Muttering my annoyance, I made my way back to the kitchen and checked the display. I didn’t recognize the number, and was about to let it go to voicemail, when it occurred to me that I’d given my number to Jack at the restaurant the other night, just in case. He hadn’t called before his visit, but the idea that he might be calling now encouraged me to answer. “Hello?”
“Umm . . . Grace?”
I immediately knew this wasn’t Jack. Male, hesitant, with a slight tremor, the voice was familiar, but only vaguely. “Yes?”
“Hi, uh, I don’t know if you remember me . . .”
It hit me. “Percy?”
“Yeah, hey. Cool. You do remember.”
I was about to ask why he was calling me, but I already knew. “Ronny Tooney gave you my number, didn’t he?”
“I know this is weird for me to call you, but I don’t know what else to do. Ronny says this is important.”
I meandered to the doorway between the kitchen and dining room. Scott and Bruce had stopped reading and were both staring up at me, listening to my half of the conversation. “I don’t really care what Ronny Tooney thinks,” I began.
“No, y’see, this is important,” Percy interrupted, talking fast. “That guy who gave me the money to make a scene in your mansion showed up at my house yesterday. Kinda scared me to see him again. I didn’t think he knew where I lived. But he swears he had nothing to do with killing that old guy.”
“And you believe that?”
A hesitation. “Not really.”
“What did you tell the police when they questioned you?”
I could almost hear him shrug. “Not much. The guy gave me money, you know? Kind of a lot. I didn’t want to get him into trouble when he was such a good guy to me.”
“Did you at least provide a description?”
The delay in his reply gave me the answer before he did. “I was kinda vague.”
“Percy,” I said using my best stern-adult voice, “you need to go back to the police. You need to tell them every single little detail you can remember about this guy.”
“You think?”
“Yeah, I think. I don’t like the fact that he came to your house.”
“Me neither.”
“Call them now. They’ll come out to talk to you.”
“I don’t want the police at my house.”
Suspicion prickled the back of my neck. “Why not, Percy?”
“I just don’t, okay? I’ll talk to them, but not here.”
“You’ll go tonight?”
He hesitated again. “Will you go with me?”
I rubbed my forehead with my free hand. All I wanted to do tonight was sort through these boxes. I had no interest whatsoever in accompanying Percy to visit the police. “You’re a big boy,” I said, unintentionally invoking a double meaning, “Just drive over there now. I’m sure one of the officers will be happy to take your revised statement.”
“I don’t drive. I’ll have to wait for a bus.”
“Call your friend Tooney. He’ll take you.”
“Uh, no. He pestered the police so much he’s afraid. He won’t go with me.” Percy waited a beat. “Please go with me?”
Without meaning to, I growled my aggravation. Curse that Ronny Tooney. What had he gotten me into?
“I’m sorry,” Percy said. “It’s just I don’t know who to trust, you know? I thought maybe you would help me because you’re part of the Marshfield group. And . . . you were nice to me.”
It was already after eight. “Tell you what,” I said, “I’ll go with you after work tomorrow.”
“Uh, can’t do it tomorrow. Got a doctor’s appointment.”
“At night?”
“He’s in another town. Takes me a long time to get there and back. And if I don’t get the meds I need, I get into trouble. Even worse trouble than I got into at your mansion.”
“Fine,” I said. “Wednesday?”
Bruce and Scott stood up. Their eyes wide, they gesticulated wildly, clearly trying to get me to change my mind.
“You’ll do that for me?”
“Yeah,” I said, knowing this was something I had to do, or be sorry forever for not helping out someone less fortunate. “I’m tied up tonight, but I’ll make time Wednesday. Where can I pick you up?” Back in the kitchen, I pulled out a pad of paper and pen.
He gave me an address just outside Emberstowne.
“Got it,” I said. “I can be there by seven. Does that work for you?”
“I really appreciate this, dude,” he said. “I mean . . . Grace.”
