CHAPTER 60

DR. FELDER PACED BACK AND FORTH BEFORE the leaded-glass windows of Dr. Ostrom’s office at Mount Mercy Hospital. He took a long, deep, shuddering breath, stared at the brown marshes beyond, a chevron of geese flying south.

What an afternoon it had been — what a terrible afternoon. The NYPD had come and gone, having turned the place upside down, asked questions, disturbed the inmates, and ransacked Constance’s room. One detective still remained on the premises for follow-up: he was now standing just outside the office, conferring with Dr. Ostrom in low tones. Ostrom glanced over, saw Felder was looking at him, frowned with disapproval, and turned back to the detective.

So far they’d managed to keep the story out of the papers, but that wasn’t going to help him much. And it likely wouldn’t last long. Already he’d received a call from the mayor, who had told him in no uncertain terms that — unless Constance Greene was returned to Mount Mercy with minimal fuss and zero collateral damage — Felder could start dusting off his résumé. That it now appeared Dr. Poole had participated in the escape — perhaps engineered it — didn’t really do him any good. The fact was, it was Felder’s name on the outing request.

What could this Dr. Poole possibly want with Constance? Why would he take such great risks to spirit her away from Mount Mercy? Was he working at the behest of an unknown relation? Could Pendergast have been involved?

At the thought of Pendergast, Felder shuddered.

There was a commotion down the hall, near the guard station by the hospital entrance. A white-clad orderly walked toward Ostrom and the detective. Felder stopped pacing and watched while the orderly conferred briefly with Ostrom.

The director of Mount Mercy turned toward Felder. “There’s a woman here to see you.”

Felder frowned. “A woman?” Who knew he was here right now, save for Dr. Ostrom and the staff? Nevertheless he followed the orderly down the corridor and back to the guard station.

A woman was indeed waiting by the entrance: fiftyish, short, thin as a twig, with fiery red hair and bright red lipstick. A faux Burberry bag was draped over one shoulder. She walked with a cane.

“I’m Dr. Felder,” he said, letting himself past the guard station. “You wanted to see me?”

“No,” she said in a high, querulous voice.

“No?” Felder repeated, surprised.

“I don’t know you from Adam. And tracking you down wasn’t exactly my idea of a pleasant afternoon. I don’t have a car, and do you know how difficult it is to get out here without one? It was hard enough even learning where Mount Mercy is. Little Governor’s Island — bah. I tell you, I nearly gave up twice.” She leaned forward, tapping her cane on the marble floor for emphasis. “But I was promised money.”

Felder looked at her in confusion. “Money? Who promised you money? What does this have to do with me?”

“The girl.”

“Which girl?”

“The girl that gave me the note. Told me to bring it to Dr. Felder at Mount Mercy. Said I’d be paid.” Another tap of the cane.

“Girl?” Felder echoed. My Lord, it has to be Constance. “Where did you see this girl?”

“From my back garden. But that’s not important. What I want to know is this: are you going to pay me or not?”

“Do you have the note?” Felder asked. He felt himself flushing in his eagerness to see it.

The woman nodded, but suspiciously, as if she might be subjected to a search for admitting this fact.

With shaking hands, Felder dug into his suit pocket, pulled out his wallet, peeled off a fifty, and held it out to her.

“I had to take two taxis,” the woman said, placing it inside her bag.

Felder plucked out a twenty, handed it over.

“And I’ll need to take a taxi back. It’s waiting outside.”

Another twenty was produced — the last bill in Felder’s wallet — and it vanished as quickly as the others. Then the woman reached into her bag and produced a single piece of paper, folded in half. One edge was ragged, as if it had been ripped from a book. She handed it to him. Written on it, in Constance’s precise copper-plate hand, was the following:

Please take this note immediately to Dr.


Felder, care of Mount Mercy Hospital,


Little Governor’s Island. Please — IT’S A


MATTER OF LIFE OR DEATH.


Felder will give you a monetary reward.

His hands shaking even more, he unfolded the piece of paper. To his surprise, the message inside was written to somebody else — Pendergast:

Aloysius — I have been kidnapped by a


man who claims he is your brother-in-law,


Judson Esterhazy. He was going by


the name of Poole. I am being kept in a


house somewhere on the Upper East Side


but I’m to be moved shortly, I don’t


know where. I fear he means to harm me.


There is something he’s told me with


peculiar emphasis more than once:


Vengeance is where it will end.


Please forgive my foolishness and


gullibility. Whatever happens, remember


that I’m entrusting my child’s ultimate


well-being to your care.


Constance

Felder looked up, suddenly brimming with questions, but the woman was nowhere to be seen.

He ducked outside, but she had disappeared. He went back inside and returned to where Dr. Ostrom and the homicide detective were waiting.

“Well?” Dr. Ostrom asked. “What did she want?”

Wordlessly, Felder handed him the document. He watched Ostrom start visibly as he read first the outside, then the interior message.

“Where is the woman?” Ostrom asked sharply.

“She disappeared.”

“Good Lord.” Ostrom walked over to a wall telephone, picked it up. “This is Dr. Ostrom,” he said. “Get me the gatehouse.”

It took only a brief exchange to discover that the woman’s taxi had already left the grounds. Ostrom made a photocopy of the document, then gave the original to the detective. “We’ve got to stop that woman. Call your people. Catch up to her. Understand?”

The detective hustled off, unhitching his radio and speaking into it.

Felder turned to Ostrom as the director hung up the phone. “She’s claiming her child is alive. What could this mean?”

Ostrom merely shook his head.

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