"You just don't get it, do you? I've put this all behind me. I don't want to relive that part of my life." They started to run again. "And besides, I don't know anything."
"How do you know you don't? Have you gone through every little detail, been asked every possible question, run down every line of possible inquiry?"
"Look, I try not to think about the past, okay?"
"So I take that as a no."
"Would you think about it much if he were
"What I wouldn't do, Kate, is try to hide from the truth. Have you ever really talked about any of this? If you haven't, I'm here to listen. I really am."
As tears started to trickle down the other woman's cheeks, Michelle put a hand on Kate's shoulder and they both stopped jogging. She led Kate over to a bench, and they sat down.
Kate wiped her eyes with her hand and glared stubbornly at nothing. Michelle sat there patiently waiting.
Kate started off hesitantly and in a small voice. "I was in algebra class when they came and got me. One minute I'm doing
"Like your whole world is ending?"
"Yes," Kate said quietly.
"Were you able to talk to your mother about it?"
Kate waved her hand dismissively. "What was there to talk about? She'd already abandoned my father. That was her choice."
"Is that how you saw it?"
"How else could I see it?"
"You must have some idea why they separated beyond what you told us earlier."
"It wasn't my father's doing, I can tell you that."
"So it was your mother's choice, and you're saying you don't know why-other than maybe feeling she'd wasted her life with your father?"
"I do know that when my mother walked out,
"Well, maybe he did."
Kate stared at her. "And what, took Clyde Ritter with him?"
"Two birds with one stone."
Kate studied her hands. "It started out like a fairy tale. My father was an activist in college. Civil rights marches, war protests, sit-ins, the whole works. My mother was the beautiful actress poised for stardom. But they fell in love. My father was tall and handsome and smarter than everybody, and he wanted to do all this good. He was noble, he really was. He had great substance. All the people my mother knew were actors; people from the stage, basically all fluff. My father was something totally different. He didn't just act the part, he went out and risked his life to make the world better."
"Pretty hard for a lady to resist," Michelle said quietly.
"I know my mom loved him. What I just told you are things I learned from her and some of her friends. And I also found some of her diaries from when she was in college. They really did love each other. So I don't know why it didn't work out. Maybe it lasted longer than it should have considering how different they were. But maybe if she hadn't left, he wouldn't have done what he did."
"But maybe he didn't do it alone, Kate. That's what we're trying to get at."
"Your new evidence that you can't tell me," she said scornfully.
"A gun," said Michelle firmly. Kate looked startled but said nothing. "A gun that we found and that we believe was hidden in the Fairmount Hotel on the day Ritter was killed. We think there was a second assassin in the building, but that person didn't fire."
"Why not?"
"We don't know. Maybe he lost his nerve. Maybe he and your father had a pact to do it together, and then he didn't, leaving your dad with the full responsibility." Michelle paused and then added quietly, "And maybe it was that person who talked your dad into doing what he did in the first place. And if he did, maybe you saw or overheard something that can help us."
Kate looked down at her hands and nervously picked at her nails. "My dad didn't have many visitors and not any real friends."
"So if somebody did come to see him, you probably would have noticed," Michelle suggested.
Kate remained silent for so long that Michelle almost rose to leave.
"It was about a month or so before Ritter was killed."
Michelle froze. "What was?"
"It must have been two o'clock in the morning, I mean some crazy hour. I was asleep but some noise woke me. I slept upstairs when I was with my father. He could be up at all hours, and at first I thought it was my dad talking, but then the voice was different. I crept to the top of the stairs. I could see a light on in my dad's study. I heard him talking to someone, or rather this person was talking and my dad was mostly listening."
"What was he saying? This other person? Wait, was it a man?"
"Yes."
"What did he say?"
"I couldn't make out much of it. I heard my mother's name used. ‘What would Regina think?' Something like that. And then my father answered that times were different. That people changed. And then the other person said something I couldn't hear."
"Did you get a look at him?"
"No. My father's study had a door to the outside. He must have left that way."
"What else did you hear?"