“So what are you working on now that can’t wait?”
“You’re not going to believe what I’ve got.” She handed him the miniature of the Empire State Building. He turned it over, looking puzzled. “I found a second person who was in that elevator that fell eighty floors after the plane crash.”
“But that’s . . .” His mouth dropped open as he stared down at the little statue, then up at Evie. “She can’t still be alive?”
“She most certainly can. And is. Over ninety and completely coherent. I’ve got her on tape, talking publicly for the first time about what happened. And she’s donating that miniature. She had it with her when she fell.”
“Wow,” Connor said. “I mean, well, wow! This is fantastic. It’s got to be part of the exhibit and—” He stopped. “You know, it seems pretty fantastic that no one knew there was a second survivor and all of a sudden she pops up out of nowhere.”
“I know. I’ve been researching some of the details, but as far as I can tell, it all checks out.”
“Are you going to have Nick integrate her story with the audio we have?”
“Nick?” Evie knew exactly how she wanted Mrs. Yetner’s story merged with what they already had. She practically had it written in her head. “I’m here. I have time to do it myself.”
“It’s your call.” He gave her a long, hard look. “But here’s some advice from a friend. You need to learn to let go. Not just because of your mother. Because it’s part of being in charge. You don’t get to do everything yourself. You have an excellent staff. You should be thinking strategically, not tactically. Giving them opportunities to be creative and giving them credit for it. And meanwhile, coming up with the next great exhibit we’re going to mount and figuring out how to find donors to pay for it.”
In other words, not logging acquisitions and editing copy. Evie knew he was right. There was no reason for her to do what her staff could do. Still, she felt a pang of regret later after she handed the tape over to Maia to digitize and transcribe.
Suddenly, Evie had time on her hands. She paid a brief visit to the Great Hall. Seared in Memory was nearly complete. Some of the pictures she’d taken in the bowels of the Empire State Building had been blown up and mounted. She used her shirtsleeve to wipe a smudge off the Plexiglas over one of them. Then she returned to her office. She checked through her e-mail. Proofread their latest press release, even though it didn’t need proofing. Sent an e-mail asking Maia to add Mrs. Yetner to the list of people invited to the opening and to make sure a VIP ribbon got affixed to her name tag. Then she tucked one of the engraved invitations into her bag. Even if Mrs. Yetner turned out to be too weak to attend, she’d have it as a keepsake.
Finally she sat down to work on a half-finished strategic plan. But her attention kept wandering. Higgs Point. Known to the Siwanoy as Snakapins, land between two waters. It had passed from Finn’s great-grandfather to Mrs. Yetner’s father, who’d chopped it into narrow lots where he’d built modest houses and sold them off. Now, one by one, houses were being leveled.
Evie logged on to the website that gave the Historical Society direct access to the city’s property rolls. She typed in her mother’s address first. A little hourglass blinked a few times, then was replaced by a three-digit BBL number—borough, block, and lot. She entered that number in the Search Deeds box and waited while the system worked.
A list of deeds for the lot came up, the oldest one dated 1925. Evie held her breath as she scrolled through the list. The house had changed hands nine times since then but—Evie exhaled with relief—her mother, at least according to the City of New York, still owned it. The current deed was dated 1980. It had last been updated in 2002, the year her father died.
But what about Soundview Management? Had they succeeded in taking over other properties? Evie changed the search criteria and typed in “Soundview” as well as her mother’s zip code. Up came a list of about a dozen properties. She selected them all and clicked Map.
A map of Higgs Point flashed up on her screen with a dozen virtual pushpins highlighting those addresses. As she sent a copy to the printer, she realized how late it was. She was due at the hospital soon. She grabbed the printout and took a quick glance as she rode down in the elevator. As she’d suspected, Soundview Management owned both properties where houses had been demolished up the street from her mother’s. They owned more lots along Neck Road as well, most of them on the water. Evie stuffed the printout into her bag to examine more closely later.
