by Sofie Kelly
“I didn’t say she did. I didn’t say anyone did. I just want to know what happened, Kathleen,” he said. “That’s all.” He looked over at the building, then back at me.
Just the facts. It frustrated me that when he was working on a case, all Marcus seemed to be concerned about were the facts, not what he knew about the people involved. On the other hand, I knew it frustrated him that whatever was going on, I was going to filter the facts through what I knew about the people.
“Is there anything else you need to know?” I asked. I wanted to go home, spend some time with Hercules and Owen and soak up some kitty sympathy.
Marcus shook his head. “That’s it for now.” He studied my face for a moment. Then he reached over and very gently tucked a loose tendril of hair behind my ear.
All at once I didn’t see the tall, intimidating police detective with the serious, almost stern expression standing in front of me. I saw the man in the waiting room at Roma’s veterinary clinic just last week, sneaking little fish-shaped crackers to Desmond, the clinic cat, when he thought no one was looking.
The moment stretched between us just a shade too long.
He looked away first, taking a step backward. “You uh, should go home and get off your feet.”
I nodded, and shifted my take-out cup from one hand to the other. “I am. Call me if…if there’s anything else.” I turned and started back up the street.
“Kathleen,” Marcus called out as I reached the corner. I stopped and after a moment’s hesitation, turned around.
He held up the empty take-out cup. “Thank you for the coffee,” he said.
“You’re welcome,” I said. I turned and just as I was about to step off the curb to cross the street my cell phone rang. It was Ruby.
“Hey, Kathleen,” she said. “Where are you?” She was talking faster than usual.
“I’m walking back to the library. Why?”
“Are you close enough to come down to River Arts?”
“Why?” I asked. “Is something wrong? Is Maggie okay?”
“Yeah. She’s fine,” Ruby said. “She went home to change. It’s just”—she paused for a moment—“I figured out where I’d seen Jaeger.” There was an edge of excitement to her voice. “I know who he is, Kathleen. Or I guess I should say, who he really was.”
8
“What do you mean, who he really was?” I said.
“It’s too complicated to explain over the phone,” Ruby said. She exhaled slowly. “There’s something I need you to see—I need somebody to see.”
I looked back over my shoulder. Marcus must have gone inside the building.
I could turn around, find him and tell him Ruby had maybe found out something about Jaeger Merrill that might be useful.
Or might not.
Then he’d tell me to stay out of his case—even though it didn’t look as though there even was a case, I’d get annoyed and go meet Ruby.
“I’ll be there in a few minutes,” I said. I was going to end up over at the studio building anyway. It just seemed like a good idea to eliminate a couple of steps.
I decided it made more sense to get the truck and drive over to River Arts so I could just go home afterward. Ruby was watching for me at the back door.
“You’re not going to believe this,” she said, as I followed her up to the top floor.
“Believe what?” I asked. Somehow the stairs had gotten steeper since the last time I’d climbed them a couple of hours ago.
She patted the top of her head with one hand. “You just have to see this. Trust me.”
There was a hardcover book open on one of Ruby’s worktables in her studio. She pointed to a black-and-white photograph of several men that took up half of the left page. “Recognize the guy in the middle?”
The hair was shorter and darker, the nose was a little longer, he was heavier, and he was several years younger, but it was Jaeger Merrill. I think I would have recognized him even if I hadn’t been expecting to see the man. “That’s Jaeger,” I said.
Ruby gave me a knowing smile. “Not exactly,” she said.
“You’re not going to tell me he has an identical evil twin, are you?”
“Nope.”
I looked at the caption underneath the picture. According to that, Christian Ellis was the man in the center of the photograph. “He changed his name,” I said slowly, turning the book over so I could see the cover: Divine Provenance: The Greatest Art Fraud in U.S. History.
“He did more than that,” Ruby said. “He changed the way he looked—different nose, different hair. I’m pretty sure different eye color. He lied about his age. He lied about his background. As far as I can tell, nothing about Jaeger Merrill was real.”
