Whitlock, the policeman who was still investigating Mr. Hepplewhiteâs murder, was the officer who had appeared on her doorstep to investigate her report of vandalism. More policemen had followed, as well as a nattily dressed detective wearing a dark suit and spotted yellow bow tie instead of a blue uniform.
Operative Micah MacKenzieâs name had been mentioned several times. But nobody saw fit to enlighten Jocelyn as to when he would return to Richmond, or whether or not he concurred with their hypotheses that the villain who had torn her house apart was connected with Mr. Hepplewhiteâs murder.
Jocelyn crumpled Katyaâs words into a ball, stomped across to the parlor fireplace, hurled the note into the flames, then returned to the foyer where Katya hovered like an over-wrought governess. âFor the last time, I doubt weâll ever see Micah MacKenzie again. Whatâs the matter with you, anyway? Noâdonât answer that, itâs just a rhetorical question. And before you ask what that means, a rhetorical question is one for which I donât expect an answer. Theyâre not meant to be answeredâOh, botheration .â Her gloves werenât cooperating with her fingers. Jocelyn gave up and threw them down. âIâm going downtown. You can either stay here and fret, or do what the police sergeant told you to do and come with me.â
Katya gave her a wounded look as she wrote. I fetch my coat.
They walked the two blocks to the streetcar stop in silence.
âIâm sorry,â Jocelyn said after they boarded the nearly empty car and sat down, side by side but an ocean apart. âI shouldnât have lost my temper, or taken it out on you.â
A self-righteous sniff was Katyaâs only response, but when Jocelyn glanced sideways, she spied a twinkle in her maidâs eyes. âCome now, confess,â she coaxed. âYouâve been wanting to go to town as much as I have. Weâll stop by the bakery, and buy some of those nutmeg doughnuts you love so much.â
When Katya dug into the folds of her voluminous sack coat for her pad and thick charcoal pencil, Jocelyn almost wept with relief. The further evidence of her crumbling fortitude drained her. Her desperation for any connection with another human being, albeit through the silent scribbling on a notepad, reduced her to a tearful puddle.
Katya tugged her arm. Their stop had arrived. Jocelyn corralled her gloomy thoughts as they joined the throng of pedestrians spilling across the tracks to the sidewalk. As long as she and Katya stayed together, Sergeant Whitlock counseled her, and confined their meanderings to the busy downtown, they should be safe.
After they strolled along East Main for several blocks, she relaxed enough to point out a display of ladiesâ shoes in the window of a shoe store, even laughed with her companion over a man on a bicycle bumping his way down the cobbled street scarcely a dozen paces ahead of a horsecar. She lingered in front of the bookshop until Katya thrust a piece of paper in front of her face.
Bakery.
âOh, all right.â
They walked up Sixth Street to Brommâs Bakery on EastMarshall. Several moments later they emerged from the shop, carrying fragrant sacks of confections. A mule-drawn delivery wagon pulled up in front of the bakery and a wiry dark-skinned man jumped down, tying the mule to the hitching post. Katyaâs entire face lit up as she pointed to the straw hat on top of the muleâs head, its long ears poking through holes cut on either side. When she indicated that she wanted to go pet the mule, Jocelyn waved her on without a second thought.
âIâll wait for you here. Iâve no desire to spoil the fragrance of our doughnuts with eau de mule. â
Sometimes she forgot how young Katya was, she mused, watching the girl gesturing with her hands to the driver, relieved when he obligingly introduced her to the flop-eared
Jeff Corwin
Vaughn Heppner
Michael Phillip Cash
Harlan Coben
Angus Donald
Diana Cosby
Nick Vujicic
Erica Lindquist, Aron Christensen
Steve Feasey
Ron L. Hubbard