The In Death Collection Books 26-29 - J.D. Robb [68]
“Yes. It’s a very sad day. After, I’ll go to Mrs. Plowder’s, to help with the bereavement supper. Tomorrow…” She let out a little sigh. “Tomorrow, I am back to work. I will prepare the house so Mrs. Anders can return home.”
“Prepare it?”
“It must be freshened, of course, and some marketing must be done. The bed linens…you understand.”
“Yes.”
“I’ll supervise having Mr. Anders’s clothes packed.”
Don’t waste time, do you, Ava? “Packed?”
“Mrs. Anders feels it will distress her to see them. She prefers they be removed before her return, and donated, of course, to charity.”
“Of course. Mrs. Horowitz, how long did it take you to put away, give away, your husband’s clothes?”
“I still have his dress uniform.” She glanced over, and following, Eve saw the framed photo of the soldier Greta had loved. “People grieve in their own way.”
“Mrs. Horowitz, you strike me as the sort of woman who not only knows her job, but does it very well. Who not only meets her employers’ needs, but would anticipate them. To anticipate, you’d have to understand them.”
“I take pride in my work. I will be glad to get back to it. I dislike being idle.”
“Did you anticipate Mrs. Anders instructing you to pack away her husband’s clothes?”
“No. No,” she said again, more carefully. “But I was not surprised by the instructions. Mrs. Anders isn’t sentimental.”
“I doubt anyone would describe either of us that way, either. As sentimental. If I lost my husband…I’d need his things around me. I’d need to touch them, to smell them, to have them. I’d need those tangible pieces of him to get me through the pain, the shock, the sadness. You understand me?”
Gaze level on Eve’s, Greta nodded. “Yes, I do.”
“Would you have been surprised, if the situation were reversed, and Mr. Anders instructed you to pack up his wife’s clothing?”
“Very. I would have been very surprised.”
“Mrs. Horowitz, I haven’t turned on my recorder. I’m just asking you for your opinions. Your opinions are very helpful to me. Did she love him?”
“I managed their house, Lieutenant, not their marriage.”
“Greta,” Eve said in a tone that had Greta sighing again.
“It’s a difficult position. I believe honesty and cooperation with the police is an essential matter. And I believe loyalty to and discretion about an employer is not a choice, it’s duty. You would understand duty, Lieutenant.”
“Mr. Anders was your employer, too. Yes, I understand duty. We both have a duty to Thomas Anders.”
“Yes.” Greta looked at her husband’s photograph again. “Yes, we do. You asked me before about their relationship, and I told you the truth. Perhaps not all shades of the truth, perhaps not my feelings on that truth.”
“Will you tell me now?”
“Will you tell me first if you believe Mrs. Anders had anything to do with her husband’s murder?”
“I do believe it.”
Greta closed her eyes. “I had that terrible thought, not when I found him that morning, you understand. Not then. Not even that night, or the next morning. But…with so much time on my hands, so much time to think instead of work, I began to have those thoughts. Those terrible thoughts. To wonder.”
“Why?”
“There was affection, gestures—on both sides. An indulgence on both sides. You would see this and think they are nicely married. Comfortably married, you understand?”
“Yes, I do.”
“If she encouraged him to go out, play his golf, or attend his games, how could you fault her? If she encouraged him to take his trips, even to extend them, it would be natural enough. Women come to prize their solitude, especially when they’re long married. A little time without the man underfoot.”
“The reasonable, loving, indulgent wife.”
“Yes. Yes, exactly what it would seem. But, in fact, she was happier when he was gone than she was when he was home, and the longer he was gone, the happier she would be. This is my opinion,” Greta hastened to add. “My sense only.”
“That’s what I’m after.”
“I would sense an annoyance in her on the day he was scheduled to return. I could sense it even as she fussed about what meal to serve him to welcome him home. When he was