knew.'

'This was in Chicago?'

'Yeah,' said Timmy. 'He told me that when my mother died they had special doctors look at her, and that she had never been to the hospital to have a baby. He said he got to look at a copy of the birth certificate they had at my school, and it wasn’t real. He said I wasn’t adopted. They just drew a picture of a birth certificate and said it was mine. He said that the reason they did that was because they loved me very much and had always wanted a little boy.'

Judge Kramer stopped the tape and backed it up to listen to the last exchange again. It was a hell of a way to explain a kidnapping. In spite of everything, he had to admire Dennis Morgan. After what he had seen, this little boy was going to be an annuity for the psychiatrists for the next fifty years. There was no reason to make it worse.

The tape kept running. 'Then he told you about your other parents?'

'Yes. Mr. and Mrs. Phillips. They died when I was one.'

'And your grandma?'

'I knew about her already, but I didn’t know she had died like all my parents. She had been dead for three years.'

'Did Mr. Morgan tell you that she had left you some money?'

'Yeah. He said that when Mr. and Mrs. Phillips died she put all the family money in a big pot and said it could only go to me. And when I was gone she hired a company to take care of the money and keep looking for me forever.'

'Did she say what they were called?'

'Trusty.'

Judge Kramer prayed that Ambrose wasn’t about to drag an eight-year-old on a field trip through a morass of legal terminology. What could the child possibly know about trustees and executors?

'What happened last week to change that? Did he tell you?'

'He said that the Trusty had gotten tired of looking and waiting, and they were going to say I wasn’t alive anymore. So he called Jane again.'

'I’m very curious about this Jane. I understand about Mona. She was your nanny, and she loved you. The lawyer, Mr. Morgan, was a very close friend of Mona’s, right?'

'Yeah. They were going to get married when the people came and got my parents. Then they couldn’t because we’d get caught. That was why he looked so hard to find out where I was really supposed to be—so Mona could go back to being Mona and marry him.'

'But why was Jane doing it? Did she know your parents?'

'No. Mona had to tell her about them that time when we went to her house. Mona thought they worked for the government, so the people who hurt them must be spies. It took Jane a long time to find out that my parents didn’t work for the government.'

'Then Jane was Mona’s friend?'

'I don’t think so. Dennis was the one who called her.'

Judge Kramer could image the F.B.I. agent. He was going to make his career sorting all this out. Not the least interesting question was why a prominent Washington defense attorney had the telephone number of a woman who made people disappear. They would be going over the record of Morgan’s former clients right now to see if there were any on their Most Wanted List.

Even Ambrose seemed to sense that he had crossed the trail of an unfamiliar creature. 'The lawyer knew her?' he repeated. 'Did he pay her?'

'No. Dennis said he tried, but she had decided that so many people loved me that I must be a fine boy.'

'Hmmmm ...'

Judge Kramer had a vision of Ambrose’s raised eyebrows, as he had seen them during cross- examinations.

'Did anybody say anything else about her?'

'Dennis. He said that from then on we had to do everything that Jane said, exactly. It didn’t matter what anybody else said, we should listen to her.'

'So she was the boss.'

'He said that he had done everything he could to find out things, but the only way to solve this was to walk into court and surprise everybody and say who I was. He said the bad people knew I must be alive, so they would be expecting me to come. Jane was the one who knew how to get us past them.'

'So you all took an airplane to California?'

'No. Jane said we had to drive all the way or the bad people might see us. Every day we got a new car. She would go to a place where they rented them, and then drive all day and then leave it and rent another one. Then we were in California.'

'What then? Did you stay in a hotel?'

'No. Jane said that if people were after me, they would be watching hotels near the courthouse, because they would be expecting us to do that. So we went to the courthouse right away.'

'What time was it?'

'About dinnertime. Jane opened the lock on an office and we stayed there all night. I fell asleep on a couch.'

'What happened when you woke up?'

'I heard Dennis come into the office. He had been out in the building by himself. He said they had pulled a trick on us, and now we had to go to a different building. So we ran out and got into our car and drove again. Jane said on the way that it didn’t feel right.'

'Did she say anything else?'

'She asked Dennis if there was any way of doing this besides actually showing up in court. Could we call and ask for a delay or something. He said that he didn’t know who was honest and who wasn’t. A phone call wouldn’t stop the case for sure, but it would tell the bad guys I was coming for sure. Then he said if they fooled the judge they could do something that day, right away. I don’t know what. Jane drove for a long time without saying anything. Then she said, ’Is there any way to know what’s in the building?’ '

'What did she mean by that?'

'She said, ’We want to fade in. If Timmy’s the only boy in the crowd, we’re in trouble.’ She said something about adoption and custody.'

'I see,' said Ambrose. 'Did Mr. Morgan know the answer?'

'We stopped at a phone booth and he looked in the book and made a call. He came back and got into the car and made Jane scoot over, so he could drive. He said he and Mona would be getting a divorce before they got married, and Jane would carry his briefcase like she was their lawyer. But we would go to Courtroom 22 on the fifth floor instead.'

'Did Jane agree?'

'At first. But then we got near the courthouse, and Jane said two men in a car were following us. They kept coming faster and faster, and then they tried to get in front of us, and they bumped the car.'

'What did Mr. Morgan do?'

'He got all nervous, and kept trying to go fast and keep the car straight. Jane said to him, ’Well? What’s it going to be?’ and he said, ’I can’t get them into the building. It’s got to be me.’ He was scared. He looked pale and sick and sweaty.'

'And Jane?'

'She was quiet. He drove to the parking lot and stopped. Mona kissed him, and Jane yanked me out the door and we started running.'

'Did you see what Mr. Morgan did after you were out of the car?'

'I heard this loud bang, and I turned around and it looked like what he had done was go backwards into the other car. One of the men jumped out and started hitting him. He tried to fight but he wasn’t good at it. And the other man got out of the car and ran after us, so Dennis tried to tackle him, but the man kicked him, and the first one grabbed him around the neck. I didn’t see any more because Jane and Mona and I were running and I tripped, but Jane held my hand and kept me from falling. We ran up the steps.'

Вы читаете Vanishing Act
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату