
Three meals had been spoken for; the bonbon in the gold wrapper had departed, perhaps to return one day. Ada announced there would be tie enough to solve five murders before anything like food arrived. The dim light of a candle and gold-shaded globes in the ceiling fell now upon the body of evidence: ten letters and the box of tombstone photographs.
“Gracious!” said Mrs. Benz, holding one letter almost to her nose. “I’ve never seen my eyes in this condition!”
“It isn’t your eyes,” Matt told her. He sipped a watery Diet Coke and deciphered one letter on a tombstone at a time. This brought him no more satisfaction than reading the extortion letters, but he had to blush less. The descriptions of Ada Silberwetter showed fine range and creativity, but concrete details about the threatened murder were sparse.
“I suppose you’re sure it was murder,” Matt said, glancing over the top of a tombstone. “And not coincidence?”
Ada shifted in her seat and adjusted cloth that clung to one hip. “I’d want to be pretty sure it was coincidence,” she said, reaching for her glass.
Matt nodded. So far, she’d been pretty cool about it all, considering the obvious vituperation and offered violence. In her place, he’d have arranged for a bodyguard and cowered in his bedroom until the police had taken care of things. But he had pretty solidly decided that he had very little in common with Ada Silberwetter.
“They’re all signed ‘Miss Skull’,” he said next. “So the picture of that skull must mean something. There are skulls on most of the tombstones, too. Does that tell you anything?”
Ada shrugged. “I know people with all kinds of nicknames. But no ‘Miss Skull”. That would be too easy.”
“Oh, yes,” said Matt’s mother, most of her attention still on the letter at the end of her nose. “The reviewers would jump on something like that in a story in no time. Even an editor would notice.”
Matt picked up one of the letters again. “The envelope isn’t much help. If the postmark showed the whole ZIP code we could tell what part of the city it came from, but otherwise….”
Mrs. Benz looked around the page she held. “Well,” she said. “There’s a coil.”
She had the envelope of the letter she held tucked behind the page, pointing at it while trying to pick up another. “That’s a stamp,” Matt told her. “A flag stamp.”
His mother blinked at him. Yes, dear. But see how it’s flat along the top and bottom, and perforated on the sides. That means it came from a coil of stamps, and not a sheet or book. This one’s a coil, too.”
Each envelope featured a coil stamp. “And they only sell whole coils,” said Ada, softly clapping her hands at thus feat of detection. “So it could be some guy who swipes his stamps at the office, or just buys them a hundred at a time.”
“Or one at a time at stamp machines,” Matt put in.
Both women frowned at him, but he went on, “If he stole them at the office, he probably did the letters there, too. So that eliminates our chance of identifying him by his typewriter at home.”
“Maybe,” said his mother, adding another letter to her handful. “But whoever did this typed the letters on one machine and the envelopes on another. See? The w in Silberwetter is tilted in the letters but not one the envelopes. On the envelopes, the b drops a little below the line.”
“Great!” Ada smoothed her hair without much effect. “So the guy types the letters at home and then sneaks them to the office to swipe the stamps and envelopes.” She paused for an ovation and failed to get one. “Are you listening over there?” she asked Matt.
“Didn’t you see me yawn?”
“Well, let’s not outline the plot before we get our notes in order,” said Mrs. Benz, briskly. “You didn’t tell me much about the victim yet, except how he was just sitting at the table and fell into his soup.”
“Facefirst,” said Ada, nodding. “He wasn’t much of anyone. His name was Nathaniel DiName and he was a high school volleyball coach until he married one of Marshall’s nieces or grandnieces and got into government. He was, oh, sixty or so. I don’t think he got picked for any particular reason.”
Mrs. Benz took out a little notebook Matt had seen thousands of times. “Well, that’s one of the things we need to find out. First you need to figure out what you know already, and then you decide what you need to find out. Now then.” She straightened in her seat, released the handful of letters, and reached for a pen. “Do you have any personal enemies?”
Ada dimpled. “I hope I don’t have any impersonal enemies.”
Mrs. Benz, nodding, wrote down “Enemies”. “Any ex-boyfriends who might still be upset?”
Matt listened as his mother pursued this line of questioning, despite an absolute lack of straight answers to her inquiries. Her persistence and method impressed him. She was lifting her method bodily, even to the line about what you already knew and what you needed to know, from her 1978 Barbara Chang mystery Palmer’s Guitar.
Her subject, utterly and eternally self-possessed, insisted she had no enemies who would bother with threats. “When I make somebody mad,” she said, “I make them mad enough to take action.” Matt believed this.
It seemed as though what they had to work with were these documents. Matt looked through them again as the women continued their game of cat-and-mouse.
There were nine letters with envelopes, one letter that had been folded into the box of photographs, and the brown paper that had been wrapped around the box. These were postmarked at roughly one week intervals: September 30, October 9, October 13, October 21, October 28, November 2, November 10, November 17, November 24, and December 2. The envelopes were plain white business envelopes with no return address, and one stamp each. The brown paper had four stamps on it, but had arrived postage due, to Ada’s annoyance. “This was a bit too much,” she had said, when she brought it out. “An extortionist should show a little more class.”
The letters had been typed on onionskin paper which had had some kind of letterhead cut away. All ran to just one page, and each was signed “Moss Skull” in a broad, florid style with swirls and decorative dingbats. Not until the November letters was there any mention of money, with rather specific anatomical suggestions of how Ada could raise these amounts. Matt wondered if these were the reason she hadn’t gone to the police at once: until her stepgrandnephew died, she’d been having too much fun reading the correspondence.
After the Thanksgiving demise, threats ad warnings were replaced by specific arrangements about payment. Mrs. Silberwetter was enjoined to place one of three messages in the Personals column of the Reader. Message A—“Miss Skull’s got no teeth”—meant Ada didn’t believe a word of it and would risk the consequences of nonpayment. Message C—“Will pay to pull Miss Skull’s teeth”—indicated that Ada would pay a reasonable amount if Miss Skull sent am invoice. Message B—“Let’s have a look at Miss Skull’s teeth”—meant Ada wanted more proof that Miss Skull was the person responsible for the accident at Thanksgiving.
Limited light made all of this hard to read, but single-spaced lines crammed together on onionskin paper made things all but impossible. It wasn’t until his hostess noted, “I knew all along he did it. He’s trying to burn the evidence” that Matt realized how close the letter had come to the candle.
“Ack!” he exclaimed. But a genuine crisis never flustered him as much as mere awkwardness. He dipped the flaming corner of the letter into his Diet Coke.
“That might improve the flavor,” he said, checking to be sure he hadn’t destroyed any of the text. “It looks….”
He glanced up into the white bottoms of a pair of rolled eyes. The head with the eyes in it turned away, and the body underneath hurried away.
Matt reached out for Ada’s hand, nodding at the retreating figure. “Oh, him,” she sniffed.
The departing visitor was more worrisome to Matt than the brief fire, but it did his heart good to hear Walter Prince dismissed as “Oh, him! In just that tone.
“Should he be on the enemies list?” he inquired.
Ada shrugged. “I never liked him and he never liked anybody. But I wouldn’t say we’re enemies. Besides, I don’t believe he’d be able to spell ‘voluptuary’.” She pointed to one of the letters in front of Mrs. Benz. “Not to mention ‘autofornication’.”
Matt took up a dry letter. “Well, if you hold it up to the light, you can see all the corrections.”
Mrs. Benz, meanwhile, had finished writing up her notes and raised these, squinting at the large text. “There. With a list of what we know and what we don’t know, all we need to do is figure out the best way to learn everything on the second list.”
“What do we do?” Ada bounced forward in her seat. Matt winced, disapproving of such active enthusiasm.
“Never start unless you’re sure you can stop,” he muttered.
Neither woman paid any attention. His mother stuck her pen between her lips and then took it out again, waving it like a cigarette holder. “We need data. A detective can’t detect without data.”
Ada nodded. “We just want the facts, Ma’am.”
“Not necessarily facts.” Mrs. Benz shrugged. “But we do need data. And that takes good, solid legwork.”
“And for that,” Matt injected, “You need good, solid legs.”
His mother admitted that with a rueful sigh. “Let’s see.” She pulled the letters together. “Let me take these. Maybe I’ll see something more when there’s enough light. Matt, this weekend you need to go to the library and look up tombstones. For now, dear, you work on the list of possible suspects. Put down everything; I won’t tell. It’ll be the Antisocial Register.”
“Sure!” Ada wriggled back in her seat. “I’ll list all my ex-boyfriends in alphabetical ardor.”
Matt winced. Ada reached out to pat his hand. “You’re allowed to applaud,” she whispered.




































