19
I was pretty sure I knew who the murderer
was. But there’s this little thing called proof, see, and though I
had suspicions aplenty and those brownies helping to point me in
the right chocolately direction, what I didn’t have was
proof.
I did have another thing, though. That was the
heart-pounding, blood-thrilling, brain-buzzing certainty that I was
one step ahead of Quinn. Oh yeah, I was jazzed, and so eager to
wrap up the case before he somehow caught wind of what I was up to
and scooped my suspect out from under me, I was ready to go
all-out.
Which explains what I was doing in that conference
room Ella had reserved for Marjorie and me to sort and store the
Garfield memorabilia that would be displayed at the
commemoration.
“There’s got to be something,” I mumbled, thumbing
through a pile of old photographs and not caring if Ella knew what
I was talking about or not. “We’ve missed something.”
Ella didn’t get it, but then, I didn’t expect her
to. She had a normal life, and normal lives don’t include murder.
Not routinely, anyway. It was a chilly September afternoon, and she
was bundled in a cardigan that wasn’t exactly the same shade of
green as her ankle-skimming, button-front dress. She poked her
hands into the pockets of her sweater. “Something worth putting on
display?”
“Something worth killing for.”
I knew I wasn’t imagining it—her face really did
turn the same color as her sweater. She sounded just like I’d heard
her sound on the phone when she offered one of her teenaged
daughters advice. “If you think you know something that would help
solve the case, Pepper, you should leave it up to the
professionals. Why not call that nice detective friend of
yours.”
I stopped just short of throwing her a look that
would have caused her to implode. But only because I liked Ella,
both as a boss and as a friend. My smile was sweet, but my teeth
were gritted when I said, “First of all, Quinn is not my friend.
Not anymore. And second of all, he’s not nice. Never has
been.”
“Putting yourself in danger isn’t smart.”
I was holding a handful of photos of the Garfield
family and I waved them in front of her face. “Does this look like
danger to you? The only thing I’m in danger of is getting bored to
death.” I plunked the pictures down on the table and looked around
at the mess that was once the neat piles and stacks of memorabilia.
“There’s nothing here,” I wailed. “It’s all so ordinary. So dull. I
was hoping something that belonged to Marjorie might have gotten
mixed up with all this stuff that belongs to the cemetery,” I
explained. “But whatever I thought I’d find . . .” When I looked
around, my sigh shivered through the room—and caught.
“What is it?” Ella was at my side instantly, one
hand out as if she thought I was going to take a tumble and she’d
actually have a chance of keeping me from hitting the floor. “You
look surprised.”
“Surprised at how incredibly stupid I am,” I told
her. I didn’t bother to explain. But then, I really couldn’t. I was
already on my way out the door.
Of course I’d forgotten all about the stuff
Marjorie gave me that night I visited her at home and I stowed in
the trunk of my car. I mean, who wouldn’t? She’d pretty much come
right out and told me none of it was all that valuable, so
naturally after I dug out that newspaper page I’d shown to Ted
Studebaker, I hadn’t bothered wasting any brain cells on what any
of it was.
What it was, as it turned out, was exactly what
Marjorie had promised: not much.
There were a few photographs of James Garfield the
soldier and James Garfield the congressman and James Garfield the
president. There were a couple postcards that showed the newly
opened memorial. There was a poorly done watercolor of the log
cabin where the president was born, a half-dozen or so shots of the
canopy under which his body had been displayed when it was first
brought back to Cleveland, and a couple ancient magazines, their
covers promising “new and surprising information” about the
president’s passing.
It seemed even after she was dead, Marjorie had
gotten the last laugh: she said she wouldn’t trust me with anything
important, and she hadn’t.
There was a piece of newspaper at the bottom of
what I thought was the now-empty box, and I grabbed it so I could
wad it up and throw it away.
Which was when I realized that what I thought was
an empty box wasn’t empty at all.
I lifted out a sixteen-by-twenty-inch frame and
stared at the single piece of paper behind the glass.
