Read The Truth of Yesterday Online

Authors: Josh Aterovis

The Truth of Yesterday (46 page)

 

     “Ok, I'll call him now before I go back to work. What's his number?”

 

     I read the number off to him and he repeated it back to me.

 

     “That's it,” I said. “Thanks, Micah. I love you.” I was determined to get it in before he hung up this time.

 

     “I love you, too,” he said.

 

     As soon as we hung up, I picked up the phone once more.
This time to call
Chris
.

 

     “I was going to call you tonight,” she said after I filled her in on my appointment with Neal and she agreed to go with me. “You saved me a call.”

 

     “You were going to call me? Why?”

 

     “They opened the safe earlier this week. My dad didn't hear about it until last night though, because he's not really on the case.”

 

     “What was in it?”

 

     “Since you're coming tomorrow, why don't I just wait and tell you then?” she said. She sounded serious but I was pretty sure she was just kidding.

 

     “How about if you tell me now,” I shot back, just to be on the safe side.

 

     “The contents were pretty interesting. There were a few coins that must have been really rare and valuable since he kept them locked up when all his others ones weren't.”

 

     “That's not very interesting. We knew he collected coins.”

 

     “I wasn't finished. They also found a bank book for a savings account. Over the last few months, there were regular deposits of a rather large sum of money once a week, but he never made any withdraws.”

 

     “What is a large sum of money and was it always the same amount?”

 

     “Dad didn't say. Do you want me to see if I can find out?”

 

     “Please.
Anything else?”

 

     “Yeah, he had two tickets to
New Zealand
that were for this coming weekend.”

 

     “Two?”

 

     
“Yes, both in his name.
But most interesting were the letters.” She paused dramatically.

 

     
“Letters?”

 

     “Well, I should say copies of letters. There were several but from what I understand they were all similar. They were handwritten and signed by Paul, but none of them were addressed to anyone. They were all apparently very vague, insinuating that Paul knew that whomever the letter was for had done something illegal.”

 

     “He didn't say what?”

 

     “No, like I said, they were all very vague. He never came out and said anything directly. It was more like he just wanted the person to know that he knew.”

 

     “That could be our missing motive,” I said, thinking out loud.

 

     “Do you think he was blackmailing this mystery person?”

 

     “It sounds like it from everything they found in the safe, but it just doesn't fit what everyone has told me about him. He was well off financially so he didn't need the money and everyone goes on and on about what a stand-up guy he was.”

 

     “They said he was quiet and kept to himself, right?”

 

     
“Yeah.”

 

     “That's what they all said about Jeffrey
Dahmer
too, and the
Unibomber
, and...”

 

     “Ok, ok. I get the point. I'd like to see these letters. Any chance we can get copies?”

 

     “That'll be hard. They're evidence in a murder investigation. It's not like they hand out copies upon request.”

 

     “But you're dad's a cop.”

 

     “But he's not on this case.”

 

     I sighed. “This is why I wanted to open the safe myself. Well, can you at least check into deposits? Find out if they were always for the same amount and what that amount was?”

 

     “I'll see what I can do.”

 

     “Ok. Thanks,
Chris
.”

 

* * *

     “Welcome back to the
Big
City
,”
Chris
said as I stepped off the train into the
Metro
Center
and narrowly missed being run over by a boy on a bike.

 

     I snorted. “With all the time I've been spending here lately, maybe I should have the post office just forward my mail. They allow bikes down here?”

 

     “Sort of, but they're supposed to walk them. Come on, we need to get on the red line to go to
Union
.” She set off at a brisk walk and I hurried to keep up with her. As we walked I got a chance to look her over. Today, she was wearing black jeans and a red t-shirt that read, “Warning: Hanging out with me will greatly damage your reputation.” Not exactly camouflage, but hopefully she wouldn't stand out too much.

 

     “Were you able to find anything out about the amount of the deposits?” I asked as we dodged through a throng of equally hurried individuals going the opposite direction.

 

     “Right to the point, huh?”

 

     “Well, we're running on a deadline here. I'm supposed to meet Neal in 15 minutes and it takes that long to just get there.”

 

     “He'll wait. He can't afford not to.”

 

     “I hope you're right.
The deposits?”

 

      “I asked Dad and he said he'd check. Hopefully he'll know something when we get done with Neal. By the way, I also asked him if there was any way he could get copies of the letters and he said he doubted it, but he'd see what he could do without sticking his neck out too far.”

