โCharlotte is on the phone having a quiet conversation with someone from her office. Mr. Preston is using the washroom. Iโmโ
pacing the living room. I stop at the window and open it a crack in a futile attempt to get some fresh air. Attached to our exterior wall, an empty bird feeder swings in the breeze. Gran and I used to watch birds from this window. Weโd admire them for hours as they gobbled bread crumbs weโd leave out. We gave each little bird a nameโSir Chirpsalot, Lady Wingdamere, and the Earl of Beak. But when Mr. Rosso complained about the noise, we stopped our feeding. The birds flew away and never returned. Oh, to be a bird.
As I stare out the window, I catch little snippets of Charlotteโs conversationโโbackground check on Rodney Stiles,โ โfirearms registry for the name Giselle Black,โ โinspection records for the Regency Grand Hotel.โ
Mr. Preston emerges from the washroom. โNo Juan Manuel?โ he asks. โNot yet,โ I reply.
About an hour ago, Charlotte and Mr. Preston decided to contact Juan Manuel. I was very unsure about dragging him into my mess.
โItโs the right thing to do,โ Charlotte said. โFor many reasons.โ
โHe holds the missing pieces,โ Mr. Preston added. โHeโs the only one who might be able to shed light on this fiascoโif we can convince him to talk.โ
โWonโt he be afraid?โ I asked. โI have reason to believe that his family has been threatened. And so has he.โ I canโt bear to even mention the other partโthe burn marks.
โYes,โ said Charlotte. โWho wouldnโt be scared? But heโll have a new choice today that he didnโt have before.โ
โWhat choice?โ I asked.
โBetween us and them,โ Mr. Preston replied.
Mr. Preston wasted little time after that. He called someone in the hotel kitchen who called someone else who discreetly checked the staff directory and handed over Juan Manuelโs direct cell number, which all of us hastily stored in our phones.
I waited nervously as Mr. Preston dialed his number. What if he turned out to be yet another disappointment, another person who wasnโt who I thought they were?
โJuan Manuel?โ Mr. Preston said. โYes, thatโs rightโฆโ
I couldnโt hear Juan Manuelโs responses, but I pictured his puzzled face as he tried to figure out why Mr. Preston was calling.
โI believe youโre in some serious danger,โ Mr. Preston explained. He went on to say that his daughter was a lawyer and that he knew Juan Manuel had been coerced at the hotel.
There was a short pause as Juan Manuel spoke.
โI understand,โ Mr. Preston said. โWe donโt want you hurt, and we donโt want your family hurt either. You should also know that Mollyโs in trouble as wellโฆ. Yes, thatโs rightโฆ. Sheโs been framed for Mr. Blackโs murder,โ Mr. Preston said.
Another short pause, a bit more back and forth, and then, โThank youโฆ YesโฆCertainly, we can explain everything in detail. And please know, weโd never do anything toโฆYes, of course. All decisions will be up to youโฆ. Iโll text you the address. See you soon.โ
Itโs now been over an hour, and Juan Manuel is still not here. All of this waiting and anticipating is having a most deleterious effect on my nerves. To calm myself, I think about what a difference it makes having Mr. Preston and Charlotte on my side. Yesterday, I was alone. This apartment felt bleak and hollow. All of its color and vibrancy drained away the day Gran died. But now itโs alive again, revitalized. I look at the feeder outside the window. Perhaps later I will scrounge for crumbs and fill it, no matter what Mr. Rosso says.
I feel overcharged and I canโt stay still, which is why Iโm now pacing. If I were here by myself, Iโd probably scour the floors or scrub the bathroom tiles, but Iโm not by myself, not anymore. Itโs altogether new and odd to have company. Itโs also a great comfort.
Mr. Preston takes his seat on the sofa. Charlotte ends her call.
Something is eating away at me, and I decide to voice it. โDonโt you think I should call R-Rodney?โ I ask. His name trips me up again, but I spit it out. โPerhaps he can offer an explanation? Maybe he has nothing at all to do with the cocaine found on my trolley. It could have been Cheryl, couldnโt it? Or someone else? What if Rodneyโs the one who can actually explain all of this?โ
โAbsolutely not,โ says Charlotte. โIโve just done a background check on Rodney. Rich family but kicked out at fifteen. Then in a group home. Then petty theft, assault, and various drug charges that never stuck, and a string of different addresses a mile long before landing himself in this city.โ
โSee, Molly? Calling that cretin is a bad idea,โ Mr. Preston says as he smooths out Granโs crocheted blanket on the sofa. โHeโll only lie.โ
โAnd then heโll disappear,โ Charlotte adds.
