13
According to the coin
dealer I went to see the next day, the silver dollar we found at
Jefferson Lamar’s grave wasn’t in the greatest shape. It wasn’t
especially rare. It wasn’t famous for some weird minting error like
an upside-down date or anything. It was worth exactly thirty-seven
dollars.
Not exactly a fortune.
Which made it not exactly worth mugging me
for.
That pretty much sealed the deal. With that piece
of the puzzle in place, I was convinced the coin had nothing to do
with the attack outside my apartment building, and since the
attack—and what it meant in terms of my investigation—was what I
was supposed to be thinking about, I was grateful to eliminate it
as a possibility. I was sitting on my couch holding the coin, with
my legal pad in my lap. I ripped off page three with its question
about the coin, wadded the sheet into a ball, and tossed it
onto
It wasn’t the most exciting way for a girl to spend
a Sunday evening. But believe me when I say that being home alone
thinking about clues and murder and a mugging gone (thankfully)
wrong wasn’t the worst thing in the world. If I was deep in thought
about my investigation, I could avoid answering my phone when it
started to ring.
And it was going to start ringing soon.
How did I know?
Well, for one thing, the latest episode of
Cemetery Survivor was scheduled to start in
about five minutes, and when it did, I knew Ella would call
immediately to tell me how cute/smart/hard-working I looked. My two
aunts would wait a little longer. But then, they’d be busy
throughout the show on a three-way call with my mom, giving her the
play-by-play. Once the show was over, I was fair game. For all
three of them.
As for me watching the show . . .
I’d already thrown out the khakis and the emerald
green shirt I’d worn to work on Friday. No way I was going to
relive the whole ugly experience by watching myself go down in the
mud.
So there I sat with time on my hands and questions
spinning through my head. I wondered why anyone would bother to
bury a pretty ordinary coin at Jefferson Lamar’s grave. And yes, I
couldn’t help it. I wondered, too, if the coin meant anything in
terms of Vera Blaine’s murder.
Maybe it was the sitting there thinking and the
staring thing. Or maybe I was just getting better at the whole Gift
that kept on giving. In the empty spot next to me on the couch, I
actually saw a little ripple that reminded me
That explains why I didn’t screech when he said,
“That’s a Morgan silver dollar you’re holding. George T. Morgan was
the man who designed the art on it, what we collectors call the
obverse and the reverse of the coin. The coins were produced
between 1878 and 1904, then again in 1921, and the silver they’re
made out of came from the Comstock Lode—you know, that big silver
strike out in Nevada in the 1850s.”
The only thing I knew about Nevada was that Las
Vegas and Reno were in it. The only thing I knew about the 1850s
was that I was glad I didn’t live then, I mean, what with the no
running water and the lack of fashion choices and—
None of this seemed relevant, so I simply held out
my hand so Lamar could see the coin better. “It’s hardly worth
anything. I mean, not like some coins are. So why would anyone
bother to bury it next to your grave? Maybe somebody owed you
money? Or maybe it’s the silver that means something. Or this whole
Compost Lode thing.”
“Comstock.” He pushed his big plastic glasses up
the bridge of his nose. “Like I said, I used to collect coins.
Plenty of people knew about my hobby. We even had a group that met
at Central State. You know, prisoners, a few guards, me. It gave
the inmates something to look forward to, and something to read
about and study between our meetings. I also belonged to a coin
group through the church Helen and I attended. I was president for
a couple years. But if anyone from the numismatic community left
that coin as a sort of gift, I can’t see why. You’d think they
would have chosen something more unusual.”
“Or more valuable.” I tossed the coin in the air
and
“I don’t think we’ll ever know.” Lamar sighed. “And
I doubt it has anything to do with Vera. How could it?”
He was right, and I was wasting my time on a
mystery that wasn’t the mystery I should have been thinking about.
With that in mind, I told myself to focus, and reached for the
fabric we’d found with the coin so I could wrap it and put it
away.
“What’s that?” Lamar pointed at the orange
cloth.
I sniffed delicately. “Nasty old fabric. The coin
was wrapped in it.”
He scooted forward, and if he could have plucked
that piece of cloth from my hands, he would have. Instead, he
stopped just short and bent nearer for a better look. “That’s not
just old fabric,” he said. “It’s a piece of a Central State prison
uniform.”
“You think?” I had never paid any attention to the
eight-by-eight square of cloth, and I smoothed it open on the couch
between us. If I looked really hard, I could just make out faded
black numbers against the orange.
