easily, âIâm a private investigator from Los Angeles. A man hired me to find his parents, who disappeared from around here some three years ago.â
She was weighing his words, and he knew she was trying to determine if he was lying to her. His cover was excellent because it was true, but even that didnât matter. He was a good liar. He could tell his voice was working on her.
She was so thin, her face still had that bloodless look,the color leached out by the terror of that phone call. Her father? He was coming to take care of her? This was nuts. He could handle sane people. He didnât know what heâd do if she flipped out.
âAll right,â she said finally. âCome this way, into the kitchen.â
He followed her to a kitchen that was straight out of the 1940âsâthe brownish linoleum floor with stains older than he was. It was clean but peeling up badly near the sink area. All the appliances were as old as the floor, and just as clean. He sat down at the table as she said, âDonât lean on it. One of the legs is uneven. See, Aunt Amabel has magazines under it to make it steady.â
He wondered how long the table had been like that. What an easy thing to fix. He watched Susan St. John Brainerd pour him some brandy in a water glass. He watched her pause and frown. He realized she didnât know how much to pour.
âThatâs just right,â he said easily. âThank you.â He waited until sheâd poured herself a bit, then gave her a salute. âI need this. You scared the bejesus out of me. Nice to meet you, Susan St. John.â
âAnd you, Mr. Quinlan. Please call me Sally.â
âAll rightâSally. After all our screams and shouts, why not call me James?â
âI donât know you, even if I did scream at you.â
âThe way you gouged me in the ribs, Iâd give up before Iâd let you attack me like that again. Whereâd you learn to do that?â
âA girl at boarding school taught me. She said her brother was the meanest guy in junior high and he didnât want a wuss for a sister so he taught her all sorts of self-defense tricks.â
He found himself looking down at her hands. They were as thin and pale as the rest of her. She said, âI never tried it beforeâseriously, I mean. Well, I did, severaltimes, but I didnât have a chance. There were too many of them.â
What the hell was she talking about? He said, âIt worked. I wanted to die. In fact, Iâll be hobbled over for the next couple of days. Iâm glad you missed my groin.â
He sipped his brandy, watching her. What to do? It had seemed so simple, so straightforward before, but now, sitting here, facing her, seeing her in the flesh as a person and not just as his key to the murder of Amory St. John, things werenât so clear anymore. He hated it when things werenât clear. âTell me about your father.â
She didnât say anything, just shook her head.
âListen to me, Sally. Heâs dead. Your damned father is dead. That couldnât have been him on the phone. That means that it must have been either a recording of his voice or a person who could mimic him very well.â
âYes,â she said, still staring into the brandy.
âObviously someone knows youâre here. Someone wants to frighten you.â
She looked up at him then, and remarkably, she smiled. It was a lovely smile, free of fear, free of stress. He found himself smiling back at her. âThat someone succeeded admirably,â she said. âIâm scared out of my mind. Iâm sorry I attacked you.â
âI would have attacked me too if I had burst through the front door like that.â
âI donât know if the call was long distance. If it was long distance, then Iâve got some time to decide what to do.â She paused, then stiffened. She didnât move, but he got the feeling