He smiled and cut her off, he felt very secure, safe, out of reach; she could threaten him but she could not find him. All she could do was call and beg and bully, but that was only because he allowed her this luxury of contact. If he chose to, he could disappear entirely, and as soon as he had executed his plan that’s exactly what he would do.
Wait until it has all played out, he told himself, wait for the money and the big finale and then be gone.
AFTER SCHOOL, Ruby took her skateboard and skitched her way to the Schroeder Building and down to Spectrum.
She found Blacker in his office, going through some files.
‘So have you picked up the card from the latest robbery,’ she asked, ‘the tie-clip theft I mean? Why haven’t you called me?’
‘No, there was no card,’ said Blacker.
Ruby looked at him. ‘But there has to be.’
‘I’m telling you Ruby, there wasn’t. Our guys were all over the joint, they didn’t find a thing. So I’m thinking maybe it’s not our guy.’
‘But it should have been, I mean, it would have been next to the tie, the tie Mr Thompson hung up in his closet.’
‘On the floor you mean,’ said Blacker. ‘Mrs Thompson was real clear about that, they were having quite a marital.’ Blacker raised his eyebrows. ‘Mrs T is not happy about it, claims he never picks up after himself, just walks in the door, kicks off his shoes, drops his jacket, pulls off his tie and wherever it lands is where it stays.’
‘Sounds like Mrs Thompson is pretty strung out about it,’ said Ruby.
Blacker nodded. ‘Is she ever.’
‘So where did Mr Thompson discard his tie last night?’
‘In the dog bowl, according to Mrs Thompson. She was very upset about it.’
‘I’m guessing the dog’s got something to say about it too,’ said Ruby.
‘Mr Thompson doesn’t remember anything about that, swears it couldn’t have got there because when he arrived home the baby was crying and he went straight to the kid’s room. Mrs T was supervising the nanny while she made it a bottle of whatever it is those little guys drink.’
‘So Mr and Mrs T woke up in the morning to find the tie-clip gone?’
‘Not quite. The nanny was up with Nileston, she took him into the kitchen and let him crawl around, and that’s when she noticed the tie in the dog bowl.’
‘And no tie-clip.’
‘No tie-clip,’ confirmed Blacker.
‘You don’t suppose Nileston swallowed it?’ suggested Ruby.
‘I would say impossible,’ said Blacker. ‘If the kid ate it then he would be in the ER right now, same goes for the dog, I imagine – anyway, it doesn’t explain the open window nor the unlocked door.’
‘Unless this is an insurance scam,’ said Froghorn, who had stepped out of the Frog Pod with a file which he handed to Blacker. ‘They could be faking a burglary – maybe they need the money.’
‘They are living on Avenue Walk in the Warrington Apartments, why would they need money?’ said Ruby.
‘Appearances can be deceptive,’ said Blacker. ‘Never take anything at face value. It’s certainly worth checking out the Thompsons’ bank credit.’
‘We’ll get someone on to it,’ said Froghorn. ‘They can check the Thompsons’ financial position, see if they are in debt.’
‘If they were in debt they would hardly just report one valuable missing,’ said Ruby.
‘Exactly, which is why we are also investigating the more than likely angle that Mr Thompson simply mislaid the tie-clip, left the window open and forgot to lock the front door when he came home,’ said Blacker. ‘However, the police are convinced it’s a copycat burglar. Either way, there’s not much we can do without that card.’
‘What are the Thompsons doing while all this goes on?’ asked Ruby.
‘They’re spending a few days out of town,’ said Blacker. ‘Mrs Thompson doesn’t feel safe knowing anyone can just crawl in the window whenever they feel like it.’
When Ruby got home the main house phone was ringing. She answered, ‘Dentures dental service, you got tooth decay, we got pliers.’
‘Excuse me?’ said the voice of Elaine Lemon. ‘I was trying to get hold of Ruby, Ruby Redfort?’
‘I can’t help you there, lady,’
‘Are you sure? I wanted to offer her some babysitting at his little birthday party, she adores my baby boy, Archie.’
‘That sounds unlikely.’
‘Pardon me?’
‘What I’m saying is, you dialled an incorrect number.’
‘But that can’t be, the Redfort number is programmed into my speed dial.’
‘Look, Cookie, unless you got some kind of toothy emergency, I’m going to have to ask you to clear the line.’
Mrs Lemon hung up and Ruby switched the phone so it went direct to answer machine.
Mrs Digby peered around the kitchen door. ‘Child,’ she said, ‘I’m sure the king of mischief himself could learn a thing or two from you.’
It was just as Ruby was changing into her nightwear, an over-sized T-shirt with superhero written across the front, that Archie Lemon’s face popped into her head.
Why? she wondered. What are you trying to tell me, brain?
Somewhere deep inside her mind a thought was trying to connect with another thought. When Ruby was very small she had sometimes liked to imagine that there was a tiny person, a little file clerk in her head, filing facts and sifting through ideas, collecting up stray thoughts and joining them all together. When she was struggling to remember something, she would imagine this little figure going off to search for it in one of the many filing drawers.
She hoped the tiny clerk might return with something soon.
She went into the bathroom to brush her teeth. Then she washed her face, examined her newly mended arm, and her recently injured foot – the scar was almost gone. She massaged it with some baby oil that Mrs Digby had bought for the purpose, and then suddenly there it was: the brain clerk had found what she needed – Archie Lemon and Nileston Thompson.
Both babies, both crawlers, both grabbers.
The tie was in the dog bowl because Nileston had put it there. The tie should have been where Mr Thompson had left it, which was most likely not in the closet as he had claimed, but on the floor of Nileston’s room. Therefore the card would have been left on the floor on top of the tie.
Nileston must have grabbed the card when he grabbed the tie, so where it was now was anyone’s guess. It was only a theory of course, she couldn’t prove it. . . at least not unless she went over there and searched the place. Of course she could wait until dawn, she could call someone right now, tell them her theory, but she felt the need to do it herself. It was her theory after all.
She wondered what Hitch would say, and decided it was probably best not to imagine.
Ruby changed into her climb gear: black clothes, free-climbing shoes, climbing gloves and a pouch of chalk dust belted around her waist. She took off