He watched her a moment. He said very quietly, so as not to startle her, âSherlock, itâs seven in the morning. What are you doing here? Whatâs wrong?â
When she turned abruptly to face him, he saw more pain on her face than heâd seen in a long time. Then the hollow, despairing look was gone. Sheâd gotten a grip. Sheâd hidden the pain again. And left nothing at all.
What was going on here?
âSherlock? Whatâs wrong?â
She smoothed out her face. What had he seen? She even managed a smile. âIâm sorry to bother you so early, but I have a favor to ask. I need to take a few days off and go to Boston.â
He unlocked his office door and waved her in. âBoston?â
âYes. I have a sick aunt. Itâs an emergency. I know Iâve only been in the Unit a couple of weeks, but thereâs not anyone else to see to this situation.â
âYour aunt is elderly?â
âNot really, well, sheâs got Alzheimerâs. Sheâs gotten suddenly worse.â
âA relative called you?â
Why was he asking all these questions? Didnât he believe her? âYes, my cousin called me. He, well, heâs not well himself so thereâs no one but me here on the East Coast.â
âI see,â he said slowly, not looking at her directly now. She looked pale, scared, and excitedâan odd combination, but thatâs what he saw in her face. Her hair was pulled severely back, held in the same gold clasp at the nape of her neck. It looked like sheâd flattened it down with hair spray. She couldnât seem to be still, her fingers now flexing against her purse, one foot tapping. Sheâd forgotten to put on any makeup. She looked very young. He said slowly, âHow long do you think youâll need to be away?â
âNot more than three days, just long enough to see that her care is all locked into place.â
âGo, Sherlock. Oh yes, I want you to call me from Boston tonight and tell me whatâs going on, all right?â
Why did he care what she was doing away from Washington? More lies. She hated lies. She wasnât particularly good at them, but sheâd rehearsed this one all the way in. Surely he believed her, surely. âYes, sir. Iâll call you this evening.â
He jotted down his phone number on a piece of paper. âIf itâs late, call me at home.â He handed her the folded paper. He said nothing until she was nearly at the outer door, then, âGood luck. Take care.â
He turned back to his office only after she was out the door. He listened a moment to the sound of her quick footfalls.
This was odd.
Why was she lying to him?
Â
It was 10:30 that night when the phone rang. Savich muted the baseball game between the Giants and the Red Sox, Giants leading 7 to 2 in the seventh inning. He kept looking at the screen as he answered the phone.
âSir, itâs Sherlock.â
He grinned into the phone. âWhatâs going on?â
âMy aunt is just fine. I have more details to tie up but Iâll be back by Thursday, if thatâs all right.â
He said easily, âI have a good friend at Boston Memorial, a doctor who specializes in geriatrics. Would you like his name so you can speak to him about your aunt?â
âOh no, sir. Everythingâs under control.â
âThatâs good, Sherlock. Whatâs the weather like in Boston?â
âItâs chilly and raining. Everything looks old and tired.â
âAbout the same here. Iâll see you on Thursday. Oh yes, call me again tomorrow night.â
There was a pause, then, âVery well, sir, if thatâs what you want.â
âIt is. You sound tired, Sherlock. Sleep well. Good night.â
âThank you, sir. You too.â
â¢Â â¢Â â¢
He watched her from his office. It was nearly one oâclock Thursday afternoon. Heâd been in meetings all
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