Ella was still in that conference room with me, and
when I read what was written on the paper and my eyes lit up, she
knew something was going on.
“What is it?” she asked. In her excitement, she
bounced up on the heels of her flat, chunky shoes. “Is it something
valuable?”
“It depends who you ask,” I told her, and even
though it was late, I headed back to the memorial.
It was time to confront the one and only person who
could give me a straight answer.
If Ella knew I was standing up on the
marble dais next to the statue of the president, she would have
gone into cardiac arrest. National treasure and all that stuff. I
was so not in the mood to care. I stood right next to that statue,
the framed letter I’d found in one hand and my voice raised so that
not even the dead could fail to hear.
“I need to talk to you, Mr. President, and I need
to talk to you now!”
It must have been a slow day at the White House.
Not two seconds later, he poofed into shape beside me.
“Really!” Honest to gosh, the president’s nose was
up in the air. “To think you can disturb the chief executive this
way!”
“The chief liar, you mean.” I held up the frame and
its contents. “You know what I’ve got here? Well, maybe you don’t.
Because maybe you never thought anybody would find it, that nobody
would ever know about it.”
He harrumphed in a presidential sort of way.
“I can’t imagine what you’re talking about.”
“Really?” I gave him a moment to come clean, and
when he didn’t, I cleared my throat and read:
My dearest Lucia,
You have, no doubt, heard of the misfortune
that has brought me to this delicate point in my life. The reports
are sadly true. I was shot by a man with murderous intent, and
though I did not succumb to the attack immediately, I have been
most inconvenienced and in much pain. The doctors tell me there is
hope, but I watch them as they turn from my bed, their eyes
downcast and their expressions somber. They dare not speak the
words. They do not have to. I know that I am dying.
Here I paused and looked up at the president. He
was as still as that statue over on my left and as pale as the
marble floor at our feet. He didn’t say a word so, of course, I had
no choice but to keep reading.
I cannot leave this earth, my dear, without
conveying to you my last good-byes. Though ours was a fragile and
momentary relationship, it has remained as clearly etched upon my
heart as if it were the love of a lifetime. I cannot part this
world, and from you, my dear Lucia, without imploring of you one
last request. Give Rufus . . .
Oh yeah, I admit it . . . I raised my voice here
and read slowly and carefully, getting the most I could out of the
moment.
Give Rufus Ward Henry my love, and tell him how
I do so regret that I was never able to properly acknowledge him .
. .
I paused again. After all, this was the big
moment.
. . . acknowledge him as being as dearly
beloved as are my other sons.
That was where the letter ended, and besides, I
think I’d pretty much made my point. His eyes glassy, the president
swayed on his feet and staggered back, one hand to his heart.
“I remember now,” he said, drawing in a labored
breath. “It was in those steamy days of September. I lay on my
deathbed, weak and delirious, haunted by my past, my mistakes.” He
swallowed hard. “My regrets. I was so much in the throes of emotion
and pain, I could hardly think straight. I called . . .” He passed
a hand over his eyes. “I called to Jeremiah Stone for paper and
ink. I intended . . . I intended . . .” The president stumbled back
toward the center of the rotunda, and when he did, the scenery
around us shivered and shifted. I fully expected to see that we
were back in that White House office, but instead, I found myself
standing in a spacious, neat cottage. There was a window opposite
from where I stood, and through it, I saw a sweep of beach and,
beyond that, the slow rolling waves of the Atlantic Ocean. No way I
was as much of a Garfield fanatic as Marjorie, but at this point,
even I knew enough about the president to know where I was: at Long
Branch Beach along the Jersey shore, the place where President
Garfield died.
I was alone, or at least I thought I was until I
saw a movement underneath the blankets of a nearby bed.
“Stone! Stone!” Even though it was breathless and
thready, I recognized the president’s voice. When I stepped closer
to the bed, though, I realized I wouldn’t have recognized him as
the man under the blankets. Not for all the world.
His skin was gray. His eyes were sunken. He was at
least a hundred pounds lighter than the robust ghost who haunted
the memorial.
