“I got a little shock when I plugged in the vacuum cleaner,” I said.
“A little shock?” exclaimed Susan. I hadn’t seen her standing behind Detective Gordon. “There were sparks and a big bang, and she went flying.”
“Would you take a look at her, please?” Detective Gordon asked, getting to his feet.
“She’s a vet,” Susan said. She gave Roma an apologetic look. “No offense.”
Roma smiled. “None taken. You’re right. But I do have first-aid training.” She knelt beside me.
“Roma, I’m all right, really,” I said.
She laid a hand on my shoulder. “Kathleen,” she said, “stop talking just for a moment, please.” She began feeling my scalp, probing gently under my hair for bumps. “Did you hit your head?”
“No,” I said. I shifted position and winced. “I did bang my hip.”
She fished in her pocket, pulled out a set of keys and held them up to Susan. “My car is in the lot—it’s the dark blue four-by-four. There’s a black bag behind the driver’s seat. Would you get it for me, please?”
“Sure,” Susan said, taking the keys.
Roma turned back to me, reached for my arm and pressed two fingers to my wrist while she checked her watch. After that she sat back on her heels. “What happened?” she asked.
“I was plugging in the vacuum cleaner. There was a loud snap, sparks and I went over backward.”
She glanced up at Detective Gordon, who nodded his agreement. “Which hand?” Roma asked.
“Excuse me?” I said.
“Which hand was holding the plug?”
“Oh. This one.” I held up my right hand.
Susan came back then with Roma’s bag and set it beside us. “Thank you,” Roma said. She opened the bag and pulled out a stethoscope. As she put the round metal end on my chest I hoped the last place it had been wasn’t a horse’s rear.
“Take a deep breath and bark,” Roma said. Vet humor, I figured.
She listened in several places, then pulled the ends of the stethoscope out of her ears. “Let’s try standing up,” she said.
Detective Gordon offered his hand. I took it and got to my feet. My arm still felt numb, but the high-pitched whine in my ear was almost gone. “See?” I said, holding out both hands. “I’m all right.” I turned to Roma. “Thank you.”
She bent to stuff the stethoscope in her bag. “You’re welcome. But you should see a doctor—one who specializes in people, not pets and farm animals.”
I thought about spending the rest of the morning sitting at the clinic, waiting to be seen by a doctor who wouldn’t do anything more than Roma had done. “I promise if I feel sick or off in any way, I’ll go,” I said. Susan, standing with her arms crossed, shook her head.
“Kathleen, do you know why I became a vet?” Roma asked.
“No.”
“Because my patients never second-guess me.” She smiled to soften the criticism. Then the smile faded. “If you feel funny at all, go to the hospital. Don’t wait around.”
“I will,” I said.
Roma swung the strap of her bag over her shoulder. She nodded at Susan and Detective Gordon. “I’ll see you tonight,” she said to me, and headed back to the checkout desk.
“You sure you’re okay?” Susan asked. “You hit the floor pretty hard.”
“I am, really,” I said, rubbing my hip. “Just a bit sore.”
“Okay. I’m going back to shelving. If you need anything, yell.” She grinned. “Maybe not as loudly as last time, though.” She disappeared around the corner.
I turned to Detective Gordon. “I won’t ask you if you’re really okay,” he said.
“Thank you.” I rubbed my arm. It still had a faint pins-and-needles feeling.
He walked over to the window to take a closer look at the outlet. There was soot on the wall plate and an ashy black scorch mark arced a good six inches above it on the wall.
“I don’t think that’s going to work anymore,” he said, pointing to the electrical cord on the vacuum. The plastic plug had melted into a misshapen blob.
“I think we have a broom somewhere,” I said. Then I remembered that the somewhere was the half-completed meeting room.
Detective Gordon was crouched down, studying the scorched outlet. He looked up at the ceiling. “I’m surprised you didn’t blow a fuse,” he said. “Still, I don’t think it’s a good idea to plug anything in here until it’s checked out by an electrician.”
I nodded. “You’re right.”
“Do you have any masking tape? We should mark this off so no one else uses it, either.”
“I think there’s a roll at the circulation desk. Let me check.”
I walked around to the desk. Mary was just hanging up the phone. “Kathleen, are you all right?” she asked.
“I’m fine, Mary,” I said, forcing a smile. “It was just a little shock.” I didn’t handle it well when people fussed over me. I was used to looking after other people, not the other way around. “Do we have any masking tape?” I asked.
“Uh-huh. Right here.” She pulled open the drawer below her computer monitor and handed the tape to me with a smile. She smelled like cinnamon and Ivory soap and looked just like someone’s sweet grandma—which she was. She was also state champion for her age and weight class in kickboxing.
“Mary, did Mr. Easton come back to the library Tuesday night after I walked him out?”
“No. Not while I was here.”
“Okay, thanks.”
I took the tape back to Detective Gordon. He crossed two pieces over the outlet in a large X. Then pulled a pen out of his jacket pocket and wrote DANGEROUS! DO NOT USE! on a third piece and stuck that above the X. “That should do it,” he said, standing up and brushing off his hands.
“Thank you.” He must have come to the library for a reason, I realized then. What was it?
“Was there something you wanted, Detective?” I asked. “You didn’t just stop by to pick me up off the floor and safety-proof the building.”
“No, I didn’t.” His smile disappeared. “Ms. Paulson, you said Mr. Easton was looking for an Internet connection when he came in Tuesday evening.”
“That’s right.” Suddenly I felt cold. I folded my arms over my chest.
“So you would have been standing . . . here?” He held out his hands, palms up.
“Yes.”
“Did Mr. Easton go anywhere else in the library?”
I shook my head. “Other than out the door, no.”
He looked me straight in the eye and I met his gaze head-on. I didn’t know where the conversation was going, but I didn’t have anything to hide.
“Did Mr. Easton come back to the library?”
“No. He didn’t come back while I was here. Susan and Mary covered the desk after that and they didn’t see him.”
He stared at me, hands jammed in his pockets, his face unreadable. If the guy who’d helped me off the floor was Nice Cop, then this had to be Mean Cop.
“Ms. Paulson,” he said, finally. “Didn’t your mother ever tell you what happens to people who lie?”
“Actually, my mother said, ‘Always tell the truth, because it’s much easier to remember,’” I said.
Detective Gordon said nothing.
“You think he came back?”
A tiny muscle twitched in his cheek.
“No,” I said slowly. “You’re certain he came back. That’s why you won’t let it go.” I looked across the library. One of the heavy sheets of plastic had been taken down. “You picked something up off the floor after we saw those spots of blood. What was it?”
He cleared his throat. “Part of a cuff link.”
“That doesn’t make any sense.” I played with my watch. “Easton didn’t come back while I was here. Both Mary and Susan said they didn’t see him, either. And they don’t have any reason to lie.”
“Do you?” the detective asked.
I closed my eyes for a moment and took a couple of deep breaths. “No,” I said.