Three-Day Town - By Margaret Maron Page 0,98

The main thing was to get outside and sling Corey Wall’s body onto the garbage truck before one of the sanitation workers tried to lift the bag. He no sooner got back inside than he heard the elevator descending, so that’s when he dived into the boiler room and hid.”

“Elevators,” I mused, holding out my glass for a refill. “All that coming and going.”

“Only up and down,” Sigrid said. “Never in and out. Horvath told us that Antoine was jealous because Corey would be going off to college, working at a better job, making a richer life, while he was going to be an elevator operator all his life.”

She swirled the wine in her glass. “In an odd way, I suppose the same went for Jackson, only he couldn’t afford to lose this job at his age. Especially since he’s still paying off the nursing home bills for his father.”

Sigrid finished her wine and stood to go.

“Don’t forget this,” I said, handing her the little Tiffany bag. “If you ever find out why Mrs. Lattimore had it, I hope you’ll tell us. Maybe we can get together if you’re down next month.”

“Maybe.” She seemed almost shy for a moment as she thanked me again for telling her about her grandmother. “Mother’s due in tomorrow night. I know she’ll want to meet you.”

“That would have been nice,” I said, “but we’ve decided to cut our trip short and go home tomorrow morning.”

(In the squad car on the way back to the apartment, we had agreed that we’d rather finish our honeymoon at home. With Cal.)

“I’m sorry your trip turned out like this,” Sigrid said. “I hope it hasn’t soured you on New York.”

“It would take more than a murder investigation to sour me on this city,” I said. “Only next time we’ll bring our son with us. There’s so much to show him.”

“And I still want to hear Sam Hentz play the piano,” Dwight said.

She smiled. “Me, too.”

I gave her our Gilbert and Sullivan tickets, and as we walked her to the door, Sigrid paused with her hand on the knob. “Did your nephew figure out who used his cell phone and hijacked his Facebook page?”

I shrugged. “I haven’t talked to the kids today, but I think I would have heard if they did.”

“This may sound strange, but my housemate—he writes mystery novels, and something he said last night made me wonder.”

“Oh?”

“You said that two other boys had the lockers next to his and a freshman girl had the one beneath his?”

“So?”

“I know that one of the boys might have done it because he was jealous of your nephew, but what if the freshman girl was jealous of the nephew’s girlfriend? If he never paid her any attention, maybe he never noticed that she had watched him dial the combination on that lock. Old student locks aren’t all that precise anyhow, are they?”

“Oh, Lord!” It was too logical not to be true. And remembering my own early teen years, who more likely to keep pawing through Lee’s locker than a fourteen-year-old girl who had the hots for him? “The one person they all overlooked?”

Sigrid smiled. “The least likely suspect.”

CHAPTER

29

From the high tower of the Singer or the Metropolitan Building the eye travels around the ring and sees waterways, landways, bridgeways, railways, radiating and crossing, leading outward and onward.

—The New New York, 1909

We spent the evening tidying up the apartment, emptying the refrigerator of everything that wouldn’t make a picnic lunch on the train, and packing our suitcases.

While I was busy elsewhere in the apartment, Dwight used a wood cleaner on that bloodstain so that it really wasn’t very noticeable. Nevertheless, I wrote a note to Jordy Lacour to explain that the police had his missing gold-and-enamel pillboxes and to tell him why there was an overly clean spot on the floor near his French doors. We left him a bottle of good brandy as a thank-you for the use of his apartment.

I emailed the kids a group letter to ask if the culprit might be the freshman girl Jess had dismissed out of hand. Something in the picture’s background had already made them start to wonder if it had been taken in a stall in one of the girls’ restrooms. They had been ready to accuse Mark McLamb’s girlfriend of helping Mark and Jamie Benton embarrass Lee, but thought the girl with the lower locker was much more likely since Lee hadn’t even bothered to learn her name after bumping into her every day since school began back in September.

Cal had sounded ecstatic when we called to say we were coming back early. “Bandit’s wagging his tail like crazy,” he told us. “He’s really, really glad.” He paused, then said, “We’re not gonna have to stay at Grandma’s so you can finish your honeymoon, are we?”

“Absolutely not,” I told him. “We’ve been missing you and Bandit way too much for that.”

Next morning, as our southbound train broke free of the dark tunnel under the Hudson River and out into the first real sunlight we’d seen since leaving home, Dwight and I looked back across the snowy New Jersey landscape for a final view of Manhattan. We even caught a brief glimpse of the Statue of Liberty before Dwight settled into his seat with a contented sigh.

We both agreed that it would be good to get home.

“Yesterday?” he said. “When you told Lieutenant Harald that we’d be back? You said ‘with our son.’ ”

“Did I?”

“Is that how you feel about Cal?”

Confused and unsure what he wanted my answer to be, I said, “I know that he’ll never stop remembering that Jonna was his mother, but yeah, after a year, I sometimes forget he’s not really my son, too.”

“He should have been yours.” Dwight drew me closer so that my head was tucked under his chin. “Whatever I’d felt for Jonna was gone long before Cal was born. I should have waited.”

“No,” I said. “If you’d waited, Cal wouldn’t be here.”

“Still…”

I reached up to touch his face and put my fingers across his lips to stop him. “Still, nothing.”

He kissed my fingers and tightened his arm around me as the train lurched toward Newark. “All the same,” he said, “I never told you this, but after the first few months, whenever Jonna and I made love, I used to pretend she was you. I knew it wasn’t fair to her, but I couldn’t help myself. It was you I made love to the night Cal was conceived.”

I was flooded with such emotion that I couldn’t speak.

He tilted my chin up so that he could look into my eyes, and just before we kissed, he said, “So in some psychic way, he really is your son.”

My son?

Yes.

My thanks to those inveterate New Yorkers, Vicky Bijur and Susan Richman, for allowing me to take aspects of their Manhattan apartments and shape them to the needs of this book.

Deborah Knott novels:

THREE-DAY TOWN

CHRISTMAS MOURNING

SAND SHARKS

DEATH’S HALF ACRE

HARD ROW

WINTER’S CHILD

RITUALS OF THE SEASON

HIGH COUNTRY FALL

SLOW DOLLAR

UNCOMMON CLAY

STORM TRACK

HOME FIRES

KILLER MARKET

UP JUMPS THE DEVIL

SHOOTING AT LOONS

SOUTHERN DISCOMFORT

BOOTLEGGER’S DAUGHTER

Sigrid Harald novels:

FUGITIVE COLORS

PAST IMPERFECT

CORPUS CHRISTMAS

BABY DOLL GAMES

THE RIGHT JACK

DEATH IN BLUE FOLDERS

DEATH OF A BUTTERFLY

ONE COFFEE WITH

Non-series:

BLOODY KIN

SHOVELING SMOKE

LAST LESSONS OF SUMMER

SUITABLE FOR HANGING

Contents

Front Cover Image

Welcome

Dedication

Deborah Knott’s Family Tree

Epigraph

1940

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Copyright

Copyright

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

Copyright © 2011 by Margaret Maron All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

All epigraphs taken from The New New York, by John C. Van Dyke, Macmillan Company, 1909.

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