โWhat about Giselle? She must know something that can help me. Or Mr. Snow?โ
Before either of them can answer, thereโs a knock at my door.
My breath catches in my throat. โWhat if itโs the police?โ The room starts to undulate and I fear I wonโt make it to the front door.
Charlotte rises from her seat. โYou have a legal representative now. The police would have called me if they wanted to contact you.โ
She comes to my side. โItโs okay,โ she says, putting a reassuring hand on my wrist. It works. I immediately feel a little bit calmer and the ripples in the floor solidify.
Mr. Preston appears on my other side. โYou can do this, Molly,โ he says. โLetโs open the door together.โ
I take a deep breath and walk to the entryway. I open the door.
Juan Manuel is standing before me. Heโs wearing a pressed polo shirt, tucked into his neat jeans. Heโs carrying a white plastic takeout bag in one hand. His eyes are wide and his breath is ragged as though he climbed the stairs two by two.
โHello, Molly,โ he says. โI canโt believe it. I never, ever wanted trouble for you. If I could haveโโ
He stops midsentence. โWho are you?โ he asks, looking past me to Charlotte.
She steps forward. โIโm Charlotte, Mollyโs lawyer and Mr. Prestonโs daughter. Please donโt be afraid. We have no intention of turning you in. And we know youโre in grave danger.โ
โIโm in too deep,โ he says. โSo deep. I never chose this situation. They made me. They made Molly, too. Itโs the same but different.โ
โWeโre both in trouble, Juan Manuel,โ I say. โIt is most serious.โ โYes, I know,โ he says.
Mr. Preston speaks up from behind me. โWhatโs in the bag?โ
โLeftovers from the hotel,โ Juan Manuel replies. โI had to make it look like I was leaving for an early dinner break. There are afternoon tea sandwiches in there. I know you like them, Mr. Preston.โ
โOh, I do. Thank you,โ says Mr. Preston. โIโll lay them out. We all need to stay fortified.โ
Mr. Preston takes the bag and brings it to the kitchen.
Juan Manuel stands at the threshold without moving. Now that heโs not holding the bag, itโs easy to see that his hands are shaking. So are mine.
โWonโt you come in?โ I say.
He takes two unsteady steps forward.
โIโm grateful that youโve come, especially given your current circumstances. Iโm really hoping youโll talk to me,โ I say. โAnd to them. I needโฆhelp.โ
โI know, Molly. Weโre both in deep.โ
โYes. There are things that happened that I didnโtโโ โThat you didnโt understandโuntil now.โ
โYes,โ I say. I glance at his scarred forearms, then turn away.
He steps inside and looks around the apartment. โWow,โ he says. โThis place. It reminds me of home.โ
He takes his shoes off. โWhere can I put my work shoes? Not very clean.โ
โOh, thatโs very thoughtful,โ I say. I step around him and open the closet. I take out a cloth. Iโm about to wipe the bottoms of his shoes when he takes the cloth from me.
โNo, no. My shoes. My job.โ
I stand there not knowing what to do with myself as he carefully wipes his shoes, puts them in the closet, then folds the cloth neatly and tucks it away before closing the closet door.
โI must warn you that Iโm not altogether myself. Everything has been veryโฆshocking. And I donโt normally have visitors, so Iโm not used to that either. Iโm not very practiced at entertaining.โ
โFor the love of God, Molly,โ Mr. Preston says from the kitchen. โJust relax and accept some help. Juan Manuel, perhaps you can assist me in the kitchen?โ
Juan Manuel joins him, and I excuse myself to use the washroom. The truth is, I need a moment to collect myself. I stare into the mirror and breathe deeply. Juan Manuel is here and weโre both in danger. I look like Iโm falling apart. There are black circles under my eyes, which are swollen and red. Iโm tense and drawn. Like the bathroom tiles that surround me, my cracks are beginning to show. I splash some water on my face, dry it off, and then exit the bathroom, joining my guests in the living room.
Mr. Preston carries in Granโs serving tray full of dainty cucumber sandwichesโcrusts removedโmini-quiches and other delectable leftovers. I smell the food and my stomach immediately begins to rumble. Mr. Preston puts the tray on the coffee table. Then he brings an additional chair from the kitchen for Juan Manuel. We all take our seats.
I canโt believe it. Here we are in Granโs sitting room, all four of us. Mr. Preston and I are on the sofa, and in front of me are Charlotte and Juan Manuel. Pleasantries are exchanged, as if this were a friendly tea party, though we all know it is not. Charlotteโs asking about Juan Manuelโs family and how long heโs worked at the Regency Grand. Mr. Preston comments on what a reliable and hard worker he is. Juan Manuel looks down at his lap.