I flipped the book so I could look at the picture again. “So Jaeger—when he was still Christian Ellis—was involved in some kind of art fraud?”
She nodded. “Religious icons. Fakes. Good ones. I looked him up online. He created some elaborate forgeries that fooled some of the best art experts in the country. Heck, in the world. You could call him a con artist.” She gestured at the book. “Funny thing is, I got that at the library book sale last summer. I’d looked through it, but I never had a chance to actually read the whole thing.”
“I assume he got caught,” I said.
“He spent eighteen months in jail.”
“So he came here for a new start with a new name.” I set the book back on the table.
Ruby slid the twisted cord bracelets she was wearing up and down her arm. “The thing is, I’m not sure that’s what it was.”
“I’m not following you,” I said.
“I get that when someone has been in jail, they want a brand-new start,” she said. “But becoming someone else?” She held out both hands. “It’s so melodramatic.”
I glanced at the photograph again. “Maybe he was embarrassed. Or ashamed.”
She put her hands on her hips and cocked her head to one side. “Oh c’mon. Did Jaeger Merrill strike you as the kind of person who embarrassed easily? Or at all for that matter?”
“No,” I said.
“So why did he go to so much trouble to create a new identity for himself, then?”
“You think he was up to something—another scam maybe.”
Ruby stared out the tall windows for a moment, and then her gaze came back to me. “I think it’s possible.” She gave a small shrug. “Maybe I’ve gotten more suspicious after everything that’s happened over the past few months.”
Ruby had been arrested back in February for the hit-and-run death of her junior high principal and mentor, Agatha Shepherd. If she was a little less trusting now, it was understandable, given everything she’d gone through before Agatha’s real killer was found. That didn’t mean her instincts weren’t good.
My hair was coming loose from its ponytail. I pushed the strands back behind my ear. “But even if you’re right, even if he was working on another scam, does it matter? He’s dead.”
She was silent for a moment, and then she nodded slowly. “I guess you’re right. There’s no scam without the scam artist.” She looked down at the photo again. “There’s one more thing, Kathleen, that I didn’t tell you.”
“What?”
“Jaeger,” she shook her head, “I’m sorry, I just can’t think of him as Christian Ellis—ended up being defended by a lawyer who was just starting out. You know the clichés. Just out of law school, fighting for truth and justice, la, la, la.”
“The lawyer is someone you know,” I said, slowly.
“Someone you know too. Peter Lundgren. Look at the picture on the next page.”
She was right. It was a younger version of Peter Lundgren in an ugly, ill-fitting suit. I made a face. Peter was settling Agatha Shepherd’s estate. He was helping Ruby with the money she’d been left in Agatha’s will. “I guess that explains how Jaeger ended up here.”
Ruby picked up the book and closed it, but I noticed she kept a finger between the pages to mark whe
re the photos were. “I don’t get why Peter kept Jaeger’s secret.”
“Peter was his lawyer. And maybe there was no secret. Maybe Jaeger changed his name legally. Maybe he was a huge Rolling Stones fan. Maybe Mick Jagger was his idol. Maybe…maybe he had plastic surgery on his nose because he snored too loud and kept waking himself up at night. And he dyed his hair because he wanted to see if blonds really do have more fun.”
Ruby laughed.
I smiled back at her. “Or you could just ask Peter.”
She nodded, still clutching the book with her finger between the pages. “I think I will.”
She walked me down the stairs to the back door. Ray Nightingale, one of the other artists who had a studio in the building, was just coming in. He gave me a quick nod and turned to Ruby. “The police are at the co-op. Do you have any idea what’s going on?”
Ruby pulled a hand over her neck. “There was…there was an accident.” She exhaled slowly. “Jaeger fell…on the basement stairs.”
“What the heck was he doing in the basement?” Ray asked. He was about average height, with a smooth shaven head and a fairly laid-back attitude from what I’d seen.
