Friday, August 28
Trudi Sara Coffey brushed a darkened curl away from her eyes and, as was her custom, looked first in the classifieds section of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
She scanned the personals until the familiar advertisement came into view. It was only one line, easy to miss. In fact, she wondered how long it had been running in the Constitution before she’d even noticed it three years ago, by accident, while on her way to the used car ads. It had been running daily ever since, and Trudi now couldn’t start her morning without checking to see if its invisible author still had the same message to send out to the world.
Safe.
Trudi had read once about a married couple separated by the tragedy of the Holocaust while trying to escape Poland for America. Before their separation, the husband and wife had promised each other that whichever one of them reached freedom first was to go to America and then take out an advertisement in the classified ad section of the New York Times. The ad was to repeat their personal code phrase—something like “love is forever” or “forever is love”—and then add a phone number where the person could be contacted.
The wife had made it out first, just before the end of the war, but was not able to place her ad until August of 1947. Early on, she ran it only once a week—on Sundays—because that was all she could afford. She built herself a new life in America, made friends, converted to Catholicism, became a nurse, and worked for three decades at a hospital in Long Island. But she never married again. Instead she dedicated her life to her work, her church, and her growing circle of friends.
By 1953, she was running the ad daily in the Times. Her friends told her it had been long enough, to give up, to move on. Surely her husband had perished as one of the many nameless people in the Nazi concentration camps. She deserved to live her life to the full, to finally be finished with grieving and begin anew with joy. And each time she heard someone say these things, she would smile, say, “You’re right, of course you are,” and then move the conversation to a different topic. And each month she’d mail in a renewal check to the New York Times, making sure her advertisement would continue to appear each day for years to come.
In 1982, she retired from the hospital, was feted with a lavish party, and was presented a gold watch with diamond accents. She settled into her brownstone apartment and prepared to spend the rest of her days reading good books, taking long walks in the park, and generally being grateful for the life she had lived, albeit alone, in her immigrant home.
In 1984, a small news item on the back page of an obscure newspaper reported that Soviet authorities had decided to shut down several leftover prison camps, relics from their Eastern European victories during and after WWII.
In 1985, the woman answered her phone one afternoon to hear an old man’s voice, a tired and nervous accent, speaking on the other end.
“Love is forever.”
And the woman knew immediately who it was. Her husband, long thought dead, had come back to life. For her.
In truth, he’d been surviving in a concentration camp in Poland where he’d eventually been forced to cooperate with the Germans in a clandestine weapons program. When the camp was “liberated” by the Russians, anyone found to have worked on the weapons program—prisoners and guards alike—had been swiftly, and secretly, swept into the Soviet Union, trading a German prison camp for an only slightly better Soviet installation in Siberia. He’d grown into an old man there, until finally it was determined that he and his fellow prisoners—those still alive—could no longer harm Mother Russia. He was seventy years old by this time, but he’d made a promise and he intended to keep it.
With unsteady eyes and a body ravaged by decades of discomfort, he traveled to the United States, to New York City. He’d waited a few days in a cheap hotel, working up the courage to hope. Then, after a week, he’d finally bought a copy of the New York Times and slowly worked his way through the personal ads until he saw, faithfully printed, his wife’s advertisement and phone number. And he’d called her. And, as the story goes, they lived happily ever after.
Trudi thought of that couple whenever she saw the daily ad that read “Safe” in the pages of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. The romantic in her hoped it represented a story of undying love. The bitter ex-wife in her hoped it even more. It would be a terrible world, she decided, if all love was only temporary.
So she looked once again at the four-letter word she’d grown so accustomed to seeing, let a faint grin pass on her lips in gratefulness that it still remained, then contentedly turned back to the front page to begin her day in earnest. Half an hour later, her receptionist (a new hire, but she seemed to be working out okay) buzzed in on the intercom.
“Ms. Coffey,” the receptionist said with youthful professionalism, “there’s a client here to see you. He doesn’t have an appointment but insists that you’ll see him anyway.”
Trudi turned to the small video monitor situated under her desk, hidden on the left side. The one-room reception area of Coffey & Hill Investigations was empty except for Eulalie Jefferson (the new receptionist) and an older gentleman dressed with impeccable care in a dark suit, carrying a cane. The older man turned slowly and—although the camera in the outside office was well disguised as a lighting sconce on the wall—appeared to look directly into Trudi’s appraising eyes. He gave a slight nod toward the private investigator and then turned his attention back to Eulalie, who waited patiently for a response from her boss.