โI work hard, yes,โ he says. โToo hard. But still, I have big problems.โ
We have tiny plates on our laps filled with little sandwiches, which we are eating, me faster than anyone.
โEat,โ says Charlotte. โBoth of you. This isnโt easy. Youโll need to stay strong.โ
Juan Manuel leans forward.
โHere,โ he says. โTry these.โ He places two lovely finger sandwiches on my plate. โI made them.โ
I pick up a sandwich and take a bite. Itโs an exquisite taste, fluffy cream cheese and smoked salmon, with a burst of dill and lemon zest at the end. Iโve never tasted a sandwich more delicious in my life, so much so that itโs nearly impossible to follow Granโs chewing imperative. Itโs gone before I know it.
โDelightful,โ I say. โThank you.โ
We are all silent for a moment, but if others feel uncomfortable Iโm not aware. For a brief moment, despite the circumstances, I find myself feeling something I havenโt felt in so long, not since before Gran died. I feelโฆ companionship. I feelโฆnot entirely alone. Then I remember what brought everyone here in the first place, and the anxiety begins to churn again. I put my plate aside.
Charlotte does the same. She picks up the pad and pen by her chair. โWell, weโre all here for the same reason, so we better get started. Juan
Manuel, I believe my father filled you in about Mollyโs predicament? And I believe you yourself are in a very challenging situation.โ
Juan Manuel shifts in his chair. โYes,โ he says. โI am.โ His big brown eyes look into mine. โMolly,โ he says, โI never wanted to see you involved in this, but when they brought you in, I didnโt know what to do. I hope you believe me.โ
I swallow and consider his words. It takes me a moment to spot the differenceโbetween a bold-faced lie and the truth. But then it sharpens and I can see it clearly in his face. What heโs saying is the truth. โThank you, Juan Manuel. I believe you.โ
โTell her what you told me in the kitchen,โ Mr. Preston suggests.
โYou know how every night I stayed in a different room at the hotel?
How you gave me a different keycard each night?โ โYes,โ I say.
โMr. Rodney, he wasnโt telling you the whole story. Itโs true, I donโt have an apartment anymore. And no work permit now either. When I did, everything was great. I sent money back home. It was needed, because after my dad died, there wasnโt enough. My family was so proud of meโโYouโre a good son,โ my mother said. โYou work hard for us.โ I was so happy. I was doing things the right way.โ
Juan Manuel pauses, swallows, then continues to speak. โBut then, when I needed my work permit extended, Mr. Rodney said, โNo problem.โ He introduced me to his lawyer friend. And that lawyer friend took a lot of my money, but in the end, no permit. I complained to Rodney and he said, โMy lawyer guy can fix anything. Youโll have a new permit in a few days.โ He told me heโd make sure Mr. Snow didnโt find out. But then he said, โYou have to help me, too, you know. You scratch my back, I scratch yours.โ I didnโt want to scratch his back. I wanted to go back home, to find another way. But I couldnโt go back home. I had no savings left.โ
Juan Manuel goes silent.
โWhat exactly did Rodney make you do?โ Charlotte asks.
โAt night, after my shift in the kitchen, Iโd sneak into whatever hotel room with the keycard Molly gave me. Molly, sheโd leave my bag there for
me, right?โ
โYes,โ I say. โI did. Every night.โ
โThat bag, it was never mine. It was Mr. Rodneyโs. His drugs were inside. Cocaine. And some other things too. He used to bring more drugs later in the night when no one else was around. And then heโd leave. All night, he made me workโsometimes alone, sometimes with Mr. Rodneyโs menโand weโd prepare the cocaine for sale. I didnโt know nothing about these things before, I swear. But I learned. I had to learn. Fast.โ
โWhen you say he made you, what do you mean exactly?โ Charlotte asks.
Juan Manuel wrings his hands as he speaks. โI told Mr. Rodney, โI wonโt do this. I canโt. Iโd rather be deported than do this. This is wrong.โ But things got worse when I said that. He said heโd kill me. I said, โI donโt care. Kill me. This is no life.โ โ Juan Manuel pauses, looks down at his lap, then continues. โBut in the end, Mr. Rodney found a way to make me do his bad business.โ
Juan Manuelโs face tightens. I notice the dark rings around his eyes and the redness in them. We look the same, he and Iโall of our sorrows on full display.
โWhat did Rodney do then?โ Charlotte asks.
โHe said if I donโt keep quiet and do his dirty work, he would kill my family back home. You donโt understand. He has bad friends. He knew my address in Mazatlรกn. Heโs a bad man. Sometimes, when I was working late, I got so tired Iโd fall asleep in my chair. Iโd wake up, forget where I was. Mr. Rodneyโs men, they would hit me, throw water at me to keep me awake. Sometimes they burned me with cigars to punish me.โ He holds out his arm.
