“Well, thank you for seeing me then.”
“You’re welcome. So what can I do for you?”
“Did you know Dan Mercer?”
He picked up a finger sandwich and took the smallest bite. “I did, yes, but not well.”
“What was your impression?”
“Do you mean, did he seem like a pedophile and murderer?”
“That might be a good place to start.”
“No, Wendy. He didn’t seem like the kind. But I confess that I’m rather naïve. I see the best in everyone.”
“What can you tell me about him?”
“Dan was a serious student—bright, hardworking. He was a poor kid. I’m the son of alumni—fourth generation at Princeton, in fact. It put us in different circles. I love this school. I’m hardly subtle about that. But Dan seemed awed by it.”
Wendy nodded as though this offered her some great insight. It didn’t. “Who were his close friends?”
“You mentioned two already, so I assume you already know that answer.”
“His roommates?”
“Yes.”
“Do you know them all?”
“In passing perhaps. Phil Turnball and I were in glee club together freshman year. It is interesting. As you probably know, freshman roommates are assigned by the school. That could lead to disaster, of course. My freshman roommate was an idiot savant who smoked dope all day. I moved out within the month. But these five all got along for years.”
“Is there anything you can tell me about their time here?”
“Like what?”
“Were they weird? Were they outcasts? Did they have any enemies? Were they involved in any strange activities?”
Lawrence Cherston put down the sandwich. “Why would you ask something like that?”
Wendy aimed for vague. “It’s part of the story.”
“I can’t see how. I understand why you’d inquire about Dan Mercer. But if your goal here is to somehow link his college roommates with whatever demons plagued him—”
“That’s not my goal.”
“Then what is?”
She didn’t really want to say much more. To stall for time she picked up the graduation program, started paging through it. She felt his eyes upon her. She flipped more pages and found a photograph of Dan with Kelvin and Farley. Dan stood between them. All three had big smiles on their faces. Graduation. They had made it.
Lawrence Cherston was still looking at her. What’s the harm, she thought.
“All of them—his roommates—have had trouble recently.”
He said nothing.
“Farley Parks had to drop out of his congressional race,” she said.
“I am aware of that.”
“Steve Miciano was arrested on drug charges. Phil Turnball lost his job. And you know about Dan.”
“I do.”
“You don’t find that odd?”
“Not particularly.” He loosened his tie as though it had suddenly become a noose. “So is that the angle you’re taking on this story? Roommates from Princeton all having troubles?”
She didn’t really want to answer that one, so she shifted gears. “Dan Mercer used to come down here a lot. To Princeton, I mean.”
“I know. I used to see him in town.”
“Do you know why?”
“No.”
“He would visit the dean’s house.”
“I had no idea.”
It was then, glancing at the program, at the list of students, that Wendy noticed something odd. She had gotten used to searching for the five names—or maybe that picture had set her off. The list was in alphabetical order. And under the Ts, the last name on the list was Francis Tottendam.
“Where’s Phil Turnball?” she asked.
“Pardon?”
“Phil Turnball’s name isn’t on this list.”
“Phil didn’t graduate with our class.”
Wendy felt a strange tick in her veins. “He took a semester off?”
“Uh, no. He was forced to leave school early.”
“Wait. Are you saying that Phil Turnball didn’t graduate?”
“To the best of my knowledge, well, yes, that’s exactly what I’m saying.”
Wendy felt her mouth go dry. “Why not?”
“I don’t know for sure. There were rumors, of course. The whole deal was kept hush-hush.”
She stayed very still, very calm. “Could you tell me about it?”
“I’m not sure that’s a good idea.”
“It could be very important.”
“How? It was years ago—and really, I think the school probably overreacted.”
“I won’t report it. This is off the record.”
“I don’t know.”
This was no time for subtlety. She had offered the carrot. Time to bring out the stick. “Look, I already said it’s off the record, but if you don’t come clean, I will go back on it. And I will dig. I will dig up every skeleton I can find to learn the truth. And then it will all be on the record.”
“I hate being threatened.”
“And I hate being stalled.”
He sighed. “Like I said, it wasn’t a big deal. And I don’t really know for sure.”
“But?”
“But, okay, it sounds worse than it is, but the rumor is Phil got caught off-hours in a building where he didn’t belong. In short, a campus breaking-and-entering.”
“He was stealing?”
“Heavens no,” he said, as if that was the most ridiculous thing he ever heard. “It was for fun.”
“You guys break into buildings for fun?”
“I have a friend who went to Hampshire College. Do you know it? Anyway, he got fifty points for stealing a campus bus. Some professors wanted to expel him, but like with Phil, it was all part of a game. He just got a two-week suspension. I confess that I participated too. My team spray-painted a professor’s car. Thirty points. A friend of mine stole a pen off the desk of a visiting poet laureate. The game ran campus-wide. I mean, all the dorms competed.”
“Competed in what?” she asked.
Lawrence Cherston smiled. “The hunt, of course,” he said. “The scavenger hunt.”
CHAPTER 32
“WE SHOULDN’T HUNT no more. . . .”
That was what Kelvin Tilfer had told her.
Now, maybe, that made some sense. She asked Lawrence Cherston some more about it, about scar face and all the rest, but there was nothing more to learn here. Phil Turnball had been caught where he wasn’t supposed to be during a scavenger hunt. He had been expelled for it. The end.