Trudi hesitated. She’d never met this man before . . . had she? The PI studied the gentleman closely for a moment longer, then shrugged. This man was a complete stranger, but something about him tickled Trudi’s curiosity. And besides, though Coffey & Hill had enough ongoing contracts to keep busy for the time being, Trudi had no other cases or clients that were pressing for her time at the moment.
She reached over and flipped the switch on the intercom. “Thanks Eula,” she said confidently. “Send him in.”
The older gentleman paused to review Trudi’s tiny office before crossing the threshold into the room.
“Good morning,” Trudi said. “What can I help you with today?”
The old man tapped his cane absently on the floor and let a whole breath enter and exit before responding. “Quite a collection,” he said, pointing the cane toward the wall of bookshelves behind Trudi’s desk. “But I would have expected more in the way of practical manuals and less in the way of, well, pleasure reading.”
Trudi let her gaze drift briefly along the books on her shelves. There were several volumes of world mythology, a few books of fairy tales and folk stories. But this visitor had pointed toward the pride of her shelves, the best of her collection. The complete Edgar Allan Poe. Same with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Memoirs of Francois Eugene Vidocq. A number of Miss Marple tales, Lord Wimsey, Ellery Queen, and the rest. It was a fine gathering of detective fiction all in one place and, when possible, first editions of the books. Most of her clients barely gave the books a second look, too obsessed with whatever problem or cheating spouse or shady business dealing had brought them to her office.
Trudi wasn’t sure whether she liked that this man noticed.
She let her eyes travel slowly back to him, taking in the details. The dark suit he wore was not new but well-pressed and cleaned. It set comfortably upon him, and he within it, as though he wore it or something like it with common frequency. Coat pockets were empty, as best she could tell. No keys in his pants pockets, though she guessed a thick wallet hid behind the drapery of the suit jacket in the rear. She watched his feet rock forward slightly on his toes and realized that the cane was merely a ruse, a prop to disguise . . . what? A weapon? A recording device? She saw his fingers flex round the handle of the cane, noticed clean nails, trimmed and filed, and even through the suit coat made out a deceptively muscular build for an older man.
“Thank you for noticing,” she said at last. “My guess is that your collection is twice as large as mine. And all first editions, whereas mine mixes in the new with the old. Am I right, Mr. . . . ?”
She watched a grin play at his lips. A slight nod of appreciation.
“You can call me Dr. Smith,” he said, easing himself into the ornate metal guest chair across from her desk.
“Really?” Trudi toyed. “That’s the best you can do?”
This time a chuckle escaped the old man. He reached into his back pocket to produce a thick, bifold wallet. He flipped it open and laid it on the desktop, never taking his hand off the end. Trudi eyed the identification card inside: Dr. Jonathan Smith. Address on the card was somewhere in New York City. She nodded.
“So it would appear that Dr. Smith really is your name,” she said.
He nodded amiably and returned the wallet to his pocket.
“But you’ll forgive me if I maintain just an ounce of doubt about that, right?” she said. “After all, I have half a dozen ID cards around this place. One might even have my real name on it. But, of course, the rest are all made simply to put people at ease with whatever story I need them to believe.”
“I grant you that ounce of doubt,” the old man said. Then he leaned in close. “And yes, you passed my test. For the moment, at least.”
Trudi nodded, annoyed that he’d even had a test for her to pass. And irritated at herself for so quickly rising to the bait.
“Well, then, Dr. Smith. What can I do for you today?”
“I’m looking for someone.”
His eyes wandered through the doorway and toward the storage room across the hall from Trudi’s office.
“Not exactly. Though he has been absent for a number of years now.”
“Does he owe you money?” Trudi wished she hadn’t asked that question as soon as the words came out of her mouth. Anyone with common sense could see that this Dr. Smith had no need of monetary gain. Still, people like him were often prone to insist on recovery of their money—at any cost—so Trudi figured it made sense to ask.
“Oh no, not that.” He smirked. “But he does owe my employer something. He stole it, a number of years ago, and it has taken me this long to follow the trail to you.”
Trudi tried not to let her eyebrows rise, nor to let her gaze wander away from the old man. Out of the corner of her eye she saw his hand squeeze the cane. A release button? she wondered. Didn’t they make canes that hid swords inside them? Or that concealed miniature pistols in the handles?