Chapter Fifty-three
Evie spent the afternoon at the hospital, sitting at her mother’s bedside and quietly free-associating. Talking. Singing. Though she had no idea whether her mother registered a single sound she was making, she rattled on about the new exhibit, about Mrs. Yetner’s incredible story of survival. For some reason that made her think of Disney World. The Haunted Mansion. From there, to the hotel they’d stayed in on a family trip. The only family trip they’d ever taken, though Evie didn’t say that.
“Remember the slide at the pool?” Evie gently pressed the back of her mother’s hand. The skin was mottled, covered with angry purple blotches and as cool as bedsheets. “You slid down on a dare, and when you hit the water, you nearly lost your bathing suit top. And remember how Ginger freaked out when Chip and Dale tried to sit down with us at breakfast in the restaurant? And you’d paid extra for that?” In a squeaky voice, she sang softly, “I’m Chip, I’m Dale. We’re just a couple of cwazy wascals.”
Minutes ticked by as Evie shared more random memories. She sang the lullabies and nursery rhymes she’d learned from her mother before everything at home went sour and boozy. She laughed. She cried. She surprised herself with how many good memories there still were to savor. It was time—past time, really—for her to let go of her anger and give herself permission to be her mother’s daughter without being afraid that she was going to turn into her.
“I love you, Ma,” she said.
But her mother just lay there, mouth open, each breath rattling in her throat. The numbers monitoring her vital signs didn’t go up and they didn’t go down. They just stayed stuck in place, and Evie felt the same way.
She was thoroughly drained by the time she caught the bus to Higgs Point. It was nearly dark, and Evie leaned her head against the bus window, feeling caught in a kind of limbo as familiar landmarks floated past. How many more times would she have to make this trip past that street corner, sit at this red light? When her mother died and the estate was settled, there’d be no reason to return.
As she walked from the bus stop, she realized she’d actually miss the neighborhood. Not so much sleeping on a mattress in the middle of her mother’s still rank-smelling living room, but there was something special about Higgs Point. Where else in New York City was there both a saltwater marsh and a view of the Empire State Building?
Sparkles already had its outside lights on when Evie got there. She paused at the window to catch a glimpse of Finn, standing at the register and talking on the phone. She didn’t go in. She wanted to get to Mrs. Yetner’s before dark and tell her how excited everyone was about making her story part of the exhibit. Plus Finn had promised her dinner—she didn’t want to keep showing up and make him think she was overeager.
Brian’s Mercedes was parked on the street in front of Mrs. Yetner’s house. The pile of lumber in the driveway had grown. Evie rang the bell. Almost immediately Brian opened the door. Before Evie could say anything, he said, “She’s not feeling up to visitors.”
“Is she all right? Can I do anything?”
“Let her rest. I’m afraid she’s weaker than we expected her to be.”
Evie heard a cat meowing. “I brought her an invitation to a gala where she’d be the featured guest. I could just pop in and deliver—”
“I can take that for her.”
Brian reached for the card, but Evie held it back. “Thanks. I’d like to deliver it personally. It might even cheer her up.”
“Well, now is
not a good time. I said she’s resting.”
“I’ll come back.”
“You do that.” Brian was closing the door when Ivory squirmed out through the opening and streaked across the lawn and around to the back of the house. Without thinking, Evie dropped her bag and took off after her, arriving just in time to see the cat slip under her mother’s back porch.
Evie turned around, expecting to see Brian chasing the cat, too. But it seemed Evie was on her own with this particular rescue mission. She crouched and peered under the porch. It was so dark she couldn’t see anything.
“Here, kitty,” she said. She made some kissing sounds. “Come out now.” Kiss kiss kiss.
After a few minutes of that, it was clear that Ivory was determined to stay hidden. So much for Mrs. Yetner’s claim that Ivory wouldn’t know what to do with herself outside. What Evie needed was something nice and smelly to lure her—like one of those empty cans of cat food she’d collected from her mother’s kitchen. Plenty of them had what a cat might consider tasty bits still stuck to them. She’d thrown those cans into one of the already full garbage bags, so she could probably retrieve a few without too much digging around.