She shrugged and twisted her bracelets around her arm. “I don’t know.”
He shook his head, blew out a breath. “But he’s okay, right?”
Ruby looked down at the floor. “No. He’s dead,” she said.
Ray stared at us, openmouthed. “What do you mean, he’s dead? You said he fell on the stairs.”
“He drowned,” I said, quietly. “I think he might have hit his head.”
Ray swore and looked away. “That’s awful. I didn’t really know him, but still.” He swiped a hand over his mouth. “Does Maggie know?” he asked after a moment.
“Yes,” I said. I wondered which side Ray had been on over the corporate sponsor issue. He did these large, intricate, acrylic ink drawings that to me seemed like a cross between an elaborate mosaic and Where’s Waldo. In each one, somewhere, there was a tiny rubber duck, no more than an inch or so long, wearing a pair of sunglasses and a fedora. Half the fun of the artwork was looking for the duck, whose name was Bo.
Like the rest of the artists who were part of the co-op, Ray did other things to help pay the bills. He’d designed a poster for the jazz festival in Minneapolis and a postcard for the James Hotel. And he collected and sold vintage ink bottles. He even used some of the old ink in his art. I’d seen him completely engrossed by the contents of an old rolltop desk at an estate sale I’d gone to a couple of weeks previously with Abigail.
Along with working at the library, Abigail also wrote children’s books and she’d wanted my opinion of several of the old picture books in the sale. She’d gotten interested in collecting books after she’d found a box of old, and it turned out valuable, books at the library the previous summer.
Ray slid a hand back and forth over his smooth scalp. “So that means the co-op is pretty much off limits, I’m guessing,” he said. Then he made a face. “I’m sorry. That was insensitive.”
I held up a hand. “It’s okay. And you’re right, the co-op is off limits for the moment.”
“What about Jaeger’s stuff?”
Ruby looked at me. “I don’t know. Kathleen?”
“I can’t see any reason why the police would need to go through his studio,” I said. “I don’t think this building is going to be off limits.”
“That’s good,” Ray said. “All this rain has put me behind.” He looked at Ruby. “If I can help with anything, let me know.” He moved past us and went up the stairs.
“Same here, Ruby,” I said. “If there’s anything I can do, call me.”
“I will,” she said.
I cut through the parking lot, got in the truck and started up the hill.
So Jaeger Merrill was really Christian Ellis, a convicted forger. He’d gone to a lot of trouble to create a new life for himself. Was Ruby right? Had he been working on another scam?
9
Hercules was sitting by the back steps when I came around the corner of the house, one paw on a black feather, with an iridescent purple sheen to it. He looked up at me and if a cat could look self-satisfied—and this cat certainly seemed to be able to—he did.
“Score one for the cat,” I said, bending down to pick him up. He nuzzled the side of my face and then looked down at the feather. Hercules was having a little war with, as far as I could tell, one lone grackle. Up until now the grackle had been winning.
“Have you thought about what you’d do with that bird if you actually caught it?” I asked as I unlocked the back door.
Herc tipped his head to one side and seemed to be considering my question. Then he licked his lips.
“Oh sure, you’re going to eat it,” I said, setting him down on the kitchen floor. “You? Mr. I-Don’t-Eat-On-Sale-Cat-Food?”
That got me a snippy meow.
I folded my arms and looked down at him. “Do I have to remind you about the caterpillar?”
Hercules immediately turned away and hung his head. I got the feeling he would have blushed if he could have. He may not have understood all of what I’d said, but he knew the word, caterpillar.
Of the two cats, Owen was the hunter, not Hercules. It’s hard to stalk anything when you don’t like getting your paws wet. One day, early last summer, Owen had caught a fuzzy black-and-yellow caterpillar out in the backyard—mostly because it crawled over a cracker he was sniffing at the time.
Hercules, who had already finished his own food because he doesn’t have to inspect every bite first, poked his head in to take a look at his brother’s prey. First he just sniffed the caterpillar. Then he rolled it over with a swipe of his paw.
