20
Oh yeah, that’s exactly what I was
thinking, and with the plan in mind, I called in the big guns.
Figuratively and literally.
I should have known better. My previous cases had
taught me that nothing mucks up an investigation like involving the
professionals.
“I still don’t think this is a good idea.” Scott
was so fidgety, I had a feeling he would have paced the office of
the memorial if Quinn hadn’t positioned himself just to the right
of the desk. The way Quinn was standing there—his feet apart and
his arms crossed over his chest—it was clear he wasn’t about to
move and just as clear that Scott wouldn’t get past him. Not
without a physical confrontation, anyway.
“What if he doesn’t show?” Scott asked. “What if he
does, and we can’t get to you in time? If you’re putting yourself
in danger, Pepper—”
“Pepper likes to put herself in danger.” It was the
first thing Quinn said since he’d shown up in answer to my phone
call. “It’s one of the things she does best.”
I didn’t bother to respond to this comment. It was
juvenile, for one thing, and for another, it wasn’t true. I did a
whole lot of things better than I put myself in danger, and Quinn
should have remembered that.
“It’s too late,” I said, responding to Scott
because I mean, really, why even try to reason with Quinn? “Ella
pulled some strings and got the information out to the media, and
the story about it was on the news this evening. They didn’t say
what it was, but they talked about the fabulous thing we’d found
and how it’s related to President Garfield and how we’re all set to
put it on display here at the cemetery. We made a big deal about
how, after the commemoration, the item is going to be donated to
the National Archives. He’s bound to show up looking for the
letter. It’s his only chance to get his hands on it and sell it
before it’s out of his reach forever.”
Yes, it was brilliant, but I have to admit, the
plan wasn’t mine alone. Civil War soldier and strategist that he
was, the president had actually helped me come up with it. The
whole thing made sense to us, and waiting for confirmation from the
two guys who would enforce it, I looked back and forth, first to
Scott, then to Quinn. When neither one of them said a thing, I gave
up trying to be reasonable, flicked off the lights in the office,
and headed into the rotunda.
“Hey, what can possibly go wrong?” I asked neither
one in particular. “I’ve got you two superheroes here watching out
for me.”
Was I trying to convince them, or myself?
Not them. I knew that. Scott was nothing if not
good at his job, and he took his responsibilities seriously. Quinn
. . . well, he was a royal pain and I was still plenty bitter about
the way things had ended between us. But Quinn was a professional,
too. In his deepest, darkest fantasies (and believe me, I knew a
thing or two about Quinn’s fantasies), I had the feeling he’d like
to see me fall flat on my face. But he wouldn’t let anything happen
to me. Not from a safety standpoint, anyway.
Now all I had to do was convince myself.
Listening to my heart beat out a rumba rhythm in my
chest, I stepped into the empty rotunda. It was after hours, and
the crowds of tourists were long gone. The chandelier above the
president’s statue was lit, and it threw a circle of light onto the
marble dais. Beyond its glow, the far ends of the rotunda sloped
into shadow.
Believe me, I took a good, long look into those
shadows before I went to station myself at the table Ella and I had
set up to the right of the lighted dais.
The news story we leaked talked about how anxious
we were to get our “fabulous” find on display. I’d even appeared on
camera to give a quote that went something like, “I can’t wait to
get started on the commemoration. I’m going to be putting in some
extra hours, day and night, to get the display ready.”
Anyone who knew me would have seen right through
this, of course. Me, extra hours? Day and night? It was
ludicrous.
I was counting on Nick Klinker not knowing me that
well.
Surprised? Come on! Nick was the logical suspect
from the beginning. I’d bet anything Marjorie told him about the
letter the moment she found it. After all, the letter proved what
Marjorie had been trying to prove all her life—that she was related
to the president. Of course, that meant Nick was, too. I could
imagine the way her warped mind worked, and in Marjorie’s mind,
there was nothing more exciting than that news, and nothing that
could possibly have made Nick prouder.
I wondered if he shared her excitement, and I
realized it didn’t matter. Marjorie would have decided the moment
she saw it that the letter was the most precious thing in the
world. And Nick?
A small noise from the direction of the entryway
caught my attention. It might have been Scott or Quinn in the
office, but remember what I said about them being professionals.
Professionals on a stakeout know better than to make any
noise.
My hands stilled over the table where Ella and I
had piled much of the Garfield memorabilia the cemetery owned.
After all, we needed to make it look like I was knee-deep in
commemoration preparations and we’d pulled out all the stops. There
were stacks of old magazines and newspapers. There were boxes of
photographs of the president and his family. There were framed
souvenirs, including the letter we were using as bait to draw Nick
to the memorial.
