Horace might be connected."
The knitting needles stopped short. "You think Horace would hurt his own daughter?" Her voice was a little sharp now.
"No, but there might be a connection. Somebody broke into Horace's apartment. He packed a bag and cleared out his bank account. I think he may be in trouble."
The needles started again. "If he is in trouble," she said, "maybe it's best that he stay hid."
"Tell me where he is, Mrs. Edwards. I'd like to help."
She stayed silent for a long time. She pulled at the yarn and kept knitting. Myron looked around the room. His eyes found the photographs again. He stood and studied them.
"Is this your son?" he asked.
She looked up over her glasses. "That's Terence. I got married when I was seventeen, and Roland and I were blessed with him a year later." The needles picked up speed. "Roland died when Terence was a baby. Shot on the front stoop of our home."
"I'm sorry," Myron said.
She shrugged, managed a sad smile. "Terence is the first college graduate in our family. That's his wife on the right. And my two grandsons."
Myron lifted the photograph. "Beautiful family."
"Terence worked his way through Yale Law School," she continued. "He became a town councilman when he was just twenty-five." That was probably why he looked familiar, Myron thought. Local TV news or papers. "If he wins in November, he'll be in the state senate before he's thirty."
"You must be proud," Myron said.
"I am."
Myron turned and looked at her. She looked back.
"It's been a long time, Myron. Horace always trusted you, but this is different. We don't know you anymore. These people who are looking for Horace" - she stopped and pointed to the puffy eye - "you see this?"
Myron nodded.
"Two men came by here last week. They wanted to know where Horace was. I told them I didn't know."
Myron felt his face flush. "They hit you?"
She nodded, her eyes on his.
"What did they look like?"
"White. One was a big man."
"How big?"
"Maybe your size."
Myron was six-four, two-twenty. "How about the other guy?"
"Skinny. And a lot older. He had a tattoo of a snake on his arm." She pointed to her own immense biceps, indicating the spot.
"Please tell me what happened, Mrs. Edwards."
"It's just like I said. They came into my house and wanted to know where Horace was. When I told them I didn't know, the big one punched me in the eye. The little one, he pulled the big one away."
"Did you call the police?"
"No. But not because I was afraid. Cowards like that don't scare me. But Horace told me not to."
"Mrs. Edwards," Myron said, "where is Horace?"
"I've already said too much, Myron. I just want you to understand. These people are dangerous. For all I know, you're working for them. For all I know, your coming here is just a trick to find Horace."
Myron was not sure what to say. To protest his innocence would do little to assuage her fears. He decided to switch tracks and head in a completely different direction. "What can you tell me about Brenda's mother?"
Mabel Edwards stiffened. She dropped the knitting into her lap, the half-moon glasses falling back to her bosom. "Why on earth would you ask about that?"
"A few minutes ago I told you that somebody broke into your brother's apartment."
"I remember."
"Brenda's letters from her mother were missing. And Brenda has been receiving threatening phone calls. One of them told her to call her mother."
Mabel Edwards's face went slack. Her eyes began to glisten.
After some time had passed, Myron tried again. "Do you remember when she ran away?"
Her eyes regained focus. "You don't forget the day your brother dies." Her voice was barely a whisper. She shook her head. "I can't see how any of this matters. Anita's been gone for twenty years."
"Please, Mrs. Edwards, tell me what you remember."
"Not much to tell," Mabel said. "She left my brother a note and ran away."
"Do you remember what the note said?"
"Something about how she didn't love him anymore, how she wanted a new life." Mabel Edwards stopped, waved her hand as though making space for herself. She took a handkerchief out of her bag and just held it in a tight ball.
"Could you tell me what she was like?"
"Anita?" She smiled now, but the handkerchief remained at the ready. "I introduced them, you know. Anita and I worked together."
"Where?"
"The Bradford estate. We were maids. We were young girls then, barely in our twenties. I only worked there