Owen tended to see himself like a lion prowling a dusty savannah on an African plain. Which meant the caterpillar was the equivalent of a downed wildebeest—not for sharing.
Paws were raised. Yowls were exchanged. Before I could step in, Hercules swallowed the caterpillar.
And promptly hacked it up again. Because, number one: it was like eating a piece of shag carpeting. Nothing that fuzzy is ever going to taste good. And number two: The caterpillar wasn’t exactly dead.
“You think having caterpillar fluff stuck in your teeth is bad,” I warned Herc, “try picking feathers out.”
I headed upstairs, switched my damp jeans for a pair of yoga pants, and then carefully cut the grubby gauze off my thumb, replacing it with a couple of big adhesive bandages. Then I warmed up the last of the apple pudding cake. Between spoonfuls I told the cats about Maggie and me discovering Jaeger’s body, and Ruby discovering his real identity. Owen’s head jerked up when he heard Maggie’s name and he almost banged it on the bottom of a kitchen chair.
“She’s fine,” I told him. “She’s coming for supper. You’ll see her tonight.” He went back to nosing around for crumbs I hadn’t vacuumed up yet.
Hercules, on the other hand, was giving me his undivided attention, although that might have been because he was hoping to score a bite or two of apple from my bowl.
“Here you big mooch,” I said, reaching for the bag of sardine kitty crackers on the counter and giving him a couple. I handed a couple down to Owen too.
I was just putting my dishes in the sink when the phone rang. I hobbled into the living room to get it. My ankle still ached, but just putting my foot up while I was at the table had helped. It was Rebecca, my backyard neighbor.
“Hello Kathleen,” she said. “I was wondering if this would be a good time to bring over that box of my mother’s things you wanted to look at for the display at the library centennial?”
“Yes, it would,” I said. “Are you sure you can carry the box? I don’t mind coming to get it.”
She laughed. “Thank you, but it’s not that big and—”
“—you’re not that old,” I finished.
“Oh, I am that old,” she said. “It’s just not that far across the lawn.”
“I’ll see you in a few minutes,
then,” I said.
When I went back into the kitchen, Owen and Hercules were sitting by the back door. Clearly they were waiting for Rebecca. I had no idea how they knew she was on her way. It was just another one of their “abilities” that I couldn’t explain, and next to walking through walls and becoming invisible, it was pretty mundane.
The coffee was brewing and I had a plate of date squares on the table when Rebecca tapped on the porch door. I figured after the morning I’d had I was entitled to having dessert twice. I let her in and took the cardboard file box she was carrying.
She frowned at my face. “Oh dear, that looks sore,” she said. I noticed that she didn’t ask what had happened.
“It looks worse than it feels,” I said. “Who told on me? Roma?”
A pink flush spread across her cheeks. “I wouldn’t exactly call it telling on you,” she said. “And no, it wasn’t Roma. It was Marcus Gordon.”
“So you decided you’d bring this over”—I patted the top of the box—“and check on me.”
“I was planning on coming over anyway,” she said. “When Marcus told me what happened yesterday, it just seemed like perfect timing.” She looked me up and down. “How’s your ankle?”
“My ankle’s just fine. And Marcus Gordon has a big mouth.”
I glanced down at her boots. They were black with little red ladybugs all over them. “Oh, I like your boots,” I said.
Rebecca stuck out one foot and rolled it from one side to the other. “Thank you. Ami gave them to me.”
Ami was Everett Henderson’s granddaughter. She adored Rebecca and Rebecca was crazy about her.
Rebecca put her foot back on the floor and stepped out of the ladybug boots.
“How about a date square?” I asked as we headed into the kitchen.
“Oh that does sound good,” she said, patting her silver-gray hair. “And don’t think I didn’t notice how you changed the subject away from what happened to you.” She reached into her pocket and handed me a small, brown paper bag. “Spread this on your ankle before bed. It’ll help.”