Behind his big-as-boats glasses, Lamar’s eyes
gleamed. “It’s a Morgan silver dollar, and Dale Morgan . . . he was
an inmate at Central State. He was in the coin group.”
“So you think he may have left the coin for
you?”
Lamar rubbed his chin. “It’s possible, I suppose.
Dale was a small-time gambler who got in over his head and got in
plenty of trouble because of it. That’s how he ended up at Central
State. But inside, he had a good heart. I was certain he could be
rehabilitated. Maybe once he got out of prison and turned his life
around, he left the coin because he was grateful I had such faith
in him.”
“It’s possible.” Thinking, I tossed the coin. “Any
idea what happened to this Dale guy?”
He shook his head. “None.”
“Is there a way I could check? I mean, if he wasn’t
rehabilitated? If he’s still in the system?”
Lamar didn’t look pleased at the thought. “What
about that Inter-thing I’ve heard people talking about? Interweb?
Interweave?”
“Internet. Perfect!” I hopped off the couch and
grabbed my purse. I don’t have a computer at home, but I do have a
key to the administration building at Garden View and the code to
get me into the side gate that employees use when they’re leaving
late and the main gates are closed.
While I was at it, heading out on a Sunday night
gave me the perfect excuse for not answering phone calls. I was
busy, I’d tell Ella, my mom, and my aunts when they finally did
track me down, and as if the Universe heard me, my phone rang at
that exact moment.
It was Ella, but I didn’t answer.
After all, I was busy.
The good news was that
thanks to the Internet, Dale Morgan was easy to find.
The bad news was that Jefferson Lamar’s faith in
the possibility of his rehabilitation had not been justified.
Morgan was incarcerated at a prison facility not
far from Cleveland, but when I called him the next day, he refused
to come to the phone.
The good news was that I kept trying, and the third
time, he agreed to take my call.
And the bad news?
“I never get any visitors,” Morgan whined. “You
want to talk to me, lady, you’re going to have to come here and do
it.”
I told him I would.
Then I found a thousand ways to avoid it, and is it
any wonder? How could I visit Dale Morgan in prison when I’d never
even been out to visit my dad? And how could I do that? Ever? If I
did, I’d have to face what he’d done to our family. I’d spent too
much time learning the fine art of denial to let that happen.
Fortunately, I had lots of things to keep me from
thinking about it. One of those was obsessing about our Cemetery Survivor score. We were ahead by ten points
one week, fell back the next, and though I told myself time and
again that it didn’t really matter, it really did. I was tired of
being short-changed by the Greers of the world. I was tired of
being snubbed by the Mrs. Lambs. I wanted to win, and I wanted to
win bad.
I also kept busy dealing with the ever-growing
groups of fans around the cemetery. And fielding the gifts that
kept arriving. This time, it wasn’t flowers. It was a box of cheap
candy one day, a bottle of off-brand perfume the next, then a tube
of flashy—and all wrong for my skin tone—pink lipstick. If I had
the time, I might have been appalled at my secret admirer’s taste.
The way it was, I tossed each gift in the nearest cemetery trash
container and got on with my life. That included spending countless
hours at Monroe Street working on the restoration. We finished
ordering headstones from the government for those veterans who were
entitled to them. We planted grass. In between hauling and loading,
designing flower beds (we left that up to Delmar), and watering, we
worked on the art show fundraiser.
I oohed and ahhed at the appropriate times when
Sammi showed off the god-awful outfits she was planning to exhibit
at the show. I praised the voodoo dolls Absalom crafted (they
really were kind of cute), and encouraged Delmar’s drawings. I sat,
glassy-eyed and brain-dead, as Crazy Jake bored me with thousands
of
Our art show was going to be held at the Garfield
Memorial at Garden View.
That’s Garfield. Like President James A. Garfield,
and don’t worry about not knowing anything about him. I didn’t,
either, until I went to work at Garden View. Then I found out that
he was the twentieth president of the United States. He was
assassinated back in 1881, and he and his wife are entombed in a
crypt in a big honkin’ memorial that sits smack in the center of
Garden View. A crypt? Oh, that means they aren’t buried; their
caskets are out in the open for everyone to see.
Yes, it’s creepy.
