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I smiled and blinked away the start of a tear. “Yes. Yes, of course.” I cleared my throat. “Is he still at the same desk?”

“Yes, last one on the right.”

We walked to it and I glanced at each desk. Case files, photographs, paper, mugs half filled with morning tea. Once the call came in that Radley had been found everyone left in a hurry.

Oswall’s desk looked different than the rest. It was very clean, devoid of any clutter. Several dip pens in a small cup, a fat little ink bottle, several reference books lined up neat on one corner, and a small hunched rock light.  A wide ink blotter took up most of the desk space and tucked within its edge folder were two pieces of paper.

I looked around in mild surprise. “Where are his case files? They should be here.” Each constable had a stack of active case files on their desk. Oswall, as the Constabulary’s only active detective, was assigned the high-ticket items; high profile robberies and murders.

Fairfax thought a moment and said, “The Chief must have been looking at them. I’ll see.” He vanished into the Chief’s office.

I picked up one of the papers stuck in the blotter. I recognized Oswall’s loopy scrawl across one side of it. ‘Hubertus – useless’. The other side was a large question mark.

The name Hubertus derived from the north-eastern region but was too common to pin down to one individual.

I took the other piece of paper and discovered it to be a business card. Rousset’s Tomes & Books of Rarity, Misael Rousset Owner & Proprietor. The address was on a street off Stage Court, near the center of town. On the back of the card in Oswall’s writing was a name, underlined: Elicia Ipthorn.

Fairfax emerged from the Chief’s office with a stack of folders. “Here they are,” he said as he set them down on the desk.

I counted them. Fourteen. “This was his active case load?” I asked, a little perplexed. That was an absurd amount to be given to a single detective. During my tenure there would be half as much, at most.

Fairfax shrugged. “Lots of crime recently, and not enough manpower.”

I sighed and regarded the pile. “Let’s have a quick check through these and see what stands out.” We split them between us, flipping through each. We stood while reading. Neither one of us wanted to sit in Oswall’s chair. It didn’t feel proper.

As we read, constables trickled into the room. All either offered a warm greeting or gave a polite nod. Aware of our assignment they left us to our task.

After three quarters of an hour we finished. Oswall’s case load composed of four murder cases, six armed robberies and four burglaries of note. Nothing jumped out to either of us as something that would result in Oswall being turned to stone.

“Well,” Fairfax said, looking a tad overwhelmed. “This is going to take considerable time.”

“That is the conundrum, isn’t it?” I said. “At first glance, there is nothing here that tells us that investigating any of these cases got him killed. It could be someone from an older case, from years ago. Or it might be someone who isn’t even related to any case, whatsoever. An old enemy from his past, perhaps?”

I sighed and Fairfax chewed at his bottom lip in thought.

On a hunch I glanced inside my satchel. The knitting bag’s brass clasp gleamed at me.

“I think we may get a lead,” I said.

“We might?” Fairfax asked.

I grabbed the folders and fanned them across the tiled floor in two rows. Then I placed the satchel on Oswall’s chair and opened it wide enough to expose the knitting bag.

Fairfax took a step back.

I chuckled. “You’ve seen me do this many times before, Fairfax. No need to worry.”

“Yes, well, it’s something that one never quite gets used to, eh?”

“True”, I said, and touched the clasp with a finger.

The knitting bag shook and yawned open. After a few moments the head of a cat emerged. It was silver this time, the same color as the coins in my purse. With multicolored eyes, it regarded me.

I bent over and pointed at the files on the floor. “Which folder will lead to Oswall’s killer.”

The cat did not move nor did it blink. It continued to stare at me with multicolored eyes.

After waiting a few moments I tried again. Sometimes I needed to be more specific.

“Is there a case here that may lead to Detective Radley Oswall’s attacker?”

To my relief the silver cat blinked and turned to look at the folders. Then it leapt out of the bag and gracefully landed on the floor. Again, this cat was the same breed as the others, fluffy with a wide tail.

It padded straight to one of the folders, turned around to face me, and sat on it.

“It appears we have a lead after all,” Fairfax said with a slight smile.

“Indeed,” I said.

The silver cat stood and walked back to the chair. It jumped into the knitting bag and vanished. The clasp snapped shut and became wooden once more.

I picked the folder up, and with Fairfax looking over my shoulder, read it.

The date on at the top of the first page showed the case was initiated on July fourteenth, three days prior.

It was a burglary at the High Garden Museum. The Head Curator, Aubert Othmar, reported several items missing from their vault, about twenty in all. Each one had an odd sounding name: Geggor’s Tacticar, The Mullock, Brambles of Obsidian, etc.

The next sheet contained Oswall’s notes of the crime scene, along with a black-and-white photograph of an open vault. The vault was still full of items, most wrapped and tagged. The stolen objects had been stored in a small locked trunk within, and the trunk was missing. Nothing else was taken from the museum.

Following procedure Oswall examined every door, window and obvious entryway but found nothing amiss.

He then took the next step and interviewed the museum staff. There were eight individuals listed with scribbles by each name. No, no, no, maybe, nervous, pretty. By the curator’s name, he had written, snob.

But the last name caught my attention: Winimar Hubertus. But Oswall had only written ‘Night Caretaker’ beside it.

“Well, now. We may have something,” I said to Fairfax. I showed him the piece of paper from the blotter with the name Hubertus on it.

“A useless night caretaker, eh?” Fairfax said, ruminating.

“Is there any other kind?” I said.

The folder contained nothing else of note except empty forms which were to be filled in as the case progressed.

“Not much here,” I said. “No details about the time of the burglary or the circumstances around it. He must not have gotten around to adding them yet.”

“Whatever progress he made is in that notebook in his pocket.”

“So,” I said. “We need to retrace his movements and see what can be found. At least now we know where to start.”

“And that is?”

I put the business card and piece of paper into the purse within my satchel, then held up the case file.

“Let’s take a trip to the museum.”

CHAPTER FIVE

The High Garden Museum was on a grassy plot of land at the west side of town. A huge building, it was several stories tall and made of flat gray brick rock. It had been a supply warehouse during the last great war, but now served a much more useful purpose.

Several horse drawn carriages and auto buggies were waiting at its front entrance, and that is where Fairfax parked.

I eyed the building, then withdrew a small pistol from my satchel and checked it was loaded.

Fairfax arched a brow. “Expecting trouble already?”

I gave Fairfax a point for not asking if I always carried it around. With such a long and successful career of throwing criminals in jail, the odds only increased that, even after many years, one of them may seek revenge.