“I could say that, but my heart is broken. I love the Vesalius.”
“Do you?” said Liesl. She stood up straighter, taken aback. “Please don’t choose this moment to get mad at me, but it’s not the type of thing I picture you reading. Vesalius didn’t talk much about the proletariat.”
“It’s the corrections.”
She pictured the handwritten scrawls on the perimeter of the text.
“The annotations? I guess I see that. It’s why it’s so valuable.”
The library’s copy of the Vesalius was a first edition. The author’s own copy where he had jotted in the margins the corrections and improvements he wanted for future editions.
“Oh hell,” Dan said. He refastened the acid-free box with care and slid it, empty, to its home on the shelf. “It has nothing to do with value.”
“What then?”
“The imperfection of genius. The man is understood to have founded the field of modern anatomy. There was a fortune spent at the time to print this grand pictorial work. But it wasn’t good enough for him. He kept working at it. I find it inspiring.”
“That’s lovely,” she said, running her fingers over the box, then fixing the flag, making sure it was perfectly upright. “I didn’t know you felt that way.”
“Yeah, well. I’m sure you and the other white collars would be surprised to learn the rest of us are even literate.”
“You weren’t going to do this now.”
“Okay. Before it all goes into motion, before we tell the instructor that he can’t have the book for his class, before we tell Garber that he has a serial thief, and before someone whispers it in Christopher’s ear at his bedside and kills him, can we just sit here a minute and be sad about it all?”
She nodded, slow and stricken. He sat on a shelving stool and she sat down next to him.
They only took five minutes, and as they breathed their silent prayers for the book to the soundtrack of the humming fluorescent lights, ideas for what to do arose and then were dismissed before they were ever spoken. Liesl was alternately sure a solution would come to her and terrified it wouldn’t.
“The police, a detective from the police.” Out of breath, Max interrupted the séance. “I’m thrilled that you listened to me, but you can’t call the police and then go hide in the basement. They’re looking for you.”
“When did you call the police?” Dan asked. “Did you already know?”
She had to get up, of course. But she wanted to refuse. To keep her basement vigil for what had been lost. Light candles, shed tears, say prayers. She rose to her feet instead.
“It’s not for this,” Liesl said. “We have so much bad news. So much bad news.”
“What’s he talking about?” Max asked. “Why exactly are they here if not for the Plantin?”
“Don’t say anything,” Liesl said to Dan. “I’ve reported Miriam missing. The rest we’ll talk about as a team later. Everyone needs to get back to work.”
The detective was not in a uniform and looked neither like a gumshoe from the movies of her youth nor a bodybuilder from the crime movies Hannah watched.
“Professor Weiss,” he said. “Detective Peter Yuan.”
“It’s not professor. Just Liesl is fine.”
“Great,” he said. “Let’s talk in your office, and you can let me know what’s been going on.”
“You’ve spoken with Vivek?”
“Yes,” he said. “He reported her missing before you did.”
“Why didn’t I know about that?” she asked.
“In all honesty, it seemed like a marital issue more than a missing person.”
“Are you going to tell me you thought she ran off with a lover?” Liesl said. “But now that her boss has complained…?”
“Something like that.”
“What happens now?”
“Quite a bit already has. Professor Patel—Vivek—gave us credit card and cellular phone information for Miriam, and we have someone following up on that. We’ve been in her apartment this morning, but there isn’t anything suspicious there. In any case, she’s not at home, and it seems she has not been in a while. Her car is not in its parking spot, so the most likely solution is that she left for a trip of some sort.” He stopped.
“Is this where you bring up the lover?”
“No,” he said. “Do you have reason to think that’s a possibility?”
“No,” she said.
“But you brought it up.”
The detective produced a leather notebook from the inside pocket of his too-big jacket. In that respect he was exactly like a gumshoe, asking Liesl questions to which he already knew the answers and scrawling her responses in tiny print into the notebook, which might hold the answers to Miriam’s whereabouts. Liesl described Miriam: what she looked like, what she acted like, what she was working on, what time she had her morning coffee. On the wall, there was a framed photograph of James Joyce. At some point Detective Yuan stopped scrawling and started staring in the direction of the celebrated scribe.
They went on like that for a bit, but then he stopped asking questions, and she stopped offering information. He asked to see Miriam’s desk. She agreed. The detective sat in her chair. The burgundy sweater that Liesl remembered her wearing that last day, the sweater she was now certain was Christopher’s, hung off the back of the chair. Without touching anything, the detective began to write what he saw in his notebook.
The hackles in the room went up. Max looked up from his bible, and Francis laid down his pencil, and Dan pressed Pause on his Discman. They watched the detective.
Liesl was standing in silence, also watching. She was telling two lies. She didn’t give the detective the full context surrounding Miriam’s disappearance. And she didn’t pick up the phone to tell Garber that another book was missing.
“Will you excuse me?” Liesl said.
The detective nodded. Having answered some rudimentary questions, she was already invisible to him. Dan and Max and Francis watched Liesl leave the workroom. She heard the scraping of a chair; someone was walking behind her. She quickened her pace, walked into the office, and closed the heavy door before her pursuer could confront her.
Garber had not explicitly told her to avoid sending emails about the theft. Yet, without explicitly telling her, it had been made clear that there should be no paper trail, no evidence that the administration had known about a theft and failed to act. Liesl looked at the phone but didn’t pick it up. She began to type an email.
“Did Garber tell you to invite the police in?” Francis blew through her office door without knocking. “Are they investigating Miriam for the Plantin?”
“I need a moment to do something.”
“Are you not going to tell me what’s going on? Don’t I deserve to know?”
“Deserve to know. Do you deserve to know? I’m emailing President Garber to report the theft of the Vesalius as a courtesy before I report it to the police.”
He crossed his arms over his chest, dropped his eyes to the floor, shrinking himself. Every feature that made him look like a spy could also make him look like a villain. It didn’t mean he was guilty. The news of a second theft was shocking. The news of Liesl’s disloyalty to Garber was shocking. It didn’t mean he was guilty.
They were interrupted by the detective at the office door. He looked between them, the air full of accusation.
Francis backed out of the room, having said nothing, and Detective Yuan reentered it, closing the door softly behind him.
“I haven’t told you the whole story,” Liesl said.
“I see that now.” The air of accusation lingered. The detective could smell in the air that there was information that had been withheld from him.
“This isn’t my office. I’m not the library director.”
“Yes, that’s obvious.”
“That I’m not the director?”
“That this isn’t your office. The upholstery smells like testosterone.”
“The director had a stroke,” she said. “And a situation has arisen while I’ve been filling in.”
“A situation. Does it have to do with Miriam’s disappearance?”
The phone on Christopher’s desk rang.
“That’s one theory.”