Never Saw It Coming

“Well, I don’t want to be sayin’ nothin’ that’s going to cause anyone any trouble,” Sylvia said.

 

“What do you mean b

 

 

 

 

 

y that?”

 

“Nothin’, nothin’ at all. I’m just sayin’ that if you want to talk to someone who knows Wendell, you know, pretty intimately, she’d be the one to talk to.” She put exactly the right emphasis on the word, hitting it not too hard, but just hard enough.

 

“I see,” Detective Wedmore said. “Do you know if she’s here now?”

 

“She is. You could probably find her over in ’lectrical or maybe lighting fixtures.”

 

“Which way’s that?”

 

Rona wandered in the direction Sylvia had pointed. She only found customers in the aisle displaying electrical parts, but there was a woman stocking shelves under an array of lit light fixtures. Wedmore could feel the collective heat of them overhead.

 

“Excuse me,” she said. “Are you Laci Harmon?”

 

The woman turned with a start. Wedmore put her in her mid-forties, about a hundred and sixty pounds. Nicely round in the right places, and a little too round in the wrong ones. She had brown hair that hung straight down, wore no makeup, and looked at Wedmore through a pair of oversized black-rimmed glasses.

 

“Yes?”

 

Wedmore showed her ID. “I’m trying to find out what happened to Eleanor Garfield.”

 

“Oh!” the woman said. “Ellie! It’s a horrible thing.”

 

“We’re certainly hoping it’s nothing too horrible,” Wedmore said. “We’re talking to everyone we can who might be able to help us, and I understand you and Mr. Garfield are co-workers.”

 

Laci Harmon’s neck flushed. “Well sure, we all work with Wendell. He has lots of co-workers. I’m certainly not the only one.”

 

“I understand you might know him a little better than some of the others here.”

 

“Who told you that?” Laci asked.

 

“Is that not true?”

 

Laci shrugged. “I mean, we talked, sure. You see someone at work every day, you say hello, you kid around, that kind of thing. No big deal.”

 

“I didn’t say that it was,” Wedmore said. “You seem a bit nervous, Ms. Harmon. Is everything okay?”

 

“I’m fine. Totally fine. I just, you know, don’t get interrogated by the police every day.”

 

“Does this feel like an interrogation to you? I’m just asking a couple of questions.”

 

Laci Harmon laughed nervously. “I guess, you know, we’re all a bit on edge, that’s all. Worried about Wendell. You know, because of Ellie.”

 

“Of course, I can understand that. Do you know Mrs. Garfield?”

 

Laci shook her head. “No, I don’t. I may have met her once, at a staff thing a couple of years ago, but I wouldn’t know her if I tripped over her.” She put hand to her mouth. “That didn’t sound right. Like I would trip over her. Like she’d be lying on the ground or anything.” A nervous laugh. “God, I’m sounding like some kind of idiot.”

 

Wedmore didn’t say anything, but was thinking the woman’s name tag should read GUILTY.

 

“Like I said, I’m just so worried about her, hoping everything is okay.”

 

“Why are you so worried about her if you don’t really know her?”

 

“You don’t have to know someone to be worried about them. I mean, when something happens to someone who’s related to someone you care about, I don’t think that’s unusual or anything.”

 

“You care about Wendell?” Wedmore asked.

 

“Okay, maybe that was a poor choice of words. I care about him the way I would care about anyone I work with, you know? That’s all.” There was a trickle of sweat running down her temple and she wiped it away. “It’s so hot under all these lights.”

 

Rona felt the same way, but said, “I feel fine.” She could have offered to move this conversation someplace else, but decided this was turning out to be a very good spot. “How long have you known Mr. Garfield?”

 

“Well, let’s see, I started here three years ago. I’d been working at Sears, but when they started advertising for jobs here I applied because it’s closer to my house, and Wendell was already working here at the time, so I guess it would be three years. I’ve known him for three years. Yes, that would be right. Three years.” She laughed.

 

“How has he seemed to you lately?”

 

“What do you mean?”

 

“Just what I said. How has he seemed? Has he been his usual self? Has he been acting as though he’s been under more stress lately?”

 

“Of course he’s going to be under stress. I mean, his wife is missing. Who wouldn’t be stressed out by that?”

 

“So you’ve spoken to him since his wife disappeared?”

 

“Hmm?”

 

“I said, you’ve spoken to him since his wife disappeared?”

 

“Uh, let me think?” She ran her fingers over her chin in an exaggerated display of concentration.

 

“Ms. Harmon, it’s only been about three days. You have trouble recollecting things that recent?”