way.â
We both fell silent, puzzled and unhappy about too many things at once.
âIâm glad I found her, though,â I said. âNo matter what.â
My brother, who had followed my thoughts as he often did, said, âYeah.â
âNice people,â I said.
âYou never thought what the police suspectedâ?â
âNo,â I said. âI never believed Joel did it. These days, everyone looks at the dad first. Did he molest her?â I did my television announcer voice. âWere there dark secrets in the house that seemed so normal?â I smiled with a twist of my mouth. People sure loved believing there were dark secretsâthey love discovering happy normal families are anything but. Truly, sometimes there were plenty of secrets, more than enough to go around. But Joel and Diane Morgenstern had struck me as truly devoted parents, and Iâd seen enough of the kind of parents who werenât to recognize the ones who were.
âI never believed it,â I repeated. âButâhere they are. In Memphis.â We looked at each other. âHow the hell could it have happened that her body turned up here, the city where her parents are living now? Unless thereâs a connection.â
There was a tap at our suite door.
âThe troops are here,â Tolliver said.
âWell. The troop.â
Art was missing a lot of his hair. What remained wascurly and white. He was very heavy, but he dressed very well. So he looked like an eminently respectable, sweet-natured grandpaâwhich just goes to show how deceptive appearances can be.
Art maintains the fiction that he is my father substitute.
âHarper!â he cried, throwing open his arms. I stepped in, gave him a light hug, and backed away when I could. Tolliver got a clap on the shoulder and a handshake.
We asked about his wife, and he told us what (but not how) Johanna was doing: taking art classes, keeping the grandchildren, remaining active in their church and several charities.
Not that weâd ever met Johanna.
I watched Art grope, trying to think of someone he could ask us about in return. He could hardly ask about our parents: my mother had died the previous year, in jail, of AIDS. Tolliverâs mother had died years ago, of breast cancer, before weâd even met Art. Tolliverâs dad, my stepfather, was in the wind since heâd gotten out of jail, having served his time on drug charges. My own father was still in big-boy prison, and would be for maybe five more years. Heâd taken some money from his clients to support the drug habit he and my mother had developed. We never saw our little half sisters, Gracie and Mariella, because my Aunt Iona, my momâs sister, had poisoned the girls against us. Tolliverâs brother, Mark, had his own life, and didnât much approve of ours, but we called him at least once a month.
And of course, there was never any news about Cameron.
âItâs great to see you two looking so healthy,â Art said inhis heartiest voice. âNow, letâs order some room service, and you can tell me all about this.â Art loved it when we ate together. Not only did it make the meal billable, but it also reassured Art that Tolliver and I were normal people and not some kind of vampires. After all, we ate and drank like the rest of the world.
âIt should be up in a minute,â Tolliver said, and Art had to go on and on about how amazed he was that Tolliver had been so farseeing.
Actually, I was pretty impressed myself.
Art made notes throughout the meal as we told him everything we remembered about our previous search for Tabitha Morgenstern. My brother got out his laptop and checked our records to be sure of how much the Morgensterns had paid us for our fruitless search. We assured Art that we had no intention of charging them anything for finding her todayâin fact, the idea made me sick. Art looked kind of relieved when I