My stomach soured when I realized that, sooner or
later, I would actually have to sort through it all. Marjorie or no
Marjorie, the commemoration would go on, and without Marjorie,
guess who was left holding the bag.
That is, if I lived long enough to have to worry
about organizing the commemoration.
The unmistakable sound of stealthy footsteps made
my heart bump, and I drew in a deep breath and held it. Scott and
Quinn had my back, I reminded myself. Taking care of the rest of
the plan was my responsibility.
I told myself to breathe and forced my hands to
move, dragging over a stack of magazines and flipping through them
like I actually cared at the same time I hoped Nick didn’t see
through our trap. Could he actually be so dense to think I would be
in here alone without locking the door?
If I ignored the next shuffle of footsteps, it
would have looked too fishy, so I spun around.
“Is somebody here?” I called into the semidark
rotunda, and when no one answered, I mumbled, “You’re imagining
things, Pepper,” to myself, told myself it actually might be true,
and got back to what I hoped looked enough like work to fool Nick
Klinker.
I guess it worked, because I heard a voice behind
me. It was husky and muffled, like he was trying to disguise it,
but I’m not a detective for nothing. There was no mistaking that
the voice belonged to Nick.
“Don’t turn around,” he said. “I’ve got a gun and
I’ll use it if I have to. Where is it?”
“Your gun? I assume you know where it is.”
“Not my gun!” He forgot himself and used his
regular voice, and when he realized it, he rumbled and tried to
sound all strange and mysterious again. “You know what I’m talking
about. The letter. Where is it?”
The framed letter from the president to Lucia was
on the table, and I let my right hand drift over to it, the better
to tantalize Nick into telling the truth. I rested my fingers on
the frame.
“Could it possibly be worth all that much?” I asked
him. “It’s just an old letter.”
“It has historical significance.”
“Maybe for loonies like Marjorie, but let’s face
it, nobody else is really going to care. Not enough to make all
this worth your while, anyway.”
“I have a buyer.”
I paused like I had to actually think about this.
“You mean Ted Studebaker. How much is he going to give you?”
“It’s none of your business.” I still had my back
to Nick, and I heard him take another step closer and waited to
feel the cold barrel of his gun press into my back. When I didn’t,
I should have been relieved, but waiting for the touch of the steel
only made me more anxious. I sure hoped Scott and Quinn were paying
attention.
“Give me the letter,” Nick growled.
“You are the rightful owner. I mean, being
Marjorie’s only living relative and all.” I threw out this morsel
in an attempt to wheedle a confession out of Nick, just the way
Scott and Quinn had instructed me to. “Why not just go home and
work on proving you own it. That way you can walk in here, take
rightful possession, and do anything you want with the stupid
letter.”
“I can’t take that chance.” Another step closer. I
held my breath. “What if there’s no way to prove it’s mine? It’s
worth too much.”
“Was it worth killing Marjorie to get?”
“What?” In his surprise, Nick forgot all about his
goofy disguised voice, and hearing him sound genuinely shocked, I
spun around. I found him with his mouth hanging open, and yeah, the
lights were dim and the shadows edged in on us from every side, but
I swear, in that one instant before he stuck his right hand in his
pocket, I saw what I saw, and what I saw was that his hand was
empty. The second he stuck it in his pocket, though, it looked like
he had a gun in there.
Or like he was pointing a finger, pretending it was
a gun.
The tension washed out of me and I tossed my head.
“Oh, come on, Nick. That’s just about as lame as it gets. You don’t
have a gun.”
He made a face. “I figured you’d give me the letter
if you thought I did.”
“Is that what you told Marjorie that morning you
came here to the memorial? That you had a gun? That she had to turn
over the letter or else?”
Even with the shadows, I could tell his face went
ashen. “I tried to reason with her,” he said, his voice squeezed
thin. “Aunt Marjorie was not a reasonable woman.”
That was neither here nor there. I stuck to my
case. “So when she wouldn’t hand over the letter so you could sell
it, you tossed her over the balcony.”
“No. I didn’t. I swear.”
He started to shake, and seeing it, I got a fresh
dose of courage. I took a step toward Nick. “I know you were here
that day, Nick. You took the brownies.”
All the gray washed out of his face and left him as
white as a sheet. Nick staggered back and swallowed hard. “How . .
. how did you know?”
“Because of what Bernadine said. She said you were
nervous about the wedding and your tummy was acting up. But it
wasn’t nerves, was it? It was the brownies. Gloria Henninger put
Ex-Lax in them.”
