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According to the papers the next morning, two men had been shot at Taft University and two getaway cars were being sought. Two other men were said to have escaped on foot as police searched the campus and surrounding woods. Both were described as white males, as were the victims.
"For crissake," I said to Hawk. "n.o.body even saw you."
"I run off lippity-lop," Hawk said.
"You ready to make another try at Taft," I said, "in your car?"
"Be a number of policemen still around," Hawk said.
"Got nothing to do with us," I said. "I'm working on a case. You're my trusty sidekick."
"Long as I don't have to call you Kemo Sabe."
"Ever wonder what that meant?" I said.
"I always thought it meant Paleface Motherf.u.c.ker," Hawk said.
"That's probably it," I said.
No one followed us this time when we drove out to Taft. There was some crime scene tape down by the pond and several state police cars parked near the administration building. Hawk stayed in the car. I got out. n.o.body paid much attention to either one of us.
Inside the registrar's office, I had to ratchet up my virile charm a little to get past the grim woman at the counter. But I did, and she took my card in and came back and said I could go into the inner office.
"I'm Betty Holmes," she said. "Are you involved in the investigation?"
"Yes," I said.
"Do you have any idea who shot those men?"
"We have some possibilities," I said.
She was maybe fifty, a tall, pale blonde woman with a strong nose, her hair pulled back tightly, and a gleam of intelligence in her eyes. She looked at me silently for a moment. I could see her thinking.
"Who's we?" she said.
"Me," I said. "I was trying to deceive you."
"How charming," she said. "What is it you are actually doing?"
"I'm investigating the death of a woman who went here probably in the late 1960s."
"Which has nothing to do with the recent shootings," she said.
"I don't know what has to do with what," I said. "But I'm not here to investigate the shooting."
"Well," she said, "good. At least now we know what we're talking about."
"Sort of," I said. "Could you see if you have any record of Emily Gold? Or a woman named Lombard."
"If they attended, we would have a record. What is Ms. Lombard's first name?"
"I don't know. She's been referred to as Bunny Lombard, but I a.s.sume it's a nickname."
"One would a.s.sume," she said. "But, working here, I've encountered some unusual names."
She wrote the names on a piece of paper.
"While you're at it," I said, "see if you have any record of Leon Holton or Abner Fancy."
"What was the second one?"
"Fancy," I said. "Abner Fancy."
She smiled but didn't comment. "Why do you want these names?" she said.
"Emily Gold is the victim. Others are names a.s.sociated with her at the time of her death."
"She would be," Betty Holmes did some brief addition in her head, "in her fifties."
"She was murdered, probably in her late twenties," I said.
"In 1974."
"And you're still working on the case?"
"On behalf of her daughter," I said.
She thought about it for a little while. I sat and waited quietly, s.h.i.+mmering with virile charm. It worked again, as she summoned the grim woman from out front and dispatched her to find the names.
"Have you always been a private detective," Betty Holmes said.
"I was once a cop," I said.
"And?"
"And I've always been inner-directed," I said.
"But you still wanted to be a detective."
"I'm good at this," I said.
"And one can make a living?"
"I can," I said.
The grim guardian returned with some computer printouts. She looked at me with disapproval. I did not stick out my tongue at her. Betty Holmes looked at the printouts for awhile.
"Emily Gold enrolled with the cla.s.s of 1967 in September of 1963. She left school in June of 1965 at the end of her soph.o.m.ore year. We have a Bonnie Lombard in the same cla.s.s. She left school in January of 1965. We have no Leon Holton or, sadly, an Abner Fancy."
"Addresses?"
"Yes. Nearly thirty years old," she said.
"Got to start somewhere."
"Here," she said.
I took the printout. Emily had an address on Torrey Pines Road in La Jolla. In her final semester she'd gotten four D's and a C. Bonnie Lombard had an address in Paradise. "How do I get the names of some cla.s.smates?" I said.
"Why?"
"I'm floundering," I said. "I have lots of information and no proof. Rule Seven of the inner-directed sleuth operating manual says, when you don't have enough proof, learn anything you can."
"Rule Seven," she said.
"Yes, Ma'am."
She smiled. "Our alumni secretary should be able to help you with that," she said.
"Could you direct me to him?" I said. "And maybe make a phone call to get me by the Gorgon at the gate."
"Gorgon at the gate," she said and laughed and reached for her phone. "Do all detectives talk that way?"
"Most of them are less inner-directed," I said.
36.
There were 3,180 kids in the cla.s.s that started at Taft in September of 1963. Hawk lay on the couch in my office with his ankles crossed and a Homestead Grays cap tilted down over his eyes, while I went through the list. Emily Gold was there among the G's. Bonnie Lombard was there among the L's. I recognized no other names.
"If we divided this list equally between us," I said to Hawk, "we'd each have only fifteen-something-hundred people to interview."
"One thousand five hundred ninety," Hawk said. "And who gonna keep them from shooting your a.s.s while I'm off chatting with my half?"
"Oh, yeah," I said. "I forgot about that."
"You want to be the one tells Susan I let them kill you?"
"There's something wrong with that question," I said. "But no, I don't."
"So maybe you need to winnow the list," Hawk said.
"Winnow?" I said.
"Glean."
"Absolutely," I said. "I could winnow geographically, and glean all the names in the Boston area."
"You know," Hawk said, "we checked out Bonnie Lombard we might not have to winnow and glean no more."
"Why didn't I think of that," I said.
"You white," Hawk said.
"I do the best I can," I said.
It was hot enough for air-conditioning as we drove along the North Sh.o.r.e toward Paradise and turned off into the old part of town. Paradise was a fis.h.i.+ng town gone upscale. There were still fis.h.i.+ng boats in the harbor, but the pleasure boats now outnumbered them, and Paradise Neck, across the causeway, was some of the most expensive real estate in Ma.s.sachusetts.
"Don't appear that Bonnie Lombard be going hungry," Hawk said, as we drove across the causeway with the harbor on our left and the gray Atlantic ocean rolling in to our right.
"Probably had her own room, too," I said.
"How many brothers you think I going to see out here?"
"Well," I said. "These people might have servants."
Seventeen Ocean Street was a rolling lawn behind a field stone fence topped by a big gray-s.h.i.+ngled Victorian house with a slate roof. There was no gatehouse, but a black Chrysler was parked at the foot of the driveway, its nose toward the street, effectively blocking the way. When we pulled up, a hard-looking guy in a black suit got out and walked over to us.
"That be the chauffeur?" Hawk said.
"You bet," I said and rolled down my window.
"How you doing?" I said.
"Can I help you?" the chauffeur said.
It wasn't unfriendly. It wasn't warm. It was flat and neutral and told me nothing.
"I'm a detective," I said. "I'm trying to locate a woman named Bonnie Lombard."
"n.o.body here by that name," the chauffeur said.
"Who lives here now?" I said.
"None of your business," the chauffeur said.
Again, neither threatening nor friendly, simply a statement.
"Okay," I said. "How long have they lived here."
The chauffeur didn't even bother to answer that. He simply shook his head.