” Train agreed and hung up. He told Karen what Mcnair had said.
“A hospice center?” she said.
“That’s what the man said. On the Pennsylvania border.
Look, it’s almost one. This will take-what, three, three and a half hours? Why don’t we get on the road now, get north of D.C. before all the traffic starts? But first, I need to mend some fences with Hiroshi and tell him where we’re going.”
They found the St. Martha’s Hospice Center with no difficulty, arriving just after 4:30. The sky had turned overcast and colder during the afternoon, and the air smelled like rain when they parked in front of what appeared to be the main building. St. Martha’s had the look of a private sanatorium. There was a brick wall surrounding nearly five acres of wooded grounds, and all the buildings were covered in old ivy. The main building, which was distinguished from the rest by the fact that it had three stories, had a granite Gothic arch entranceway capped by a plain marble cross set back into the arch. There were several cars in the parking lot but no obvious police cars.