consulted with my internist
about this?”
I shake my head in feigned sympathy. “What planet is that guy living on?”
Sam Willis drops by to ask if I want an update on his progress in digging into the now concluded life of Walter Timmerman.
The truth is that I don’t, but he’s worked hard and quickly on it, so I agree.
It is truly amazing how much of a person’s life is available on computers if you know where to look, have the expertise to
do so, and are willing to skirt all applicable federal and local laws. Sam fits the bill on all those counts, and he brings
me a treasure trove of information on Timmerman, he says—far too much to go through now. And he’ll have much more later on,
when he really has time to get into it.
“Can you give me an overview?” I ask.
“Well, the guy was as rich as the media reports made him out to be; I would estimate his net worth at between four hundred
and four hundred fifty million. And he didn’t spend much of it; he had the nice house, spent a lot on jewelry for the current
wife…”
“Was Steven’s mother his first wife?”
Sam nods. “Yes. Died about six years ago. Cancer.”
“No recent unusual transactions?” I ask.
“Could be; I’m not sure. At this point I was more into gathering the information than analyzing it,” he says. “I’ve also got
copies of the e-mails he sent and received for the last three months from his private and business addresses, but I didn’t
read most of them.”
“How did you get that?” I ask.
“You don’t want to know,” he says, and he’s right about that. “By the way, I did happen to see one strange e-mail.”
“What was that?”
Rather than tell me about it, he searches through the reams of paper and finds a copy of it. It is from Robert Jacoby, whose
e-mail sign-off identifies him as the director of laboratory operations at the Crescent Hills Forensics Laboratory.
The e-mail conveys what seems to be an annoyance on Jacoby’s part with Timmerman, though it is expressed rather gently:
Walter
I’ve chosen to report back to you in this informal way because of the unusual results we have gotten on the sample you submitted.
As you no doubt are aware, the DNA from the sample is your own, as it is a perfect match from a previous sample of yours we
have on file.
Did this represent something of a test you felt we needed to pass? That would surprise me, and the fact that you requested
the results on a priority basis only adds to my puzzlement. Can you enlighten me?
All my best to you and Diana. Looking forward to getting you back on the golf course.
Robert
I won’t be able to place this in any kind of context until I go through everything Sam has brought, though he says he didn’t
see a reply to Jacoby’s questions. Certainly the fact that a man who was soon to be a murder victim was experimenting in any
way with his own DNA is at least curious, and something for me to look into carefully if I stay on the case.
But a nurse comes in and asks me to quickly come to Laurie’s room, so right now everything else is going to have to wait.
“A NDY .”
Laurie says it as I walk in the door. She sort of mumbles it, and it’s hard to make it out, but it is without a doubt the
most beautiful rendition of my name that I have ever heard.
There is a searing pain in my throat as I fight back the need to cry. I don’t want her to see me cry, not now, because I don’t
want her to misinterpret it. She might think I am upset about her condition, when I have actually never been happier than
I am at this moment.
I walk to her side. “I’m here, Laurie. God, you look beautiful.”
I take her hand, and she seems to be struggling to speak. It looks as if one side of her face is unmoving and a little distorted.
“Andy… don’t know what happened… to me.”
The doctor mentioned that she might have short-term memory loss, so I’m not surprised by this. I decided that I would