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"Mr. Halloran? I have your coat."
"Bring it here." His voice came from the private washroom behind his desk.
She hesitated and then cautiously walked toward it. She wouldn't set foot inside the bathroom. She remembered too well what had happened the last time.
He straightened himself in front of the gold mirror, running a hand through his thick, coiffed hair. He turned to her with a tight-lipped smile. Something erratic behind his eyes made her shrink from the door. He pulled the coat from her hands.
"Don't think I don't know what you're up to."
"Sir?"
He grabbed her by the wrist. "Don't play dumb with me. You and that friend of yours, Maxine. You two are up to something. Keys don't just go missing. I'm going to find out what it is, and when I do . . ." He squeezed her wrist until she winced. She cowered under him, not daring to even whimper. He dropped her arm and stormed out of the room, leaving her trembling in the doorway.
She drew in a deep breath. He was right that Max had been up to something. She had lots of keys. She had been in the vault. Beatrice walked her shaking legs back to her desk. She tried to rea.s.sure herself that he didn't know any more about what Max was up to than she did. He was just acting like a bully. Randy had been in the vault the other night. Maybe he was angry he couldn't find the keys.
She pulled out her writing pad and began making more notes in shorthand. Randy liked to drink. He took long lunches. He yelled at people on the phone. He was in the vault. He was born rich and got a job where his father worked. His father was Teddy. He and his father were big money men, and making money was a dirty business. The argument she'd overheard between Randy and the older man was replaying in her head when the phone rang.
"h.e.l.lo. First Bank of Cleveland, Auditing Department."
"Beatrice? Is that you?" It was Tony.
"Yes. Can I help you?" she replied as if he were a bank customer. The feeling she was being watched crept up her back, and she quickly slid her notes down into her desk drawer.
"I need to see you. Tonight."
"Tonight?" she whispered. Francine or someone else might be listening. She cleared her throat and spoke up. "Um, of course."
"I'll see you at six. Theatrical Grille." Then he hung up.
"Have a nice day," she sang into the phone, and set it down. She swallowed hard, thinking of the tunnels that ran under the city. Checking her pocketbook, she found her wallet was empty. She needed money for a cab ride from the pub to the alley behind the Stouffer's Inn.
When the lunch hour came, Beatrice headed down to the banking floor to make a withdrawal. She walked through the towering lobby to the long room where pretty ladies waited behind the bars for customers. She scanned the booths until she found a familiar face.
"Hi, Pam!" Beatrice smiled at the woman who had helped her open an employee checking account when Max had insisted on taking Beatrice shopping.
"Hiya!" she said, looking bewildered for a moment. "Oh, you're Max's friend, right?"
"That's right." She forced a smile.
"How is old Maxie? I haven't seen her around lately."
"I think she's on vacation in Mexico." It was the lie Max had designed.
"Vacation? How'd she finagle that?" Pam laughed and then lowered her voice. "I heard she was advanced on her pay for months."
Beatrice tried to keep her surprise from registering on her face.
"That's Max for ya!" Pam waved her hand. "She's always been a wild one. I could tell you stories that would curl your eyelashes . . . So how can I help ya?"
"I need to make a withdrawal. Fifty dollars." Beatrice slid a piece of paper with her account number under the bars. Pam scratched a few notes on the slip and pulled cash from a drawer. As she pulled out her wallet, Beatrice eyed the ring of keys at the bottom of her purse.
"Say, Pam? Do you know anything about the safe deposit boxes here?"
"They're downstairs. Go out past the elevators and down the steps." She slid the cash under the barred windows. "You tell Max she still owes me a favor next time you see her, okay?"
"Okay. Thanks."
Max had money troubles. The thought raised lines on her forehead as Beatrice made her way back to the lobby. She found the staircase that led to the lower level. Down the marble steps, she began to recognize the room from her trip to the hidden door that led down into the tunnels. In the light of day, it was a grand hall almost as nice as the lobby above. There was a large reception desk and a row of red velvet curtains. Crystal and bra.s.s chandeliers hung overhead, and the red carpet swirled with flowers and ribbons.
A woman with jet-black hair pulled into a severe bun sat at the reception desk. Cat-eyed gla.s.ses perched at the end of her prim nose. She didn't notice Beatrice standing there until she cleared her throat.
"Can I help you, miss?" She studied Beatrice through her thick lenses the way a scientist might examine a germ.
"I'm not sure. My aunt is very ill. She's in the hospital, and she asked me to get something for her."
Beatrice reached into her purse and pulled out Doris's safe deposit box key. She handed it to the woman.
"Are you an authorized agent?" The woman slid the gla.s.ses down her slender nose.
"Excuse me?"
"An authorized agent. Did your aunt sign a release allowing you access to the box in the presence of a bank employee?"
"Uh. No." Beatrice lowered her voice. "She had a stroke and I'm . . . I'm the only family she's got."
It was the sad truth, but the woman behind the desk didn't appear moved.
"Unless you have a police warrant or a death certificate with the power of attorney, I cannot legally grant you access to the box."
She set the key on the counter with a firm click.
"I don't understand." Beatrice sniffed. "Aunt Doris just wanted me to get her . . . rosary for her."
It was a small white lie, but she had nothing left. The tears began to pool without prompting, and the key blurred on the counter.
"The best I can do is check the records. What's your aunt's name?"
The woman examined the number on the key and pulled out a file drawer below the counter.
"Doris. Doris Davis," Beatrice answered flatly.
It was a dead end and she knew it; she didn't have power of attorney or whatever it was she needed. The prolonged silence on the other side of the counter made her look up. The woman was staring at her.
"You're Doris's niece?"
"I'm sorry?" Beatrice felt anxiety grip her skin.
"Doris Davis used to work here."