But which one were they in? she wondered as she stood contemplating the five bags of garbage she’d forgotten to put out at the curb for garbage pickup. Even closed they exuded a nasty smell.
Eenie, meenie, miney . . . She took a breath, held it, and opened Mo. It was a lucky guess. There, on top, were some of those cans. Most of them were surprisingly clean, and she had to pick through to find one with a few crusty clumps stuck to the bottom. She carried it over to the edge of the porch and set it on the ground. As she stood waiting for Ivory to come investigate, the last glow of amber and pink sunset disappeared from the sky. It really was beautiful out here. Why had Evie never appreciated it when she was growing up?
At last the cat poked her nose out from under the porch and slunk forward. Evie crouched. Nudged the can a little closer to the cat. Waited until the cat had sniffed, sniffed again, and finally settled, licking at the inside of the can before Evie grabbed her.
Ivory squirmed and tried to wriggle free as Evie carried her around to the front of Mrs. Yetner’s house. At Evie’s knock, Brian opened the door again. He took the cat from her arms with a grudging thank-you and closed the door.
Evie went to throw away the can and close up the garbage bag. This time, she’d drag all five of them to the curb. But as she was tossing the can into the open bag, she noticed a familiar-looking jar with a green-and-white label right on top. She lifted it out. NaturaPharm. Vitamin C. She shook the container. Pills rattled inside.
Trying not to inhale, Evie dug around until she found a second NaturaPharm container. Vitamin B1. The rest of her mother’s cache of vitamin pills that had disappeared from her medicine cabinet after the break-in were probably in the bag, too, but Evie wasn’t about to scrounge around for them. But what were they doing in there? Who had taken them from the medicine cabinet, and why take them and then throw them away?
Evie took the two containers inside and set them on the kitchen counter. She opened the vitamin C. Shook out a large white oval tablet into the palm of her hand. One side was scored for easy breaking. Imprinted on the other side was the code L484.
She opened the container of B1 vitamins. The pills inside were the same size. Same shape. Same L484.
It took Evie just a moment to Google the number on her phone. L484 was the pharmaceutical industry’s code for acetaminophen.
Moments later, Evie had dug from her purse the card from the police officer investigating the earlier break-in. Sergeant Bruce Corday. He’d said to call if she discovered anything else, and now she most definitely had.
When he called her back an hour later, he listened. Said he’d come to the house first thing in the morning, and that he’d be bringing a detective with him.
Chapter Fifty-four
When Mina finally woke up, it was dark in her bedroom, but bright strips of sunlight bled from between the window shades and sills. Her clock ticked quietly, but she couldn’t see the time. She put her hand out, feeling for Ivory. But the spot where the cat liked to sleep was cool and empty.
She had no idea how long she’d been out. She struggled to turn over, but it was as if her muscles didn’t want to respond, and to make matters worse, the sheets were twisted around her legs. She reached down to free her legs and realized she wasn’t caught up in sheets but rather a long nightgown. Light cotton. She felt the neck. A lace collar. It had to be Annabelle’s. While she’d been asleep, Dora must have gotten her up and changed her clothes. Her face burned with shame at the very idea of it.
She had to get out of bed. Now. She couldn’t let herself fade the way Annabelle had, so rapidly once she was installed in that nursing home and no longer had to do for herself. All that lying in bed—meals being brought to her, a bedpan if she wanted and diapers if she didn’t—had quickly atrophied Annabelle’s muscles until her arms and legs were nothing more than twigs, and she couldn’t even stand on her own. Just a few weeks later, ghastly raw areas formed on her backside, bedsores that eventually oozed and wept infection. She’d been too weak to even cough, so when she’d gotten a cold, it had quickly turned into pneumonia, the illness that doctors called “the old person’s friend” because at least it pulled the plug. Now there was an expression Mina detested.
Even after all that, Mina hadn’t been ready for Annabelle to go. And she was tortured by the likelihood that Annabelle’s slide would have been more gradual had she been able to keep her at home. Kept her active. But there’d been no choice.