“Let’s call it missing persons, then,” she said swiftly. “Rates for a missing persons case involve a flat fee up front, daily expenses—including travel—and a finder’s fee bonus when the case is complete. If, after six months, there’s no realistic progress toward finding your missing person, I’ll refund half of the flat fee you paid up front. But I’m very good at uncovering secrets, so I don’t expect that’ll be applicable in this case.”
“Oh no, Ms. Coffey, I’m not here to hire your agency.” The smile looked almost sincere. “I don’t doubt your abilities. I just trust my own more. I’ve been working on this case for over a decade, and I’m not planning to relinquish it anytime soon.”
Trudi ground her teeth. Another time-wasting moron.
“So, you’re a PI, here in search of professional courtesy or something?”
He stood and removed the wallet again. He pulled a sheaf of hundred dollar bills neatly out of the lining and dropped them on the desk.
“All I want is information,” he said, “and I think that should cover your time, am I right?”
That would cover a month of my time, Trudi said to herself. To Dr. Smith she said, “Why don’t you tell me what you want, and I’ll tell you whether or not that covers it.”
He returned to his seat and now pulled a photo from the wallet. He laid it on the desk next to the money.
Truck, Trudi thought, what have you done now?
Dr. Smith said nothing at first but studied her eyes with interest. Then, “I see that you recognize this man. I would very much like to find him. According to my sources, he last surfaced in Atlanta four and a half years ago, and then disappeared into either Alabama or Tennessee.”
“Never seen him.”
She said it too quickly, she knew.
Dr. Smith let himself relax in the chair. “Detective Coffey,” he said, “you’ll forgive me if I maintain just an ounce of doubt about that, right?”
“It’s a free country.”
“Sometimes, yes.”
Okay, she thought. Time to play stupid little girl. “Well, I don’t know this man, never met him. At least not that I remember. Who is he, anyway, and why are you looking for him?”
Dr. Smith didn’t respond at first. He made no move to end the conversation, nor did he seem ready to prolong it. He just studied her face, obviously, without fear of retribution.
Well, Trudi figured, silence was a powerful tool in a private investigator’s arsenal. So she waited. Wait long enough, she’d discovered, and the other guy almost always gave away something he didn’t mean to give. She returned his gaze, trying to look interested and transparent. She pictured butterflies in a meadow, and let that look waft toward the scrutiny of the visiting Dr. Smith.
“His name,” Smith said at last, “is Steven Grant. At least that’s what it was when I first came to know of him. I’m told that was one of a few dozen names that he used. Uses. Perhaps you know him by a different name?”
Trudi hunched over the picture. Yep, it was definitely Truck. Last time she’d seen him was four and a half years ago, though he’d spent most of the time talking privately with her ex-husband and ex-PI partner, Samuel Hill. The pig.
She shrugged and looked placidly back at the old man, dreaming of monarchs and swallowtails as she grinned. “Maybe he changed his name to Smith.”
Dr. Smith chuckled with genuine amusement. He stood. “Well, thank you for your time, Ms. Coffey. I do have other leads to follow, so I’ll be on my way.” A pause, then, “Please wish your former husband my best when you call him five minutes from now.”
Trudi couldn’t stop her face from flushing red. She scooped up the cash still on the desk and held it toward the man. “Call him yourself,” she said evenly. “We’re no longer on speaking terms, as I’m sure you know.”
The old man gave a slight nod and collected the money from Trudi’s hand. He dropped one bill back onto the desk. “For your hospitality,” he said. Then he stepped casually toward the door. “Perhaps we’ll meet again under more favorable circumstances, Ms. Coffey,” he said at the exit. Then he was gone.
Trudi watched the old man on the reception monitor until he left the office completely. She then switched to the outdoor camera and saw him get into a waiting car, a black Mercedes GL-Class SUV. Expensive taste, she thought. The vehicle drove slowly away and out of sight.
Truck and Samuel always had secrets, she knew that. They’d been close before Trudi had met either of them. But what had Leonard Truckson done that kept a trail hot more than four years after she’d last seen him?
“No,” she said aloud, “that old man said he’d been on Truck’s tail for more than a decade.”
Why? What was so valuable that it was worth a ten-year search? And what did Samuel Hill have to do with it?
Trudi waited a full eight minutes before buzzing Eulalie in the reception area.
“Get me a secure line,” she grumbled, “then get my ex-husband on the phone. The pig.”