 

     “That's great! I don't want him to get in trouble on my account.”

 

     “Don't worry, he'll be careful.”

 

     We boarded the red line train and found seats. Once settled, we chatted for the next few minutes about the case in general, throwing ideas back and forth. We agreed that we really needed to talk to the family and that the two tickets to
New Zealand
raised some interesting questions.

 

     “He was obviously planning on taking someone with him,”
Chris
pointed out logically. “He must have had a lover, but why was he trying so hard to keep this guy a secret from his friends?”

 

     “He wasn't necessarily keeping it a secret from Sabrina. She admitted that she's been really busy the last few months and hadn't paid much attention to Paul. It could have just been a matter of both of them being too busy with their own lives to catch up.”

 

     “What about
Razi
?”

 

     “Sabrina said
Razi
was difficult when Paul and Micah were dating, always trying to break them up, but as soon as they broke up, he lost interest. Maybe Paul was trying to avoid a similar situation as long as he could.”

 

     “That's reasonable. So how do we find out who this mystery guy is?”

 

     “I don't know,” I admitted, “but now we have two mystery guys.
Paul's lover and the recipient of those letters.”

 

     “The letter recipient isn't necessarily a guy you know.”

 

     “True. I don't suppose there would be any chance they're the same person. That would be too simple.”

 

     “Why would Paul be involved with someone he knew was doing something illegal?”

 

     “It's happened before. You know what they say; love is blind. Maybe he thought he could change him. This is all just speculation until we know more details.”

 

     
We through around a few more wild ideas before discarding them as too outlandish before we pulled into Union Station.

 

     Once in the station, we laid out our game plan.

 

     “Do you know where this restaurant is that he was talking about?” I asked.

 

     
“Yeah, the Center Café.
It's in the middle of the main concourse. You know, this used to be a train station. When it opened, it was the largest train station in the world, and probably the most ornate. The ceiling was actually gold plated.”

 

     “You sound like a tour guide.”

 

     She flipped me the bird, accompanied by a dirty look. “This is one of my favorite places in the city,” she said. “I love to shop here.”

 

     I was surprised at that revelation, but then I scolded myself for stereotyping.
You should know better
, I thought fiercely.
Just because
Chris
doesn't look like your typical mall rat doesn't mean she doesn't like to shop.

 

     “Well, maybe we'll have time for shopping after I talk to Neal,” I said in an attempt to atone myself, even though she had no idea what I'd been thinking. I glanced down at my watch. “You can give me the history lesson later. Right now, we need to get moving. I want you to follow me from a discreet distance. I'm supposed to go to the restaurant and ask for Neal; they'll show me to his table. Keep me in sight just in case he does something weird, although I doubt he would in a public place like this.”

 

     “Still, it's better to be safe, right?”

 

     
“Exactly.”

 

     We went up to the main level of the train station cum mall and
Chris
showed me how to find the restaurant where I was supposed to meet Neal. I took a deep breath and muttered, “Here goes nothing,” before striding purposefully across the floor. The restaurant was in the center, as implied by the name, of the large open area that had once been the main concourse. It was two floors with the second floor being open to the large room with a rail going around the edge. I approached the well-dressed young man standing at the greeters' podium.

 

     “I'm here to meet with Neal,” I told him.

 

     He looked me over from head to toe. I felt a little like a prize bitch at a dog show. “Are you Killian Kendall?” he asked.

 

     “Yes.”

 

     “Follow me.”

 

     He led me up the flight of stairs and towards a table set off to itself in one corner. At first, the waiter was in my line of vision so I couldn't see the man I was meeting, but as he shifted to one side, I stopped in mid-step. Sitting at the table waiting for me with a pleasantly bland expression was a man I had seen before. Not in person, mind you, and I'd only seen him once, but I recognized him immediately. The last, and first, time I'd ever seen him was in Jake's room. It was the man from the newspaper clipping. It looked like my cases might be connected.

Chapter 20

Other books

Undead L.A. 2 by Sagliani, Devan
Force 10 from Navarone by Alistair MacLean
The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho
Sidelined by Kyra Lennon
Stranger to History by Aatish Taseer
The Last Street Novel by Omar Tyree
More Than a Fling? by Joss Wood
Amadís de Gaula by Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo