MISSING JUSTICE
Alafair Burke
First published in Great Britain in 2004 by Orion, an imprint of the
Orion Publishing Group Ltd.
Copyright 2004 by Alafair Burke
For Jim, Andree, and Pamala
One.
If it's true that dreams come from the id, then my id is not
particularly creative.
The dream that makes its way into my bed tonight is the same one that
has troubled my sleep almost every night for the past month. Once
again, I relive the events that led to the deaths of three men.
The walls of the stairway pass as a man follows me upstairs. I force
myself to focus on my own movements, trying to block out thoughts of
the other man downstairs, armed and determined to kill me when I
return.
Time slows as I duck beside my bed, reach for the pistol hidden in my
nightstand, and rise up to surprise him. The .25 caliber automatic
breaks the silence; more shots follow downstairs. Glass shatters.
Heavy footsteps thunder through the house. In the dream, I see bullets
rip through flesh and muscle, the scene tinted red like blood smeared
across my retinas.
I usually wake during the chaos. Tonight, though, the silence returns,
and I walk past the dead bodies to my kitchen. I open the pantry door
and find a woman whose face I know only from photographs and a brief
introduction two years ago. She is crouched on the floor with her head
between her knees. When she looks up at me and reaches for my hand,
the phone rings, and I'm back in my bedroom.
It is four o'clock in the morning, and as usual I wake up chilly,
having kicked my comforter deep into the crevice between my mattress
and the foot board of my maple sleigh bed. I fumble for the phone on
my nightstand, still ringing in the dark.
"This better be worth it," I say.
It's Detective Raymond Johnson of the Portland Police Bureau's Major
Crimes Team. A member of the search team has found a woman's
size-seven black Cole Haan loafer in the gutter, but Clarissa
Easterbrook is still missing.
The call came only eight hours after my boss, District Attorney Duncan
Griffith, had first summoned me to the Easterbrook home. It was my
first call-out after a month-long hiatus and a new promotion from the
Drug and Vice Division into Major Crimes. I was told it would just be
some quick PR work to transition me back into the office.
So far, the transition had been rough.
When I pulled into the Easterbrook driveway that first evening, I cut
the engine and sat for a few last quiet moments in my Jetta. Noticing
Detective Johnson waiting for me at the front window, I took a deep
breath, released the steering wheel, and climbed out of the car,
grabbing my briefcase from the passenger seat as I exhaled.
I climbed a series of steep slate steps, a trek made necessary by the
home's impressive hillside location. Despite the spring mist, I was
able to take in the exterior. Dr. Townsend Easter brook was clearly
no slouch. I wasn't sure which was bigger, the double-door entranceway
or the Expedition I'd parked next to.
Johnson opened one of the doors before I'd had a chance to use either
of the square pewter knockers. I could make out voices at the back of
the house; Johnson kept his own down. "Sat in that car so long,
Kincaid, thought something might be wrong with your feet."
At least my first case back on the job brought some familiar faces. I
had met Raymond Johnson and his partner, Jack Walker, only two months
ago, when I was a mere drug and vice deputy. But given the history,
however recent, I felt a bond with these guys the gun ky kind that
threatens to stick around for good.
"You must not have given up all hope, Johnson. You were waiting at the
door."
"I was beginning to wonder, but then you tripped something off walking
up the path, and I heard a voice somewhere announcing a visitor. George
fucking Jetson house. Gives me the creeps."
The Easterbrook home wasn't exactly cozy, but I'd take it. Neutral
colors, steel, and low sleek furniture the place was a twenty-first
century update on 1960s kitsch.
With any luck, Clarissa Easterbrook would turn up soon, and there'd be
no need to disrupt all this coolness.
Johnson caught my eye as I studied the house. "Look at you, girl.
You're almost as dark as I am." He grabbed my hand and held it next to
the back of his. Not even close. Johnson's beautiful skin is about as
dark as it comes.
"Yeah, but you're still better looking."
He laughed but it was true. He also dressed better than me more
Hollywood red carpet than police precinct lineoleum. Griffith dragged
you back from Maui just for this?"
"I flew in last night. I sort of assumed I'd have Sunday to myself
before I headed back in tomorrow, but the boss must have thought it
would do me good to get some hand-holding practice while we wait for
Easterbrook to turn up. You know, ease me out of drug cases into the
new gig."
"They usually do," Johnson said. "Turn up, I mean. She probably went
shopping and lost track of time or went out for a drink with the
girls."
"Right, because, of course, that's all women do in their spare time:
shopping and girl talk."
"This is going to take some getting used to, Kincaid, after seven years
of MCT work with O'Donnell."
I didn't react to the mention of my predecessor. "Just doing my part
to lead you down the path of enlightenment, Ray. Clarissa
Easterbrook's an administrative law judge, not some bored housewife."
"Oh, so it's only women lawyers who excel beyond malls and gossip. Got
it. Note to all detectives," he said, as if he were speaking into a
dictation recorder, "the new Major Crimes Unit DA says it's still OK to
diss housewives." He dropped the routine and cocked a finger at me.
"Busted!"
There was no arguing it, so I laughed instead. "Who's in the back?" I
asked, leaning my head toward the ongoing murmurs.
"Walker's back there with the husband and the sister. We got here
about half an hour ago, and the sister showed up right after. We
haven't been able to do much more than try to calm them down. We need
to start working on the timeline, though. I stayed out here to wait
for you. I suspect Dr. Easterbrook's still getting used to having a
brother in the house."
It was unusual to have MCT involved so early in a missing persons case,
but Walker and Johnson were here from the bureaus Major Crimes Team for
the same reason I was: to make sure that our offices looked responsive
and concerned when the missing judge showed up and to triple-check that
the investigation was perfect, just in case she didn't.
"Sounds good. I'll do my part for the family and any press, but for
now you guys take the lead on interviews."
"Music to my ears, Kincaid."
He began walking toward the back of the house, but I stopped him with a
hand on his elbow. "I assume you're keeping things gentle for now,
just in case. And absolutely no searches, not even with consent." If
Clarissa Easterbrook had encountered anything criminal, everyone close
to her would become a suspect, especially her husband. We couldn't do
anything now that might jeopardize our investigation down the road.
"I should've known it was too good to be true. All DAs just got to
have their say. It's in the blood." I could tell from his smile that
he wasn't annoyed. "No worries, now."
We made our way to the kitchen, walking past a built-in rock fountain
that served as a room divider. The Easterbrooks had sprung for marble
countertops and stainless steel, Sub-Zero everything, but it looked
like no one ever cooked here. In fact, as far as I could tell, no one
even lived here. The only hint of disorder was in a corner of the
kitchen, where the contents of a canvas book bag were spread out on the
counter next to a frazzled-looking brunette. She had a cell phone to
one ear and an index finger in the other.
Jack Walker greeted us. With his short sleeves, striped tie, and bald
head, he had enough of the cop look going to make up for his partner.
"Welcome back. You look great," he said into my ear as he shook my
hand with a friendly squeeze. "Dr. Easterbrook, this is Deputy
District Attorney Samantha Kincaid."
There are women who would describe Townsend Easterbrook as
good-looking. His brown hair was worn just long enough and with just
enough gray at the temples to suggest a lack of attention to
appearance, but the Brooks Brothers clothes told another story. On the
spectrum between sloppy apathetic and sloppy preppy, there was no
question where this man fell.
He seemed alarmed by the introduction. At first I assumed he was
nervous. I quickly realized it was something else entirely.
"Please, call me Townsend. Gosh, I apologize if I was staring. I
recognized you from the news, but it took me a moment to draw the
connection."
It hadn't dawned on me that, at least for the foreseeable future,
former strangers would know me as the local Annie Oakley. One more
daily annoyance. Terrific.
"I'm sorry to meet you under these circumstances, Dr. East-erbrook.
Duncan had to be in Salem tonight, but he wanted me to assure you that
our office will do everything within our power to help find your
wife."
When Griffith called, he had insisted that I use his first name with
the family and assure Dr. Easterbrook that he would have been here
personally if he weren't locked in legislative hearings. Other missing
people might disappear with little or no official response, but Dr.
Easterbrook's phone call to 911 had ripped like a lightning bolt
through the power echelon. The wife was sure to turn up, but this was
Griffith's chance to say I feel your pain.
And Easterbrook clearly was in pain. "Thank you for coming so
quickly," he said, his voice shaking. "I feel foolish now that you're
all here, but we weren't sure what we should be doing. Clarissa's
sister and I have been calling everyone we can possibly think of."
"That's your sister-in-law?" I asked, looking toward the woman in the
corner, still clutching the phone.
"Yes. Tara. She came in from The Dalles. I called her earlier to see
if she'd heard from Clarissa today. Then I called her again when I saw
that our dog, Griffey, was gone, too."
Walker tapped the pocket-size notebook he held in his hand with a
dainty gold pen that didn't suit him. Most likely a gift from one of
his six daughters, it looked tiny between his sausage fingers. "Dr.
Easterbrook was just telling me he got home from the hospital at
six-thirty tonight. His wife was home when he left this morning at
six."
A twelve-hour day probably wasn't unusual for the attending surgeon at
Oregon Health Sciences University's teaching hospital, even on a
Sunday. Looking at him now, though, it was hard to imagine him
steadying a scalpel just four hours ago.
Easterbrook continued where he must have left off. "She was still in
bed when I left. Sort of awake but still asleep." He was staring
blankly in front of him, probably remembering how cute his wife is when
she is sleepy. "She hadn't mentioned any plans, so when I got home and
she wasn't here, I assumed she went out to the market. We usually have
dinner in on Sundays, as long as I'm home."
"You've checked for her car," Walker said. It was more of a statement
than a question.
"Right. That was the first thing I did once I was out of my scrubs: I
changed clothes and walked down to the garage. When I saw the Lexus, I
thought she must have walked somewhere. I tried her cell, but I kept
getting her voice mail. Finally, around eight, I thought to look out
back for Griffey. When I saw he was gone too, I drove around the
neighborhood for what must have been an hour. I finally got so worried
I called the police."
In the corner, Clarissa's sister snapped her cell phone shut and blew
her bangs from her eyes. "That's it. I've called everyone," she said,
looking up. "Oh, sorry. I didn't realize anyone else was here."
"From the District Attorney's office," Townsend explained. Ms.
Kincaid, this is Clarissa's sister, Tara Carney."
It was hard to see the resemblance. My guess is they were both pushing
forty, Tara perhaps a little harder, but they had been different kinds
of years. Clarissa was a thin frosted blonde who favored pastel suits
and high heels. Tara's dark brown pageboy framed a round face, and she
looked at ease at least physically in her dark green sweat suit and
sneakers.
She acknowledged me with a nod. "I called everyone I can think of, and
no one's heard from her today. This just isn't like her."
"She's never gone out for the day without telling someone?" Walker
asked.
They both shook their heads in frustration. "Nothing like this at
all," Townsend said. "She often runs late at work during the week, we
both do. But she wouldn't just leave the house like this on the
weekend. With the dog, for hours? Something must be wrong."
We asked all the other obvious questions, but Tara and Townsend had
covered the bases before dialing 911. They had knocked on doors, but
the neighbors hadn't noticed anything. Clarissa hadn't left a note.
They didn't even know what she was wearing, because when Townsend left
that morning she was still in her pajamas.
Her purse and keys were missing along with Griffey, but Townsend
doubted she was walking the dog. She always walked him in the morning,
and sometimes they walked him together after dinner if they were both
home. But she didn't take Griffey out alone after dark. Anyway, we
were talking about ten-minute potty trips, not all-night strolls.
Walker was rising from his chair. "Finding out how she's dressed is a
priority." He was shifting into action mode. "If we go through some
of her things, do you think you might be able to figure out what she's
wearing?"
"You would be the one to go through your wife's belongings I corrected.
We had to keep this by the book. "I think what Detective Walker's
suggesting is that you might be able to tell what clothes are missing
if you look at what's here."
"Right," Walker agreed. "And it would help to get a detailed
description out as fast as possible." It would also help us determine
if we were all wasting our time. Maybe Clarissa had packed a suitcase
and her dog to run off voluntarily with a new man or simply to a new
life without this one.
"You either overestimate my familiarity with clothing or underestimate
Clarissa's wardrobe. Tara, can you help? I doubt I can be of any
use."
I suggested that we all go upstairs together while Tara looked through
Clarissa's closet. Johnson offered to stay downstairs in case anyone
knocked, but Easterbrook assured him that the house's "smart system"
would alert us if anyone approached the door. Of course, Johnson
already knew that, so I gave him a warning look over my shoulder to
join me as I followed Townsend and Tara up the hammered-steel
staircase. No way was he sneaking around down here while the family
was upstairs, especially in a house with its own intelligence system.
The Easterbrook master suite was the size of my entire second floor, a
thousand square feet of spa-style opulence. Town-send led us through a
large sitting area, past the king-size bed, and around the back of a
partial wall that served as the bed's headboard. I couldn't help but
notice that the lip balm on the nightstand was the same brand as my
own, the paperback novel one I'd read last year.
The back of the suite contained a marble-rich bathroom adjoining a
dressing area roughly the size of Memphis. Town-send wasn't kidding
about his wife's wardrobe.
Tara started flipping through the piles of folded clothes stacked
neatly into maple cubes. The hanging items looked work-related.
After she'd gone through the top two rows, Tara blew her bangs out of
her face again. "She tends to wear the same few things when she's
around the house, but the ones I can remember are all here. I just
don't know."
Townsend stood in the corner of the closet, seemingly distracted by a
pair of Animal Cracker print pajamas that hung from a hook. Tara was
unfazed by the moment's poignancy, or at least she did not let it halt
her determination. She was examining rows of shoes stacked neatly on a
rack built into the side of the closet. "Well, it looks like her
favorite black loafers are gone. Cole Haans, I think. But I can't
tell what clothes are missing; she's just got too much stuff."
She walked over to a Nordstrom shopping bag on the floor next to the
dressing table. She pulled out a red sweater, set it on the table, and
then reached back in and removed some loose price tags and a receipt.
"These are from yesterday," she said, looking at the receipt. "Town,
these are Clarissas, right?"
She had to repeat the question before he responded. "Oh, right, she
did mention something about that last night, I think."
"Can you tell anything from the tags?" Walker asked.
"No," Tara said. "Well, the brand name, but then it's just those
meaningless style names and numbers."
"Did anyone go shopping with her? We could find out what she bought
from them," I suggested. I knew I told Johnson I'd leave the questions
to them, but I couldn't help myself.
Townsend seemed to wake up for a moment. "I believe she went with
Susan, but "
"I'm sorry." Walker interrupted, holding up his pen and pad. "What's
Susans last name?"
Tara looked disappointed. "Susan Kerr, a friend of my sister. I've
already tried calling her, and all I got was the machine."
A store clerk would be able to determine from the item numbers what
clothes Clarissa purchased Saturday. It wouldn't be easy to get that
information at eleven o'clock on a Sunday night, but it was worth
trying.
"We'll track someone down from the store," I suggested, looking toward
Ray and Jack. "Can't we pull a number for someone at Nordstrom out of
PPDS?" The Portland Police Data System compiled information from every
city police report and was the handiest source for accessing an
individual's contact information.
Within a few minutes, Walker had the home telephone number of a store
manager mentioned in a recent theft case. A manager would not be
involved in your average shoplifting case, but this one had been
unusual. An employee at one of the local thrift stores had bilked
Nordstrom out of thousands of dollars in cash by taking advantage of
its famously tolerant return policy. The bureau estimated that every
Nordstrom brand dress shirt donated to the thrift store during the last
two years had been returned to Nordstrom stores for cash by either the
employee or one of her friends.
Hopefully the manager would be sufficiently grateful to the bureau for
cracking the case that he'd forgive us for calling him after ten
o'clock at night. Walker made the call on his cell to leave the
Easterbrooks' line open, just in case.
As it turned out, the Easterbrook phone rang just a few minutes later.
I found myself watching Townsend to see how he responded. Did he
really expect the caller to be Clarissa? Or did he act like a man who
already knew we wouldn't be hearing from her? So far he seemed legit,
if dazed. He hadn't made any of the obvious slipups, the ones you see
on Court TV: using the past tense, buying diamonds for another woman,
selling the wife's stuff, things like that.
Whoever was calling, it wasn't Clarissa. Listening to one side of the
conversation was frustrating. "I see.... Where was he? ... No, in
fact, she's ... missing" Townsend's voice cracked on that one. "The
police are here now.. .. Yes, that's terribly kind of you, if you
don't mind." Some more earnest thank-yous and a goodbye, and Townsend
set the phone back on its base.
"That was a fellow who lives a few streets down. He works with me at
the hospital. He and his wife were leaving the Chart House and found a
dog running in the parking lot with its leash on. It's Griffey."
Walker had reached the Nordstrom manager, who generously offered to
meet him at the store to track down what Clarissa Easterbrook had
purchased yesterday and was we hoped still wearing.
About fifteen minutes after Walker left, a voice similar to the one
that announces my e-mails at home declared, "Good evening. You have a
visitor." Ray was right. Creepy George Jetson house.
I looked out the living room window to see a man in his fifties
struggling to keep up with an excited yellow Lab dashing up the slope
to the front door, straining against the leash. A woman of roughly the
same age followed.
When Easterbrook opened the door, the Lab finally pulled free from his
temporary handler, dragging his leash behind him. He leaped on
Easterbrook's chest, nearly knocking him over. He was a sticky mess
from the drizzle, but you could tell he was a well-cared-for dog.
Townsend absently convinced Griffey to lie down by the fountain, though
the panting and tail thumping revealed that he was still excited to be
home.
A dog like Griffey probably had an advanced degree from obedience
school, unlike my dropout, Vinnie. Vinnie was actually expelled. Or,
more accurately, I was. When it became clear to the teacher that,
despite her instructions, I caved to Vinnie's every demand to avoid his
strategic peeing episodes, she suggested that I re-enroll my French
bulldog when I felt more committed to the process. Two years later,
Vinnie and I have come to mutually agreeable terms. He has a doggie
door to the backyard, an automatic feeder, and a rubber Gumby doll that
he treats like his baby, but if I don't come home in time to cuddle him
and hear about his day, there's hell to pay. Griffey, on the other
hand, appeared to do whatever Easterbrook told him.
Easterbrook introduced Griffey's new friends as Dr. and Mrs. Jonathon
Fletcher. I guess you have to give up both your first and last names
when you marry a physician. Dr. Fletcher's looks said doctor more
than Townsend Easterbrook's. In contrast with the flashy Expedition
and high-tech house, I noticed that the Fletchers pulled up in a Volvo
station wagon.
Mrs. Dr. Fletcher did her best to provide comfort. "I'm certain
Clarissa's just fine, Townsend. A misunderstanding, is all. We just
have to find her, and that's that. Now, when's the last time you saw
her?"
She made it sound like we were trying to track down a lost set of
keys.
"This morning," Townsend said. "She was still in bed. I had
back-to-back surgeries, and when I got home she was gone."
"Well, dear, I'm surprised you even get a chance to operate anymore.
Jonathon tells me how busy you are, developing the new transplant unit.
Sounds like that's going extremely well."
Apparently Mrs. Dr. Fletcher was so used to her job as
conversationalist to her husband's colleagues that she was slipping
into autopilot. Understandably, Townsend cut her off.
"Who knows? Still so much to do," he said. Translation: Who the fuck
cares about the hospital right now? "I didn't even realize Griffey was
gone until a couple of hours ago. When did you find him?"
"Right around ten," Dr. Fletcher said. "A group of us were leaving
our function at the Chart House, and this feisty fellow was running
around in the parking lot. Initially, everyone assumed he escaped from
one of the neighborhood yards or something. But then someone noticed
he was dragging a leash. Our friend went after him, figuring someone
had lost hold of him. When he checked the tag, what do you know? Our
own Griffey Easterbrook."
The Chart House sat just a couple of steep miles down from the
Easterbrook home. The elegant restaurant was located on the winding,
wooded section of Taylor's Ferry Road that ran from the modest
Burlingame neighborhood in southwest Portland, up about two miles to
OHSU, and then back down again into downtown Portland. Spectacular
views of the city made the route one of the most popular spots in the
area for walks, runs, and bike rides.
It was not, however, the safest place for a woman alone at night. About
a year earlier, two guys from the DA's office were taking a run there
after work. They heard what they thought was a couple goofing around
behind the bushes, a man wrestling his squealing girlfriend to the
grass. Fortunately, the woman heard them talking as they ran past and
yelled, "Help, I don't know him."
The bad guy got away, but the ensuing publicity had called the city's
attention to the potential dangers of the area. It was no longer
common to find women alone on the path after dark.
The Fletchers' discovery of Griffey there was not a good sign.
Johnson must've been thinking the same thing, because he decided to
revisit what I thought had been our mutual decision not to search the
Easterbrook/Jetson home. He pulled me aside while Townsend continued
the conversation with the Fletchers.
"I know we're playing it safe, but finding the dog changes the picture.
We need to go through the place now while he's still playing victim. If
we wait until a body shows, he might lawyer up."
I shook my head. "I still don't like it," I said. "Look at him he's a
basket case. Later on, his state of mind might kill any consent we get
from him. If, God forbid, her body does surface, we can easily get a
warrant, since this is her house. We won't need to have probable cause
against the husband."
"And what do we do about the fact that our doctor can move whatever he
wants and start dumping evidence the minute we're out of here?"
Johnson's point was well taken, but it wasn't enough to justify a
thorough search this early in the case. Not only could Townsend try to
throw out the search down the road, we'd pretty much be killing any
chance we had of continued cooperation from him. In any event, if
Townsend was involved in his wife's disappearance, he certainly could
have disposed of any incriminating evidence before calling the
police.
I explained my thinking to Johnson and proposed a compromise. "Why
don't you offer to take a look around to make sure there's no sign of a
break-in? I don't have a problem with you doing a general
walk-through; I just don't want a detailed search yet. If you check
for broken windows and the like, we can at least look for the obvious
and avoid any major fuckups."
"Okay with you if I ask him about it in front of his buddies?"
I gave a quick nod. If Townsend felt pressured to consent to a search
because his friends were around, so be it. Courts only care about
claims of involuntariness if the supposed coercion comes from law
enforcement.
Before Johnson walked away, I added, "We should also get people
searching up on Taylor's Ferry. Hopefully, by the time the department
has a search plan together, Walker can tell us what she might have been
wearing."
Griffey perked up when Tara came down the stairs, apparently satisfied
that nothing helpful was going to come from foraging through her
sister's closet. I'd already been positively disposed toward her based
on her obvious concern for her sister, and I warmed to her even more
when she found the energy to get down on the floor with her sister's
dog and comfort him with a bear hug.
After a few minutes spent on introductions to the Fletchers and the
inevitable words of comfort, Tara grew antsy again. "Griffey, up," she
commanded, pointing him toward the stairs. "Sorry, I can't sit still.
You mind if I throw him into the tub real quick, Town? He's a little
crunchy, and it'll give me something to do."
It was clear that Tara's nervous energy was grating on her
brother-in-law; he seemed more at ease once she'd followed Griffey to
the second floor and he could turn his attention back to the
Fletchers.
"I keep expecting the phone to ring, but I'm not sure exactly what kind
of call it would be; maybe a ransom demand or something. Obviously, I
want it to be Clarissa explaining that this is all a misunderstanding,
that she went with a friend somewhere and forgot to leave a note, and
Griffey just happened to get out.. ." He was just rambling. I didn't
point out that the leash suggested Griffey had not simply escaped from
the yard, but that someone had been walking him. Townsend would come
to the realization in his own time.
I was beginning to think that a ransom demand would be good news at
this point. At least it might indicate that Clarissa was alive.
"This lifestyle of ours," Townsend said, looking around. "Why does any
of it really matter? Maybe it just invites problems."
Johnson used the moment as his in to ask permission for the
walk-through. Consistent with everything else about the man, his
transition was smooth.
He started by asking Dr. Easterbrook if he'd ever noticed anything
that might suggest that someone was scoping out the house or following
them, perhaps planning a way to get to Clarissa by herself.
"No, nothing at all like that," Easterbrook replied. "This
neighborhood is so isolated up here. We hardly see anyone on our
street who doesn't live here."
