remembered that I knew he didn’t read or write English.”
She shrugged. “It was a chance we took. Not many knew it because he spoke it perfectly. He had that block, which for some reason kept him from either reading or writing it. Walter forged his handwriting.”
“He was always good at that,” Padillo said.
“That and other things.”
“It still doesn’t make sense.”
“Why?”
“You could have written it in German just as easily. Whose idea was it to write in English?”
She turned back to the window. “Mine.”
“Because you didn’t really want me in, did you, Wanda?”
“No. You don’t have to ask why, do you?”
“No, I don’t think so.”
“It’s different now,” she said as she turned, walked across the room to a straight-backed chair, and lowered herself onto it in that easy, graceful way that they once taught in the better finishing schools.
“How?” Padillo said.
“I need you,” she said, gazing at the gray carpet. She stared at it a moment before looking up. “I don’t like admitting it, but I do. I’m the last of the Gothars. That doesn’t mean anything to anyone other than me, but I’d like to stay alive. Did you hear how Paul was killed in Beirut?”
“No,” Padillo said. “I just heard that it was messy.”
“His throat was cut.”
“That’s hard to believe.”
She nodded. “It is, isn’t it? He was good, wasn’t he?”
“I’d say he was almost the best.”
“Which means that it was somebody he knew. And trusted.”
“As much as he’d trust anyone,” Padillo said.
“The same thing must have happened to Walter. He was no easy mark either.”
“Why was your brother in my apartment?” I said.
She shook her head twice. “I don’t know. He was supposed to have been with them.”
“Who’s them?” Padillo said.
“Kassim and Scales. You don’t know about scales, do you?”
“No.”
“He knows about you. He hired us on the condition that you’d be part of things.”
“I still don’t know him.”
“Emory Scales. He was Kassim’s tutor until the boy went into the monastery.”
“English?”
“Yes.”
“And now he’s what?”
“He’s Kassim’s adviser.”
“And just popped up after Kassim’s brother had the car wreck?”
“Kassim sent for him, I understand.”
“And Scales got in touch with you.”
“Yes.”
“What’s he been doing recently? I mean was he still in Llaquah or back in England when Kassim sent for him?”
“He was back in England,” she said.
“You mentioned that Walter was supposed to have been with them when he came visiting McCorkle. I assume that means they’re here in Washington.”
Wanda Gothar shook her head again. “Baltimore.”
Padillo rose from the room’s one easy chair and walked over to the window. “Why would he want to see McCorkle?”
“I don’t know,” she said.
“Guess.”
“Maybe he thought that he could persuade McCorkle to persuade you.”
“That’s thin.”
“Have you got something better?”
“Not yet. What do Kassim and Scales say?”
“About what?”
“Come on, Wanda.”
“They don’t say anything about why he left them in Baltimore. They said he told them that he had an appointment and that he’d be back and that they should remain where they were.”
“And where’s that?”
“It doesn’t matter,” she said. “I’m moving them.”
“When?”
“As soon as Kassim’s brother dies.”
“What’s the latest report?” Padillo asked.
“He’s still in a coma.”
“Where’re you moving them to?”
She looked at Padillo and then at me. “There’s nothing in it for McCorkle,” Padillo said.
“Perhaps that’s what worries me,” she said.
“There could be something in it for me,” I said.
“What?” she said.
“I’d like to know why your brother got killed in my apartment. So would the police. They’ll stop bothering me as soon as they find out who killed him and why. The quicker they find out, the better
Alaska Angelini
Cecelia Tishy
Julie E. Czerneda
John Grisham
Jerri Drennen
Lori Smith
Peter Dickinson
Eric J. Guignard (Editor)
Michael Jecks
E. J. Fechenda