The footnote to this paragraph cited the letters of one Josiah Rhodes, who was evidently the Longs’ banker. The author of the dissertation went on to say that word reached the town in late September of 1863 that the major had succumbed to a fever, and shortly after, his father died as well. Mrs. Long was left with her young son and a few servants at Bellefontaine.
I had seen photographs of the carnage wrought by the Civil War and the grievous wounds borne by the soldiers who survived. I could understand that a proud man might not care to be seen and pitied by anyone other than his family. The Battle of Gettysburg had the highest casualties of any battle during the war, with more than twenty thousand of them from Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia. Meade’s Army of the Potomac sustained a similar number.
I put the book aside, my question about the death of Major Andrew Long answered. Time now to focus again on Rachel’s diaries. Ordinarily I would have started at the beginning, but because of the questions I had regarding the diary I thought was fake, I started with the volume with the missing pages. There might be clues in other parts of the diary that could be helpful.
For the next forty-five minutes I read steadily, and I paused every few minutes to make sure Diesel remained on the windowsill. I also cast a few glances at the phone, wishing Stewart would call, but I had no idea how long it would take him to examine the paper and ink. I hoped he had been able to find the equipment he needed and hadn’t had to wait for it to become free.
The office phone rang while I was standing and stretching in front of the desk. I snatched up the receiver.
“Charlie, I’ve got an answer for you,” Stewart said without preamble. “Based on my analysis, I’d say this one volume is definitely a fake. The inks don’t match, though the paper does.”
THIRTY-TWO
Stewart continued before I could respond. “I used Raman spectroscopy, which basically gives a fingerprint of the ink. The paper, too. It’s a fast test and noninvasive as well.”
“Noninvasive is good,” I said.
“Now, about the ink,” Stewart said. “I did a bit of research on nineteenth-century inks before I did the tests. You probably know about iron gall ink already, so I won’t bore you with the details. I found spectra online for iron gall ink. There has been a fair amount of research on it related to historical documents. For one thing, it’s corrosive over time, and it leaves telltale evidence of that.
“When I looked at the spectra for the ink in the two volumes, I could see that the spectra were similar in a couple of respects. The forger obviously tried to duplicate the iron gall ink but the formula wasn’t the same. The other giveaway is that the ink hasn’t caused corrosion in the forged diary.”
My head buzzed a bit with the details, but the result was clear. The fifth volume of the diary was a forgery, and I was certain I knew the identity of the forger: Lucinda Beckwith Long.
“Thanks, Stewart,” I said. “I’m going to call Kanesha right away and tell her about this. I need to get the diaries back, though. Shall Diesel and I walk over and retrieve them?”
“No, I’ll bring them back to you,” Stewart said. “I’ll be heading home anyway. Got a hot date tonight to get ready for, and you know it takes me simply ages to look my best.”
I had to laugh because I couldn’t remember ever seeing Stewart look less than his best. “I appreciate it.”
Before I called Kanesha I wanted to organize my thoughts. One in particular intruded, and I was irritated by it. The mayor obviously thought I wasn’t experienced enough, or smart enough, to catch on to the forgery. Maybe she thought I would believe the diary was real simply because she said it was. The Longs, I guessed, were so accustomed to being respected and obeyed, she thought I would just toe the party line, as it were.
I felt my temper rising, and I had to keep it under control. I would have to guard my tongue if I encountered Mrs. Long anytime soon. I couldn’t afford to let her know I knew the one volume was forged.
Kanesha answered her cell phone almost immediately.
“I’ve got big news for you,” I said. “One of the diaries is forged. I think you should send it off for a complete forensic examination, because you’re going to need expert proof.”
Kanesha didn’t waste time with questions. “I’ll be there in about fifteen minutes. Keep those diaries locked away until I get there.”
I didn’t have time to tell her that I didn’t have the forged one, but I figured Stewart would have it back in my office before Kanesha arrived.
Sure enough, Stewart turned up ten minutes later with the box. I thanked him again, and he grinned. “Glad to do it. Made for a nice little puzzle this afternoon. I wish I could hang around but I have a lot to do today.” He ran his fingers through his thick, dark blond hair. “For one thing, I have to get this shaggy mop tended to. I’m starting to look like a Yeti.”
His hair was a bit longer than I was used to seeing, but it wasn’t anywhere near long enough to qualify as a mop of any kind.
“Have fun tonight,” I said.
Stewart bade Diesel and me good-bye and vanished through the door.
A few minutes later Kanesha arrived and strode into the office. She greeted me and stood in front of my desk. “Tell me about this forgery.”
“Please, have a seat,” I said. “My neck will cramp if I have to sit and look up at you like this.”
Kanesha sat and leaned forward in the chair. Her laser stare focused on me, and I knew I’d better start talking. “There were things in this one volume—the one the mayor brought after the others were stolen—that weren’t adding up. I talked to Jasper Singletary this morning, and he says the family has never heard anything about his great-great-grandmother Celeste being a freed slave. He wasn’t particularly upset about it, just puzzled.”
Kanesha nodded. “Go on.”
Diesel had climbed out of the window to greet her, and she gave him a few rubs on the head while she listened to my explanation. When he’d had enough attention, the cat went in search of his water and food bowls, along with a litter box, that I had stowed in a corner of the room.
I explained the duplication in time coverage between the forged volume and one of the original four. “I’m not sure what the forger was thinking. It would have been smarter to keep back the volume from the same time period and substitute the forged one for it. I might have been slightly less suspicious if she had done that.”
“She?” Kanesha asked. “Do you think the mayor is responsible for the forgery?”
“I think it’s the most likely answer,” I said. “And if she didn’t do it, then someone in the family or closely connected to the family did it on her orders.”
“The reason for the forgery?” Kanesha said.
“To embarrass Jasper Singletary and help Beck Long win the election.”
Kanesha shook her head. “Strange way of going about it, if you ask me. Politics makes people crazy sometimes, although I don’t know why the Longs are so afraid of Jasper Singletary. Beck Long was ahead by a mile in the polls until recently, and no one could have produced that forgery in a few days. It would have taken several weeks, don’t you think?”
Point to Kanesha. I hadn’t considered that, but she was right. “Yes, it would have taken more than a few days. The planning had to take some time as well before anyone sat down and started to write.”
Diesel reappeared, his errands done, and chirped at me before he climbed into the window.
“What about the handwriting?” Kanesha asked, seemingly oblivious now to the cat. “Did it look like the same person’s writing to you?”