friends, possibly her family, weren’t always sure where she was?” I ask dubiously. “What about telephone calls, e-mail . . . ?”
“We sent agents to check,” Burke says. “Well, why don’t you pick up here?” She directs this to the woman I don’t know. “Valerie Hahn’s with our cyber squad.”
“And for the record, everybody calls me Val.” She smiles at me, and she shouldn’t bother.
I don’t feel friendly and am consumed by worry. What has Marino done?
“The bottom line is it certainly appears she never got to her cottage on the lake,” Valerie Hahn says. “It’s totally abandoned. No luggage. Nothing in the fridge. It’s looking like she vanished into thin air around the first of May, possibly earlier, and Dr. Zenner mentioned that could be consistent with the condition of the body?”
“I’ll know better when we autopsy her.” It rankles me that Luke has told them anything.
“I don’t know if you might have heard her mentioned?” Valerie Hahn says to me.
I open the door leading out into the corridor, where Ned Adams is headed toward us, carrying his old black leather medical bag.
“Why would I have heard her mentioned?” I ask bluntly.
“I’m just wondering if the name Pretty Please means anything to you, or perhaps anyone on your staff?” Hahn says.
“Hello, Ned.” I hold open the door for him. “She’s in the scanner. Help yourself.”
“I can do it in there. Sure.” He pushes back the hood of a long yellow raincoat that is dripping water on the floor. “Her films are up to date. Lots of crowns, implants, root canals, including a panoramic x-ray that’s good of the sinuses. You got those?”
“I can put them up on the screens even as we speak.” Anne starts typing. “You want a printout, too?”
“An old-fashioned guy like me still likes paper. She has lots of features, an embarrassment of riches, shouldn’t take long. Are we hot?” He pauses at the door leading into the scanning room as if it’s a military operations area that might be dangerous.
“The scanner’s offline,” I tell him. “You know how to slide out the table?”
“I do.” He takes off his coat.
“Presumably because her initials are PLS,” Douglas Burke explains. “One might suspect that’s where please comes from.”
“You’re on Twitter, aren’t you, Kay?” Valerie Hahn acts as if we’re friends.
“Barely.” I’m beginning to understand, or I think I do. “I don’t use it to socialize or communicate.”
“Well, I know you never tweeted Peggy Lynn Stanton, whose handle on Twitter is Pretty Please,” Hahn says.
“I don’t tweet anyone.”
Marino, what have you done?
“It’s easy enough to see that you two weren’t tweeting each other.” Hahn is quite sure of herself. “One doesn’t even need admin privileges to see that.”
“I don’t think we need to get into this level of detail right now.” Benton watches Ned Adams through glass.
“I think we do.” I look at him until he looks at me.
“Suffice it to say that at least something useful came from all the television coverage.” I can read Benton’s reluctance in the flatness of his eyes. “Our office in Boston got phone calls, Cambridge got phone calls, Chicago and Florida got calls, at least a dozen people certain the dead woman is Peggy Stanton, whom these people said they haven’t seen or heard from, apparently, since at least May, when she was supposed to be on her way to her Lake Michigan cottage or possibly Palm Beach. People here assumed she was in Illinois and people up there assumed she was still here. Some people assumed she was in Florida.”
“People? As in friends?” It is all I can do to mask how much I don’t like this.
“Various volunteer groups and churches.” Benton knows exactly what I’m feeling, but it doesn’t matter.
This is how we do our jobs. This is how we live.
“Apparently she was very involved in eldercare. Here, in Chicago, in Florida,” he says.
“She has family and they haven’t wondered where she is after all these months?” I think about what Marino said to me in the car this morning when we were on our way to the Coast Guard base.
“Her husband and two kids died thirteen years ago when their private plane crashed.” Benton reports the information objectively, and he can sound so cold.
But that’s not who he is.
“An investment broker with a hefty life insurance policy,” he reports. “Left her fairly well off, not that she was poor to begin with.”
“None of her vendors have complained that she’s not paying her bills? No one noticed she wasn’t answering