We headed down the long corridor.
Dr. Botnick led the way. The corridor seemed to narrow as we walked, as though the tiled walls were closing in on us. I was about to move behind Myron, walking single file, when she stopped in front of a window.
“Wait here, please.” Dr. Botnick poked her head in the door. “Ready?”
From inside, a voice said, “Give me two seconds.”
Dr. Botnick closed the door. The window was thick. Wires crisscrossed inside of it, forming diamonds. There was a shade blocking our view.
“Are you ready?” Dr. Botnick asked.
I was shaking. We were here. This was it. I nodded. Myron said yes.
The shade rose slowly, like a curtain at a show. When it was all the way up-when I could see clearly into the room-it felt as though seashells had been pressed against my ears. For a moment, no one moved. No one spoke. We just stood there.
“What the-?”
The voice belonged to Uncle Myron. There, in front of us, was a gurney. And resting on the gurney was a silver urn.
Dr. Botnick put a hand on my shoulder. “Your father was cremated. His ashes were put in that urn and buried. It isn’t customary, but it’s not all that unusual either.”
I shook my head.
Myron said, “Are you telling us that there were only ashes in that casket?”
“Yes.”
“DNA,” I said.
“Pardon?”
“Can you run a DNA test on the ashes?”
“I don’t understand. Why would I do that?”
“To confirm that they belong to my father.”
“To confirm…?” Dr. Botnick shook her head. “That technology doesn’t exist, I’m sorry.”
I looked at Myron. There were tears in my eyes. “Don’t you see?” I said.
“See what?”
“He’s alive.”
Myron’s face turned white. In the corner of my eye I could see Bow Tie heading down the corridor toward us.
“Mickey…,” Myron began.
“Someone is covering their tracks,” I insisted. “We wouldn’t cremate him.”
“I’m afraid that’s not true.”
It was Bow Tie. He held up a sheet of paper.
“What’s that?” I asked.
“This is an authorization to have the body of Brad Bolitar cremated per the legal requirements for the State of California. It is all on the up-and-up, including the notarized signature of the next of kin.”
Uncle Myron reached out for the sheet, but I grabbed it first. I scanned to the bottom of the page.
It had been signed by my mother.
I could feel Myron reading over my shoulder.
Kitty Hammer Bolitar had signed a lot of autographs during her tennis days. Her signature was fairly unique with the giant K and the curl on the right side of the H. This signature had both.
“It’s a forgery!” I shouted, though it didn’t look like a forgery at all. “This has to be a fake.”
They all stared at me as though an arm had suddenly sprouted out of the middle of my forehead.
“It was notarized,” Bow Tie said. “That means an independent person witnessed and confirmed that your mother signed it.”
I shook my head. “You don’t understand…”
Bow Tie took the sheet back from me. “I’m sorry,” he said. “There is nothing more we can do for you.”