"Can you think of anyone who has a conflict with you of some kind?
Someone who might be motivated to do something to scare you or
retaliate against you?"
"Why would someone hurt Clarissa to get to me, detective?"
"Just exploring all possibilities, doctor. Maybe a disgruntled patient
from the hospital? A former employee?"
"No," Townsend said, slowly shaking his head. "Clarissa would
occasionally get some threats about her cases, but she always assumed
they were only blowing off steam. Never anything we considered
seriously. No one would want to hurt her. She's such a good
person."
"I was just exploring all the possibilities," Johnson repeated. "Come
to think of it, we should probably take a look around and make sure
there's no signs of a break-in, just in case. Do you mind?"
"Of course not, but I'm sure I would have noticed something earlier.
Given the security system, I don't see how anyone could have gotten
in."
"As long as you don't mind, I'll go ahead and check it out. No harm,
right?"
Johnson sidled off before anyone might want to stop him, and the
Fletchers seized the opportunity to extricate themselves from a
situation where they knew they couldn't be of much help. As they
launched into their goodbyes, feeding Townsend more premature
assurances that everything would be okay, I caught up with Ray. Truth
was, I didn't want to be alone with Townsend, struggling like the
Fletchers to avoid all those lame cliches this will all work out, only
a silly misunderstanding, and other completely useless pronouncements
suggesting the speaker had any clue as to how the night would end.
We hit the basement first. My basement is a dark, damp, dusty wreck of
concrete and cinder block that my imagination has populated with
thousands of spiders and their cobwebs. The Easterbrooks' had been
finished into a laundry room and a home gym that had better equipment
than my health club. Not only did we not find any bodies, blood, or
guts, there weren't even any windows to check. In place of the flimsy
things that are so often kicked in for basement break-ins, the
Easterbrooks had glass bricks.
Climbing back up the stairs, we could hear Townsend letting the
Fletchers out the front door, so we headed up to the second floor,
where Tara had Griffey in a bathroom off the main hallway. She was
fighting to get a dog brush through the hair on his hind leg.
Predictably, Griffey stood compliantly while Tara tried to avoid
pulling his entire coat off by the roots.
She looked up at us from the tile floor, removing her hand from the
brush to push her bangs from her forehead. The brush stayed entangled
in poor Griffey's coat. "I was just wondering whether I should show
this to you. I thought he felt a little crusty downstairs when I was
petting him, but it looks like he's actually got something dried on his
coat back here."
Johnson knelt down and looked more closely at the side of Griffey's
hip. Then he reached into an interior pocket of his suit jacket,
removed a latex glove, and slipped it over his right hand.
"Do you mind giving us a second, Ms. Carney?"
Tara seemed surprised by the request but left the bathroom, closing the
door behind her.
"Looks like clay or something," Johnson explained, "like he brushed up
against it here on his side."
"Shit. We should have gotten the crime lab over here immediately when
the Fletchers called."
I was beginning to panic. Why the hell hadn't Johnson been on top of
this? "Wasn't obvious," he said, responding to the unspoken question.
"Until you're certain what you're dealing with, it's hard to decide
what kind of resources to put into it. Considering the small chance of
any evidence off the dog, plus the likelihood that we're dealing with a
runaway wife, and it's a tough call."
It made sense, but it didn't excuse the fact that we nearly allowed
Tara Carney to take the source of what might be our best piece of
evidence so far and soak him in a bathtub.
Johnson flaked some of the beige paste from Griffey's coat into an
evidence bag, then marked it with his name and the date using a Sharpie
pen.
Shit. What else had we missed? "I think we should go ahead and get
the crime lab out here and search around Taylor's Ferry. Everything
about this feels bad."
"Your call," he said, pulling out his cell phone.
This new gig was going to take some getting used to.
Two.
By 7 a.m. the next morning, I was watching my first Major Crimes Unit
case unfold on television. Nothing like an attractive, professional,
missing white woman to satisfy the hunger of the viewing masses.
I sat in the eighth-floor conference room of the Multnomah County
District Attorney's Office, location of the office's only TV set,
flipping channels in a futile attempt to track the coverage. Out of
principle, I boycotted the Fox affiliate for running the tagline case
of a real-life Cinderella? in a graphic beneath the talking head. I
finally gave up and settled on the local morning show, which seemed to
be covering the story in the most detail.
Cut to some guy named Jake Spottiswoode, so-called field correspondent,
also known as the kid right out of college who gets sent with his
Columbia Gore-Tex jacket into the rain.
"Good morning, Gloria. Behind me in southwest Portland is the home of
Dr. Townsend Easterbrook and his missing wife,
Administrative Law Judge Clarissa Easterbrook. Dr. Easter-brook
reported the mysterious disappearance yesterday evening, shortly after
returning from a day of surgery at OHSU.
"Residents of this quiet neighborhood are fearing the worst," Gore-Tex
continued, "since learning that one of Judge Easter-brook's shoes was
discovered in the street on Taylor's Ferry Road last night. That
discovery was particularly ominous given that the shoe was found only
half a mile from where her dog was found earlier in the night, alone
but still on his leash. The community is helping police in the search
effort and say they still hold out hope that Judge Easterbrook will be
found safe and unharmed. We've been told that the family will be
coming outside any minute to make a statement."
"Jake, what can you tell us about what Clarissa Easterbrook might have
been doing before she disappeared? Was she walking the dog?" Watching
Gloria Flick lean forward and dramatically furrow her brow, I
remembered why I never watch this show. Gloria Flick was annoying as
hell.
While Flick continued to feign concern, Gore-Tex explained that the
police had refused to rule out any possibilities. Although this was
formally a missing persons case, they were moving forward on the
assumption that foul play might be involved. Trying to fill air time
before the press conference, the rain-soaked rookie correspondent
touched upon Clarissa's position with the city. "We're hearing,
Gloria, that Clarissa Easterbrook, as an administrative law judge, is
not the kind of judge that many of us would envision, in a courthouse,
presiding over trials. Rather, she hears appeals from the
administrative decisions of city agencies. Because many of those
matters are considered routine and, in fact, somewhat bureaucratic,
police are discouraging the media from speculating that Judge
Easterbrook's disappearance could be related to her official
position."
The viewing public was spared any further attempt to explain the boring
work of an administrative law judge when Clarissa Easterbrook's family
assumed its place behind a podium that had been set up in the
Easterbrook driveway.
Joining Tara and Townsend were an older couple I imagined were
Clarissa's parents, along with a woman I didn't recognize. Townsend
tentatively approached the mike. Make that about ten mikes. Unlike
Tara, he had changed clothes, but the bags under his eyes were every
bit as pronounced.
As the attending surgeon at the state's teaching hospital, Townsend was
probably used to speaking to a crowd. But today he seemed focused on
merely making it through the notes he carried to the podium. His voice
lacked affect, and he didn't look up once from his reading:
"My wife, Clarissa Easterbrook, has not been seen since six o'clock
yesterday morning. She disappeared somewhere between then and last
night at approximately six-thirty p.m." when I returned home. We
believe she was wearing a pink silk turtleneck sweater, charcoal-gray
pants, and black loafers, one of which was found on Taylor's Ferry
Drive early this morning. Our dog was discovered last night in the
same area, near the Chart House restaurant. We are asking anyone who
may have seen her, or seen anything in that vicinity that might be
related to her disappearance, to please call the police immediately.
Clarissa, we love you and we miss you, and we want you to come home to
us safe.
"Behind me are Clarissa's sister, Tara Carney; her parents, Mel and
Alice Carney; and her dearest friend, Susan Kerr. On behalf of all of
us, I'd like to thank everyone who is helping in this search effort.
Members of the Portland Police Bureau and the Multnomah County District
Attorney's Office were here late last night, and the media have been
great about getting Clarissa's picture out there and asking for
information. We're very grateful for all the support and concern that
has been shown for Clarissa and our family. Thank you again."
Whoever wrote the script was savvy enough to know how to play the game
of political institutions. Appear supportive of the police department
and the DA's office early on, and you'll have all the more leverage
down the road if you threaten to turn. Reporters were shouting out
questions now, but there wasn't much for Townsend to add. Yes, it was
certainly possible that something might have happened to her while she
was walking the dog, but the police were not ruling out other
possibilities. No, there hadn't been any ransom demands or other
communications about the disappearance.
