Part 26 (1/2)
”The Loudoun Museum.”
”The little museum in Leesburg?”
I told him about the newspaper article and Francis Pembroke's great-granddaughter's donation. ”Don't you think it makes sense? Maybe the seeds were in packets in his medical bag,” I said. ”I'll call the museum tomorrow. They're only open for a few hours on Friday, Sat.u.r.day, and Sunday, but perhaps I can make an appointment to come by. I also found out there are a couple of Pembroke descendants living in the area, or at least there were twenty years ago.”
”Are you going to try to track them down?” Jack asked. ”a.s.suming they're still alive, that is.”
”Yup.”
”Wouldn't that be something? All this time the seeds are right under our noses in a museum forty miles away.”
”Probably in their archives or in storage somewhere,” I said. ”I doubt they're in the museum or Kevin would have known about it.”
Jack nodded and fell silent.
”What is it?” I asked.
”Xavier told me Kevin's funeral will be next week at the monastery.”
”Was that why he seemed so upset?”
”Not really. He's dealing with a vocational problem, trying to decide what to do, whether this kid just doesn't belong with the Franciscans or whether he doesn't belong in the priesthood at all.”
”That must be a tough decision.”
”You know as well as I do we need new blood. But not everyone who believes he has a calling really does.” He pulled up at a stoplight at the end of North Capitol Street and gave me one of his looks. ”I trust Xavier. He'll make the right decision. He's a good man, a good guardian for the Franciscans.”
”Yes,” I said. ”He seems to be.”
”So back to my original question. Why did you lie to him just now?”
”I didn't lie. I just didn't tell the whole truth.”
”Don't even go there, cupcake.”
”Okay. All this time I've been thinking that whoever killed Kevin knew about his research, a colleague or another scientist. What if it was someone at the monastery?”
He hooted. ”Xavier? Are you kidding me? That is flat-out crazy, Soph.” He banged his fist on the steering wheel. ”No way. How could you even think that? Besides, who among any of the friars would stand to gain professionally or financially from Kevin's death? They take a vow of poverty, so it's not about the money. And no one else is doing the same kind of research Kevin was involved in, so there's no professional motive, no rivalry, either.”
I held up my hands like a s.h.i.+eld. ”Okay, okay. Uncle. Sorry.”
”You're looking in the wrong place,” he said with that same intense conviction. ”Maybe you'll find out something tomorrow when you call the Loudoun Museum.”
Directly ahead of us, the Capitol dome was lit up against the cobalt-blue evening sky. I stared at it and tried to imagine what it had looked like the night the British set fire to it. The dome hadn't been built yet, but the sight of the two wings of the building in flames, visible everywhere in the night sky since this was the highest point in the city, must have devastated anyone who saw it, not only because of what the building symbolized but also the deliberate, vengeful destruction. By then Dolley Madison had left town, escaping just before British soldiers marched down Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House, looting the mansion and heaping the furniture-most of it Thomas Jefferson's-into a huge bonfire.
What happened to the seeds after that awful night?
Maybe Jack was right.
Maybe tomorrow I'd find out.
21.
When I finally went to bed, I slept like the dead and didn't wake up until Jack came back from Ma.s.s downstairs in the chapel. He knocked on my door and handed me a coffee mug. ”Bagels in my room when you're ready. I figured you could use this now.”
”Thank you. I have no idea what time zone I'm in anymore.”
Twenty minutes later I walked into his suite. He had thrown open the doors to his second-floor balcony overlooking Stanton Park, letting in cool morning suns.h.i.+ne, a fresh breeze, and the sound of rush-hour traffic. The pages of the Was.h.i.+ngton Post fluttered on the seat of his reading chair. I picked up the paper before the wind blew it around like dry leaves. It was folded to a front-page story on Ursula Gilberti's primary race.
”It looks like she might not win,” Jack said.
”I guess when it rains, it pours,” I said. ”I wonder how she took the news of Victor and Yasmin's wedding being postponed.”
”Some reporter is bound to ask her about it, so she'll have to say something.”
”Especially since she's been courting the press to cover it. She probably can't get away with 'no comment.'” I put a bagel in the toaster and let him refill my coffee mug. His mug said WHEN G.o.d MADE ME HE WAS JUST SHOWING OFF.
”Gracie's latest tacky Catholic birthday gift,” he said with a grin. ”You should see the card. Jesus holding out the loaves and fishes and the crowd kvetching about whether the fish contained mercury and was the bread made with organic flour.”
I laughed, and it turned into a yawn, which I tried to stifle.
He gave me a sympathetic look. ”Rough night?”
”I stayed up too late studying Kevin's drawing of the Pembroke family tree. I did some searching and it looks like no Pembrokes live in Leesburg anymore. Either they pa.s.sed away or they moved. I did find out that Francis P. Quincy was a senator from Virginia from 1900 until 1912, and a member of the Senate Committee on the District of Columbia, which Senator McMillan chaired. But he wasn't a member of the McMillan Commission.”
”I bet the folks at the Loudoun Museum can help you out since the family was local.”
”I left a voice mail a few minutes ago. Maybe someone will call me back even though they're not open today.”
”So now what?” he asked.
I shrugged. ”The Library of Congress is just up the street. I think I'll drop by. Thea Stavros asked one of the librarians to put together a list of the items Kevin borrowed from the Science and Business Library so they could remove them from his study room before the Franciscans came to collect his things. Maybe I can talk Thea or the other librarian into letting me look at that list. There might be something about the McMillan Commission that I missed when I was there the day we discovered that Kevin's study room had been ransacked.”
Jack gave me a skeptical look. ”Good luck with that. What are you hoping to find, if they say yes?”
”I'm not sure,” I said. ”But if I'm lucky, I'll know it when I see it.”
”You're going to stay here again tonight, right?”
I took the bagel out of the toaster and b.u.t.tered it. ”I'm over my jitters. I probably ought to go home. Don't worry, I've got Nick's guns and I know how to use them if anybody decides to pay a visit again . . . which isn't going to happen now that whoever broke in has Kevin's book.”
He said in a warning voice, ”I don't think you should be playing vigilante, Soph.”
I waved the b.u.t.ter knife at him. ”I'm not. But I'm not going to be a victim, either.”