All that pale skin was suddenly shot through with a
color that reminded me of blood. “I’ll sue!” Nick yelled. “That
woman is a menace. This certainly proves it. She . . . she tried to
kill me.”
“But here you are, alive and well.” I let this
comment settle before I added, “But Marjorie isn’t, is she?”
Nick whirled around, then spun back to me. He
tugged at his hair, his voice choked and desperate. “Yes, I was
here that morning. Yes, when I left, I took the brownies. I love
chocolate, you see, and I figured it would serve Aunt Marjorie
right to not get any of the brownies. She was . . .” Looking for
the right word to describe a woman who was indescribable, he
blubbered.
“She was impossible! For once, I wanted to get the
best of her, so when I arrived here that morning, I told Aunt
Marjorie something she didn’t know. A couple weeks earlier, after
she showed me the letter for the first time, I smuggled it out of
her house and showed it to Ted Studebaker. You know, so that he
could value it. I should have sold it to him right then and there,
Aunt Marjorie be damned. But no!” He was so overwrought, his voice
gained an octave.
“I had to be the good nephew. Just the way I’ve
always been. I had to give in to Aunt Marjorie’s whims. Just the
way I always have. I returned the letter to her along with the good
news about how much it was worth. She said she’d consider selling
it and that I should come here to the cemetery and we’d talk about
it further.”
“And when you did?”
“When I did, she laughed in my face.” Nick’s eyes
were rimmed with red. He swigged his nose. “She told me I was
stupid if I ever thought she’d sell that letter, that it was the
most wonderful thing in the world and that she’d never part with
it. I felt like a little kid all over again, always being corrected
by Aunt Marjorie, always being told by her that I wasn’t smart
enough, that I didn’t care enough about family history. She made me
so angry . . .” Nick’s hands curled into fists. “I wanted to . . .
I wanted to—”
“Kill her?”
Nick went motionless and the only sounds in the
rotunda were the echoes of his rough breathing. “I . . .” He drew
in a breath and it stuttered out of him on the end of a sigh. “I
didn’t kill her. I swear I didn’t kill her. We fought, yes. We
yelled. We screamed. But when I left here, Aunt Marjorie was
alive.”
I wasn’t about to believe him, not without proof,
anyway. “You were the only one here that morning, Nick,” I
said.
“Well, obviously not. Someone threw Aunt Marjorie
over that balcony. But it wasn’t me.” He wiped the tears from his
cheeks and threw back his shoulders, and suddenly, his voice was as
calm as it had been distraught only moments before. “Now you’ll
need to give me that letter, Pepper. I may not have a gun, but I am
a man, and stronger than you. I’m not leaving here without the
letter. Even if it means I have to hurt you to get it.”
Before I could decide if he was bluffing, Nick
darted toward me, and honestly, I think I could have taken him if
not for the fact that all the lights came on in the place and Scott
and Quinn showed up out in the entryway. I was distracted, watching
as they jockeyed for position, each trying to be the first into the
rotunda. All they managed to accomplish was to trip over each
other.
In the meantime, I lost precious seconds, and in
those seconds, Nick closed in on me and I stepped back and bumped
into the table. Before I had a chance to figure out which way to
run, his hands had already closed around my neck.
“Give me that letter!” he said, his voice deadly
serious. And even though I struggled to breathe at the same time I
fought to loosen his hold, I recognized the important word
there.
Deadly.
He was stronger than any IT geek had a right to be.
He shook me like a ragdoll. “It’s mine. Give me the letter.
Now.”
Never let it be said that Pepper Martin isn’t
willing to oblige. I was getting nowhere trying to pry Nick’s hands
away from my neck so I groped for the framed letter. Once I had a
hand on it, I swung. Hard.
When the frame and the glass shattered on Nick’s
head, the noise was as loud as a gunshot.
I guess that got Quinn and Scott’s attention. They
untangled themselves from the doorway and scrambled over just as
Nick’s eyes rolled to the back of his head and he crumpled to the
floor.
“Nick Klinker, you’re under arrest—”
They did it again. Started talking at the same
time.
Quinn and Scott exchanged cutting looks. But maybe
Scott is the smarter of the two. Or maybe he just knew that the
case was officially Quinn’s and there was no way he was going to
scoop it, anyway. He stepped back and Quinn cuffed Nick and called
for the paramedics.
What did I do while all this was going on?
Well, I still had a hold of what was left of the
frame, and I looked down at the letter, but I couldn’t really see
it clearly. That’s because my hands were trembling.
“You OK, Pepper?” Scott asked. He put a hand on my
arm.
