G is for Gumshoe (Kinsey Millhone 7)
"Santa came over special and gave us all a stockingful of goodies. I let her have mine."
"Who, Emily?"
"Don't talk about Emily. Don't tell. It was the earthquake. Everyone said so." She extracted her hand and a veil of cunning dropped over her eyes. "My arthritis is in my shoulder and knee. My shoulder has been broken two times. The doctor didn't even touch it, just X-rayed. I had two cataract operations at least, but I never had to have a tooth filled. You can see for yourself." She opened her mouth.
Sure enough, no fillings, which is not that big a deal when you have no teeth.
"You look like you're in pretty good shape for someone your age," I said gamely. The subject was careening around like conversational pinball.
"Lottie was the other one. She was a simpleton, but she always had a big smile on her face. She didn't have the brains God gave a billy goat. She'd go out the back door and then she'd forget how to get back in. She'd sit on the porch steps and howl like a pup until someone let her in. Then she'd howl to get back out again. She was the first. She died of influenza. I forget when Mother went. She had that stroke, you know, after Father died. He wanted to keep the house and Emily wouldn't hear of it. I was the last one and I didn't argue. I wasn't really sure until Sheila and then I knew. That's when I left."
I said, "Unh-hunh," and then tried another tack. "Is it the trip that worries you?"
She shook her head. "The smell when it's damp," she said. "Never seemed to bother anyone else."
"Would you prefer to have Irene fly down and travel back with you?"
"I worked cleaning houses. That's how I supported Irene all those years. I watched Tilda and I knew how it was done. Of course, she was dismissed. He saw to that. No financial records. No banks. She was the only casualty. It was the only time her name was ever in the papers."
"Whose name?"
"You know," she said. Her look now was secretive.
"Emily?" I asked.
"Time wounds all heels, you know."
"Is this your father you're talking about?"
"Oh dear, no. He was long gone. It would be in the footing if you knew where to look."
"What footing?"
Her face went blank. "Are you talking to me?"
"Well, yes," I said. "We've been talking about Emily, the one who died when the chimney fell."
She made a motion as if to lock her lips and throw away the key. "I did it all to save her. My lips are sealed. For Irene's sake."
"Why is that, Agnes? What is it you're not supposed to tell?"
She focused a quizzical look on me. I was suddenly aware that the real Agnes Grey was in the room with me. She sounded perfectly rational. "Well, I'm sure you're very nice, dear, but I don't know who you are."
"I'm Kinsey," I said. "I to a friend of your daughter's. She was worried when she didn't hear from you and she asked me to come down and find out what was going on."
I could see her expression shift and off she went again. "Well, no one knew that. No one even guessed."
"Uh, Agnes? Do you have any idea where you are?"
"No. Do you?"
I laughed. I couldn't help myself. After a moment, she began to laugh, too, the sound as delicate as a cat sneezing. Next thing I knew, she'd drifted off to sleep again.
7
I did not sleep well. I found myself thinking about Agnes, whose fears were contagious and seemed to set off worries of my own. The reality of the death threat had finally filtered down into my psyche, where it was beginning to accumulate an energy of its own. I was sensitive to every noise, to changes in room temperature as the night wore on, to shifting patterns of light on Venetian blinds. At 1:00 a.m., a car pulled into a parking slot near my room and I found myself instantly on my feet, peering through the slats as a couple emerged from a late-model Cadillac. Even in heavy shadow, I could tell they were drunk, clinging to one another in a hip-grinding embrace. I moved away from the window, my senses heightened by anxiety as the two of them fumbled their way into the room next to mine. Surely, if they were killers they wouldn't postpone my demise for the noisy grappling that started up the minute the bolt shot home. The bedframe began to thump relentlessly against the adjoining wall like a kid drumming his heels. There were occasional lulls while the woman offered up suggestions to her hapless companion. "Hop on up here like a puppy dog," she would say. Or "Get that old bald-headed thing over here."