precautions. Taking care of details. Meredith was very good at details.” Silence hummed gently on the line for a few seconds. “But she may have had some qualms.”
“What makes you say that?”
“In her message, she said that if things turned nasty I’m supposed to call you.”
“Huh. Wonder why she did that?”
“Meredith was very intuitive.”
“Yeah?” He stroked the muscles behind Wrench’s bent ear. “I’ll take your word for it. I didn’t know her very well.”
“You slept with her.”
“Like I said, I didn’t know her very well.”
“Do you sleep with a lot of women you don’t know well?”
“No.” He let it go at that. Unlike Meredith, apparently, he was not real intuitive. But it was obvious, even to him,that this particular conversational direction would lead to a dead end.
There was a short, tense silence.
“I think I know where your one-point-five million is,” Leonora said after a while.
He was on his feet without being aware of having come up out of the chair. Wrench sat back on his haunches, head cocked attentively.
“Where is it?” Thomas asked.
“In an offshore account in the Caribbean.”
“That figures. She was a very sophisticated scam artist, wasn’t she?”
“I’m afraid so, yes.” Leonora hesitated briefly. “I’m sorry. Meredith had a long history of, uh, pilfering funds from other people.”
“When the amount involved is one and a half million, the term pilfering doesn’t seem adequate.”
“No, I guess not.”
“Can you access that offshore account?”
“Yes, I think so. She gave me the number of the account.”
He went to stand at the window that overlooked the cove. “If you’ve got the number, I should be able to transfer the funds back into the endowment account without anyone being the wiser.”
“Yes, well, that’s something I feel we should discuss in more detail.”
Damn. He had known it wouldn’t be that easy. Meredith had been a thief. He had to remember that. Thieves hung out with other thieves, or, at the very least, they probably favored friends whose own moral and ethical standards tended toward the low end of the spectrum.
“If you’re worried about your finder’s fee,” he said, “relax. I’ll make sure that you get the money.”
Leonora cleared her throat. He got the feeling she was working up her nerve for whatever it was she intended to say next.
“That’s not quite what I had in mind,” she said.
He braced one hand around the wooden window frame and prepared to negotiate.
“How does fifty thousand sound?” he said evenly. “Together with a guarantee that your name will not be brought up in any conversation related to the scam in the event that someone, say a cop or a lawyer, for instance, gets wind of it in the future?”
“No.”
Her refusal came swiftly. Too swiftly. There was no hesitation whatsoever in her voice. That worried him. She made her living as an academic librarian and he knew for a fact that there was no serious money in the family. He’d checked her out online. All she had was a grandmother who survived on social security, a tiny pension and the income of some small investments. Fifty grand had to sound like a very nice chunk of change to anyone in Leonora’s position. Of course, it wasn’t exactly one and a half million.
She was playing hardball.
“It’s a good offer,” he said. “The best you’re going to get. Meredith told you to trust me, remember? Take my advice, Miss Hutton. You do not want to try to hang on to the money in that numbered account.”
“I don’t?” She sounded almost amused.
“No.”
“Why not?”
“Because I will hound you to the ends of the earth. I promise I will make life very difficult for you.”
“I believe you,” she said dryly.
“Good.”
“Look, this isn’t about the money, Mr. Walker.”
“Sure it is. It’s always about the money.”
“If you actually believe that, you’ve led a very limited and extremely barren