taught me that the best way to elicit help and information from an interview subject is to be as open and frank as possible. Candor and cooperation beget the same.
I hedge. “Can I explain later?”
He considers this in silence, then says: “No deal. I need some more information now. I’m guessing we’re not talking about some more rogue cops bent on burning down all the toilets in Northern California?”
I force a laugh. “Something more cerebral.” I decide to concede the information, or some of it.
I explain that Adrianna Pederson contacted me to give me a story tip but has since gone underground. I explain that the story might be very interesting and even involve powerful people in the scientific community doing something they shouldn’t; what that might be, I have no idea but my instincts tell me it’s absolutely worth pursuing.
“Where does your grandmother fit in?” he asks.
I hadn’t realized I’d mentioned her. But when he asks, I say aloud the revelation I’ve been brewing.
“As odd as this sounds, I think Grandma knows something about the story, a secret, maybe,” I say. “One that she shouldn’t.”
“Ha,” he says.
“What?”
“That’s the kind of wide-eyed conspiracy theorizing I like to see in my bloggers.”
He asks me to spell Adrianna’s name, and I take a stab at it.
“I’ll look into this. I’ll call you tomorrow to find a time to get together,” he says.
I feel my impatience rising. It’s the Internet era; people never get together in person.
“Fine,” I say. I need his help.
We hang up.
I look at Grandma. She’s sound asleep.
Five minutes later, I pass Betty Lou on the street. She stands three blocks from Magnolia Manor wearing a wool hat and long coat. She holds a shopping bag. The reason I pass her without stopping is because I want to make sure she’s alone, and that I’m not being followed. But I’m not quite sure whether I’ve accomplished either of these goals as I pull around the block a second time and park in front of her.
I roll down the window. Betty Lou’s gaze goes right to Grandma, who is in deep slumber. Then Betty Lou looks at me, hard, like a schoolmarm at a first-grader playing bongos in the middle of naptime. She’s wearing a necklace with a turquoise cat pendant dangling from it.
“Why did you just drive past me? It’s cold out here.”
“You want to get in?”
“I want to know why you’re pretending to be Sean Connery.”
“Get in please.”
She gets into the back, pushing aside my backpack and handing me a paper shopping bag.
“Sean Connery drove an Aston Martin and it didn’t smell like a dorm room,” she says.
“At least the Bond girls are still beautiful,” I say.
“Young people are so patronizing,” she says, for the second time today. Her tone turns serious. “What’s going on, Nathaniel Bond?”
I navigate a vague rhetorical path. I tell her that Grandma had been tense lately and so I decided to give her a little change of scenery for a few days and that I’ve taken her to a neurologist who also prescribes a break. I explain that Vince has taken exception to this notion and would prefer that I not take Grandma Lane away, however temporarily.
“Vince is an officious a-hole,” Betty Lou says. “But he really cares about the residents, and he’s right that she needs to be in a comfortable setting.”
She looks tenderly at Lane. “It came on fast,” she says.
Our mood feels heavy and quiet, darkening.
“Betty Lou, has Lane said anything unusual to you lately?”
“Like what?”
“Has she mentioned a man in blue, or someone named Adrianna?”
“Not to me. But you should ask Harry.”
“Why’s that?”
“I thought journalists were supposed to be observant. Can’t you see they’re good friends?”
I think about this in silence for a moment.
“Older people say strange things when they get forgetful,” she says, gently. “Like ice cream man or blueberry man, or whatever.”
“She said ‘man in blue’ to me. Does Grandma go to the dentist a lot?”
“The dentist? I don’t think so.”
I gamble.
“Do you think you could find out for me?”
She crinkles her brow, uncertain what I mean.
I explain that Grandma’s neurologist said her condition might be exaggerated because she experienced some trauma.
“Separately, Grandma has expressed some fear about going to the dentist.”
“So you think the dentist made her act strange?” she asks, incredulous.
“I’m always a little crazy after I go to the dentist.”
She laughs. “How can I help?”
“I’m wondering if you could ask one of the nurses to give you Grandma’s care file.”
“You know they’d never do that.”
“I know.”
“Nathaniel, you’re scaring me a little.”
“Sorry, Betty Lou, I don’t mean to.”
To break the mild tension, I look in the shopping bag that she’s brought. Inside it are two meticulously folded blouses, two pairs of pants, a skirt and some undergarments. There is also a toothbrush and sundry bathroom supplies.
“I brought your Grandmother’s favorite brush. She loves to brush her hair, and to have it brushed.”
“I’m on it,” I say. I feel a wave of emotion, and I choke it back.
“Nathaniel, I think you should bring Grandma back where she belongs. And, if I may say so, I think you should get some rest. You’re behaving strangely.”
“I’ll have her home soon,” I respond. “Can you look into the care file?”
She drops her gaze from mine.
“I’ll ask about it.”
“Thanks.”
“Might be easy to get today,” she says. “The place is so chaotic with the flood.”
“Flood?”
“The sprinklers went off in the recreation room. Everything got soaked. But they got most of the people out before we all got wet. Still, everyone is in a dither because all the computers are down.”
“Sprinklers? Was there a fire?”
“I don’t think so. But when Vince came back, he was royally pissed. He hates any inconvenience he doesn’t cause himself.”
“Got back? Where was he?”
She shrugs.
Wasn’t Vince also missing from Magnolia Manor the night we were nearly shot?
“I can’t figure out what that all adds up to,” I say, thinking aloud.
“You’re mumbling,” says Betty Lou.
“I should take you home.”
I drive two blocks to the corner of Magnolia Manor. I give her my card with my cell phone number on it and ask her to call if she sees anything odd, or gets Grandma’s care file. She gives slumbering Lane a gentle pat on the