The memorial itself is a huge building filled with
stained glass, mosaics, and bas-reliefs of the president’s life (no
worries about knowing what those are, either, because they’re
basically just sculptures that project out of walls). Since the
building itself is so elaborate, we decided to keep our exhibit
simple. In each quadrant of the rotunda on the first floor of the
monument, one of our artists would display whatever he (or she)
wanted on the six-foot-tall, four-foot-wide panels Reggie was
building. Jake insisted he needed twenty panels for his photos, but
we convinced him that minimalism was all the rage, and he finally
agreed to stick with five like everyone else.
It was perfect, and enough of a coup to put Team
One’s knickers in a twist. The moment our fundraiser was announced
on Cemetery Survivor, calls started coming
in to the station and tickets to the event were selling like
hotcakes. We were going to make a bundle for the Monroe Street
volunteers, and make Team One look like losers in the
process.
Because I didn’t want to act all superior, I was
trying not to think about that on the Saturday afternoon I arrived
at Mae Tannager’s Shaker Heights home for Team One’s fundraising
tea.
I said home, right? Silly
me. I should have said mansion.
The Tannagers live in a monstrosity of a house
built in the early 1900s. It has tastefully decorated rooms, high
ceilings, and a maid’s quarters on the third floor. I would bet any
money they’re still in use. The pink walls, white furniture, and
gold bric-a-brac are so not my taste, but I was plenty impressed,
anyway. So were my team members.
“Sweet mother of pearl!” Wearing freshly pressed
black pants and an ivory-colored silk camp shirt that emphasized
the impressive breadth of his shoulders, Absalom stepped inside the
front door and whistled below his breath. “This ain’t a house. It’s
a—”
“Palace.” In honor of the occasion, Sammi had
designed a summery strapless dress out of Wonder Bread bags. When
she sighed and looked around in . . . well, in wonder . . . . the
yellow, blue, and red dots jiggled.
Our fans—many of them already inside sipping tea
and nibbling tiny sandwiches—cheered our arrival.
“Pepper, you’re looking fabulous, girl!” a lady
called to me, and it’s not like I’m vain or anything, but I knew
she was right. For our fundraiser, I was planning on pulling out
all the stops. For Team One’s, I’d toned things down a bit, but
honestly, that didn’t mean I had to look like a frump. After all, I
was planning on seeing Bianca that day, so I’d chosen my outfit
wisely. I was wearing a taffeta dress decorated with huge orange
red poppies with gold centers. The dress had a V neckline, a low
back, and a gathered skirt that swished and twirled when I
walked.
I twirled to wave to our groupies.
My skirt twirled, too.
“But, Pepper . . .” There was a group of fans
around us, and I didn’t see the person who started talking, but I
heard the voice. It belonged to a man, and I saw his hand shoot out
of the crowd, reaching in my direction. “Pepper, what about
the—”
The hand briefly clutched my arm and, startled, I
pulled it out of his grasp. I never had a chance to see who it
belonged to. By the time I spun around, the crowd had closed around
me, and along with Absalom and Sammi, I was carried toward the back
of the house and an elegant sunroom that looked out over a
perfectly manicured garden. Out there, more partygoers (was a tea
considered a party?) walked the stone paths between topiaries cut
into geometrical shapes and ponds where water lilies floated in the
afternoon sun. The sunroom itself was glassed-in on three sides and
filled with more guests who sat on the wicker furniture and waited
in orderly lines at the tables mounded with finger food.
“Now we’re talkin’!” Absalom went for the lox and
bagels. Sammi disappeared in the other direction. Delmar and Reggie
were over near the punch bowl talking to Mae. Reggie was wearing
jeans (they were clean) and a T-shirt that said HUNNIES PLAY ME
CLOSE LIKE BUTTER PLAY TOAST. I saw Mae’s eyes glaze when she tried
to make sense of the message.
Across the room, Bianca’s eyes met mine, and she
looked me over, smiled, and nodded her approval. I hoped Greer got
that and a full-length shot of me while she was at it because, of
course, she was there, recording the whole, elegant affair for
posterity. She’d even chosen a dress for the occasion, though
something told me gray polyester wasn’t exactly tea-party
fabric.
But I had better things to worry about than Greer’s
poor fashion choices. Like everyone else there, I’d paid my twenty
bucks to get in, and I planned on getting my money’s worth. I
glanced over at a table stacked with designer brownies, and my
stomach growled. I was just about to fill a plate when I realized
Jefferson Lamar was standing right next to me.
“Don’t do that.” I pressed a hand to my heart.
“Can’t you ring a bell or something when you show up, just to let
me know you’re here?”
