Authors: Sarah Shaber
Simon was fascinated. What crisis could he have missed that would cause an emergency faculty meeting to be called when the rest of the faculty couldn't be on hand to enjoy the fracas? Of course, Alex Andrus could cause trouble about anything, anytime.
The history department was located in one of the original college buildings built in 1834. It was faced with hand-carved stone left over from the State Capitol's construction, and like the Capitol, it was early Greek Revival, complete with dome and pedimented portico. Every bit of the building was built by hand. There wasn't a right angle in the entire place, but the halls were wide and the windows were as tall as a man and could actually be opened during the spring and fall. The hand carved woodwork, wood banisters, and moldings were maintained meticulously by a fund specially set up for the purpose of preserving the four original campus buildings. Although the history faculty complained about the erratic heating and cooling and the unreliable plumbing, not to mention the mice, most would not have dreamed of forsaking the old building.
The lounge had once been the original library for the entire campus, and it was still lined with bookshelves that held faculty publications and part of the original collection. A few battered leather couches and a couple of tables filled the center of the room. A full pot of usually decent coffee sat on one table. During the academic year, one could find the entire history department in the lounge at this hour, but this morning, only Professor Vera Thayer was ensconced on one of the couches. She was drinking a steaming cup of coffee and reading the Raleigh News and Observer.
Simon wished that everyone would stop noticing his comings and goings. He really didn't enjoy explaining to the world that he had been having some difficulty getting out of bed in the morning because of a bout with clinical depression but that he was feeling much better, thank you.
Thayer suddenly seemed to realize the implications of her question.
"That's right," he said. Of course, he continued to himself, as he filled a cup of coffee to the brim and laced it with sugar, you're not teaching anything until second session, and you're here bright and early every day, loaded for bear. Professor Thayer was in her late fifties. She was always dressed meticulously in a suit, wore full makeup, and had her hair fixed twice a week. She was the type of middle-aged career woman who was so selfconscious about her success that she was constantly playing the part of the perfect academic. She was not brilliant, but she was tough and had written seven books, most of them now out of print. She was the first woman at Kenan to make full professor. She was not a popular teacher because she had no empathy with her students, but everyone who passed her courses knew the material backward and forward. Of course she knew that Simon's wife had left him, but she usually accepted no excuses for herself or anyone else, and it surprised him that she would excuse his "malingering." Simon, and everyone else on the faculty, except perhaps Walker Jones, tended to wilt under Thayer's scrutiny. Simon wondered if she would be chair of the department after Jones retired.
After a while, Simon became aware that Professor Thayer had let her paper fall into her lap and was studying him. He looked up at her, and she seized her opportunity to speak.
Simon shrugged. "I don't really know. He seems to think I might be able to help them more. Apparently if she was murdered, there might be some kind of an official investigation, even though it happened a long time ago."
"It would be a mighty cold trail."
"But we historians investigate old, cold trails all the time," Simon said.
"There's going to be a faculty meeting at eleven."
"I know. Do you know what it's about?"
"I'm afraid it's going to be unpleasant for you," she said.
Simon felt his stomach constrict and his armpits grow damp.
"What on earth—"
"Simon," she said, "since you haven't been yourself this summer, which," she added quickly, "we all understand, under the circumstances, I'm afraid that there is an individual in the department who will use it against you."
Simon had been jumped over Andrus for tenure when his book won the Pulitzer. Andrus hated him for it. There were no more tenured positions available and wouldn't be unless someone left. Simon guessed that he was a candidate for that someone.
"Exactly what will be the context of this unpleasantness, Vera?" he asked. "Bobby Hinton's senior thesis grade," she answered.
"I've got to go."
As he walked out the door, Professor Thayer stopped him again.
"Simon," she said.
"Yes?"
"Just watch your back," she answered.
Simon worried about their conversation all the way down the hall to his office. The situation didn't seem to him to warrant Thayer's concern, and he wondered what he didn't know.
By the time he got back to his office, Sergeant Gates and the legal counsel for the police department were waiting for him. Gates looked older than Simon had thought at first—his short hair seemed grayer and Simon noticed deep lines cut into his forehead. Again Simon had an urge to step back a pace to get a look at the complete man. Judy, who knew everything about everybody in town, had told him that Gates went into police work after a very successful football career. The combination of the man's size and brains must have made him formidable.