“Stone!” Even as I watched, the president shifted
in bed. A spasm of pain crossed his face. His skin was slick with
sweat. His eyes were glassy. “Stone, I must write a letter!”
“Of course, Mr. President.”
A door over on my right opened, and as efficient as
ever, Jeremiah Stone marched into the room, the ever-present
portfolio in his hands. “I am terribly sorry, Mr. President,” he
said, as oblivious of me now as he’d always been. “I was just
discussing a certain matter with Mr. Windom, your secretary of the
Treasury.”
“All is . . .” Another spasm of pain crossed his
face, and the president closed his eyes against it, then opened
them again. He wasn’t about to let that stop him. Though it
obviously hurt, he sat up, and Stone shifted the pillows behind
him. “All is well, isn’t it? There are no . . . no . . .”
“No problems of national import. No, sir, certainly
not.” Stone adjusted the glasses pinched to the bridge of his nose.
“It was nothing more than a trivial thing we discussed and I regret
leaving your side so that I might attend to it. What can I get for
you, sir?”
“Paper.” The president’s voice was so small and
shallow, Stone had to lean closer to hear. “Paper and ink. I would
. . . I would like to write a letter.”
“Certainly.” There was a table next to the bed, and
Stone set his portfolio down on it. He reached into his breast
pocket, pulled out one of those old-fashioned fountain pens, and
set that down, too, before he backed toward the door. “I have no
blank paper with me, sir, but I will get some for you. I will be
back in just a moment. And when I do return, sir . . .” Stone’s
gaze darted to the portfolio. “There are papers that must be
signed, sir. I know it is inappropriate of me to insist so strongly
when you are so discommoded, but really, sir, we must get these out
of the way before—”
Realizing what he’d almost said, Stone
blanched.
The president reassured him with a wheezing
chuckle. “I do not hold it against you for nearly saying the words
no one else dare speak, Stone. You are an honorable and efficient
aide to me, and I cannot fault you for verbalizing the truth. You
wish me to sign these papers before I pass into a better place.
That is true, is it not?”
Stone nodded.
“We will take care of it when you return,” the
president assured him. “For now, if you might bring me that writing
paper . . .”
Stone disappeared, but honestly, I don’t think the
president even noticed. For a minute, he was so still and quiet, I
thought he might have died. But then he sighed, and like a
sleepwalker, he groped toward the bedside table, reached into the
portfolio, and drew out a piece of paper. Slowly and carefully, he
began to write.
My dearest Lucia . . .
I watched him write out each word, pausing now and
then to fight for a breath or reposition himself in bed.
“. . . as are my other sons,” he mumbled as he
wrote, and his strength gave out. The pen dropped out of his hand
and onto the blankets. The letter fluttered under the
bed.
“I remember desiring to communicate with
Lucia on that, the last day I spent among the living.” When the
president’s ghost spoke, I realized we weren’t at the sea-shore
anymore. We were back in the memorial. “I remember that Stone went
to get pen and paper. But the letter . . . I have no memory of
writing it. And yet there it is, framed and in your hand. Are you
telling me it was never delivered? Does that mean it never made its
way to Lucia? That I never had a chance to say good-bye to my
darling?”
“Please!” I turned the word into two emphatic
syllables. “All this time, you’ve held the key to the mystery and
all you can think of is your love puppy?”
He had the good sense to look embarrassed—at least
for a moment. The next, he was back to his old, blustery self. “It
is inappropriate to share such a sensitive piece of information
with—”
“Give me a break!” I was pissed, and just to prove
it, I stomped one foot on the marble floor. “News flash, nobody
cares! Not anymore, anyway. You had a kid with your mistress. Big
deal! These days in the world of politics, that’s small
potatoes.”
His chin went rigid. “It should not be. Such a
lapse of moral judgment should never be taken lightly. It would
surely have destroyed my career if the public knew of my
relationship with Lucia. And should they have learned there was a
child born from our liaison, that would have resulted in the
ruination not only of me, but of my family as well. That is why the
boy was raised by a distant relative of Lucia’s, why I was unable
to acknowledge him as my own. Had word gone out that he was my son,
I would have never been elected to office. I would never have been
able to hold up my head in public again.”
