Brendan gave this the judicial consideration it deserved. “The way I heard it, it sounded more like a bribe,” he said.
She tossed him a look of such scorn that it was only with a strong exercise of his backbone that he managed not to wilt. “That was two nights ago. This afternoon was a threat.”
Again, Brendan considered. “No, I’d have to say none of what you’ve repeated to me could come under the heading of a threat.” Kate turned on him and he shook his head. “He didn’t say anything that could be followed by an ‘or else,” now, did he? No. He didn’t even tell you to butt out. Near as I can figure, adjusting for the decibel level, of course, all Erland Bannister told you was good-bye.“
“He sure wasn’t upset over Charlotte’s death,” Kate said fiercely. “Fucker was erring more on the side of overjoyed.”
“I’d have to check the statutes to be sure, but I don’t think that’s a crime, Kate.” Brendan reflected. “Of course, I haven’t seen the latest bulletin from John Ashcroft, either.”
Kate came to a halt, clenching the back of the chair across from Brendan’s desk in both hands, as if she’d like to tear it apart. “This situation is bent, Brendan.”
“What situation?” Brendan said. “Look, Kate, I’m sorry, but it seems to me you’re out of a job. It’s closing time.” He looked at the clock. “For both of us. Go home.”
Instead, Kate tracked down Axenia.
Axenia was her cousin, who had moved to Anchorage, married a lobbyist, and had recently had a child. Relations were cool between them for many reasons, but mostly because Kate had been born first and smarter and prettier. The expression on Axenia’s face when she opened the door to her house told Kate that she would just as soon be closing it again immediately. “Kate,” she said evenly, and shifted the drooling toddler on one hip.
“Axenia,” Kate said. “I need a favor.”
Inside, the house boasted tastefully chosen and perfectly matched furniture ensembles, a hardwood floor polished to a painful shine, and paint that was never allowed to become smudged. Plastic toys in primary colors were carefully corralled in a toy box in one corner, a pile of glossy magazines was neatly stacked on a teak coffee table, and there were no books to be seen, but that was okay, because there were no reading lamps, either, only wrought-iron torcheres in all four corners, whose job appeared to be to light the ceiling above them. While waiting for the water to boil for coffee, Axenia and the toddler took Kate on a tour of the College Gate split-level house, which included four bedrooms, three baths, a wooden deck that took up most of the backyard, and a room converted into a theater that seated twenty. “A lot of Lew’s clients are pretty labor-intensive,” Axenia said. “We entertain a great deal, cocktail parties, dinners.”
Kate managed to restrain a shudder. “Where is Lew?”
“In D.C., doing some lobbying for UCo.”
Axenia put the baby down for a nap and served Kate coffee and Oreos on the beveled-glass table in the kitchen. “You look good, Axenia,” Kate said.
Axenia, less defensive and more self-assured than Kate had ever seen her, inclined her head in acknowledgment. Her hair was styled in the latest do and her clothes were the latest in casual chic, no doubt fresh off the rack at Nordstrom, and this would be Nordstrom in Seattle, where Axenia would fly to do her shopping, probably half a dozen times a year. “You look well, too,” she said. “Have you been in town for long?”
“A few days. I’m working on a case.”
“Really? What kind?”
“A murder,” Kate said, “thirty-one years ago.”
Axenia raised an eyebrow. “Didn’t they catch him?”
“Her,” Kate said, “they caught her, and she’s in jail, but there seem to be some unanswered questions. I was wondering if you knew anybody in the Muravieff family. They’re sort of connected to this case.”
“Of course,” Axenia said, “Nadine and I are good friends.”
“Nadine.” Kate passed in review a mental flip chart of what she knew of the Muravieff family tree. “Would that be Celia’s daughter?”
“Yes.”
Celia was Eugene’s sister. Nadine was Eugene’s niece. “Could you ask Nadine to introduce me to her mother?”
Axenia didn’t ask why; she just reached for the phone and dialed a number from memory. The call took less than two minutes. She hung up and said to Kate, “Celia lives with Nadine. You can go over there right now.”
“Thanks, Axenia.”
Axenia inclined her head again. “No problem.”
“You’ve got a cute baby there,” Kate said on the doorstep.
“Thank you,” Axenia said, and closed the door.
Kate stared at it for a few moments.
Nope, nothing in the way of a reconciliation going on there anytime soon.
Eugene’s niece Nadine lived west of Axenia, in Roger’s Park. Nadine’s house wasn’t as large as Axenia’s and it looked a lot more user-friendly, but then Kate told herself not to be so judgmental. Axenia had been well on her way to being a drunk in the Park. In Anchorage, she was sober and a mother and one hell of a housekeeper. Kate told herself she really had to learn how to let go.
“Kate Shugak?”
Her reverie interrupted, she looked up to see a short, slight woman regarding her.
“Yes,” Kate said.
“Ekaterina’s granddaughter?”
Kate stifled a sigh and nodded, wondering where her own identity had gone.
The woman had a compact, neat-featured face, well-proportioned, a face whose chief characteristic was its calm, a face it was hard to imagine angry, which would make it all that more formidable when it was. Her eyes were dark and direct and her hair a styled gray cap. She wore dark blue slacks and a white long-sleeved button-down shirt, tucked under a slim brown leather belt that exactly matched her penny loafers.
In the Park, Kate would have addressed Celia as “Auntie,” an honorific demonstrating the respect due an elder from a younger person. The word did not rise to her lips this afternoon. Maybe it was the fact that Celia was wearing her shoes inside, not the general practice in Alaska, as it tracked in snow and mud. Whatever the reason, Kate found herself saying formally, “Thank you for speaking with me this afternoon, Ms. – ”
“It’s Herrick, and it’s Mrs.” She indicated a chair. Kate sat. Celia sat opposite her and folded her hands. A younger woman came bustling in with a tray with coffee and a plate of homemade cookies. At least it wasn’t Oreos again.
“My daughter, Nadine,” Celia said. “Kate Shugak.”
Nadine filled the cups and made as if to sit next to Celia. Some signal passed between them that Kate did not see. Nadine stood back up as if she’d been attached to a wire that Celia was pulling, and said brightly, “Those kids sound like they’re killing each other. I’d better check on them.” She bustled out again.
Celia poured coffee. “I was sorry to hear about your grandmother. She was a strong woman, a strong leader, and very wise.” Celia allowed herself a small smile. “It doesn’t always happen that the two are able to coexist in one personality.” Her diction was smooth and uninflected, with no trace of ancestral gutturals. Celia was old enough to have been sent away to school, to Mount Edgecumbe in Sitka or even as far away as Chemawa in Oregon, where in that day and time she would have been punished severely for speaking in her Native tongue.
Of course, the Muravieffs had been members of the first tribes to be impacted by the intrusion of Western civilization, as witness their Russian-derived last name. They’d had a couple of centuries to learn how to speak English. “Thank you,” Kate said, accepting the coffee. She sipped it, scalding her tongue. “Your own family has produced some fine leaders itself. Harold Muravieff was one of the founding members of the Alaska Native Brotherhood, was he not?” She, too, could be formal when there was need.
Celia inclined her head, accepting the implied tribute as her family’s due.