narrow alleyways.
The brick and concrete block building on Leonard Street was a remodeled school, he told me, and once we were inside, he took me into a small room that could have been the school nurse’s office. A uniformed officer quickly and efficiently rolled my fingertips, one at a time, from ink pad to a card that could be scanned by the computer.
I cleaned my hands with a packaged towelette, then followed Underwood as he stopped by the squad room to pick up a legal pad and a bulky manila envelope from a desk that was even messier than his car.
A few steps farther down the hall was a tiny interview room no bigger than six foot square and bare of all furnishings save two straight-backed chairs that faced each other across a small metal table.
Underwood rummaged in his manila envelope and pulled out a clear plastic bag with a brown plastic prescription bottle inside.
“This yours?”
The label was still intact. If I could clearly read my name and my doctor’s, surely he could as well.
“Do we really have to play games, Detective Underwood?” I asked. “Of course it’s mine. Penicillin. And it’s hours past my time for another dose.”
I reached for the bag, but Underwood continued to hold it.
“How many tablets are supposed to be here?”
“Six? Or is it four?”
“That’s what I’m asking you, ma’am.”
His tone wasn’t threatening, just mildly inquisitive, and I knew he was just doing his job, but lack of food and sleep was starting to make me cranky. Nevertheless I tried to hold on to my temper as I worked it out on my fingers.
“I started with thirty. Three tablets a day for ten days… breakfast, mid-afternoon and bedtime… But I didn’t take last night’s and I still have today’s to go… Four?”
He handed me the baggie. “Shake it.”
Empty.
The bottom fell out of my stomach.
“That’s what put Chan Nolan into anaphylactic shock? My penicillin?”
“According to his allergist, even one tablet would be dangerous for him. Didn’t you see his Medic Alert medallion when you were dancing with him last night?”
“I remember two gold chains, but if there was a medallion, it must have been tucked inside his shirt. I certainly didn’t read it.”
“No?” He twisted one end of his thick brown mustache into a sharp point and regarded me with those warm brown eyes.
“And I certainly wasn’t his only dancing partner.”
“So far though, you’re the only one with missing penicillin tablets,” he pointed out.
“The only one you know about,” I snapped.
“
“
“Half the medicine cabinets in America must be stocked with half-empty bottles of penicillin,” I said as calmly as I could. “Besides, from early in the evening, I didn’t even have mine.”
I described the mix-up with tote bags and he wanted to know who’d been where from the minute I set my tote under the table. He wrote down all the names, beginning with Savannah, continuing through Dixie Babcock, Drew Patterson and her father Jay, Kay Adams and her colleague Poppy Jackson, Heather McKenzie, Mai and Jeff Stanberry, and, even though I didn’t know her, that Lavelle Trocchi who was supposed to have given Chan the Hickory-Dock catalog last month and who, according to Dixie, had been next to the table.
He was particularly interested in the plate of food Drew had fixed for Chan and which Dixie had actually handed to him, “although Dr. Harrison says that with that much penicillin, Nolan would have started to react immediately. You sure you didn’t see him again after you left that ballroom?”
As he wrote down my denial, the officer who’d taken my fingerprints tapped on the door, stuck his head in and said, “Two hits on the baggie, Dave.”
“What baggie?” I asked apprehensively.
“The tablets were crushed and stuck into some brownies. We found a baggie in his jacket pocket with brownie crumbs and some of the penicillin residue. Your prints are on the baggie.”
“That’s impossible!” I snapped. And then I remembered the zip-lock bag that Savannah had dropped.
My sudden recollection and hasty account of picking up the bag sounded limp and guilty even to my ears. With as much dignity as I could muster, I said, “Dwight Bryant’s the deputy sheriff over in Colleton County and he’s known me since I was born. He’ll tell you I don’t make a habit of going around killing perfect strangers.”
(Okay, so maybe that was a slight fudging of the facts, but
“I’ll give you his phone number.”