Mary, Mary (Alex Cross 11)
Chapter 52
GREAT NEWS—I was accruing enough hotel points for a lifetime of free rooms. The problem was that I never wanted to see another hotel for as long as I lived. West Los Angeles didn’t offer much in the way of distractions, either. I lay on the bed flipping through my notes again, a half-eaten chicken sandwich and a warm soda next to me.
When the phone rang, I gratefully picked up. It was Nana Mama.
“I was just thinking about pork chops and spoon bread,” I told her. “And here you are.”
“Why are you always buttering me up, Alex?” she asked. “Trying anyway. You going to tell me you’re not coming home next weekend?”
“Not exactly.”
“Alex—”
“I’m coming home. And believe me, there’s nothing more I want than to leave this case far behind. But I’m also going to be back and forth some.”
“Alex, I want you to think long and hard about how much time you really need to be out there in California. Turns out, this new job is worse than your last one.”
Apparently, my post-custody trial grace period was over. Nana was back to her old self, laying it on with a trowel. Not that she was entirely wrong.
“How are the kids?” I finally asked. “Can I talk to them?” And give my ears a rest from you, old woman.
“They’re fine and dandy, Daddy. Just for the record, so am I.”
“Did something happen?” I asked.
“No. Just a dizzy spell. It’s nothing at all. I saw Kayla Coles today. Everything’s fine. Dr. Coles checked me out. I’m good for another ten thousand miles.”
“If I know you, and I do know you, that means a big dizzy spell. Did you pass out again?”
“No, I did not pass out,” she said, as if it was the most ridiculous idea she’d ever heard in her life. “I’m just an old woman, Alex. I’ve told you that before. Though, God knows, I don’t look or act my age.”
When I asked Nana to give me Kayla Coles’s phone number, though, she outright refused. I had to wait for Damon to get on the line and Nana to get off; then I told him to go up to my desk and get me Kayla’s number from my Rolodex.
“How’s she seem to you?” I asked him. “You need to take care of her, Day.”
“She seems pretty good, Dad. She wouldn’t tell us what happened. But she went out grocery shopping and made dinner tonight. I can’t tell if there’s anything wrong or not. You know Nana, how she is. She’s vacuuming now.”
“She’s just showing off. Go vacuum for her. Go ahead now. Help your grandmother.”
“I don’t know how to vacuum.”
“Then this is a good time to learn.”
I finished up with the kids and then called Kayla Coles, but I got her answering service. I tried Sampson next and asked if he could swing by the house and check on Nana, who had partly brought him up, too.
“No problem,” he told me. “I’ll show up hungry tomorrow for breakfast, how’s that?”
“Sounds like a win-win to me. Also, a very believable excuse for a visit.”
“She’ll see right through it.”
“Of course she will. Although you’re a very believable hungry person.
”
“How’re you doing?” he asked then. “You sound like you’re at about fifty percent.”
“I’m okay. More like seventy-five. There’s just a hell of a lot going on out here. Big, messy case, John. Way too much publicity. I keep seeing that asshole writer Truscott, too. Though I hear he’s back East again now.”