Once the family retreated into the house, the station ran more pictures
of Clarissa and repeated the description of her clothing. Nordstrom
had come through. From the montage of photographs at a picnic with
Townsend, at Cannon Beach with Griffey, on the lap of a shopping-mall
Santa Claus with Tara I began to feel I knew this woman. She was aging
gracefully, keeping her hair blond but neatly bobbed, allowing the
wrinkles to show beneath a light dusting of makeup. And in every
picture she had the same big, generous smile that had greeted me the
one time I had met her at a women's bar conference a couple of years
ago. I couldn't bear to watch.
As I was clicking the TV off, Russell Frist stuck his perfectly
salt-and-peppered head into the conference room. "Welcome back,
Kincaid, and welcome to the Unit. The boss tells me you're in the
thick of things already."
The District Attorney must have called Frist first thing this morning.
Recently appointed supervisor of the Major Crimes Unit, my new boss had
a reputation for screaming at other lawyers and making them cry, but
also for being a good prosecutor. I had vowed to keep an open mind
about him, but sitting there beneath his gaze, I found myself
intimidated. At six foot three and a good two-twenty, Frist put in
enough time at the gym to test the seams of his well-cut suit.
It wasn't surprising that Frist referred to the trial unit that
prosecuted all person felonies as "the Unit." He'd been handling major
crimes for at least fifteen years, so other kinds of cases had no doubt
stopped mattering to him long ago.
"Looks like it," I said. "When he sent me out to the Easter-brooks'
last night for some hand-holding, I don't think either one of us
thought it was going to turn into something like this, literally
overnight."
"Well, we should talk. Give me about fifteen minutes, then meet in my
office?"
Fifteen minutes wasn't enough time to get any actual work done, so I
continued making my way through the pile of mail that had accumulated
over the past month. As un pampered county employees, we usually have
to take care of our own office moves when we change rotations, but
someone had been nice enough to relocate my things from my old office
down the hall at the Drug and Vice Division to what used to be Frist's
office in major crimes.
Everything, that was, except for my black leather, high-backed swivel
chair. A good office chair is nearly impossible to come by when you
work for the government. Most of the chairs around here had ceased
being adjustable years ago and had funky-smelling upholstery fit for
the county's HAZMAT team. About a year ago, I had spent four full
months sucking up to the facilities manager, begging for a decent
chair. The campaign was not my proudest moment; let's just say it
involved me, a lunchtime knitting class, and a decade's supply of ugly
booties for the woman's baby.
Now someone had taken my vacation as an opportunity to run off with the
spoils of my labor. The culprit clearly lacked two essential pieces of
information. First, I would stop at absolutely nothing to get that
chair back. And second, I'd have no problem proving ownership. The
day I got no, make that earned- my chair, I committed vandalism against
county property by scratching my initials in a secret spot and vowing
we'd be together forever.
But for now, I was stuck with a sorry-looking lump of stinky blue tweed
on casters.
Otherwise, the new office was a step up. In my old office, I had an
L-shaped yellow metal desk with a cork board hutch. Now I had an
L-shaped gray metal desk with a cork board hutch, plus a matching gray
file cabinet all to myself. Whoever had done the move had replicated
my old office (minus my special chair) to a T, all the way down to the
two pictures stuck in the corner of my cork board: one of Vinnie
gnawing on his rubber Gumby doll, the other of my parents in front of
their tree on my mom's last Christmas.
I met Frist as requested in his new corner office, legal pad and pen in
hand, ready for a fresh start in a new unit, with a promotion I had
wanted since I joined the office. It took most attorneys five to seven
years of good work and shameless ass kissing to get into MCU, and I'd
done it in less than three with my pride largely intact. Given my
Stanford law degree and three years in the Southern District of New
York at the nation's most prestigious U.S. Attorney's Office, some
would say I was actually running behind.
I took a seat across from Frist, trying not to think about the last
time I was there with the office's previous tenant.
True to his reputation, my new boss skipped the small talk and got down
to business. "I thought we should touch base since you're new to the
Unit and I'm still getting used to this supervision gig. You know the
deal: we handle all non domestic person felonies, basically murders,
rapes, and aggravated assaults. Robberies we treat like property
crimes and send down to the general felony unit. You can decide
whether you want to bring any files over from your old DVD caseload,
but I'd recommend against it. You'll have your hands full enough here
without having to juggle Drug and Vice."
It took some concentration to focus on the substance of what Frist was
saying. He had one of those deep voices you have to tuck your chin
into your chest to impersonate, a common practice around the DA's
office. He sounded like that antiwar governor from Vermont who ran for
president, but this proud conservative ex-marine would never oppose a
war, let alone go to Vermont. Frist was booming something at me, but
his eyes kept darting alternately between my breasts and somewhere just
above my forehead.
"You're starting out with something less than a regular load. Usually
we'd give you the cases of whoever left, but O'Donnell obviously had
some doozies that'd be hard to start out with. So I took over his
caseload, kept about a quarter of mine, and gave you the rest. As the
new person, you'll be on screening duty."
MCU's screening assignment is a notorious time-waster. Paralegals dole
out the incoming police reports among the various trial units: major
crimes, gangs, drugs and vice, general felonies, domestic violence, and
misdemeanors. But to make sure that no one misses a heavy charge and
issues it as a throw-away, any report that even arguably establishes
probable cause for a major person felony goes to MCU for screening. The
problem is, cautious paralegals end up finding potential felonies in
every run-of-the-mill assault. Now I'd be the one to waste hours
separating the wheat from the chaff. So much for my big impressive
step up in the prosecutorial food chain.
Frist covered a handful of issues he thought I should be aware of on
the cases I'd inherited from him, then changed the subject. "Now, as
for this Easterbrook matter, I talked to the boss. I don't think he
intended to throw you into the middle of things so quickly. You know,
he figured the judge'd turn up in a couple of hours, and he wanted to
make sure we did what we could in the meantime. But now this thing's
looking like it's got real potential."
When I first started in the DA's office, I was sickened by how excited
the career prosecutors seemed to get over a juicy incoming murder case.
I swore I'd never treat human tragedy as career fodder. But it had
since become clear to me that attorneys who have stuck with this job
for any amount of time handle it one of two ways: They either get off
on the adrenaline of their files or they become apathetic. Compassion
is a straight path to burnout. I wasn't yet to the point where I
looked at a person's murder simply as a trial challenge, but, when I
did, I'd rather approach my cases as a passionate competitor like Frist
than yet another of the lazy plea-bargaining bureaucrats we keep around
here.
But precisely because Frist was competitive, he wanted in on this one.
"Go ahead and ride the case solo while she's missing, but if a body
turns up, you don't want this as your first murder."
I opened my mouth, but Frist was all over me. "Zip it, Kincaid. I
know you're hungry, but you can forget about running this on your own.
And don't think I'm picking on you for being new. Or because you're a
woman."
Out the window went the staples of my reliable boss-fighting arsenal.
Clearly I'd need to be more creative.
"We always have two attorneys on any death penalty case," he explained,
"which this may very well be, if it's a kidnap gone wrong. And
Clarissa Easterbrook isn't exactly your typical murder victim. Every
person out there who thinks he can benefit will be crawling up our
asses to scrutinize every aspect of this investigation and
prosecution."
"Is it still my case, or should I go ahead and tell MCT to call you the
next time they find a shoe in the gutter at four o'clock in the
morning?"
"Nice try," Frist said, shaking his head and smiling. "But whereas
some people who held this job in the past were lazy fucks who'd rather
play golf than practice law, I want to make sure we do things right
around here, even if we all have to work our asses off. Including me.
So keep your MCT phone calls, and we'll talk later about how to split
the work if the need should arise. I never said who'd be first chair,
now, did I?"
I said "fine" but couldn't resist being a little pouty about it.
As I was leaving his office, Frist dropped a closing comment to my
back. "Besides, Kincaid, from what I hear, MCT's got an inside line to
you in the middle of the night."
"Yeah, my pager number," I said, pretending not to recognize his
not-so-subtle allusion to Detective Chuck Forbes. Despite my every
attempt to be discreet, the whole world seemed to know we had something
going on.
