Bloodless (Aloysius Pendergast #20)(67)
Pendergast had his ID and shield out while the weapon was still in motion. “We’d like to ask you just a couple of questions, Dr. Quincy.”
The old man considered this. Then he shrugged and stepped back from the door. Quickly, Pendergast stepped in, followed by Coldmoon. The man led them down a short hallway and into a room that once was probably a consultation office, full of old magazines and some medieval-looking medical diagrams hanging on the walls. While everything was old, it was spotless and organized. There was a desk, an examining table, two chairs. Quincy slipped behind the desk and gestured for the agents to sit.
“I’d offer you coffee, but it’s too damned early,” the man said, moving a stack of medical journals aside to clear his desktop. Something in his economy of movement made Coldmoon realize that, though the man was old, he must have been virile, even formidable, in his prime.
“We appreciate your letting us in,” Pendergast said.
“You mentioned you had a couple of questions,” Dr. Quincy said. “I’m going to hold you to that.”
Pendergast gestured as if to say this was fair enough. “You offered medical assistance when we rang the door, I believe. Are you still practicing?”
The man laughed. “Now, how should I answer that to an officer of the law?”
“If I weren’t an officer of the law, and I came here with a caddis fly hook stuck in my thumb, what would you do?”
The man considered this. “Well, seeing as only locals ever come by here, I’d extract the hook, stitch the thumb up if necessary, apply some Betadine, and—since my surgical license expired fifteen years ago—tell the patient to be more careful with his fly fishing.”
He laughed, and Pendergast gave a slight smile in return. “That’s a shrewd answer, Doctor, and I didn’t hear a word of it. Besides, my interest lies more in your memories than it does in the present.”
“Is that a fact?” said the old man. “And why would two FBI agents have any interest in my memories?”
“Because we have a lot of threads, and we’re hoping you could help us braid them together. Now, I do know something of your background—please tell me if I’m mistaken about anything. Fifty years or so ago, you were enrolled at the University of Washington School of Medicine—the only medical school in the state at that time.”
The man nodded silently.
“Your family ran the farm here: raspberries, dairy products, apples, and turkeys. Your mother had died while you were in college and, with you as the only child, your father looked after the farm while you went to medical school. Correct so far?”
“If it’s my biography you’re writing, add a heroic war record and a moon landing while you’re at it,” the old man said. But, Coldmoon noticed, the humor did not dispel the fact that when Pendergast began asking questions, the doctor had become guarded.
“Heroic isn’t actually too far from the truth,” Pendergast continued. “Because when your father was injured in a farming accident and could no longer do the work, you came home. The farm was heavily mortgaged, and with your medical school bills on top of that, it was impossible for you to continue your studies.”
Dr. Quincy said nothing.
“You did all you could. But your father’s injury meant that you had to give up medicine to manage the farm.” Pendergast paused. “Everything still accurate?”
“You’re telling more than you’re asking,” the doctor said, “and that’s more than a ‘couple of questions’ already. Get to the point.”
“What I’m curious about, Doctor, is how you went from such dire straits—dropping out of med school, managing the farm alone, trying to keep it all afloat—to finishing your medical degree and residency in orthopedic surgery, hiring someone to help around the farm, paying off the mortgage, and turning this place into a going enterprise for almost forty years, even while maintaining a successful surgical practice in Tacoma.”
“You’re the biographer,” the doctor said. “I guess you’ll just have to figure it out.”
“Biographers can’t work without sources. I can give you a few more specifics, if that will help. We’re not interested, precisely, in your good fortune. But we are interested in someone you were acquainted with many years ago. Someone who, like you, appreciated poetry. Someone whose initials are, or should I say were, A.R.”
The old man abruptly twitched, as if administered a galvanic shock. Coldmoon could only admire how quickly he mastered it.
“We’re not here to arrest you—or the woman in question. What I propose is a simple exchange of information. I imagine you can guess what I want to know. And I know you must be eager—despite yourself—to hear the information I can offer about A.R. in return.”
The old man remained silent, but Coldmoon could see the wheels turning in his head.
“Information,” the doctor finally repeated.
“Precisely.”
The doctor went silent again for several moments. Then: “What do you want to know, exactly, about this person?”
“The more light you can shed, the better.”
“I’m not going to do that,” Quincy said, his voice low and harsh. “I made a promise, and I won’t go back on it—no matter how many years have passed.”