Kramer the satisfaction of saying a word about it. Instead, I went along with the program and acted as though everything was on the up and up.
“Were they here together? And if so, why would the head of the teachers’ union be cozying up to the district’s head of labor relations in a secret midnight meeting?”
“Why don’t we ask her?” Kramer responded.
Jennifer Lafflyn-Ms. Lafflyn, if you will-the previous day’s miniskirted number, was seated demurely at the large reception desk in the school district office. A thick cloud of flowery perfume tainted the atmosphere ten feet in any direction from her desk. She seemed totally recovered from the previous day’s emotional roller coaster.
“Good morning, Ms. Lafflyn,” Kramer said with oily deference when she looked up from her switchboard and saw us standing there. “We’re here to see Mrs. Stovall. Her secretary said that you’d know where to find her.”
I don’t know if Kramer actually remembered Jennifer Lafflyn’s name and preferred salutation or if he had taken his cue from the nameplate on her desk, but his underscored use of the word “Ms.” earned him a warm smile from the lady in question. The guy walking three feet behind him, me, that is, was totally invisible.
Jennifer rose quickly to her feet. “Of course,” she said. “One moment. Please wait right here.”
She turned and disappeared down a long hallway. Her slight but well-built figure was poured into a tightly belted, short black sheath over black panty hose. She may have thought of her basic black getup as appropriate mourning attire, but it was short, exceedingly short.
Kramer leered after her, watching her every move. “Maybe when we’re done here, I’ll offer to give her a lift downtown so we can get those fingerprints we need. And I’ll throw in an early lunch.”
He wasn’t just talking about lunch, either. “You’d better watch that stuff, Kramer,” I warned him. “She looks like she could blow all your fuses and never turn a hair.”
Ms. Lafflyn came tripping back down the hallway right then. “They’ll be meeting in the conference room. Mrs. Stovall’s in the room next door, fourth door on your left.”
I’ve always had this image of union presidents as tough-talking, cigar-chewing guys in baggy pants and rolled-up shirtsleeves who negotiate heavy-duty secret deals in smoke-filled rooms. With my introduction to Andrea Stovall, that particular stereotype was about to be pleasantly shattered.
The woman sitting in the small office was a tiny, immaculately dressed blonde with her hair cut in the short, free-falling style preferred by figure skaters. She had pixielike features combined with the solid handshake of a born politician. She would have been pretty had it not been for the deep shadows under her eyes, ravages of sleeplessness that even the most deftly applied makeup couldn’t entirely obliterate.
“Sorry we’re so late,” Kramer said as she motioned us into chairs. “We had trouble getting transportation.”
She shrugged. “That’s all right, but we’d better get started right away. What can I do for you?”
“This won’t take long,” Kramer assured her. “It’s about Sunday night. We noticed that you were signed in and out on the logbook.”
Andrea Stovall nodded. “That’s correct. You said as much on the telephone. What about it?”
“The only other person we have any record of working that night, other than the security guard, the only other person who signed in, was Marcia Louise Kelsey, a woman who died under mysterious circumstances that same night.”
“I know all about that,” Andrea said wearily. Her whole body sagged and the smooth veneer of her face contorted with grief. “Marcia Kelsey and I were friends. I can’t get over what happened. It’s such a terrible tragedy.”
“Actually, Mrs. Stovall,” Kramer said, “that friendship is one of the things we wanted to ask you about, as well as what you were doing at the district office the night before last. Isn’t it odd for the head of the union and the head of labor relations to be buddies, as it were?”
“We started out teaching together years ago, and we became friends then. Through the years our jobs grew in different directions, but the friendship stayed.”
“What about Sunday night?” I asked.
“I came down to check on her.”
“You knew she was going to be working that night?”
“Not really, but…”
“But what?”
“I just thought she might be, that’s all.” Andrea Stovall dropped her eyes and wiped imaginary dust off the desktop in front of her. Even though we were treating her with kid gloves, this line of questioning was making Andrea Stovall very nervous. I wondered why and decided to get a little tougher.
“Look, Mrs. Stovall,” I said gruffly. “It was the middle of the night on one of the worst night we’ve had in years. The streets were a mess, yet you expect us to believe that you came all the way down here on the off chance that Marcia Kelsey might be here as well? That doesn’t make sense.”
“It doesn’t matter if it makes sense or not. That’s what happened. I was worried about her and came to check on her. She wasn’t here, nobody was. I thought…” She paused.
“You thought what?”
“Since her car was still in the lot, I thought maybe Pete had come by and given her a ride home.”
“Was the guard on duty?” I asked.
“Probably, but I didn’t see him or anyone else, not a soul.”
“What time was that?” Kramer asked.
“I don’t remember exactly. Around eleven. I wrote it down in the logbook, both the time in and the time out. If you don’t believe me, you can ask Rex.”
She broke off and bit her lower lip while an embarrassed flush crept up her neck and across her cheeks. Clearly she had blurted out something she hadn’t intended to.
“Who’s Rex?” I asked.
“Rex Pierson, the manager of my building.”
“What building is that?”
“I live at the Queen Anne. It’s just up the hill from here.”
The Queen Anne wasn’t a building I recognized by name. Next to me, Detective Kramer shifted uncomfortably in his chair. There was a good deal the two of us didn’t agree on, but he was getting the same reading from Andrea Stovall that I was.
“How exactly did you get into the building, Mrs. Stovall?” I asked. “You said you couldn’t find anyone, not even the security guard. Weren’t the doors locked?”
Andrea Stovall clasped her hands and placed them on the desk in front of her, but not before I noticed a sudden, uncontrolled trembling.
“Are you cold, Mrs. Stovall?” I asked, feigning sympathy. “Your hands are shaking.”
“No,” she said quickly, “I’m fine.” But under her makeup, the color of her skin had paled.
“You still haven’t told us how you got into the building,” I prodded.
She swallowed. “I have a key,” she said in almost a whisper. “I used that to let myself in.”
Detective Kramer’s jaw dropped, and so did mine. Giving the head of the teachers’ union a key to the district offices sounded downright crazy, like giving the Big Bad Wolf his own private key to the henhouse.
“You mean the head of the teachers’ union has a key to the building?” Kramer demanded.
“I probably shouldn’t have,” Andrea Stovall conceded, “but I do. I’ve had one for years. I still sign in and out, the way I’m supposed to. Remember, that’s how you found me, from the sign-in sheet. Besides, I was sure Marcia was still here, because her car was parked in the lot outside, but when I couldn’t raise the guard with the bell, I let myself in.”
“There’s a bell?” Kramer asked.
“A night bell, so that if the guard is in some other part of the building, he can still hear that someone’s at the door.”
“Tell us about the car,” I said, switching gears. “You said it was still parked in the lot?”
“She drove a Volvo, a green Volvo station wagon,” Andrea Stovall answered gratefully, relieved to move away from any more questions about her unauthorized possession of a building key. “It was right there in the lot when we drove up.”
“We? You mean you and this Rex person?” Kramer asked.