"Sorry. That was probably what human resources would call
'inappropriate." Color me repentant." He placed his hand dramatically
over his heart. "Seriously, when you're ready, we'll need to talk
about how you want to handle that. We can keep you off his cases or
not, whatever you think is ... appropriate."
I knew he was being fair, but inside I cringed. I pride myself on not
letting my personal life interfere with my job. In the two years since
my divorce, I had complied with my self-imposed prohibition against
dating cops and DAs. It's hard enough for a woman barely out of her
twenties to be taken seriously as a prosecutor. If cops and colleagues
start to look at you as dating prey, you're toast.
I headed straight to Alice Gerstein's desk to pick up some of the
weekend custodies. As the senior paralegal in the unit and possibly
the most competent member of the DA's office, Alice had already entered
today's new cases into our internal data system. We only had until two
o'clock this afternoon to present probable cause affidavits to the
court on anyone arrested over the weekend without a warrant, so issuing
custodies was always the first priority of the day.
Alice welcomed me with a fat Redweld file marked mcu screening. I
struggled to hold it in one hand, my coffee in the other. Judging by
its weight, the file held close to thirty cases. "Could you give me a
few of the regular unit custodies too? You know, so I can use them to
break up the monotony a little?"
Alice was no pushover. "Sorry. Frist has got me under strict orders.
The newbie doesn't get any real cases until the screens are finished. I
know for sure that at least Luke is absolutely delighted by your
addition to the unit. All last week, he was counting down the days."
I usually resent it when the all-female staff tries to enforce the
office's rules against me, because it's common knowledge that most of
them let the rules slide with their favorite male attorneys. But Alice
is a soldier in what she sees as the daily war of keeping this place
running, so I sucked it up and headed back to my office with the dregs.
If Luke Grossman had stuck it out, so would I. About an hour later, I
was reading my nineteenth police report, the closest one yet to a major
crime. Alas, it turned out to be another no complaint to be shipped
off to the Domestic Violence Unit. The victim called 911 to report
that he was walking down the street, minding his own business, when a
woman shot an arrow at him from a balcony overhead. That's right, an
arrow. What we call in this business a weapon, triggering major crime
jurisdiction.
Bad news for me, the 911 call turned out to be woefully incomplete. For
example, he left out the fact that the archer was his ex-girlfriend
who, by the way, was on Portland State's archery team and had a
restraining order against her ex. He also forgot to mention that the
weapon to wit, one arrow had a pink rubber Power Puff Girl eraser
popped onto the tip. No wonder the patrol officer's only arrest was of
Newman himself, for violating the restraining order. At the arrestee's
insistence, his complaint was written up, even as he was transported to
and booked at the county detention center.
I scrawled my initials next to a big fat red mcu declined stamp in the
file's log notes and then went ahead and no complain ted the potential
misdemeanor charges as well. No use making someone in DV waste their
time with Newman's whining.
My phone rang just as I was tossing the file into my out box.
"Kincaid." The butch phone answer is one of the small but very cool
perks of being a prosecutor.
"How you doing there, Kincaid? I was afraid your extension might not
have moved with you."
I recognized Ray Johnson's voice. How could he be so chipper when he'd
undoubtedly been at the Easterbrook house most of the night?
"Pretty amazing. The county somehow manages to keep all the phones
straight, but I still have to share a copy of the evidence code with
the entire unit. What's up? Don't tell me. Judge Easterbrook turned
up alive and well, rambling about a probe from little green men?"
"Nope. My instinct tells me that's not going to happen, not even that
first part. One good sign, though, is that the husband's schedule
checks out at OHSU. Three back-to-back surgeries. He's accounted for
from seven a.m. to six p.m. No strange behavior."
"You mean it's a good sign for him."
"And a good sign for our vie. If the husband didn't do her, she's less
likely to be dead." The bizarre mathematics of murder in a world where
most violence against women is inflicted by husbands and lovers.
But Johnson wasn't ready to clear Townsend Easterbrook. "On the other
hand, maybe it happened in the morning, and the guy goes off to work
like it's nothing. Wouldn't be the first time. And, of course, the
alibi's meaningless if he hired someone.
"I also got some preliminary info from the crime lab. They picked up
some unidentified latents around the house, but the one match they got
in AFIS was with the one Walker left on the door knocker. Other than
that, the only thing they've got is on our boy, Griffey. Remember that
gnarly-looking scum the sister found on the dog?"
"Sure, clay or something." My hopes were up. Cases had been solved
before by the unique composition of dirt left behind at a scene. Or,
in this instance, on a dog.
"Nope, not clay. Paint."
Interesting. Dogs out walking in the rain don't usually come home with
body paint.
"And how are we going to find out where that paint might've come from?"
I asked.
"One of the lab guys is getting together with some paint geek from Home
Depot. They've got a color-match computer. It's a long shot, but they
might be able to tell us the brand name if there's a perfect match.
From there, we could check the stores for any recent orders. In any
event, they'll make us up a paint chip, so if we ever do have something
to match it against, we won't have to use the dog hair. In the
meantime, the PIOs going to put a call out in the next press briefing
for tips. Hopefully, we'll get some reports of a neighbor who was
painting in the area. Even if we don't get our bad guy, it might at
least help us figure out where the dog has been."
Better the bureau's Public Information Office than me. I try to stay
away from the media.
"Any other news?"
"Nothing of any use. Looks like Griffey's the only mutt with anything
to contribute. We called a K-9 unit out there this morning to see if
one of their dogs could pick up a scent on
Clarissa. No luck. The handler told me the scent was long gone.
Probably the rain."
"Any luck getting in touch with Susan Kerr?" It would be helpful to
see if Clarissa's friend had noticed anything unusual when they went
shopping on Saturday.
"Haven't managed to reach her yet."
"She's around," I said. "She was with the family at the press
conference this morning."
"I know. She called my desk this morning; probably got my name from
Tara. I missed her when I called her back, though. When I catch up
with her, you want to go out on the interview with me?"
"Any reason to figure she's a suspect?" DAs don't usually tag along on
witness interviews.
"Yeah, guilty of being a rich muckety-muck. I did a little recon on
our girl. She makes the Easterbrooks look like Jerry Springer trailer
trash."
"Careful, Ray. Not all of us can afford those Hugo Boss suits you
strut around in."
"The point is, she's loaded. I thought we might cut through some of
the predictable bullshit if you talked to her."
"No problem. It's my first day cooped up in the office, so the sooner
the better." As usual, Johnson was right: Lots of rich people find
speaking to the police beneath them. Depending on who Susan Kerr
turned out to be, she might expect a personal call from District
Attorney Duncan Griffith or even from the mayor herself.
I hung up, pleased that I hadn't given in to the urge to ask Ray if
he'd seen Chuck this morning. I was surprised I hadn't heard from him
yet.
I'd managed to reject only another three cases before my thoughts
drifted back to Clarissa Easterbrook. If she was still alive, what was
she doing right now?
I paged Johnson, and he returned the call right away. "Didn't I just
talk to you?" he asked.
"Have you thought about searching Easterbrook's office?"
"I thought you wanted to play things cool with him for now," he said.
I realized that he thought I was talking about Townsend. "No,
Clarissa's office. Maybe there's something there that would at least
give us some leads."
"It's looking like she was snatched from the neighborhood, so we've
been working from that area out. The office has been less of a
priority, but, yeah, you're right, we should at least check it out.
I'll get someone on it."
"Don't worry about it. I'll do it and call you when it's okay to go
in."
"Really, Kincaid, it's all right. I know you're new to this, but DAs
don't usually do any of the runaround work. One of the perks of the
job, right? Bossing cops around?"
"Trust me, there will come a time when you rue the day you encouraged
me to be bossier. I'm not doing this to take the load off you; I'm
doing it because I'm going stir crazy in this new rotation. Plus, I
have a feeling that if you guys storm into a judge's office with a
search warrant, the chief judge will be on the phone to Duncan
demanding my head."
"We're talking about me, Kincaid. I don't storm. I slide." He
dragged out the vowel in his last word.
"You get the drift."
"That I do. Go to it, then. Call me when you need me."