"Yes, I know." Beatrice quickly picked up the key. Investigating the box was a huge mistake.
"No, she used to work here." The woman pointed to the counter. The woman's stony face began to soften. "She trained me years ago. Did you say she had a stroke?"
"Yes, on Thanksgiving . . . You two were friends?"
"Yes, we were." The woman gave a small nod. Her eyes were pained. "I'm so sorry to hear she's not well. Which hospital is she at?"
"University. She's in the intensive care unit."
"I knew something was wrong. I should have called her. She came in every week." The woman pressed a thin hand over her mouth. She shook her head and then regained her composure. "I shouldn't be doing this, but come with me."
The deposits clerk walked around the desk and led Beatrice through the round doorway back to the vaults. An armed guard stood at attention.
"h.e.l.lo, Charles. The S1 key please."
The armed guard unlocked a drawer in a wood stand and poked around for a few minutes before pulling out the correct key.
"Thank you." She motioned for Beatrice to follow her and muttered under her breath, "These new security measures are driving me crazy!"
Deep in the metal room, the woman searched the rows and rows of little doors for the right one. Hundreds of metal rectangles lined the walls floor to ceiling. Each one had a number.
"What do you mean?"
The woman found the right box and slid the key the security guard gave her into a hole.
"The security guard . . . They gave him the keys-my keys. I've had the key ring for ten years, and last week they took them and said they needed to be more secure. It's ridiculous." She turned to Beatrice. "You need to insert your key, dear."
Beatrice slid Doris's key next to the first key where the woman was pointing and gaped in amazement as the door swung open. The clerk removed her key, and Beatrice did the same; then she pulled what looked like a long metal shoe box out of the cubbyhole behind the door.
"Follow me." The woman carried the box out of the vault and back into the lower lobby.
"Uh, s.h.i.+rley, I think you're forgetting something," the guard said.
"Of course," s.h.i.+rley responded curtly, and handed the guard the key.
Beatrice followed her through the round doorway to a red curtain. s.h.i.+rley pulled it aside, and Beatrice could see it hid a tiny room. The booth contained nothing but a table, a chair, and a small desk lamp. She placed the box on the table.
"I'll give you some privacy." With that, she pulled the curtain closed.
Alone with the metal box, Beatrice sat staring at the lid.
CHAPTER 53.
Beatrice returned to the reception desk with the closed box in her hands. It was heavy. She placed it on the counter, and s.h.i.+rley looked up.
"Did you find what you needed, dear?"
Beatrice nodded, afraid to trust her voice. She hadn't known what to expect and didn't know what to make of what she'd found. There were more questions than answers, and the weight of them bore down on her shoulders. s.h.i.+rley must have noticed.
"I hope your aunt feels better soon." Then she leaned in and lowered her voice. "Whatever you do, don't lose that key."
"Pardon me?"
"The key-don't lose it. There's no other way into the box without a police warrant and escort. We used to have ways to open the box discreetly with the right paperwork, but not anymore." s.h.i.+rley began sorting through papers on the counter as if she was trying to look busy.
"Discreetly," Beatrice repeated, not quite sure what s.h.i.+rley was getting at.
"Privately. With a master key. Sometimes things get lost, especially when people die . . ."
Beatrice lowered her eyes out of respect for Doris.
s.h.i.+rley cleared her throat. "Sometimes boxes contain sensitive materials."
"Money," Beatrice said flatly. She'd seen the rolls and rolls of quarters and bundled dollar bills in the back of her aunt's box.
"Sometimes." s.h.i.+rley leaned in closer. "Your aunt worked her fingers to the bone. I'd hate to see the IRS get ahold of what she worked so hard to save."
The IRS, police, money-Beatrice began to understand. Her aunt came in every week; that's what s.h.i.+rley had said. Her aunt came in every week with her tips and deposited them into a box for safekeeping. Beatrice had no idea why she didn't just use a coffee can or a cookie jar like everybody else. Either way, Aunt Doris was hiding her tips from the IRS. But that was the least of her concerns.
s.h.i.+rley seemed content to leave it at that. She lifted the box and carried it from behind the counter and toward the vault entrance. Beatrice followed her and watched her slide the steel container through the open door in the vault. The door snapped closed, and the clerk locked it with Doris's key. s.h.i.+rley's leather pumps padded swiftly back to her counter.
"You and Doris will be in my prayers."
Beatrice knew this was her cue to leave, but she paused and studied s.h.i.+rley. "What happened to the master key?"
s.h.i.+rley looked up and pressed her lips together. "I heard it disappeared." She glanced toward the security guard in the corner and then back to her papers.
"When?"
"Oh, before I started. I'm not sure. Doris is the one who told me about it. Please send her my best. I'll be praying for her. I've got to get back to my work now, dear."
Beatrice nodded apologetically. "Thank you for your help."
Doris and s.h.i.+rley occupied her thoughts all the way back to her desk. s.h.i.+rley had broken the rules to help her-well, to help Doris. She may have even broken the law by giving her access to the box. Doris must have been a dear friend indeed.
The master key went missing years ago. Mr. Thompson was raiding safe deposit boxes, but he couldn't possibly have the keys to boxes owned by complete strangers. He must have it. It was the only logical explanation. But a nagging voice in her head told her there was more to the story. There was Jim and Teddy and their late-night conferences about bribing officials. There was Randy in the vault last night. Then there was what she found in Box 547. She rubbed her forehead.
"Headache?" a voice next to her asked. It was Francine.
Beatrice blinked in surprise and turned to look at the neighboring desk for the first time in days. Francine was like a piece of office equipment the way she kept her head down hour after hour. Then she remembered Francine and the rest of the secretarial pool had heard Randy's outburst that morning. Her face reddened.