Henry seemed to smile to himself. “Aren’t you overstating your case?”
“Well, it may be too strong a term, but you get my point. Henry, how much children’s aspirin do you take these days? I counted fifteen of these.”
“I donate the extras to charity. Speaking of pain relievers, how’s your hand?”
“Good. Much better. It hardly hurts,” I said. “I take it Rosie’s attitude doesn’t bother you.”
“Rosie’s Rosie. She’s never going to change. If it bugs you, tell her. Don’t complain to me.”
“Oh right. I see. You want me to take the point.”
“Battle of the Titans. I’d like to see that,” he remarked.
At six, I left Henry’s, stopping by my apartment to pick up my umbrella and a jacket. Once again, the rain had eased off, but the cold saturated the air, making me grateful to step into the tavern. Rosie’s was quiet, the air scented with the pungent smell of cauliflower, onions, garlic, bacon, and simmering beef. There were two patrons sitting in a booth, but I could see they’d been served. The occasional clink of flatware on china was the only sound I heard.
Rosie was sitting at the bar by herself, absorbed in the evening paper, which was open in front of her. A small television set was turned on at the far end of the bar, the sound muted. There was no sign of William and I realized if I was going to catch her, this would be my only chance. I could feel my heart thump. My bravery seldom extends to interactions of this kind. I pulled out the stool next to hers and perched. “Something smells good.”
“Lot of somethings,” she said. “I got William fixing deep-fried cauliflower with sour cream sauce. Also hot pickled beef, and beef tongue with tomato sauce.”
“My favorite,” I said dryly.
Behind us, the door opened and a foursome came in, admitting a rush of cold air before the door banged shut again. Rosie eased down off her stool and moved across the room to greet them, playing hostess for once. The door opened again and Colleen Sellers was suddenly standing in the entrance. What was she doing here? So much for my confrontation with Rosie. Maybe Colleen had decided to give me some help.
“I don’t even know what I’m doing here,” she said, glumly. Her blond hair drooped with the damp and her glasses had fogged over from the heat in the place.
“Talking about Tom.”
“I guess.”
“You want to tell me the rest of it?”
“There’s nothing much to tell.”
We were seated in the back booth I usually claim as my own. I’d poured her a glass of wine that was now sitting in front of her untouched. She removed her glasses, holding them by the frames while she pulled a paper napkin from the dispenser and cleaned the lenses in a way that made me worry she was scratching them. Without the glasses, she looked vulnerable, the misery palpable in the air between us.
“When did you first meet him?”
“At a conference up in Redding a year ago. He was there by himself. I never did meet his wife. She didn’t like to come with him, or at least that’s what I heard. I gathered she was a bit of a pain in the ass. Not that he ever admitted it, but other people said as much. I don’t know what her gig was. He always spoke of her like she was some kind of goddess.” She pushed her hair back from her face and tucked it behind her ears in a style that wasn’t flattering. She put on her glasses again and I could see smears on the lenses.
“Did you meet by chance or by design?”
Colleen rolled her eyes and a weary smile played around her mouth. “I can see where you’re headed, but okay . . . I’ll bite. I knew he was going to be there and I looked him up. How’s that?”
I smiled back at her. “You want to tell it your way?”
“I’d appreciate that,” she said dryly. “Until the conference in Redding, I only dealt with him by phone. He sounded terrific so naturally, I Wanted to meet him in person. We hit it off right away, chatting about various cases we’d worked, at least the interesting ones. You know how it is, trading professional tales. We got talking department politics, his experiences versus mine, the usual stuff.”
“I don’t mean to sound accusatory, but someone seemed to think the two of you were very chummy.”
“Chummy?”
“That you were flirtatious. I’m just telling you what I heard.”
“There’s no law against flirting. Tom was a doll. I never knew a man yet who couldn’t use a little boost to his ego, especially at our age. My god. Who the hell’s telling you this stuff? Someone trying to make trouble, I can tell you that.”
“How well did you know him?”
“I only saw him twice. No, correction. I saw him three times. It was all work at first, starting with the case he was on.”
“What case was that?”
“County sheriff up in Nota Lake found an apparent suicide in the desert, an ex-con named Ritter, who’d hung himself from a branch of a California white oak. Identification was confirmed through his fingerprints and Tom tracked him back as far as his release from Chino in the spring of ‘eighty-one. Ritter had family in this area; Perdido to be precise. He talked to them by phone and they told him Ritter’d been traveling with a pal.”
“Alfie Toth,” I supplied. I was curious to hear her version, but I didn’t want her to think I was completely ignorant of the facts.
“How’d you hear about him?” she asked.
“Hey, I have my sources just like you have yours. I know Tom drove down here in June to look for him.”
“That’s right. I was the one got a line on the guy. Toth had been arrested here on a minor charge. I called Tom and he said he’d be down within a day. This was mid-April. I told him I’d be happy to make the contact, but he preferred doing it himself. I guess he got caught up in work and it was June by the time he made it down here. By then, Toth was gone.”
“So Tom never talked to him?”
“Not that I know of. As it turned out, Toth’s body was the one found in January of this year. The minute the ID was made, I called Tom. The MO was the same for both Ritter and Toth and that was worrisome. The two deaths had to be related, but it was tough to determine what the motivation might have been.”
“From what I hear, the murders were separated by a five-year time gap. You have a theory about that?”
I could see her mouth pull down and she wagged her head to convey her ambivalence. “This was one time when Tom and I didn’t agree on anything. It could have been a double-cross . . . you know, a bank heist or burglary with Ritter and his sidekick betraying an accomplice. Fellow catches up with them and kills Ritter on the spot. Then it takes another five years to hunt down his pal, Toth.”
“What was Tom’s idea?”
“Well, he thought Toth might have been a witness to Ritter’s murder. Something happens in the mountains and Pinkie Ritter dies. Toth manages to get away and eventually the killer catches up with him.”
I said, “Or maybe Alvin Toth killed Ritter and someone else came along and avenged Ritter’s death.”
She smiled briefly. “As a matter of fact, I suggested that myself, but Tom was convinced the perpetrator was the same in both cases.”
I thought about Dr. Yee’s assessment, which was the same as Tom’s. “It would help if I knew how to get in touch with Ritter’s family.”
“I can give you the phone number. I don’t have it with me, but I could call you later if you like.”
“That’d be great. One other thing. I know this is none of my business, but were you in love with Tom? Because that’s what I’m picking up, reading between the lines,” I said.
Her body language altered and I could see her debate with herself about how much to reveal. “Tom was loyal as a dog, completely devoted to his wife, which he let me know right off the bat. Ain’t that always the way? All the good men are married.”
“So they say.”
“But I’ll tell you something. We had real chemistry between us. It’s the first time I ever understood the term soul mate. You know what I mean? We were soul mates. No kidding. It was like finding myself in this other guise . . . my spiritual counterpart . . . and that was heady stuff. We’d be in a room together with five or six hundred other people and I always knew where he was. It was like tentacles stretching all the way across the auditorium. I wouldn’t even have to look for him. The bond was that strong. There wasn’t anything I couldn’t say to him. And laugh? God, we laughed.”