I wanted to get off the phone, now. “Great. See you then.”
“Do you think we could maybe grab a bite to eat while we’re out?” His voice held a peculiar lilt. “You know, just you and me?”
“Let me guess, my treat?”
“Only if you don’t mind.”
I bit the insides of my cheeks and reminded myself to pay it forward. “Okay, but nowhere fancy. Just a quick bite.”
“Excellent!”
“I gotta go, Percy. See you Wednesday.”
The moment I snapped my phone shut, my two roommates descended. “You’re not really going,” Bruce said. “You can’t.”
Scott must have read the answer on my face because he said, “We’re not going to let you go alone.”
Bruce shot him a look.
“You can stay at the store Wednesday night,” Scott said to Bruce. “The last hour is pretty quiet anyway. I’ll meet Grace and we’ll pick up Percy together.” He turned to me. “What do you think?”
I gave him a hug. “I think you’re the best.”
Bruce affected a pout. “I think I deserve a hug. After all, just as you answered the phone I came across something very interesting in that scrapbook.”
“You did?” I practically leaped over the boxes to get to the wing chair, where he’d left the leather-bound volume. I sat, pulling it onto my lap, thinking about how similar the book was to the ledger Abe and his predecessors had kept all these years.
Bruce reached to take it out of my hands.
“Hang on,” I said. This wasn’t just similar; it was identical to the ledger in my office. “I have something like this at the manor. The only difference is the pages inside.” I fanned through them. “Abe’s copy has lined pages . . . you know, for record keeping. But these are normal scrapbook pages.” I closed the book again and ran my hand over the cover. “These books were made by the same manufacturer; they had to be.”
“Then there’s a link,” Scott said.
“But not the only one.” Bruce opened the book on my lap. “Your family was obsessed with the Marshfields,” he said as he gently turned pages. He was right. There were dozens of newspaper clippings featuring Warren, Jr., all dated in the mid-1940s. “I thought it was all sort of normal—I mean, fans keep all sorts of paraphernalia on Elvis or the Beatles, but then I found this.” He pulled a folded letter out from between two pages of photos. Addressed to my grandmother Sophie, it was typewritten on the official letterhead of Hertel and Niebuhr, and signed by T. Hertel, senior partner.
“This is the law firm that handles everything for the Marshfields,” I said.
“I figured as much,” Bruce said. “Read the letter.”
I did, skimming so quickly I had to reread. In essence, the letter requested my grandmother’s presence at their offices on March 1, 1948, at seven o’clock in the evening to sign documents that made her newborn daughter, Amelia, beneficiary of a trust for the home I lived in now.
Bruce said, “I think Marshfield bought this place and gave it to your grandmother. You said your grandfather—that is, your grandmother’s husband—was a real jerk. If your grandma was hurting for money, this was probably a safe way for Warren Marshfield to help her out.”
My brain was moving in slow motion. I still held the letter. “This is hardly proof.”
Bruce leaned down to turn to the back of the book. Tucked in the inside cover was a sheet of yellowed paper, folded in thirds. Accompanying it was an old black-and-white photo with curlicued edges. “Does he look familiar?”
“That’s Warren, Jr.,” I said. I’d seen enough pictures of the Marshfield family to recognize them all. But I couldn’t discern where the photo had been taken. “This must be on Marshfield property, but I can’t figure out where.”
Bruce nodded. “He’s holding a baby. Your mother.”
“We don’t know that.”
He unfolded the letter, and I read:
My dearest Sophie,
I thank you for the greatest gift any woman can give the man she loves. I know your feelings run as deeply for me as mine for you. I regret, with all my heart, that I cannot be with you. As you know I am forever disappointing my family and my father has made it clear that if I choose to follow my heart, I will do so absent his blessing. That would mean losing everything for myself, and for my young son. To recognize you would be to turn my back on all else. Sadly, I am not strong enough to face this fate. Perhaps, when he departs this earth, you and I will be together after all.
“It isn’t signed,” I said.
Bruce’s voice was soft. “But you
know
who wrote it.”
I did. I knew it from the flutter of my stomach down to the tingle in my toes. The treasure map. After all these years, I’d finally found it. “But knowing something and proving it are two entirely different things.”
Bruce looked ready to explode. “You don’t call this proof?”
“Bennett seems to have taken a liking to you,” Scott said. “Why not ask him about it?”
“Are you kidding? This morning he came in to fire me.”
That took them both aback. “I fixed it,” I said, not wanting to get into a lengthy explanation. “My job is safe for now. But there’s no way I’m sharing this with him.”
Scott folded his arms. “You should. You said he’s a fair guy. Show it to him. Heck, then your job will be permanently secure. He might even offer you a share of the family fortunes.”
“Not a chance,” I said. “Do you have any idea how many people are trying to get a piece of him?” Since it was a rhetorical question, I continued. “I want him to trust me. Not to think I’m just another money-grubber, looking to stake a claim in his life.” I was shaking my head the whole time I was talking. “I know what all this suggests. But it’s circumstantial.”
Scott blew raspberries. “You just don’t want to rock the boat.”
“Not true.” I placed my hands flat on the pages of Marshfield history in the scrapbook. “If we were truly related to this family, why didn’t my mother ever say anything? Do you think that’s why she refused to sell the house? Because it was a gift from . . . from her real father?”
They didn’t answer—they couldn’t begin to get into my mother’s mind on this matter—but I knew the reason she’d stayed mum. My mother was straitlaced, almost prudish. I’d often joked that I didn’t know how she’d had children, because I couldn’t imagine her letting our dad get close enough. To know that her mother—her
married
mother—had had an affair that resulted in my mother’s birth would have been a difficult truth. She would never have told me. Not outright. But why hadn’t she destroyed all the evidence? Sentimental weakness, perhaps? Sadly, I would never know the answer to that.
“It’s your decision,” Bruce said. “But keep an open mind, okay?”
I smiled up at them, my hands still on the precious artifacts on my lap. I could not tell Bennett. That much I knew for sure. I ran my finger along the corner of the black-and-white photo. Warren, Jr. had died before I was born. “Nice to meet you, Grandpa,” I whispered.
Scott turned to face the roomful of boxes. “So now that we found what you were looking for, can we throw the rest of this junk away?”
Chapter 24
THE PRELIMINARY REPORT ON SAMANTHA Taft provided nothing unexpected. I didn’t know what I’d hoped for—some indication that she’d hired a hit man? While there were plenty of news clippings, Internet postings, and photos of Mrs. Taft, nothing suggested she was more than a high-maintenance wife who somehow managed to preserve her standard of living despite the fact that her husband had bilked millions from unsuspecting investors.
Detective Rodriguez stopped by my office unannounced. “She didn’t do it,” he said without preamble.
I looked up from the stack of Fairfax reports on my desk. “Who are we talking about?”
“The stepdaughter. Ms. Singletary.” He rolled his eyes. “You were wrong about her.”
“I never suspected her.”
“Oh no?” he asked, making himself comfortable in the seat across from me. “Then why did you tell us about her sneaking around? Was that just to shift the blame away from you?”
Rodriguez looked tired today. Not sleepy as much as worn out. And somehow, more approachable. “I was never really a suspect, was I?”
He shook his head. “We have to rattle people from time to time. You never know what will fall out.”
“Speaking of rattling,” I said, pulling reports from the bottom of the pile, “there are a couple of people who might be worth checking out.”
“What? You think you’re some kind of private investigator? You think we’re not moving fast enough?”
Better to deflect that question. “I thought about who might want revenge on Bennett.” Turning the files to face Rodriguez, I continued. “Jeremy Litric and Rupesh Chaven both lost a boatload with Taft.”