“Whoa,” Max said. “That’s so cool.”
“You want to know how my teeth got this way?”
Grace took that one. “No, thank you.”
Cram glanced at her. “Good answer.”
Cram. She took another look at the too-small teeth. Tic Tac might have been a more apt name.
“Max, you have homework?”
“Aw, Mom.”
“Now,” she said.
Max looked at Cram. “Scram,” he said. “We’ll talk later.”
They shared another fist-knuckle salute before Max darted off with the abandon of a six-year-old. The phone rang. Grace checked the Caller ID. It was Scott Duncan. She decided to let the machine pick that one up—more important that she talk to Cram. They moved into the kitchen. There were two men sitting at the table. Grace pulled up short. Neither of the men looked up at her. They were whispering to each other. Grace was about to say something, but Cram signaled her to step outside.
“Who are they?”
“They work for me.”
“Doing?”
“Don’t worry about it.”
She did, but right now there were more pressing matters. “I got a call from the guy,” she said. “On my cell phone.” She told him what the voice on the phone had said. Cram’s expression did not change. When she finished, he pulled out a cigarette.
“You mind if I smoke?”
She told him to go ahead.
“I won’t do it in the house.”
Grace looked around. “Is that why we’re out here?”
Cram did not reply. He lit the cigarette, drew a deep breath, let the smoke pour out of both nostrils. Grace looked toward the neighbor’s yard. There was no one in sight. A dog barked. A lawn mower ripped through the air like a helicopter.
Grace looked at him. “You’ve threatened people, right?”
“Yup.”
“So if I do what he says—if I stop—do you think they’ll leave us alone?”
“Probably.” Cram took a puff so deep it looked like a doobie toke. “But the real question is, why do they want you to stop?”
“Meaning?”
“Meaning you must have been getting close. You must have struck a nerve.”
“I can’t imagine how.”
“Mr. Vespa called. He wants to see you tonight.”
“What about?”
Cram shrugged.
She looked off again.
“You ready for some more bad news?” Cram asked.
She turned to him.
“Your computer room. The one in the back.”
“What about it?”
“It’s bugged. One listening device, one camera.”
“A camera?” She couldn’t believe this. “In my house?”
“Yeah. Hidden camera. It’s in a book on the shelf. Fairly easy to spot if you’re looking for it. You can get one at any spy shop. You’ve probably seen them online. You hide it in a clock or a smoke detector, that kind of thing.”
Grace tried to take this in. “Someone is spying on us?”
“Yup.”
“Who?”
“No idea. I don’t think it’s the cops. It’s a little too amateur for that. My boys have given the rest of the house a quick sweep. Nothing else so far.”
“How long . . .” She tried to comprehend what he was telling her. “How long has the camera and—listening device, did you say?—how long have they been here?”
“No way to know. That’s why I dragged you out here. So we could talk freely. I know you’ve been hit with a lot, but you’re ready to deal with this now?”
She nodded, though her head was swimming.
“Okay, first off. The equipment. It’s not all that sophisticated. It only has a range of maybe a hundred feet. If it’s a live feed, it goes to a van or something. Have you noticed any vans parked on the street for long periods of time?”
“No.”
“I didn’t think so. It probably just goes to a video recorder.”
“Like a VCR?”
“Exactly like a VCR.”
“And it has to be within a hundred feet of the house?”
“Yep.”
She looked around as if it might be in the garden. “How often would they need to change tape?”
“Every twenty-four hours tops.”
“Any idea where it is?”
“Not yet. Sometimes they keep the recorder in the basement or garage. They probably have access to the house, so they can fetch the tape and put in a new one.”
“Wait a second. What do you mean, they have access to the house?”
He shrugged. “They got that camera and bug in somehow, right?”
The rage was back now, rising, smoldering behind her eyes. Grace started looking at her neighbors. Access to the house. Who had access to the house? she asked herself. And a small voice replied . . .
Cora.
Uh-uh, no way. Grace shook it off. “So we need to find that recorder.”
“Yes.”
“And then we wait and watch,” she said. “We see who picks up the tape.”
“That’s one way of doing it,” Cram said.
“You have a better suggestion?”
“Not really.”
“Then, what, we follow the guy, see where it leads?”
“That’s a possibility.”
“But . . . ?”
“It’s risky. We could lose him.”
“What would you do?”
“If it were up to me, I’d grab him. I’d ask him some hard questions.”
“And if he refused to answer?”
Cram still wore the sea-predator smile. It was always a horrific sight, this man’s face, but Grace was getting used to it. She also realized that he was not intentionally scaring her; whatever had been done to his mouth had made that become his permanent, natural expression. It spoke volumes, that face. It rendered her question rhetorical.
Grace wanted to protest, to tell him that she was civil and that they would handle this legally and ethically. But instead she said, “They threatened my daughter.”
“So they did.”
She looked at him. “I can’t do what they asked. Even if I wanted to. I can’t just walk away and leave it alone.”
He said nothing.
“I have no choice, do I? I have to fight them.”
“I don’t see any other way.”
“You knew that all along.”
Cram cocked his head to the right. “So did you.”