The Lady Sleuths MEGAPACK TM(9)
I clutched my hands around my middle like a pregnant woman. The edges of the journals dug into my stomach, and I wanted to adjust them, but I couldn’t.
We went through the same routine—I stepped into the pantry, he shut off the lights, then closed the door. Once it was shut, he moved a few boxes in front of it.
I could hear voices not too far away. Kaplan paused at the pantry door, peering through it. Then he beckoned me, and we scurried across the kitchen. The voices were coming from the dining room beyond.
Kaplan led the way down the stairs and out the side door. He looked along the sidewalk, nodded when he wanted me to follow, and walked faster than I liked on the ice-covered concrete.
My papers and journals were slipping. I shifted my hands slightly, praying that nothing fell as I hurried after Kaplan.
He reached my car before I did, tried the door, and cursed loud enough for me to hear. He didn’t like that I had locked it. I wasn’t sure how I was going to unlock it without dropping anything. I pulled the keys out of my pocket, adjusted my papers again, and leaned a little on the cold metal to unlock my door.
I pulled it open. Kaplan reached around and unlocked the back door. He looked both ways, bent over, and opened his jacket. The ledgers fell out along the seat. Then he slammed the door closed and shoved his hands in his pocket.
I just got in the driver’s side, figuring it was easier than getting rid of my stuff.
“I’ll be in touch,” he said before I could ask any more questions. Then he slammed the driver’s door closed.
He had returned to the other side of the street before I could get the keys in the ignition. My breath fogged up the window, but I just used my fist to make a hole.
I didn’t have to be told to get the hell out of there. I pulled out just as a group of large black cars came around the corner behind me.
I followed the narrow street out of the neighborhood, then pulled over until the windshield cleared. While the defrost was doing its job, I reached around to the back seat. I locked the door, and grabbed a blanket I kept on the floor for emergencies. I used it to cover the ledgers that Kaplan had spilled.
If we had dropped anything outside the car, I hoped Kaplan had found it.
Because I wasn’t going anywhere near that place again.
* * * *
I got back to the hot line in record time. The hot line was a few miles away, deeper in the city itself. We weren’t far off State Street, which connected the University of Wisconsin with the Capitol. This neighborhood used to be a nice enclave for the medium rich, leaving the very rich to Langham’s neighborhood. Now, the old Victorians here had been torn down or divided into apartments, usually crammed with students.
The church where we housed the hot line had been abandoned two decades before. I lived in the rectory and used the church proper for the hot line, and sometimes to house women in need.
On this day, I pulled into the rectory side of the parking lot. I didn’t want the volunteers to see what I had.
It took me two trips to bring in all of the material. I piled the stuff on my coffee table, then closed and locked my door. I pulled the curtains too, something I rarely did in the middle of a Midwestern winter.
I took off my coat, put some innocuous papers over the things on my coffee table, and picked up one sheet of the paper covered in shorthand. Then I headed into the hot line proper.