J is for Judgment (Kinsey Millhone 10) - Page 101

The CF offices were officially closed, but there was a big jumble of keys in the lock, visible through the glass. Darcy’s desk was unoccupied, but I caught a glimpse of Gordon Titus in Mac’s glass-enclosed office, which was the only one showing any lights. Mac passed with two mugs of coffee in hand. I tapped on the glass. He set the mugs on Darcy’s desk and unlocked the door for me. “We’re in my office.”

“So I see. Let me grab a cup of coffee and I’ll be right there.”

He picked up the mugs and moved on without comment. He seemed depressed, not a reaction I’d anticipated. I’d half expected fireworks. He’d seen the case as his way of going out in a blaze of glory, retiring from CF with a big gold star pasted to the front of his personnel file. He wore a pair of red-and-green-plaid pants and a red golfing shirt, and I wondered if his current emotional state was generated by the forfeiture of his weekend tee time.

All the workstations were empty, phones silent. Gordon Titus sat at Mac’s desk, immaculately dressed, hands folded, his facial expression bland. I have a hard time trusting anyone so unflappable. While he appeared to be levelheaded, I suspected that he truly didn’t care about most things. Poise and indifference so often look the same. I poured myself a mug of coffee and added nonfat milk before I opened Mac’s office door and braved the chill effect of Titus’s personality.

Mac was now seated on one of his two upholstered visitors’ chairs, apparently unaware of how neatly Titus had displaced him. “I tell you one thing,” Mac was saying, “and Kinsey can pass this on to Mrs. Jaffe for a fact. I’ll have a lock on that money till Wendell dies of old age. If she has any hopes of seeing even one red cent, she’ll have to drag his dead body up the steps and lay it across my desk.”

“Good morning,” I murmured to Titus. I took the other chair, which at least lined me up on the same side of the desk as Mac. He shook his head and sent me a dark look. “The son of a bitch has done it to us again.”

“I gathered as much. What’s the story?” I asked.

“You tell her,” Mac said.

Titus pulled a ledger over in front of him. He opened it and leafed through, looking for a blank page. “What do we owe you to date?”

“Twenty-five hundred. That’s ten days on a flat. You’re lucky I didn’t charge you for the mileage. I’m making two and three trips to Perdido every day, and that adds up.”

“Twenty-five hundred dollars and for what?” Mac said. “We’re right back where we started. We’ve got nothing but air.”

Titus ran his finger down a column and penciled in a figure before he turned to another part of the book. “Actually, I don’t think this is as bad as it seems. We have enough witnesses who’ll testify that Jaffe was alive and well as recently as this week. We’ll never see a dime of the money Mrs. Jaffe’s already spent—we might as well write that off—but we can settle for the balance, thus cutting our losses.” He glanced up. “That should be the end of it. She’s hardly going to wait five years and make another claim.”

“Where’d they find the boat?”

He began to write, not looking up. “A southbound tanker saw it as a radar blip right in the middle of a shipping lane last night. The guy on watch flashed a warning light, but there was no response. The tanker notified the Coast Guard, who went out at first light.”

“The Lord was still in the area? That’s interesting.”

“It looks like Wendell sailed the boat as far as Winterset and then headed out toward the islands. He left the sails up. There was no big sea running, but with the storms coming through, the normal northwesterlies were countered by the hurricane effect. The Lord probably has a seven-knot hull speed, and with the right puff of wind it should have gone much farther. When they found the boat, it was stalled and drifting. The jib was backwinded, sheeted to the windward side, in effect, blowing the bow down off the wind while the main and the mizzen were trying to put it up wind. The boat must have lay hove to until discovery.”

“I didn’t know you sailed.”

“I don’t anymore. I did once upon a time.” Brief smile, the most I’d ever gotten from him.

“Now what?”

“They’ll tow it to the closest harbor.”

“Which is what, Perdido?”

“Probably. I’m not certain where jurisdiction lies. Some crime scene unit will go over it. I don’t think they’ll find much, and frankly, I don’t see that it’s any longer our concern.”

Tags: Sue Grafton Kinsey Millhone Thriller
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