revenge if for no other reason than she was furious that someone had made the decision to end his life long before it should have been over.
She had a sudden thought and checked her watch. She had no idea what time zone he was in, but she needed to know. She ran to the desk against one corner and snatched up her cell phone. She punched in the numbers and waited impatiently while it rang. She’d given him this number and an international phone so they could keep in contact for a while after the con. If one heard anything about Jerry, he or she was supposed to call the other.
Leo finally answered. “Hey.”
“Hey yourself. I didn’t think you were going to pick up.”
“I was in the pool.”
“In the pool, nice. Where in the pool?”
“The deep end.”
“No, I meant where in the world?”
“No can answer. What if Bagger’s standing right there?”
“I see your point. Heard from anybody else?”
“Not a peep.”
“How about Bagger?”
“No, I took old Jerry off my Rolodex,” he said dryly.
“I meant, have you heard any of the fallout?”
“Just some scuttlebutt. Didn’t want to get too close, you know. You can bet the dude’s homicidal.”
“You know he’ll never stop looking for us as long as he’s breathing.”
“Then let’s pray for a massive heart attack. I don’t want the guy to suffer.” Leo paused and said, “Something I should’ve told you before, Annabelle. Now, don’t get pissed.”
She sat up straighter. “What did you do?”
“I sort of let it slip to Freddy a little about your history.”
She stood. “How much of my history?”
“Your last name, your stuff with Paddy.”
She screamed into the phone, “Are you out of your damn mind?”
“I know, I know, it was stupid. It just came up. I just wanted him to know that you weren’t like your old man. But I didn’t tell Tony. I’m not that dumb.”
“Thanks, Leo, thanks a hell of a lot.”
She clicked off and stood in the middle of the room. Freddy knew her last name and also that her father was Paddy Conroy, Jerry Bagger’s mortal enemy. If Jerry got to him, he’d make Freddy talk. And then the man would come for her, and she could predict her fate with reasonable accuracy. Jerry would feed her into a wood chipper body part by body part.
Annabelle started packing her bag. Sorry, Jonathan.
When Caleb returned to his condo later that night, he found someone waiting for him out in the parking lot.
“Mr. Pearl, what are you doing here?”
Vincent Pearl didn’t look like Professor Dumbledore this evening, principally because he wasn’t wearing a long lavender robe. He had on a two-piece suit, open-collared shirt, shiny shoes, and his long thick hair and beard were carefully combed. He looked thinner in the suit than he had in the robe. The chubby Caleb made a mental note never to start dressing in robes. Pearl’s spectacles were halfway down his nose as he silently studied Caleb with such a condescending look that the librarian started getting a little perturbed.
“Well?” Caleb finally asked.
In a deep, offended voice Pearl said, “You haven’t returned my calls. I thought a personal appearance would help remind you of my interest in the Psalm Book.”
“Right, I see.”
Pearl looked around. “A parking lot seems hardly appropriate to engage in conversation about one of the world’s most important books.”
Caleb sighed. “Very well, come on up.”
They rode the elevator to Caleb’s floor. The two men sat across from each other in the small living room.
“I was afraid that you’d decided to go straight to Sotheby’s or Christie’s with the Psalm Book.”
“No, it’s nothing like that. I haven’t even been back to the house after you were there. I didn’t call you because I’m still thinking.”
Pearl looked very relieved by this statement. “At the very least it would behoove us to obtain definitive tests on the Psalm Book. I know several firms with impeccable reputations that can do this. And I see no need to wait.”
“Well,” Caleb said hesitantly.
“The longer you procrastinate, the less control you have over the public learning about the existence of a twelfth Psalm Book.”
“What do you mean by that?” Caleb said sharply as he sat forward.
“I’m not sure you adequately realize the significance of this discovery, Shaw.”
“On the contrary, I realize very clearly the enormity of it.”
“I mean that there might be leaks.”
“How? I’ve certainly told no one.”
“Your friends?”
“They’re completely trustworthy.”
“I see. Well, pardon me if I don’t share your confidence. But if there is a leak, people might start making accusations. Jonathan’s reputation may suffer considerably.”
“What sort of accusations?”
“Oh, for heaven sakes, man, let me just spell it out for you: accusations that the book was stolen.”
Caleb’s thoughts leaped to his own theory about the library’s Psalm Book being a forgery. Yet he said as earnestly as he could, “Stolen? Who would believe such a thing?”
Pearl took a deep breath. “No other owner of one of those treasures in the long and celebrated history of book collecting has ever kept it a secret. Until now.”
“And you think it’s because Jonathan stole it? Preposterous. He’s as much a thief as I am.” Please, please, let that be true.
“But he might have purchased it from someone who had stolen it, perhaps unwittingly, perhaps not. At least he might have had a suspicion, which would explain the secrecy he kept about owning the book.”
“And where exactly would the book have been stolen from? You said you checked with the other places that own one.”
“What the hell would you expect them to say?” Pearl snapped. “Do you think they would admit it to me if their Psalm Book had been stolen? And maybe they don’t even know. What if a very clever forgery was left in its place? It’s not like these places check their literary treasures daily to assure their authenticity.” He added, “Did you find any paperwork relating to the book? A bill of sale? Anything to show where it came from?”
“No,” Caleb admitted, his heart sinking. “But I haven’t looked through Jonathan’s personal papers. My work was limited to the book collection.”
“No, your work extends to all evidence of ownership of his books. Do you really think that Christie’s or Sotheby’s will put a Psalm Book up for auction without being absolutely certain of both its authenticity and the legal authority under which Jonathan DeHaven’s estate will be selling the book?”
“Of course, I was aware that they would need to know that.”
“Well, Shaw, if I were you, I would set about immediately to find that evidence. But if you can’t, the clear impression will be that Jonathan came by it through means that are not verifiable. And in the rare book field that is tantamount to saying that he stole it himself or knowingly purchased it from someone who did.”
“I suppose I could ask his attorneys if I could search through his papers. Or perhaps they could do it if I told them what to look for.”
“If you go that route, they will want to know why. And when you tell them, you will have most certainly lost control of the situation.”