The sarcasm went right over his buzz-cut head. “You
know I can’t touch anything, so how could I ring a bell? I had to
see you, to find out about Dale Morgan.”
This was not the time or the place to discuss my
progress (or lack thereof) on the case. I shushed him with a look,
but since nobody but me could hear him anyway, I guess he didn’t
think that was any big deal.
“It might be important,” he reminded me.
I looked longingly at the brownies before I turned
and walked out of the sunroom. It wasn’t easy finding a private
place to talk. The house was as big as a boat, but there were
people in the study and people in the dining room and people in the
hallways. Never one to let pesky numbers get in the way—of
anything—I didn’t try to tally the size of the crowd against the
kind of money we’d need to bring in to beat Team One at the
fundraising game. Instead, I poked my head into the well-appointed
kitchen, saw there was no one there, and ducked inside. Lamar and I
had the place to ourselves, and the added bonus of a tray of broken
brownies left out on the counter. I grabbed a hunk and popped it in
my mouth. Chocolate caramel.
“So . . .” The warden pinned me with a look. “What
did Dale Morgan have to say?”
I swallowed and grabbed a chunk of what looked like
chocolate chip. It was, and the chips were dark chocolate.
“You haven’t picked the best place for a little
heart-to-heart,” I told him, dodging the question. “You could have
shown up someplace else. Anyplace else but here. Like when nobody
was around.”
He didn’t apologize or explain. “I’m here now,” he
said. “And if I didn’t know better, I’d think you were avoiding the
subject.”
“Not avoiding.” I had chocolate on my fingers and
the perfect excuse to avoid the subject some more. I washed my
hands, then couldn’t find a towel, so I searched through the nearby
catering boxes, found a napkin, and dried my hands. “I’ve been
busy,” I finally said, tossing the napkin aside.
“You haven’t talked to Morgan.”
“I have talked to him.” That was the absolute
truth, so I gave my statement all the oomph it deserved. “By the
way, it looks like you were a little off base when you said you
thought he could turn his life around. Morgan’s in prison.”
“That’s too bad.” A pained expression crossed
Lamar’s face, but he didn’t let his disappointment distract him for
long. “You asked him about the silver dollar? About me? About
why—”
There was only so long I could keep up the
shillyshallying. I crumbled like one of those brownies. “He came to
the phone. Once. But he refuses to talk to me about anything. Not
until I go and visit him.”
“And you haven’t done it?”
The question was so blunt and well . . . so darn
logical, I had no choice but to be outraged. My shoulders shot
back. “Like I said, I’ve been busy.”
“Not too busy to go shopping.” His gaze briefly
grazed my taffeta dress. “You said this case was important to
you.”
“And it is. You know that. But the coin doesn’t
have anything to do with Vera. How can it? It’s just a
whatchacallit. Red heron. Or red Herman. Or—”
“Red herring?”
“Yeah, that’s it.” He’d gotten me riled up, and as
every woman alive knows, there’s nothing like the endorphins in
chocolate to calm a girl down. I grabbed another hunk of brownie
and talked with my mouth full. “Did Morgan have some kind of grudge
against you? No, I didn’t think so. And besides, wasn’t he in
prison at the time Vera was killed? You said he was a small-time
crook, so was he the type who could have arranged a hit from the
inside? Because of some sort of vendetta? What, you guys were
fighting about the value of wheat pennies?”
I stared at him long and hard, waiting for his
answers, and when he didn’t say a thing, I shouted a triumphant,
“Aha!” I spun away, then spun around again. It took a while for my
skirt to settle down.
“The Morgan thing is a dead end,” I said. “Admit
it. Talking to him isn’t going to help us. It isn’t going to get us
anywhere. I’d be wasting my time. Which I don’t have much of these
days, in case you haven’t noticed.”
“You don’t want to talk to him because you’re
afraid to walk into a prison.” Of course I was going to dispute
this and remind him that I wasn’t afraid of anything, not even
ghosts. But he stopped me like a traffic cop, one hand in the air.
“I know you’ve got courage. You don’t need to remind me. If you
didn’t, you wouldn’t have gone to see Bad Dog. Or Reno Bob. That’s
not what I’m talking about, Pepper, and you know it. You don’t
want
I would have argued with this. If I could think of
anything to say. Instead, I grabbed another bit of brownie. I
didn’t eat it, though. I wasn’t all that hungry anymore.
