Diane let that pass. “I’ll stay as long as I’m needed. I’m hoping we can get Mother out quickly.”
“We all hope that, but Alan says-” Susan stopped suddenly. “This is my car.”
She pushed the remote and unlocked the door of a Lincoln Town Car. Diane put her bag in the rear seat and buckled herself in the front seat.
“I have an appointment with a criminal lawyer this afternoon,” said Diane. “I thought the two of us could go.”
Susan was backing out of the parking space, but stopped abruptly, throwing Diane against her seat back, hurting her arm.
“Shit, Susan, what are you doing?”
“Mother is not a criminal!”
“No, she isn’t. But she is in the criminal justice system, and we have to get her out of it. That calls for a criminal lawyer. Let’s not argue about this.”
Susan drove the winding circular exit lane through the parking deck out to the street. “We thought with your contacts in the State Department you could help learn what this is about. Have you called them?”
“No. We first need to find out why she’s being held. The State Department probably has nothing to do with it.”
Susan sighed heavily. Diane hated that sound.
“And I suppose you have a theory?”
“Yes, a couple. I’ve talked to a friend who’s a detective in the Metro Atlanta Fraud and Computer Forensics Unit. He believes she may be a victim of identity theft.”
“That’s stupid. Her credit cards weren’t stolen.”
“No, but her identity may have been. It’s like, say I’m caught for shoplifting, and when I’m arrested I give them your name and Social Security number. I could just not show up for trial and they would go looking for you.” A scenario that at the moment sounded rather appealing to Diane. “I believe something like that may have happened to Mother.”
Susan didn’t say anything, and Diane knew that meant her sister found her argument persuasive but didn’t want to admit it.
“Susan, we can go at it from both angles. Alan can follow his theory, I’ll follow mine, and maybe between us we can get Mother out. This isn’t a contest. The goal is to get Mother back.”
“That sounds reasonable,” admitted Susan. “You said on the phone that you had a medical procedure. How are you?”
“I’m doing okay. A little sore. I was stabbed in the arm.”
Susan looked over at her, then back to the road. “Well, if you insist on dealing in crime. .”
Diane had decided on the plane that the best way to get through this visit with her family was to say as little as possible and stay focused on the task at hand.
“I was at the funeral for one of Rosewood’s most prominent citizens,” Diane said.
“I read about that in the paper.” Susan gasped. “They said a student was stabbed.”
“That’s true. I didn’t know I was also stabbed until later. The, uh, knife was very sharp.”
“God, what’s the world coming to?” said Susan. She turned a corner sharply, and Diane held on to the handle above the door for support.
“That’s what we’ve been asking ourselves,” Diane said, keeping her mouth firmly closed about Susan’s driving.
Diane’s sister drove to Mountain Brook, one of the wealthy suburbs of Birmingham populated by new money in old mansions that were layered on wooded hillsides above narrow, winding quiet streets whose curbs were lined with expensive automobiles. Her parents’ home was a large rock-faced structure that looked like an English manor. Susan lived next door in an equally large brick home built a century ago by a steel tycoon. She drove up the steep, winding drive to the garage and parked the car.
“You’ll be staying at Mother and Dad’s. I’ve made up the guest room for you. We’re all having dinner there this evening-including Alan. I hope that’s not a problem.”
“No. Whatever all of you feel comfortable with.”
Susan gave another one of her exasperated sighs. “It’s not about our comfort. Alan is a friend of the family and is Mother and Dad’s lawyer.”
“That reminds me,” said Diane. “We have an appointment in an hour and a half. Do you want to go with me, or do you want me to handle it?”
“I’ll go with you. Like you said, going at it from two directions won’t hurt. Dad went in briefly to the firm today. He’ll be home in an hour or two.”
Diane got out of the car and grabbed her bag from the rear seat. “I’ll just freshen up a bit and we can get started.”
Daniel Reynolds’s office was over the mountain in downtown Birmingham. They made it with five minutes to spare and were ushered straight into his office by a young woman. Reynolds was sitting at a large dark-wood library table stacked with files. His desk was much older, with scrollwork around the sharp edges. Both looked antique. The desktop held pens, a pad of paper and a telephone. All the office walls were lined with glass-enclosed bookshelves filled with law books. There was no computer visible in his office.
Reynolds himself looked like he belonged out West working cattle. Not because of what he wore-he had on a silver-gray dress shirt and gray suit pants with dark gray suspenders, his suit coat thrown over the back of his chair. It was his rugged face that made him look like a cowboy, that and his wiry steel-gray hair. He stood and held out his hand. Diane and Susan shook it in turn and introduced themselves.
“One of you is from Georgia?” He gestured to two chairs.
“That’s Diane,” said Susan. “She lives in Rosewood, Georgia.” She sat down, holding her purse in her lap, and fidgeted with the strap. “I live in Mountain Brook. My husband is in business with my father. They have a brokerage firm here in Birmingham-Fallon and Abernathy. Diane. . Diane has several jobs.”
Diane suppressed a smile. Susan made it sound like she worked at McDonald’s during the week and Waffle House on weekends. “I’m director of the RiverTrail Museum of Natural History, as well as the director of the Rosewood Crime Lab and the Aidan Kavanagh Forensic Anthropology Lab.”
“You do indeed have several jobs. There’s got to be a story in that.”
“There is. A long one.”
Diane and Reynolds smiled at each other. Susan was clearly out of her comfort zone. Diane would have liked to reach out and take Susan’s hand to give her some measure of solace, but she knew the gesture would not have been welcome.
“So what can I do for you ladies?”
Susan gave Diane the I-dread-this look, but said nothing. “We’ve had a rather odd thing happen to our mother,” said Diane. “She was picked up by federal officers last Tuesday and put in prison. We are having a hard time discovering why. So far we have only speculation. The authorities have said it was for robbing a bank, but little else.”
“They suspect she robbed a bank? Could she have?”
“Mr. Reynolds, this is a woman who won’t wear white shoes after Labor Day because she thinks it’s against the law. No, she wouldn’t have robbed a bank, not now or at any time in her life.”
“She doesn’t think white after Labor Day is illegal,” sputtered Susan. “It’s just in bad taste.”
Reynolds’s homey, pleasant smile spread across his face. “I see. When does she come to trial?”
“She doesn’t get a trial,” said Susan. “They’ve already put her in prison. They said she won’t get out until her time is up.”
“Your mother is a natural-born citizen of this country?”
“Back for ten generations,” said Diane.
“Twelve generations,” said Susan.
“Then they can’t do that. If they arrested her, they have to give her a speedy trial.”
“Even with the Homeland Security laws?” asked Susan.
“Even then.”
“Well, that’s what they did. She was sent directly to prison.”