“Yeah, well, that was back in the old days when
politicians had consciences. You should have told me about the
letter. You should have told me you and Lucia had a son.”
“It cannot be of great importance. Not to your
investigation.”
“It is if your son, Rufus, went on to have a family
of his own.”
The president glanced away. “He did.”
“And if his children had children and their
children—”
“Yes. Yes!” I was glad he interrupted me. I wasn’t
sure about all this genealogy stuff and didn’t know how many
children’s children’s children I needed to list.
Rather than even worry about it, I gave him an icy
stare. “Yes or no. That’s all I want from you. Not an explanation
and not a speech. Was Marjorie Klinker really one of your
descendants?”
“Rufus was married at an early age. His wife died
after giving birth to their first child. He then remarried and
fathered a number of children with his second wife. Through that
side of the family, there is a convoluted bloodline that—”
“Ah!” I held up a hand to stop him. “Not what I
asked. Was Marjorie related to you?”
The president’s shoulders never wavered. “Yes.”
“Well, damn! Wouldn’t that just make her day? Or at least it would
if she was alive to hear the news.”
Sarcasm—no matter how well placed—apparently
doesn’t work on ghosts. Or maybe it’s just presidents who are
immune. Thinking over the possibilities, he rumbled, “You think
that unfortunate woman’s murder had something to do with . . .” He
dismissed the very idea with a lift of his broad shoulders. “No.
That is hardly possible.”
“It is possible if somebody knew about this letter.
And if that somebody wanted Marjorie to part with it. Her nephew,
Nick, talked to an antiques dealer about selling a piece of your
personal property. Well, it can’t get much more personal than this.
What if he wanted to sell it and she didn’t? She wanted to reveal
the news to all the world at the opening of the commemoration. She
said she had something to display, something wonderful and
valuable. Don’t you see? If Nick wanted her to sell the letter and
she refused because it was too precious to her . . .”
“Yes, yes.” The president nodded. “I understand. Of
course I do. They may have quarreled. They may have fought. He
might have killed her to get his hands on the letter.” He glanced
at the frame in my hands. “But he did not get it, it seems. Did
he?”
The little piece of presidential one-upsmanship did
not sit well with me. Then again, I guess I could forgive Mr.
Garfield. He didn’t know the whole story.
“Marjorie wanted to pull out this little bombshell
at the commemoration,” I explained. “And until then, my guess is
that she had it at home, where she thought it was nice and safe.
But that night I visited her, she was plenty upset by the time Ray
dumped her and walked out. So when she gathered the stuff she
wanted me to bring over here, she somehow grabbed the letter, too.
That explains why I saw her running through the house like a crazy
person when I drove away.”
Another thought hit and stuck, and I gave myself a
mental slap. “It explains that voice mail message she left at my
office, too. She said she had to see me the next morning. She said
it was important. Of course it was! Marjorie couldn’t find the
letter anywhere else so she knew I had it. She had to get it back.
It was the most important piece of Garfield junk . . . er . . .
memorabilia she owned.”
The president hung his head, and if I didn’t
remember he was a politician (which automatically made him a liar
in my book), I might have been more inclined to forgive him when he
said, “I am terribly sorry. If I had remembered the letter . . . if
I thought it had any relevance . . . You believe it does.”
It wasn’t a question. I nodded, anyway. “If
somebody wanted to sell this letter and Marjorie didn’t—”
“Then that same person—”
“Killed her. And then when he couldn’t find the
letter among her things, he ransacked her house and her locker here
at the cemetery, looking for it.”
The president’s brow creased. “It seems to me, that
means he might still be looking for this letter of mine. And that
if he knew you were in possession of it—”
“He’d be real eager to get his hands on it.” I slid
the president a look. “Are you thinking what I’m thinking?” I
asked.
A smile sparked in his blue eyes. “Only if you’re
thinking we might still use this letter as bait to catch a
killer.”