Kelly raised herself on tiptoe and peered over the stream of travelers exiting from the
jetway
until she spotted
Nick, she knew, was right behind her. Though they had taken separate cabs from the police station to the airport, they had come back to
"What is Nick
Mcbride
doing on your flight?"
"Long story.
I'll tell you later."
"What about Jonathan? Did you find him?"
"Let's get out of here first."
"They don't know. His dental records arrived to day but they haven't done any tests yet. To complicate matters, the motel clerk who could have identified Jonathan died this morning as a result of his
burns .
"
"What about the other employees? You said there were maids, and a maintenance man."
"They've all vanished." She repeated what Detective Quinn had told her about illegal immigrants.
"I don't know. I'm getting mixed signals and until I've sorted them all out, I can't even make an educated guess as to what happened." She watched a couple with two young boys, both wearing Mickey Mouse
ears,
make their way toward a station wagon. "One possibility is that he may be hiding," she said softly.
"Hiding from what?"
"I don't know. Maybe he's in some kind of trouble."
"He would call me if he was."
"Not if he was afraid of putting you and Phoebe in danger."
"Danger from what?"
Kelly forced herself to meet her friend's worried gaze. "This is going to hurt,
"The only thing that would hurt me unbearably right now is if I found out that my husband was dead. Anything else I can handle."
Kelly studied
her
hands steady on the steering wheel. The last two days had toughened her up, but she couldn't possibly be prepared for what she would hear next. Kelly took a breath and released it. "Jonathan is having an affair."
"Fuck your proof!"
"I met her," Kelly said gently.
"Oh, God."
"Maybe we should wait until we're home," Kelly suggested.
"No."
As gently as she knew how, Kelly told her about
Paulie
and his friend, and how Nick had rescued her.
"That's what I kept telling myself over and over. I was so sure the whole thing was a case of mistaken identity.
Or a scam of some sort."
"And that's exactly what it is. A scam, engineered by that ... tramp."
"Magdalena never came forward with the information,
"I don't care! I know my husband. He would never get involved with another woman, a stripper
no
less. She's making all this up."
Without a word, Kelly reached inside her purse, pulled out the package and began to unwrap it. As the last layer of bubble wrap was removed,
"My snuff bottle."
She reached for it, but Kelly held it away. "Don't touch it. We have to preserve the fingerprints."
"At
Jonathan gave it to her on Monday. She collects miniature bottles but had no idea this one was so valuable, or that it was missing from your shop."
"Are you saying ..."
"I'm sorry."
Overwhelmed,
It took a while for the sobs to subside. When they finally did,
"Don't apologize." Kelly
lay
a hand on her friend's arm. "I'll drive if you want."
"If it's any consolation," Kelly said as
"I know."
"A Captain Cross at the Roundhouse has been in constant communication with my aunt. He's even promised to try to keep the story out of the papers."
Quinn must have kept the information quiet, assuming Kelly would want to tell Victoria herself. It was a nice gesture and Kelly made a mental note to thank him later.
Inside her bag, her cell phone rang. She answered it, half expecting to hear her mother's voice. Instead, she was greeted by Martha
Grimwald
, Jonathan's secretary.
"Miss.
Robolo
," the woman said excitedly. "I did remember something after all. I don't know how it slipped my mind in the first place. I'm so sorry."
"That's all right, Mrs.
Grimwald
. Why don't you tell me what it is you
remembered.
" As
"Jonathan broke his routine this past Friday, though I can't verify it because he didn't write it down."
"How did he break his routine?"
"He went out for lunch instead of eating at his desk."
Kelly felt a ripple of excitement. At last, a break. "Did he go alone?"
"I don't know, but Mr. Webber was in
"I've already asked," the efficient secretary replied. "Only two board members were in town that day and neither saw Jonathan."
"No, but it had to be somewhere in
"Thank you, Mrs.
Grimwald
. You've been a big help."
"What did she want?"
"Jonathan went out to lunch last Friday, but she doesn't know where or with whom." Kelly dropped her phone back in her purse. "It wasn't with
Syd
Webber or any of the board members."
"We may be able to find out the name of that restaurant." The color was slowly returning to
"I found an American Express receipt in Jonathan's nightstand drawer the other night when we were looking through his things. I didn't pay attention to it at the time because we were focusing on the
Kelly gripped her friend's arm and squeezed it. "
"No.
Just a woman desperate to find her husband."
Fourteen.
Yo
, Kelly!"
At the typical
Gambone
. The old man and his meat shop on
"Pretty good now that I have a new knee."
He bent his leg a few times to show off his returned flexibility. He laughed. "Maybe I'll even enter the Boston Marathon this year."
Other area merchants were coming out, closing shop, waving at Kelly and shouting from across the street.
Kelly loved it. This was home. This is where she had grown up, attending school at St. Maria
Goretti
and playing street hockey with the boys in front of her parents' restaurant. If she closed her eyes she could almost hear the old Mario
Lanza
records her father used to play every night as he served his customers. Her mother had been more into the Golden Boys of South Philly--Frankie Avalon, Fabian, Jimmy Dan-en and Bobby
Rydell
. Framed photographs of the famous singers were prominently displayed throughout the restaurant, each lovingly signed to Connie.
Remo
Kelly waved at a couple she knew and made her way to the kitchen, inhaling her mother's fragrant tomato sauce. Quick to respond, her stomach gave an angry growl, reminding her she hadn't eaten a thing since that cinnamon bun at the
"Well, what do you know?" Connie
Robolo
said when Kelly came through the swinging doors. "I do have a daughter after all."
She was a short, round woman with Italian good looks and the same
Eydie
Gorme
hairdo she'd had for thirty years. A white apron splattered with tomato sauce was wrapped around her waist.
"Where were you?" she asked as Kelly kissed her cheek. "I've been trying to reach you all day."
Instead of answering, Kelly tore a piece of bread from a crusty loaf on the counter and dipped it into a simmering pot.
"I even called
"Like she was lying to me."
"Ma, I'm thirty-five years old. I don't have to tell you where I am every minute of the day."
"Sure you do. I'm your mother." She watched as Kelly chewed. "How's the sauce?"
Kelly made a circle with her thumb and forefinger.
"You think it needs more basil? Benny says I never put enough basil."
Kelly had no idea. She could never taste the basil anyway. "It's fine the way it is, Ma. I love it."
"You tell Benny." Connie took a bowl of homemade pasta from the refrigerator and set it on the gleaming stainless-steel counter. "
You going
to answer my question or are you going to ignore me all night?"
Kelly thought about lying, maybe inventing an old friend she hadn't seen since college. At the last minute, guilt enveloped her like a bad aura and she couldn't do it.
"I was in