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“I only need one,” I said.

Anderson nodded.

“I got to go wash my hands, Sunny. You better not even think of taking any of those pictures while I’m gone. ‘Cause I got them counted.”

“Okay,” I said.

Anderson got up and walked out of his cubicle. I looked at the stack of photographs. They weren’t Polaroids. They were good-quality color photographs. I counted them. There were forty-two. I selected one that showed Betty Patton clearly and full face in a completely compromising pose. I put that picture in my purse and put the other forty-one back in the envelope, and crossed my legs and folded my hands in my lap. In a couple of minutes Anderson came back. He walked to his desk, picked up the envelope and counted the pictures.

“Forty-one,” he said.

I nodded.

“Does anything about those pictures bother you?” I said.

Anderson grinned at me.

“Aside from that,” I said.

“Like who took them?” Anderson said.

“Yes. If they were taking pictures of themselves wouldn’t they set the camera up on a tripod and use some sort of timer or remote?”

“That’s what people usually do.”

“These pictures are taken from different angles at different distances,” I said. “And some of them seem to have been taken seconds apart from different angles and distances.”

“So maybe there’s a third party,” Anderson said.

We looked at each other. Neither of us seemed pleased with the image of a third party with a camera lurking just outside of every picture.

“I guess there would have to be,” I said.

“You suppose Humphries kept that private mailbox for anything else?” Anderson said.

“Well, he wouldn’t want his wife to see these pictures,” I said. “Did he get other mail there?”

“No.”

“How about the handwriting on the envelope?”

“Wife says it’s his. Our guy says it matches other samples of his handwriting.”

“So he rented the box to hide these pictures,” I said.

“Looks like.”

“If it were just his wife why wouldn’t he just hide them in his office? They were separated. She says that she never went there.”

“Un huh.”

“If the woman in the pictures had money these would be a good basis for blackmail.”

“Your client got money?” Anderson said.

“On the other hand, the picture taker could use them for the same purpose.”

“One wouldn’t preclude the other,” Anderson said.

“‘Preclude,”’ I said. “Wow.”

“Impressive, huh?”

“And accurate,” I said. “One would not preclude the other.”

“Still be nice to know who the photographer was.”

“It couldn’t hurt,” I said.

“Too bad, I only got forty-one of those pictures,” Anderson said. “‘Cause if the broad in the pictures turned out, just by a crazy chance, to be your client, and you had one of the pictures you might be able to use it for leverage.”

I didn’t say anything.

“‘Course you gotta wonder,” Anderson said, “would a woman who’d pose for pictures like this care about being blackmailed?”

“Maybe her husband would.”

“Or maybe it’s just vanity,” Anderson said. “Maybe she told everyone she was a real blond.”

Chapter 45

I was going to find something that Millicent liked to do if I had to invent a new pastime. Which was why we were sitting on two Alden fiberglass rowing shells, side by side on the river, twenty yards from shore, with a cold wind blowing at us.

“Have you ever rowed a boat?” I said.

“No.”

Millicent was trying so desperately to balance that she could barely speak.

“Good,” I said. “This is nothing like that, and if you had you’d just have to unlearn it.”

Millicent said “yes” as minimally as possible. She looked entirely miserable in her yellow life vest.

“Okay, first, just let the oars rest on the water... That’s right... Now rock the boat. Go ahead. See how long the oars are? You can’t tip over with the oars spread like that.”

Millicent shifted her weight a millimeter. The shell didn’t tip.

“Good, now we’ll just sit here a bit until you get used to it. We have as much time as we need. There’s no reason to hurry.”

We sat. It was early October and everything along the river near the boat club was still green. Cars moved steadily along the parkways on both sides of the river. People ran along the sidewalks next to the river, running the loop around the upper Charles where it bent toward Watertown, using the Larz Anderson Bridge to cross the river in one direction and the Eliot Bridge to cross in the other. We stayed in close to shore, out of the current, just far enough from land to keep the oars from hitting.

“Okay,” I said, “see, you’re not going to tip over.”

“Yet,” Millicent said between her teeth.

“Now, when you row, you want the blades to dip in, but not too deep, and of course to come out of the water entirely, but not too high. Watch me.”

I rowed across the river and back staying where she could see me without turning. I remembered when I had first learned to row these boats. It was like sitting on a needle. I knew she wouldn’t turn.

“Okay, now look at my hands, see how they are? It’s all in the way you roll your wrist. See? Again. See?”

Millicent nodded very carefully, her head barely moving.

“Now you do it,” I said.

“Where shall I row?”

“Just roll your wrists first, see how the blades turn?”

She tried it, rolling her wrists maybe a half an inch.

“Let’s practice rolling the wrists so that the oar blades are vertical, then horizontal, vertical, horizontal, that’s right. If you feel like you’re losing your balance just let the oars drop onto the water, there, yes, like that.”

We practiced that for a while. I wasn’t having a nice time. I had housebroken Rosie faster than I was teaching Millicent to row. But it was the first thing she’d shown any interest in. She’d seen the college teams rowing on the river and said that it looked like it might be nice. I had pounced on it like an ocelot. I used to row, I said, in college. She said, Really? I said, Yes. She said, Could you teach me. And here we were.

“It’s the legs,” I said, “that do the real work in rowing. You get the push off the big quadriceps. It’s why the seat is like that. See, you lay out over the oars like this and then pull them toward you while you drive with your legs.”

I demonstrated and my rental shell shot halfway across the river. I returned to her, backstroking, stern first.

“You can try that now. Look around and make sure it’s clear because the first stroke will send you a pretty good distance.”

She did as I told her and caught a crab with her right oar and almost fell out of the boat.

“Oars in the water,” I said. “Oars in the water.”

She did what I told her. The boat steadied. I looked at her. Her face was gray with fear and concentration.

“Everybody almost falls in,” I said. “Try it again. Remember about rolling the wrists.”

The gun at the small of my back was not appropriate to single-shell rowing, and I felt like we were two ducks sitting out there on the river in plain view. But I was goddamned if I was going to let Cathal Kragan bury us alive. And I was pretty sure he wouldn’t be looking for us out on the river.

“Okay,” I said, “I’ll be right beside you, go ahead, don’t press, let the oars into the water pull, extend your legs, good, roll the wrists, good.”

We slid out across the dark water.