Flash and Bones - Kathy Reichs [52]
Had Galimore really taken a bribe? Or had there actually been a frame-up back in 1998? A frame-up in which police officers participated?
Had Galimore impeded the Gamble-Lovette investigation? Was he trying to do so now? Or was he genuinely interested in righting a wrong to the Gambles, which he saw as partly of his making?
Ryan wasn’t exactly burning up the phone line. Nor was Charlie Hunt.
Did I just need a booster? What was this peculiar attraction I felt for Galimore?
I sneaked another look.
Galimore was holding a flat square box. DONATOS was visible in big red letters.
My eyes drifted to the tomato and cuke. Which were now oozing liquid across the sideboard.
What the hell.
I crossed and unlocked the door.
Galimore smiled. Then his gaze dropped.
Too late, I remembered my lack of undies. One hand rose, pointlessly, to my chest.
Galimore’s eyes snapped up. “Totally loaded.” He raised the pizza. “Hope you like anchovies.”
I gestured toward the table. “Let me throw on some clothes.”
“Not on my account.” Galimore winked.
A flush rose up my neck.
Oh, yes, cowboy. On your account.
When I returned in jeans, a sweatshirt chastely concealing my bosom, the table was set. A small bottle of San Pellegrino sat beside each wineglass.
Out of courtesy to me? Or was Galimore also a nondrinker. Given his past, it seemed likely.
Before taking my place, I muted the TV.
“What did you learn?” I started off, wanting to set the tone.
“Not yet.” Galimore slid an overloaded slice of pizza onto my plate. “First, we eat. And enjoy the lost art of conversation.”
In the course of three helpings, I learned that Galimore lived alone uptown, had four brothers, hated processed food, and besides auto racing, enjoyed football and opera.
He learned that I had one daughter and a cat. And that the latter was inordinately fond of pizza.
Finally Galimore bunched his napkin and leaned back in his chair.
“I know where you’re going,” he said. “And I think you’re dead-on.”
“What was Owen Poteat’s middle name?”
“Timothy.”
“And his daughters?”
“Mary Ellen and Sarah Caroline.”
“Yes!” I performed the “raise the roof” pantomime with both hands.
“What I can’t figure is how you got that.”
“First, I spoke to my daughter earlier this evening. She talked about a man who opened tax-advantaged savings plans for his kids’ educations.
“Second, I have a friend who is getting married. Right after my conversation with Katy, she phoned to complain about her bridesmaids.”
“Condolences.”
“Thanks. Both bridesmaids go by double first names.”
“True maidens of Dixie.”
“As I listened to Summer, I was studying Rinaldi’s code.”
“Summer is the lovely bride-to-be?”
“Do you want to hear this?”
Galimore raised apologetic palms.
“The plan Katy described is named after Section 529 of the Internal Revenue Code. 529s are investment vehicles designed to encourage saving for the future college expenses of designated beneficiaries.”
“OK. How do they work?”
“A donor puts money in and can take it any time he or she wants. The main benefits are that the principal grows tax-deferred, and that distributions for higher-education costs are exempt from federal tax.”
Pete and I had considered a 529 when Katy was small. Never followed through.
“A side bennie is that the assets in a 529 plan are not counted as part of the donor’s gross estate for inheritance tax purposes,” I added.
“So a 529 can be used as a sort of estate planning tool, a way to move assets outside your estate while retaining control if the money is needed in the future.”
Galimore was a very quick study.
“Yes,” I said.
“How much is a donor allowed to put in?”
“Thirteen thousand per year.”
Our eyes met.
“Get the code.” Galimore sounded as jazzed as I was.
I dug the spiral page from my purse and unfolded it on the table.
ME/SC 2X13G-529 OTP FU
Wi-Fr 6–8
Silently, we both translated the first line.
Mary Ellen. Sarah Caroline. Two times thirteen thousand into a 529 plan. Owen Timothy Poteat. First Union.
“First Union National Bank