I buzzed through the rest of my screens, the promise of doing some real
work motivating me like a creme briilee waiting at the end of a bad
meal.
When I was done, I called the mayor's office. Although Clarissa's
position entitled her to be called Judge, hearings officers are
actually part of city administration. Anyone who disagrees with a city
agency's decision has to take an administrative appeal to a city
hearings officer before he can sue before a "real" judge. In short,
when it comes to city bureaucracy, a judge like Clarissa Easterbrook is
the last stop before the courthouse.
I explained the situation to the mayor's administrative assistant, who
referred me to Clarence Loutrell, the chief administrative hearings
officer.
Hanging up the phone, I swiveled my chair around to look out the
window. Okay, it was more of a cranking than a swivel with this
particular chair, but it was enough for me to see that there wasn't a
break from the rain yet. I generally prefer to handle this kind of
thing face-to-face. It's harder for someone to reject a request in
person than to say no to a faceless voice on the telephone.
Fuck it. The walk in the humidity was sure to leave me with a puffy
head of cotton-ball hair for the rest of the day, but four hours at a
desk after two weeks on the beach had me yearning to get out. Besides,
I could put my hair through a wind tunnel, and it wouldn't matter.
Clean clothes and a lack of BOis about all you need to meet minimum
standards for the courthouse crowd.
I signed myself out on the MCU white board without explanation,
following my practice of staking out ground early in a new job the way
Vinnie pees everywhere he goes to mark territory. No way was I going
to join the kiss-ups who leave notes on the board detailing their
precise location. That's what pagers were for.
I kicked off my black Ferragamo sling backs and threw them in my
briefcase while I shoved my stockinged feet into my New Balances. I'd
lost enough of my good shoes to Portland's damp streets.
On my way out, I swung by my old office in DVD. Kirsten
Holloway, newly promoted from the misdemeanor unit, had already covered
the place with her wedding photos and stuffed animals. She would learn
her lesson quickly. By the end of the week, anonymous pranksters would
be sure to have her cute little animals posed in backbreaking positions
violating the laws of thirty-six states. I didn't even want to think
about the Post-it notes she'd find stuck around the bride and groom. In
the meantime, no sign of my beloved chair.
I entered City Hall from its new Fourth Avenue entrance. The city had
completed what seemed like endless remodeling about a year ago. What
used to be a dingy back entrance through a metal door was now the main
entrance, hugged by pink pillars and a rose garden.
The refurbished City Hall beat the hell out of my rundown courthouse.
The renovation had exposed the building's original marble tile and
woodwork. To the extent that there was any natural light on this
crummy day, it flooded into the lobby through the atrium skylights. The
tiled staircases that had once been enclosed in a stairwell were now
open, exposing five floors of original copper handrails and plating.
I took the stairs to the third floor, then ducked into the corner to
switch my shoes. Judge Loutrell's office was in the suite at the end
of the hall.
I was in luck, or so it seemed. After a short call, Loutrell's
secretary told me he was in and willing to see me. Even though I
should have made an appointment, of course.
Loutrell rose from his desk to greet me. He was tall and thin, balding
but trying hard to conceal it with his last few wisps of white hair. I
shook his hand and introduced myself as a Deputy District Attorney.
"I'm sure you already know that Clarissa Easterbrook has been reported
missing."
"Yes. I was shocked when I heard it on the news this morning. It's
just not like Clarissa to be gone like this."
"That's what others have been telling us as well, so the police are
investigating every possibility. For now, they're focusing primarily
on Judge Easterbrook's neighborhood, but since I work at the courthouse
and was in the area, I thought I'd see if anyone she works with might
have any theories about where she could be or people the police should
be talking to."
"Gosh, not offhand. I wish I could help, but I didn't talk to Clarissa
much and I don't know much about her personal life."
"What about her professional life? Has there been anything unusual
lately for her at work?"
"Not that I can think of. Like I said, we didn't talk much, and all of
us work pretty independently. I'm the chief administrative officer,
but that doesn't mean much other than filling out some forms and
whatnot."
Now came the tricky part. "I'm sure it's a long shot that her
disappearance would have anything to do with work, but we want to make
sure we cover all the bases early on. What would be really helpful to
the investigation is to take a look in Judge Easterbrook's office. You
know, just to make sure nothing seems out of the ordinary."
I was about halfway through the request when Loutrell began to finger
the pen resting on his leather desk pad. By the time I was finished,
he had picked it up and was twisting the cap around in circles.
"Well, yes, I can see why that would be an important part of what
you're trying to do. But I'm sure you understand that I can't just
open up one of our hearing officers' offices for you."
"Judge Loutrell, one of your coworkers is missing. From everything
I've heard, including what you just told me, this is not a woman who
would run off without some explanation. One of her shoes was found in
a gutter. All I'm asking for is the chance to rule out the possibility
that this had anything to do with her work so the police can focus on
more likely possibilities."
"I understand all that, Ms. Kincaid, but I'm sure you understand that
there are privacy issues at stake."
"Clarissa Easterbrook is not a private attorney. She doesn't have any
clients, so we're not talking about privileged material. The only
privacy rights at issue are Clarissa Easterbrook's, and I think it's
safe to say that she'd want us to take a look under these
circumstances."
"I just don't know." He was still twisting the pen cap.
"I can have the police apply for a search warrant if you think that's a
more appropriate procedure." I managed to make it sound like an offer
to be helpful instead of a threat.
"I just don't think this is something I should be handling."
"The mayor's office pointed me to you. You're the chief administrative
hearings officer."
"And I told you that title means little in this context. I think you
should talk to the City Attorney's Office."
I thought about arguing but decided it was a waste of time. Loutrell
was a timid bureaucrat who was more concerned about straying beyond his
authority than finding Clarissa Easterbrook. He had also said the
magic attorney word: The City Attorney represented all city agencies,
including the hearings officers. If Loutrell told me to go to his
attorney, I didn't have much choice.
Luckily, the City Attorney's Office was just one floor up. When I
explained to the receptionist what I needed, however, she told me I'd
need to talk to the City Attorney himself, Dennis Coakley, who wasn't
going to be back until the end of the day. I left my name and number
and did my best to encourage her to get the message to him as soon as
possible.
On my way back down, I noticed the listing for Clarissa
Easterbrook's office on a sign at the third-floor landing. I followed
the arrow to the left, away from Loutrell's office, and found the suite
number I was looking for.
A receptionist with a pierced nose and red pixie haircut was busy
juggling calls, repeating, "City hearings department, please hold."
After three times she exhaled loudly and looked up. "Welcome to my
world. How can I help you?"
At least she had a sense of humor about it. I gave her my best
empathetic smile and introduced myself. She made the connection to
Clarissa's disappearance on her own. "Oh my God. I have been going
crazy in here this morning. I didn't listen to the news this morning
and came in early, before anyone else was around. The calls started
around seven-thirty, and I was, like, What do you mean she's missing? I
had to go out to my car and listen to the news on the radio. Finally,
someone came in this morning at nine to explain the situation to me.
The phone's been ringing off the hook."
"What kind of calls?" I asked.
"Reporters, mostly. I don't know what they expect me to tell them.
I've been reading the prepared statement I was given. Hold on a sec,
okay?" She jumped back to juggle the phones, telling each caller,
"Clarissa Easterbrook is an important member of the city community. We
hope for her speedy return, and our thoughts and prayers are with her
family at this critical time." As she repeated the line, she handed me
a memo from Clarence Loutrell with the typed-out statement.
Once she'd gotten through the on-hold callers, she let the phone ring
unanswered while we spoke.
"Seems like a small office. You must be pretty close to her."
"I guess. I started here last fall. I work for her and one of the
other hearings officers, Dave Olick. I'm pretty much their entire
staff. I do the phones, the secretarial work, any legal research that
comes up. I graduated last spring from Lewis and Clark.
It wasn't exactly my dream job after law school, but it's a job, at
least. I'm Nelly by the way. Nelly Giacoma."
The Portland legal market, like legal markets everywhere, was getting
tight. I wasn't surprised that a recent law graduate might have to
clerk for an administrative law judge for a while. This one's nose
ring, lollipop hair, and what I now saw was a yin-yang symbol tattooed
on her ankle probably didn't help.