“It’s nothing to be ashamed of.” Lamar stepped
closer. “You feel embarrassed. And let down. It’s natural. I saw it
so often in the families of the men who were incarcerated. Your
father, he betrayed your trust.”
I shrugged. What other response could I give him?
While I was at it, I tossed the brownie, washed my hands again, and
grabbed a glass for a drink of water. All that chocolate was
clogged in my throat.
“I could go with you if that would help.” I was
still facing the sink and Lamar’s voice came from behind me.
“To see Dale Morgan?” I turned to him. “Or to see
my dad?”
“Either. Both. Though I think we should concentrate
on Morgan first. If he knows something valuable—”
“You think?”
He spread his hands. “I’d like to find out.”
Yeah, me, too.
The only question was, how much?
I didn’t have the answer, and I couldn’t pretend I
did. Maybe that’s why Lamar felt he had to try a little harder to
convince me.
“Maybe there’s something he can tell us
about—”
“Maybe.” I’d admit that much.
“You’re the only one who can do it,” he reminded
me.
Not technically correct. I wasn’t the only one who
could talk to Dale Morgan. I was, however, the only one who could
report the conversation back to Jefferson Lamar.
“I’d really appreciate it.” I knew Lamar wasn’t
comfortable
“There isn’t.” He didn’t need me to remind him, but
I did, anyway. “I know I’m the only one. It’s just—”
He swallowed his pride so hard, I saw his Adam’s
apple bob. “Pepper, please. I owe her.”
Of course he was talking about Helen, the wife
who’d never stopped believing in him, but he never had a chance to
elaborate. That’s because Delmar and Reggie raced into the room and
Jefferson Lamar disappeared in a poof.
“There you are!” Delmar was red in the face. “We
got us a situation.”
I didn’t want to ask, but it was another case of
I-didn’t-have-a-choice. “What kind of situation?”
Reggie was breathing hard. “We been running all
over this place lookin’ for you. Absalom, he went outside. Jake is
somewhere takin’ pictures . . .” He waved away the thought that
Jake would be any help, anyway. “We need you and we need you
now.”
He hadn’t mentioned Sammi, and my heart shot into
my throat, then slammed down somewhere at the bottom of my
just-about-empty stomach.
Delmar pulled in a breath. “Virgil walked in the
front door about ten minutes ago. He and Sammi headed somewhere
together, only we can’t find ’em anywhere. And that Greer, she saw
him, too. She’s looking all over, practically drooling about the
possibility of catching another fight.”
“Shit.” It was the only appropriate response. I
headed out of the kitchen with them. “Where have you looked?” I
asked.
“Outside. Back in the sunroom and in the library.”
Reggie rolled his eyes at the very thought that any
I glanced to my right and the winding staircase
that led up to the second floor. “Anybody look up there?”
They shook their heads, and I took the steps two at
a time.
The second floor of the home was no less impressive
than the first. There were doors open on either side of the wide
hallway, and when I peeked inside, I saw what might have been
referred to in those ritzy home design magazines not as bedrooms,
but as boudoirs. Each door led into a private suite that included a
dressing room, a bedroom, and a sort of sitting room, and each one
was chocked full of white furniture dabbed with gold. There was no
sign of Virgil and Sammi in any of them.
And no splatters of blood, either, which in the
great scheme of things actually cheered me.
Until I heard sounds from down at the end of the
hallway.
“Shit, shit, shit.” Thankful for such an
all-purpose word, I raced in the direction of the room at the end
of the hall. The door was closed, and here, the sounds were louder
than ever. Grunts, groans, moans. Prepared for mayhem, I shoved
open the door.
It would have opened all the way if it hadn’t
caught on the Wonder Bread dress lying on the floor.
“Oh.” Embarrassed more by my own naïveté than by
what I saw happening in the bed on the other side of the room, I
stood rooted to the spot, grateful that Sammi and Virgil were so
busy doing what they were doing, they didn’t notice me. Desperate
to keep it that way, I back-stepped out of the room and clicked the
door closed.
Delmar caught up with me. “They in there?”
“Oh, yeah.” I looked over his shoulder. “And
Greer—”
“Not to worry.” Reggie came running up the hallway.
“Absalom told her he saw Sammi go after Virgil in the garden, so we
got time to get them off each other.”
“Or not.”
They looked at me in amazement. “Apparently Sammi
and Virgil have a love-hate relationship,” I told them. “Right now,
they’re in a love phase.”