related to his home life, not his work one.â
âTrue.â
âCould it have been an ordinary mugging?â
âOnly if he was carrying a wad of cash in his pocketâwhich he might have been, if it was payday yesterday. Hrivnak said he had his wallet on himâthatâs how the police IDâd him.â I realized I hadnât asked her if he still had any cash, but Hrivnak hadnât said it was gone.
âI assume youâve come up with other worst-case scenarios?â
âOf course. Thatâs what I do in my spare time.â The wine seemed to be doing its work, and I could feel my tension seeping away. âIf we presume that Mr. Scruggs was pushed, which probably means he was having an altercation on the sidewalk with someone, why? Was it a drug deal gone wrong? Was he attempting to mug someone who fought back? Could it have been related to sexâa jilted lover, an angry spouse? Could he have been the victim of a hate crime, bashed because of his sexual orientation or his ethnicbackground, neither of which I know anything about, or because somebody didnât like the way his face looked?â I realized the wine was hitting me hard and fast.
âAn excellent summary, except that you left out aliens from space and terrorism.â James didnât look at me as he said that. Maybe he was trying not to laugh.
âWell, pardon me. Of course, my true worst-case scenario is that he was killed over something that has to do with the Society, except nobody has a clue what that might be, and how the heck do we look for something when we donât even know what weâre looking for?â
âI understand, you know,â he said gently. He put a lid on whatever he was making, then came and sat across from me, bringing the bottle of wine with him. âWe need to clear something up, if weâre going to get into this.â
That sounded ominous. I held out my glass for a refill. âAll right, what?â
He obliged. âYou know by now that my jurisdiction as an FBI agent does not extend to Philadelphia police investigations, except under certain unusual circumstances.â
âYes, James, I am well aware of that. And I am aware of the fact that this may be no more than an ordinary suspicious death, being investigated by the city police, and therefore not requiring your special skills.â
âExactly. That having been said, I am more than happy to listen to your thoughts, serve as a sounding board for you, and make suggestions, so long as you donât bludgeon the detective over the head with them, because sheâs going to know where theyâre coming from.â
âYou think I canât come up with intelligent theories of my own? Seriously, I donât expect you to involve yourself.That saidââI took a sip of wineââif my victim turned out to have a rare seventeenth-century pen wiper in his pocket, one that had once belonged to William Penn and that still had an accession label from the Society on it, would that make it your problem? Under some form of cultural theft?â
âPossibly. Or not. It depends.â
âWell, I am so glad we cleared that up! And youâd better feed me soon before this second glass of wine makes me totally incoherent.â
âIâll start the pasta.â
I watched as he moved neatly and efficiently around the kitchen. I had to say, even though it was undeniably modern and therefore wildly wrong for a classic Victorian house, I really liked this kitchenâwell, except for the humongous refrigerator and the frightening stove with lots and lots of dials, both of which I assumed Iâd come to understand eventuallyâand we were getting to know each other slowly. The room was well laid out, and it was a pleasure to work in, with plenty of room for both of us to cook at the same time, unlike either of our former homes. Large windows on two sides let in lots of light
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