Mina pushed back the covers and sat up. She was stiff and achy, and her mouth tasted like old rubber tires. Her head felt like a big empty metal drum that was being hammered at from the inside. And she had to go to the bathroom.
She edged herself to the side of the bed, expecting the walker to be there waiting for her. But it wasn’t. She stretched out her toes and felt around for her slippers but she couldn’t find those, either. Never mind that. She pushed herself to her feet. Leaning against the wall, she felt her way to the door to the downstairs hall. The minute she opened it, Ivory slipped in, meowing and rubbing against her.
“Shoo,” Mina said. The last thing she needed was to trip over the cat.
She paused, listening. The house was quiet. No more construction going on upstairs. The hall was dark, and she shouldn’t have had any trouble navigating the few steps to the bathroom, but soon after she started inching her way along, she hit a roadblock. Stacks of bundled papers and bulging garbage bags lined the hallway.
What in heaven’s name was going on? “Brian!” she called. No answer. Was Brian even there? And what about Dora?
Mina squeezed past the debris. At least the bathroom door wasn’t blocked. It wasn’t until she was sitting that she noticed the smell. She gagged. Her bathroom had never smelled this bad before. Had Ivory’s litter box had been moved in here? Why hadn’t Dora taken care of it? Wasn’t that part of what Brian was paying her to do?
That’s when Mina heard scritch-scratch from behind the shower curtain. Sounded as if the litter box was not only there, but in use. How had Ivory managed to slip past her? She’d have to tell Dora that the bathtub was no place for the cat box. It didn’t take much cat litter to clog a drain. It solidified in there like cement.
She washed her hands, then pushed back the shower curtain. Sure enough, the litter box was a dark rectangle against the white of the tub. Ivory’s white fur looked like quicksilver as she did a figure eight and then settled. But—Mina squinted, not sure if she was imagining things without her glasses—was that another Ivory perched motionless in the corner? And could that quick movement be another alongside the litter box in the tub?
A knock on the bathroom door startled her. “Wilhelmina?” Mina actually felt relieved to hear Dora’s voice. “Are you in there? Are you all right? You were supposed to ring the bell I left for you.”
Bell? Mina o
pened the door. “Why are there so many cats?”
“Cats?”
“There are at least three of them in here.” Mina pointed to the tub.
“Of course there are.” Dora tugged the shower curtain closed before taking Mina’s arm and leading her from the bathroom. “And they’re all white just like Ivory, aren’t they?”
Mina knew all about that strategy—she’d seen it used plenty with Annabelle. Her caretakers called it entering into the delusion. “I suppose you’re going to tell me that I’m seeing double. And that all this junk stacked out here”—she jabbed a finger toward the piles as they sidled past—“is a figment of my imagination, too.”
“Certainly not. It’s just part of the construction work.” Mina was about to ask how stacks of newspapers constituted construction, but Dora was too quick for her. “They’ll have them out of there in a day or two, and you’ll be able to move upstairs to the new room. You’ll see. It’s so much nicer. And the new bathroom is lovely.”
Distraction, Mina recalled, was another strategy for dealing with a demented old woman.
“Upstairs,” Dora went on. “With plenty of space to move around in a wheelchair.”
“But I don’t have a—”
“You know, you slept right through lunch.” Lunch? How had it gotten to be lunchtime already? “I’m not surprised you’re feeling peckish. Come on. Back to bed and I’ll bring you a nice tray. There’s butterscotch pudding. You like butterscotch pudding, don’t you?”
Mina did like butterscotch pudding, but she’d be damned if she’d say so. “I want to go outside.”
“Come on now. Back to bed. I’ve made a lovely lunch for you.”
Mina was hungry. Very hungry, in fact. She let Dora shepherd her from the dark hall and back to the equally dark bedroom.
“Why are the shades drawn?”
“My, my. We do have a lot of issues today, don’t we?”
“And when will my glasses be here? I hate not being able to see.”
There Was an Old Woman Page 21