“I see,” Joe said. “Did you tell her it was important?”
The receptionist glared at Joe.
“Yes.”
“Did you tell her it was about her
She was suddenly flustered. As Joe had suspected, the receptionist had been there long enough to realize the special relationship Strickland had with her cocker spaniel.
“No. What about her dog?”
Joe shook his head. “I need to talk with Ms. Strickland privately, please.”
The receptionist huffed and turned on her heel and went back into Strickland’s office. Behind him, Joe heard a brief rush of employees turning off lights and closing office doors. It was five, and they streamed out of the building so quickly that the outside door never shut between them.
Melinda Strickland opened her door, clearly agitated. She stood to one side to let the receptionist back through so she could go home. Strickland’s hair was the coppery color it had been when Joe first met her three months before.
“What is this about Bette?”
Joe had forgotten the name of her cocker spaniel. He stood up.
“Do you have a minute?” he asked.
Strickland’s eyes flashed. She hated surprises, but she loved her dog. Joe knew that.
“Ms. Strickland . . . ?” the receptionist asked, poised behind her desk.
“Yes, go on home,” Strickland snapped at her employee. “I’ll lock things up in a minute.”
Joe pushed by Melinda Strickland in her doorway and walked into her office. The room was in a shambles. Papers, notebooks, and mail were piled on the chairs, on the desk, and in the corners. She had made quite a mess in a short period of time. He cleared a hardback chair of papers and sat down across from her desk to wait for her.
Peeved that he had entered her office uninvited, she strode around her desk and sat down facing him.
He coolly looked around the room. The only things of a personal nature on the side wall were a framed cover of
“Joe, I . . .”
“Your actions killed my daughter,” Joe said simply, letting the words drop like stones.
She recoiled as if stung.
“You and I both know what happened up there on the mountain,” he said, holding her eyes until she looked away. “Your agency exonerated you. But we’re talking about the real world now. I was there. You caused her death, and the death of three other people.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” she spat. “You are a sick man.” She looked everywhere in the room except at Joe.
“You didn’t even send my wife a note.”
“Leave my office this instant, Warden Pickett.”
Joe leaned forward and cleared a spot on her desk for the manila folder he had brought with him. He placed it there but didn’t open it.
“There’s no way you can bring April back,” Joe said. “But there are a couple of things you can do to at least partially absolve your guilt.”
Her hands thumped on the desktop. “I’m guilty of nothing!”
“Of course, it’s not even close to enough . . . ,” Joe continued, opening the folder as if Strickland hadn’t spoken, “ . . . but it’s something. It will make my wife feel better. And it will make me feel better. It might even make
“Get out of my office!” Strickland screeched, her face contorted with rage. It was clear to Joe she wasn’t used to people ignoring her orders.
Joe went on, directing his attention again to the paper he was reading. “The first document here is a press release creating the April Keeley Foundation for Children,” he said. He glanced up and saw that she was listening, although her face was white and tense. “The initial twenty-five thousand dollars for the Foundation is to be donated by you from the trust fund your father set up for you. If you can give more than that, it would be even better.”
He searched the document so he could quote directly from it. “The purpose of the Foundation is to ‘advocate for better protection and legislation for children in foster care.’ You’ll be a hero again. Maybe there will be a story in a magazine about you not only saving a forest but also protecting foster children.”
“What is this?” she said. “Where did you get that?”
“I wrote it up last night,” he said, shrugging. “Press releases are not my specialty, but I think it’s okay.”
“What am I supposed to do with it?”
“Release it under your signature. Then call one of your press conferences and announce it.” An edge of sarcasm had crept into his voice, and a slight smile tugged at his mouth.
Strickland was clearly aghast. Joe hadn’t seen her face so contorted before.