RUE
And you’re assuming they were referring to Florence, because . . . ?”
I watched Tisha’s forehead crinkle on FaceTime and nodded. It was the same question I’d asked myself a handful of times since yesterday.
Or one hundred.
“Because I have exactly two friends. And if it’s not Florence . . . is there something you want to tell me?”
“Good point,” she conceded.
I scratched my temple. I’d slept poorly and fitfully, my brain an agitated mess of Conor Harkness’s taunting voice, white wine filling my glass, and the way Eli had rested his chin over my head as he stirred the boiling water. At some point early in the morning, right before falling asleep, I decided that I needed some distance from Eli. To help my body process what he could do to me.
“I looked them up,” I told Tisha. “As much as I could. Most of the hits regarding those four—”
“Eli and his Harkness friends?”
“Correct. Most hits are about their recent finance work, but with some digging—”
“Define ‘some’?”
“A couple hours of exploration of digital archives. Tisha, I can place three of them—Minami, Hark, and Eli, at UT ten years ago. In the chemical engineering department.”
“What about the other one?”
“Sul. Still at UT, but in chemistry.” I pressed my lips together. “I’m not the best at reading interpersonal dynamics—”
“Understatement. Please continue.”
“—but I think that the original friend nucleus was Minami, Hark, and Eli. Sul became part of the group when he married her.”
“I can see that.”
I was glad Tisha thought so, because I wouldn’t have bet a string of used dental floss on my own analytical skills. “They did overlap with Florence at UT. Minami got her PhD from Cornell eleven years ago, with a dissertation on biofuels, so she must have been a postdoc there. Hark’s mentor was Dr. Rajapaksha.”
“Who?”
“Some guy who retired before our times, even though he was still young. And I found an old page about Eli. It misspelled his last name—only one l—and that’s why it took me a while. His mentor was also Dr. Rajapaksha. And in his first year Eli won some kind of early-career grant for his work. Guess what on?”
Tisha’s forehead wrinkled even more. “Please, tell me it’s not biofuels.”
I couldn’t do that, so I said nothing.
“Okay.” Tisha blew out some air. “Could they have been at UT when Florence was, and involved in her area of work, and not have crossed paths with her? Would that be possible?”
I worried my lower lip. “I don’t think that there were any faculty I wasn’t aware of back in grad school. But one of my thesis committee members called me Rhea throughout my defense, and I doubt he’d recognize me if we met at the supermarket.”
“But what if you launched a hostile takeover of his lemonade stand?”
“I . . .” That’s where the tangle of my thoughts became unteasable. “In that case, I cannot imagine that he wouldn’t at least do some research on me.” Tisha nodded, and I continued, “It’s possible that that’s exactly what Florence did. Maybe she had no memories of them until she researched them.”
“And forgot to update us.”
“Or maybe she simply hasn’t had the time or energy to look them up.”
“Only one way to find out.”
I nodded. “My performance evaluation meeting is tomorrow. I’ll ask then.”