“I’m fine,” I lied, but only because Quinn looked
up, anxious to see how I was going to answer.
“I’ll just . . .” My knees were mushy, and I
figured it would be more graceful to sit down in the office than to
fall down on the floor, so I headed that way. “I’ll wait inside the
office.”
This, too, was a good plan.
Or at least it would have been, if Nick Klinker
hadn’t been telling the truth about Marjorie’s murder, and the real
murderer wasn’t lying in wait for me.
I had already slumped down into the chair
behind the desk when the office door swung shut, clicked, and
locked. Too late, I realized someone had been standing behind
it.
“Thank goodness for Nick causing all that
commotion. I never could have gotten in here unnoticed if your two
cops friends hadn’t been so busy trying to one-up each other.” Ted
Studebaker stepped out from the shadows. Good old Ted, always the
showman. He wasn’t content using the ol’
finger-in-the-pocket-like-a-gun trick. He really did have a gun, a
small, silver pistol with a pearl handle. It was aimed right at
me.
“Let’s get this over with as quickly as we can,” he
said. He held out his left hand and jiggled his fingers, urging me
to hand over the letter. “If I can get out of here fast, we can
avoid any messy consequences.”
“If you shoot me, Scott and Quinn are going to come
running.”
This sounded reasonable to me, but it wasn’t about
to make Studebaker change his mind. “By the time they stop what
they’re doing and figure out where the shot came from, I’ll be out
of here. That’s the thing about surprise. It’s . . .” He grinned.
“Surprising!”
“All this for a stupid letter?” What was left of
the frame was on the desk and I looked down at the President’s
fancy, curlicue script. “Come on, it can’t be worth that
much.”
“It isn’t.” Studebaker stepped closer. “But what’s
on the back of it . . .”
I hauled in a breath, and if I wasn’t so worried
about living through the next couple minutes and about how if I
didn’t, my body would be found with a big, ugly red mark on my
forehead, I would have given myself a slap. “Of course, Jeremiah
Stone said there wasn’t any blank paper in his portfolio. He went
to get some, but the president couldn’t wait. He grabbed a piece of
paper, anyway. And if there was no blank paper, that means
something has to be written on the back of this one.”
Carefully avoiding both Studebaker’s confused “What
are you talking about?” and the sharp bits of glass still left
inside the frame, I took out the president’s letter and flipped it
over. Even though the writing on the other side of the paper was
stiff and old-fashioned and hard to read, I skimmed over the words
and my breath caught.
I looked up at Studebaker in wonder. “This isn’t
possible. You mean—”
“When word of this gets out . . .” He dangled the
word to reflect the possibilities.
OK, so I’m not exactly a whiz when it comes to
politics. Or world affairs. Or treaties and such. But even I knew
the piece of paper in my hands would blow the lid off international
relations.
“That’s why you were so anxious to get at this. It
wasn’t because the letter from the president to Lucia is so
valuable. It was for what was on the other side of it. And nobody
knew about it but you. When I brought you that newspaper page I
wanted to sell, you said you’d have to have an archivist look at
it. That’s what you did with this. You took it out of the frame,
and you saw what was on the back of the letter, and you . . .”
There was nothing to be gained from not going for broke. “You
killed Marjorie Klinker to get it.”
“It would have been easier to kill Nick.”
Studebaker sniffed. “I was hoping he’d talk his aunt out of the
letter and then I could simply eliminate him. I waited for him to
leave the memorial with the letter in hand, but then I heard them
arguing. She hadn’t even brought the letter with her, the stupid
woman. After Nick left—”
“You moved in on Marjorie. And when she wouldn’t
tell you where the letter was—”
“Things got out of hand. Yes. As they are about to
get out of hand again.” With the barrel of the gun, he motioned me
to stand. “I can’t say for sure, but my guess is that once a man
has killed for the first time, the second time can’t possibly be
hard. The letter, please. Now.”
I got to my feet, and just as I did, I heard the
door handle jiggle.
“Pepper?” Scott was outside, and he tried the door
again.
“Pepper, are you in there?” This question was from
Quinn. “Is everything OK?”
“Tell them it is.” Studebaker mouthed the
words.
Let’s face it, I never have been very good at
taking direction. Especially not from a murderer.
I yelled something I vaguely remember as, “Watch
out, it’s Studebaker and he’s the murderer,” and dropped to the
floor, and just as I did, I heard the crash of the door getting
kicked open, the sound of a single gunshot, and a muffled cry from
Studebaker. I would like to be able to describe exactly how Scott
and Quinn subdued him, but truth be told, I crawled under the desk,
and stayed there the whole time.