'Why do you say that?' asked King.

'I won't beat around the bush. I wasn't John Bruno's biggest fan, although Bill worshiped the ground he walked on. Bill was almost twenty-five years older and acted as a mentor. Now, I'm not saying Bruno wasn't good at what he did, but let's put it this way: John Bruno always did what was in the best interests of John Bruno and everybody else be damned. As an example, he's twenty minutes fromthe body of his mentor and doesn't have the decency to stop his campaigning to come and pay his respects. Until, that is, he gets a phone call, allegedly from me? Well, that's all you need to know about John Bruno.'

'I take it you wouldn't have voted for him for president,' said King, smiling.

Martin laughed a deep, throaty laugh and put her hand on top of his. 'Oh, honey, you're so damn cute I could just put you on my shelf and look at you all day.' After she said this, she didn't remove her hand.

'You should get to know him first,' said Joan dryly.

'I can hardly wait.'

Joan said, 'Did your dislike for John Bruno start at any particular time?'

Martin picked up her empty glass and crunched on an ice cube. 'What do you mean by that?'

Joan looked down at some notes in front of her. 'Around the time that your husband headed the U.S. Attorney's Office in Washington there were some irregularities resulting in a number of convictions being overturned and other prosecutions derailed. It was a pretty nasty business all around.'

She lit another cigarette. 'It was a long time ago. I don't really remember.'

'I'm sure that if you think about it, it'll come back to you,' suggested Joan firmly. 'Perhaps you could refrain from any more drink? This is really very, very important.'

'Hey,' said King, 'lay off. She's doing us a favor. She doesn't have to tell us anything.'

Martin's hand returned to King's. 'Thank you, honey.'

Joan rose. 'I tell you what: why don't you finish questioning her while I go have a cigarette and admire the lovely garden.' She picked up Mildred's pack of cigarettes. 'Mind if I poach one?'

'Go ahead, honey, why should I die alone?'

'Why indeed,honey?'

Joan stalked off, and King looked at Martin in an embarrassed fashion. 'She can be a little abrupt.'

'Abrupt? She's a cobra in heels and lipstick. Do you really work for her?'

'Yes. I'm actually learning a lot.'

Mildred glared at Joan, who was tapping cigarette ash on a rose vine. 'Just remember to keep your hand on your zipper when she's around, or you might wake up one morning missing something really important.'

'I'll keep that in mind. Now, what she was talking about, the things in your husband's office, I could tell you had some definite thoughts about that, didn't you? In fact, your husband eventually resigned because of those irregularities, didn't he?'

Martin held her chin high, though her voice quivered. 'He took the blame, because he was the boss and he was honorable. There aren't many men like Bill Martin anymore. Like old Harry Truman, the buck stopped with him. Either rightly or wrongly.'

'Meaning he shouldered the blame though it really wasn't his fault?'

'I need another drink before I break another crown with all this damn ice,' she said, starting to rise.

'You thought it was Bruno's fault, didn't you? He left D.C. before the hammer fell, ruined your husband's career and went on to head up the U.S. Attorney's Office in Philadelphia. And there he garnered a bunch of high-profile convictions and rode that to a lucrative private practice and eventually to a run for the White House.'

'I see you've done your homework.'

'But your husband remained an admirer, so he didn't share your belief, did he?'

She sat back down. 'Bill was a good lawyer and an exceptionally bad judge of character. I have to hand it to Bruno; he said and did all the right things. Do you know that he called here to tell Bill he was running for president?'

King looked at her in surprise. 'Really? When was that?'

'Couple of months ago. I answered the phone. Could have knocked me over with a stick hearing his voice. I wanted to give him a piece of my mind, but I didn't. I held my tongue. We chatted like two old friends. He told me all the great things he'd done, his wonderful life in Philadelphia society. It made me want to throw up. Then I gave the phone to Bill, and they talked for a while. All Bruno wanted to do was gloat and rub it in. Let Bill know he'd risen so much further than Bill ever had.'

'I just assumed Bruno hadn't had any contact with either of you for years.'

'Well, it was just the one phone call, and a damn irritating one at that.'

'Did Bill say anything on the phone that might have led to Bruno's coming to see him at the funeral home?'

'No. Bill hardly talked at all. He was pretty weak even at that point. And I certainly didn't say anything to Bruno that would get him all agitated. Although I wanted to, believe me.'

'About the stuff at the U.S. Attorney's Office?'

'Among other things.'

'Did you ever have any proof?'

'Bruno was a lawyer, he covered his tracks well. His shit never stunk. He was long gone before it all came out.'

'Well, I guess you're not really sorry he disappeared.'

'John Bruno can go to hell. In fact, I hope he's already there.'

King leaned forward, and this time he put his hand on top of hers. 'Millie, this is really important. Despite your husband's autopsy being inconclusive, there is evidence that suggests he might have been poisoned, perhaps with methanol. You see, that method of poisoning would have been disguised in the embalming process. His death and his body's being at that funeral home started this whole thing rolling. Whoever took Bruno couldn't have left that to chance. Your husband had to be there at a certain time, meaning he had to die on a certain date.'

'That's what the FBI said, but I'm telling you that no one couldhave been poisoning Bill. I would have known about it. I was with him every day.'

'Just you? Your husband was very ill before he died. Did you have any help? Anyone who came by? Any medication that he took?'

'Yes. And the FBI took it all to analyze and found nothing. I ate the same food, drank the same water. And I'm fine.'

King sat back and sighed. 'Someone impersonated you at the funeral home.'

'So I heard. Well, I look good in black; it goes well with my new hair color.' She looked at King's half-empty glass. 'Would you like another?' He shook his head. She said, 'Bill was a Scotch man too, right up to the end. It was one of the few pleasures he had left. Kept his own stash of twenty-five-year-old Macallan's.' She chuckled. 'He had some every night. I'd just pour a shot in his feeding tube using a big syringe. Eating he could have cared less about, but he looked forward to his Scotch even through his belly, and the man made it to eighty, not bad.'

'I bet you keep a good supply on hand.'

She smiled. 'At our age, what's left?'

King looked down at his glass. 'How about you? Ever drink Scotch?'

'Never touch the stuff. Like I said, gin is my game. Scotch is too much like paint thinner. If you want to clear your sinuses out, by all means drink the stuff.'

'Well, thanks again. We'll be in touch. Enjoy your evening.' King rose and started to turn away. He looked over at Joan, her drink and cigarette in hand, and he froze.

Paint thinner?

He whirled back around. 'Millie, can you show me Bill's special stash of Scotch?'

41

It was the Scotch, or at least Bill Martin's secret cache, that Mildred Martin had never bothered to tell the police or FBI about. A relatively simple test at the police lab showed the bottle had been doctored with methanol.

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