Simon hadn't expected anyone other than Gates, and he quickly had to sweep a pile of papers and files off a chair before he could seat both his visitors. Gates introduced Simon to the young woman who was with him.
McGloughlan shook Simon's hand. His first thought was that she would be attractive if she wasn't wearing a gray suit with a burgundy-and-gray tie knotted under the collar of a stark white blouse. She had auburn hair and hazel eyes, and she looked particularly bad in gray. Nonetheless, Simon automatically checked her left hand. No rings. He caught himself mentally, surprised that he would care.
"It's a case," she said. "A woman shot inside the city limits of Raleigh is definitely a case. The DA doesn't want to spend time and money on a case that is probably insoluble," McGloughlan continued. “He knows perfectly well that there is no statute of limitations on murder."
"We don't know that it's murder, although it seems likely," Gates said. "If it is, the murderer is dead by now, too. Isn't the point of solving a crime to bring the perpetrator to justice?"
"That's sort of why we're here, Simon," said Gates. "We've pretty much decided to look into this, and the chief says it's okay as long as we don't spend too much time and money on it. We've got the authorization for an autopsy, but we have a favor to ask of you."
"We need a positive identification of the body. We think she's who you say she is mostly because of circumstance. The fact that we can authenticate her jewelry is important, but what we really need is a physical description of Anne Bloodworth to give the ME so that he can positively identify her and then give a death certificate that lists the cause of death as homicide."
"The sergeant has some good men on the police staff, but they're not historians," McGloughlan said. "We don't have any idea how to research this. The sergeant tells me that he thinks you might be willing to help us."
"What kind of information do you need?" Simon said.
Simon thought for a few minutes. He had run across newspaper articles about Anne Bloodworth's disappearance when he was researching his book, and he remembered the details fairly well. The police departments of the entire state had been alerted. Her father had hired the Pinkerton Detective Agency to search for her all over the country. Surely a detailed description of her must have been circulated by the authorities.
Simon checked his watch. He had almost an hour until his meeting. "Sure," he said. "I'd appreciate it," Julia said. "But if you have something else to do, just say so."
Together, the two walked across the Kenan campus, obsessing about the same things all North Carolinians obsessed about at this time of year: the weather and the pollen count.
Each year May brought rampant floral beauty and a massive accumulation of plant reproductive matter. Pollen and giant tree pods lay in clumps all over the ground. Little seeds with various wing configurations helicoptered out of the trees to the ground. Children couldn't go barefoot, for fear of stepping on the countless little round seed canisters with spikes that were thick on the ground.
The oak pollen was the worst. Huge clumps of oak flowers clogged up sewers and drains, gummed up windshields, and ruined car finishes. Everyone constantly prayed for rain to wash the stuff away and signal the coming of the month of June, that limited, blessed time that precedes the heat and humidity of July.
So Julia and Simon discussed the possibility of rain. Did all those black clouds and the oppressive atmosphere mean rain? If it rained, would all the pollen wash away, and would there be a final onslaught? Was ridding the neighborhood of pollen a worthy trade for canceling a Durham Bulls doubleheader and having to sandbag Crabtree Creek? Yes, they unanimously agreed as cascades of yellow dust drifted out of the trees around them.
Simon shook his head. "Probably not," he said. This happened in 1926 . Most of the crimes we think of as federal crimes weren't designated as such by Congress until the 1930s, when the Depression caused a crime wave. For instance, kidnapping became a federal crime after the Lindbergh baby was abducted in 1932."
"If they had any money, they hired the Pinkerton Detective Agency. It had offices in every major city in the country. But the best place to begin researching anything is the newspapers. I'll start there tomorrow."
The crime-scene tape was gone from the site, and David Morgan was back at work excavating. He was watching the sky while supervising two students spreading plastic over the site.
Simon introduced Julia McGloughlan to him. David acknowledged her with a noncommittal nod. She could have been seventy and walking with a cane for all the attention he paid her. Most women were insulted by this—Tessa certainly had been—but Julia seemed unconcerned. She was only interested in information.
"This building had a dirt floor, a fireplace, and a wood-fueled stove. It was used for over a hundred years. A modern kitchen was added to the house right before the First World War," Simon said. "Then this building was used for storage until it burned to the ground in 1933."