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Alex Cross's Trial (Alex Cross 15)

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They glared at each other. It struck me that they’d had this argument before, when I was nowhere around. It also reminded me that there were many good men and women in the South, even here in Eudora.

I was about to say something in support of Winkler when a servant girl walked in bearing a large round cake, frosted white, on a silver platter.

Nottingham brightened. “Why, Lizzie, is that a hummingbird cake?”

“Of course it is. I had them make it just for you. Richard’s going off to Jackson next week. We’ll miss his birthday, but we can all celebrate tonight.”

Something happened then that sent an electrical jolt through my body. It was all I could do to keep from bolting upright in my seat.

As she said these words to her husband, I felt Elizabeth’s hand gently pat the inside of my thigh.

“Ben,” she said, “you must try the cake.”

Chapter 54

“NO, SIR.”

“No, not today, Mr. Corbett.”

“No, sir, nothing today.”

Maybelle always had the same answer to the question I asked her at least once every day. First I would check the table in the front hall, then I’d convince myself that a letter had come and Maybelle was keeping it from me because she knew how anxiously I waited.

I would go ask her, and she would say, “No, sir.”

It had been more than a week since I’d written to Meg. I’d imagined that my love had fairly leapt off the page when she read it and that she would write back immediately.

That letter had not yet arrived.

Meanwhile I was keeping someone else waiting: President Roosevelt expected a report on what I had found out about lynching in and around Eudora. I had spent the past two evenings on a long letter to the president that gave precise locations, right down to the species of the hanging trees. I included the names of victims and the approximate times and dates of their murders.

Then I showed the letter to Abraham. He read it and said, “If it was me, I’d make it like a telegram. Short and sweet. ‘Dear Mr. President, it’s worse than you heard. Send the Army. Stop.’ ”

Abraham was right. I reme

mbered years ago at Las Guasimas when Roosevelt spoke to me for the first time. He glared down from his horse. “Do we have provisions for an overnight, Captain?”

“Sir, I ordered the men to double their rations and to fill their canteens—”

“Stop!” Roosevelt commanded. “That was a yes-or-no question.”

“Yes, sir,” I said.

And now it took Abraham to remind me of Roosevelt’s fondness for a concise report.

“Send it to him in a wire,” he said.

“That’s a good idea. But I can’t send it from Eudora.”

The telegraph operator in town was Harry Kelleher, who was also the stationmaster. The moment I left the depot after sending my wire to the White House, Kelleher would personally see that the contents were passed on to every man, woman, and child in Eudora.

“Where can I go, Abraham?”

“Where’s the closest place where everybody doesn’t know who you are?”

I thought about that. “McComb,” I said.

McComb was the nearest sizable town, a farm center and railroad hub ten miles north. When I was growing up, McComb was nothing but a crossroads, but when the Jackson & Northern railroad extended its line and located a terminus there, it outgrew Eudora. McComb was only an hour’s carriage ride away, and it boasted Sampson’s, a fine restaurant specializing in New Orleans–style food: Creole jambalaya, grits and grillades, steak Diane.



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