"Since I'm across the street at the courthouse, I just dropped by to
see if the people who worked with Clarissa had any thoughts on where
she might be, that kind of thing."
Nelly shook her head slowly while she spoke. "No, I just have no idea.
Everything was fine last week. She was working when I left at five
Friday, and she said she'd see me on Monday."
"You can't think of anything unusual that's happened lately? Something
that might be connected somehow?"
"Well, about a month ago, some guy on one of her cases sort of blew up
at her."
"Do you know anything about the case?" I asked.
"Not really. The guy was getting evicted, but I don't know what the
issue was."
"If you could pull the file, I can go through it while you get some of
those calls." I tilted my head toward her phone, which was still
ringing.
"Gee, I don't think I can just let you go through the file."
"At least parts of it are public record."
"But I don't think the whole thing is, especially when the case is
still pending. Besides, I don't even know what case it is. I'd have
to go through all the files and try to find it. I better check with
Judge Loutrell and get back to you."
I picked her brain for more about the ticked-off evicted guy or for any
other cases of note, but didn't get any further. "What about stuff
outside of work? Did you talk to Clarissa enough to know anything
about her personal life?"
"Well, I know she's married."
Oh, yeah, they were best friends, all right.
"And how did that seem to be going?" I asked.
"Good, I guess. Clarissa's pretty private, though. Or she is with me,
at least. We're pretty much employer-employee. But she's really,
really nice. I hope she's all right. I'm sure she is, isn't she?"
I nodded and smiled, doing my best to appear unworried. When I said
goodbye, Nelly apologized that she couldn't be more helpful but assured
me she'd talk to Loutrell about going through the files. I handed her
my card, but I knew she wouldn't get back to me. Loutrell would
forward the request to Dennis Coakley, leaving me in the same spot I
was already in.
All I had to show for my out-of-court venture was a head full of frizz
and a few extra calories burned on the stairs. So much for making a
difference in the world.
While I was waiting at the crosswalk back to the courthouse, my pager
vibrated at my waist. I recognized the number as the Major Crimes Team
desk and called back on my cell.
After half a ring I heard, "MCT. Johnson."
"Hey, Ray. It's Samantha. I got a page."
"I know. It was from me. We finally got hold of Susan Kerr. I'm
headed out with Walker to her house now. Can you meet us?"
"Where's the house?"
"Up in the west hills," he said.
"Can you swing by the courthouse and get me? I took the bus in today."
Schlepping across downtown to check out a car from the county lot would
take longer than the short ride from the courthouse up into the
hills.
"Damn, Kincaid. What are you doing riding the bus? We got to get you
livin' a little larger."
"I ride the bus because I'm a good citizen, Raymond. I recycle too."
"You are definitely a different kind of DA, girl. Riding the damn city
bus with the rest of the citizens. I'll swing in front on Fourth in
about ten minutes. Cool?"
"Yep. See you then."
I used the ten minutes to make sure nothing urgent was waiting for me
back in the office and to put something called mud in my
moisture-crazed hair for the trip. My best friend, Grace, is a
hairdresser. She cut my dark brown locks (the bottle says coffee, to
be exact) into a wispy little do a few months back, and to her chagrin
I was in the ugly process of growing it back into my boring reliable
shoulder-length bob. According to her, all I needed was the right
product to see my hair through its growing pangs. I must have been
doing something wrong with the mud, because by the time my fingers were
done crimping and twisting, I looked like Neil Young in drag.
I left the courthouse just as Johnson and Walker pulled up in a white
unmarked bureau Crown Vic.
Lunch-hour traffic had begun to accumulate downtown, but the drive was
quick once we crossed 1-405 and got out of the downtown business
district. As Johnson maneuvered the tight curves up the west hills, I
asked Walker what they knew so far about Susan Kerr.
"Not too much. Her PPDS printouts right there," he said, reaching back
to hand me a sheet of green computer paper from the Portland Police
Data System. "Nothing to see. She's forty-two, no criminal history,
drives a Mercedes."
"The big one," Johnson cut in. "I told you, the woman's got some
cash."
"We don't know much more than that. One criminal complaint four years
ago for a smash-and-grab," Walker explained.
Portland has low violent crime and high property crime, driven
primarily by a large population of street kids and drug addicts. Almost
everyone with a car has at some point been a smash-and-grab victim. My
poor Jetta's windows have been smashed on three occasions, once for my
stereo, once for the gym bag I stupidly left in the backseat, and once
for nothing but a new Lyle Lovett CD. That one really pissed me off.
Walker pulled his spiral notebook from the breast pocket of his shirt
to refresh his memory. "The co-complainant on the smash-and-grab was
Herbert Kerr at the same address. Presumably the husband, but he's got
a 1932 date of birth. He died two years ago."
"Hey, some women go for the old guys. Look at you. You've got a
woman." Johnson was laughing at his joke, but Walker gave his partner
a look to show he wasn't amused.
"Yeah, and she's been stuck with me for thirty-two years. Somehow I
suspect I'm not Susan Kerr's type."
"Well, I know I'm not."
"Excuse me, fellas, but could we get back to talking about the case?
For the record, I think any woman would be lucky to have either of
you."
"Sorry, Sam," Walker said. "Lack of sleep gets to you. Truth is,
we're not getting anywhere. Media coverage is usually good on a
missing persons case, but this one's out of control. Calls have been
flooding into the hotline we set up, but it's a bunch of stuff that's
either wrong, contradictory, or totally irrelevant."
"Like what?" I asked.
I could tell he didn't know where to begin. "Well, we've got people in
the neighborhood telling us they saw her walking her dog on Sunday at
eight a.m." eleven a.m." three p.m." and seven p.m. We've got people
all over town calling us about possible sightings today. Then we've
got the callers who need us to know everything they ever happened to
notice about the Easterbrooks that their landscapers were out on
Tuesday, that UPS left something on the porch on Friday, that the
windows were open overnight on Saturday. You don't want to tell people
to stop calling, but you'd think these people would have the good sense
to know they're not being helpful."
"Don't forget the psychics, Jack."
"Ah, Jesus. The psychics. One lady called up crying that Clarissa was
at the bottom of the Willamette and couldn't cross over to heaven until
we recovered her body from the river. Fucking ghoulish. There's just
way too many nut jobs out there for us to keep up with the leads."
"Well, I think I might have something worth pursuing," I said. I gave
them the limited information I'd gotten from Nelly Giacoma about the
ticked-off evicted guy.
"Hard to look into it without knowing who we're talking about," Johnson
said. "Want us to get a warrant for the office?"
"I'm working on it. I think it'll be faster to go through the City
Attorney, but I'll let you know what I hear. What about the husband?"
I asked. "He still acting like what you'd expect?"
Walker answered. "Yeah, seems all right. I was over there this
morning. You know, shook up but not overwrought. He's definitely in
no shape to be cutting anyone open; he was doing what he could to get
his hospital rounds covered. But he's out there on the news, being
cooperative. I'm not getting a vibe from this one."
"Me neither," Johnson said, "but you never can tell."
I assumed when the car stopped in front of one of the nicer Portland
Heights spreads that we had arrived at Susan Kerr's. As deluxe as the
place was, however, it must not have been good enough because she was
making some improvements. There was a dumpster in the driveway and a
construction truck across the street.
I opened my door, but Johnson wasn't ready to drop the subject of
Townsend Easterbrook. "I know you got your boss to think about,
Kincaid, but I think we need to at least consider whether we should ask
the guy to take a poly. Far as I'm concerned, the husband's always a
suspect. I don't care who he is."
"OK, we'll talk about it after we're done here." I stepped into the
rain, making my way to the house as quickly as I could.
Three.
I was surprised when a maid answered Susan Kerr's front door.
Definitely not a Portland thing. This woman had real money.
The maid led us through three rooms and told us to sit in the fourth.
Big on color-coordinated stripes, dots, and paisleys, Susan Kerr's
taste was the decorating equivalent of a Laura Ashley orgy. And, as
far as I could tell, every room we passed was what most would consider
a formal sitting room and what I would consider useless: no bed, no TV,
no snacks. Maybe that was the purpose of the home improvements; I
could hear construction noises coming from somewhere deep inside the
house.