โMolly,โ Juan Manuel says. โI made up lies about the dishwasher burning me; Iโm sorry. Itโs not the truth.โ His voice catches and he dissolves into tears. โItโs wrong,โ he says. โI know a grown man should not cry like a baby,โ he says. He looks up at me. โMolly, when you came in the hotel room that day and saw me with Rodney and his men, I tried to tell you to
run away, to go tell someone. I didnโt want them to get you like they got me. But they did. They found a way to get you too.โ
Mr. Preston is shaking his head as Juan Manuel continues to sob. My own tears begin to fall.
Suddenly, I feel very tired, more tired than Iโve ever felt in my life. All I want is to get up from the sofa, pad down the hallway to my bedroom, wrap myself up in Granโs lone-star quilt, and fall asleep forever. I think back to Gran in her last days. Is this what she felt near the end, drained of the will to carry on?
โLooks like we found our rat,โ Mr. Preston says.
โWhere thereโs one, there are more,โ Charlotte adds. She turns to Juan Manuel. โWas Rodney working for Mr. Black? Did you ever hear or see anythingโanything at allโthat might suggest Mr. Black was actually behind this drug operation?โ
Juan Manuel wipes the tears from his face. โMr. Rodney never said much about Mr. Black, but sometimes he took calls. He thinks Iโm so stupid that I donโt understand English. But I heard everything. Mr. Rodney would sometimes come into the room late at night with lots and lots of money. Heโd set up meetings to give money to Mr. Black. Like more money than I ever seen in my life. Like this.โ He makes a gesture with his hands.
โStacks of bills,โ Charlotte said. โYes. New. Fresh.โ
โThere were bundles like that in Mr. Blackโs safe the day I found him dead,โ I say. โPerfect, clean stacks.โ
Juan Manuel continues. โOnce, Rodney was really upset because there wasnโt much money coming in that night. He went to meet Mr. Black and when he came back, he had a scar just like mine. But not on his arms. On his chest. Thatโs how I knew I wasnโt the only one getting punished.โ
The pieces come together. I remember the V of Rodneyโs crisp, white shirt and the strange round blemish marring his perfectly smooth chest.
โIโve seen that scar,โ I say.
โThereโs another thing,โ Juan Manuel says. โMr. Rodney never talked to me directly about Mr. Black. But I know he knows the wife. The new wife.
Mrs. Giselle.โ
โThatโs not possible,โ I say. โRodney assured me he barely ever spoke to her.โ But even as I say it, I realize Iโm a fool.
โHow do you know Rodney knows Giselle?โ Charlotte asks.
Juan Manuel takes out his phone from his pocket and flicks through some photos until he finds the one heโs looking for. โBecause I caught him,โ he says. โHow do you say in Englishย en flagrante delitoโฆโ
โIn flagrante?โ Mr. Preston offers.
โLike this,โ he says, and turns his phone around to show us a picture.
Itโs Rodney and Giselle. They are kissing so passionately in a shadowy hallway of the hotel that they most certainly would not have noticed Juan Manuel taking the picture. My heart feels sore and heavy as I stare at the photo, registering the detailsโher hair swept across his shoulder, his hand on the small of her arched back. I fear my heart may stop altogether.
โWow,โ says Charlotte. โCan you send that to me?โ
โYes,โ Juan Manuel says. They exchange numbers and he texts the photo to her. It takes only a few seconds for the vile proof to replicate on her phone.
Charlotte stands and paces the living room. โItโs becoming more and more clear that Giselle and Rodney had multiple reasons to want Mr. Black dead. But the only way we can prove Molly is innocent is by finding irrefutable proof that one or both of them killed Mr. Black.โ
โIt wasnโt Giselle,โ I say. โShe didnโt do it.โ Many skeptical eyes turn my way.
โOh, Molly. How do you know that?โ Charlotte asks. โI do. I just do.โ
Charlotte and Mr. Preston exchange that look again, the look of doubt. Mr. Preston rises to his feet. โI have an idea,โ he announces.
โUh-oh,โ Charlotte replies.
โJust hear me out,โ he says. โItโs not going to be easy, and weโll have to work as a teamโฆ.โ
โThatโs a given,โ says Charlotte.
โI like this team idea,โ says Juan Manuel. โItโs not right, the way they treat us.โ
โWeโll have to be conniving,โ says Mr. Preston. โWeโll have to make a plan thatโs ironclad.โ
โA plan,โ Charlotte says.
โYes,โ Mr. Preston answers. โA plan. To outsmart the fox.โ