Someone was watching her.
Daphne had studied enough paranoids, had worked with some, and knew the symptoms well. Symptoms she now displayed: a heightened nervousness, the constant checking over her shoulder, insomnia, loss of appetite, the suspicious pauses to stop and listen. But it was an energy and she understood energy. An energy focused on her, and if she were imagining this, then she intended to compliment her imagination, because this was like nothing she had ever experienced.
Back there somewhere? Over there? she wasn’t sure. It seemed at times to be all around her. At others to be in a specific place-yet when she checked: no one. It made her skin crawl, this feeling. And it wasn’t just while out on a run, which was where she was at the moment. It was in the bedroom, in the car-she felt it when undressing even in the bathroom, which is where she changed clothes. The rest of her houseboat made her feel naked before she took off a thing. This filled her with a nauseating fear, a sense of violation she had not known.
Was that the same car? she wondered. It looked awfully familiar. Had it been parked across from the dock entrance to the houseboats? What was it, Japanese? Detroit/Japanese? She wished she were better with cars. It was the same color, she thought. Same size. Dark blue. Small. Nondescript. Just the kind of car one would use for surveillance! Just the kind of paranoid thinking that could get you in big trouble. “Conspiracy vision”-there were all sorts of slang terms for it. “Oliver Stone disease,” she had once heard it called; and that one had made her laugh. No longer.
She broke with her regular Tuesday evening running route and turned right up Galer and right again onto Eastlake, a procedure similar to the consecutive four right-hand turns used to spot moving surveillance when in a vehicle. She glanced over her shoulder. Watch it! a voice cried out inside of her. That was symptom number one.
She ran another quarter mile, and literally leapt into the air when a blue car overtook her from behind. A different blue car, she realized quickly enough. Upset with herself, she turned around, cutting short the run. It was dusk. It would be dark by the time she got back, and whereas normally her run would take place after work and therefore under the streetlights, tonight the idea bothered her. It cut her run nearly in half, but she could make up the difference tomorrow.
Daphne ran hard, working up a good sweat, pushing herself to go a little harder today since she had cut it short. Her gymnasium-gray tank top was soaked dark below her breasts and down her back. Her hair stuck to her neck, and her white wristband was damp from sponging her brow.
Typically, she used her runs as meditations-a quiet break devoted to nothingness, to thinking as little as possible. She waved to a walker, thankful for a familiar face, and the woman waved back at her with a broad smile. Although they had never formally met, she knew all about this woman-the houseboat community was like that. The woman was an M.D. who volunteered her time at a local clinic for the poor; her husband was a former minister turned author. They lived in a small houseboat, though it was one of the more charming ones-with very few pretensions. And they waved at you when out for a walk.
A scruffy dog crossed the road lazily, either not seeing or not caring about a sleek black cat that sat atop a shingled mailbox house at the end of pier 11.
She walked the last hundred yards, peeked into her mailbox for the second time today, and headed down the dock.
Halfway down the long dock her skin crawled, and she blamed it on a light breeze off the lake and the slight chill it induced.
Whether attributable to caution or paranoia, she took inventory of her houseboat as she approached. It was tiny, less than eight hundred square feet, but with the proportions that created an illusion of a house twice its size. From behind her came the constant drone of traffic from the interstate, distant but intrusive-it seemed so much closer at this moment. Edges and corners seemed sharper. Her motion seemed to slow, despite the quickness of her heartbeat. This increased awareness had come all of its own, and yet Daphne Matthews the psychologist knew better: Something had triggered this-nothing came all of its own. The cop she worked with in a survivors clinic described similar sensations moments before a firefight. But Boldt would talk instinct, Daphne would talk reflex. She had caught something out of place perhaps: a sound, a smell, an image; she fell victim to this stimulus, misinterpreted or not.
The air smelled of charcoal. She heard a seaplane taking off in the distance, and, much closer, the nauseating laugh track of a television show.
Her face felt hot from the run, her skin itched. Her mind worked furiously trying to sort things out.
At the same time, she began an internal dialogue, chastising herself for being such a paranoid. What a baby! She also wrestled with the internal voices of several friends, Lou Boldt among them, who had once attempted to talk her out of buying a houseboat. The investment had silenced her critics-the place was worth a fortune now, and her timing couldn’t have been better. But it was an isolated location, and tonight in particular it felt just a little too removed.
Get in the house! she told herself. She bent to retrieve the key that she had tied to her shoelace. Get in the house, her mind repeated more loudly.
She unlocked the door, leaving it slightly ajar until she got the light on, and hurried to the nearest lamp, on the entrance table along with her purse. Inside the purse was her gun. This thought did not escape her. The light flashed brightly and died-the bulb had blown.
She felt a gust of wind at her back. The front door thumped shut of its own accord. Startled, she leapt over to it, and swiveled the dead bolt, locking it. Issuing darkness. Nothing-not even the pitch black-was going to convince her to open that door again. Safe! She inched carefully forward, the picture of the downstairs emblazoned in her mind: directly ahead, the living room, a center post in the middle of the room, a small sofa and end table, a rocker, the wood stove; to her right, the narrow ladder ascending to the tiny bedroom and its balcony; to her left, the small galley, demarcated by a blue tile countertop with two ash stools looking across the Jenn-Air range; around the galley, the head to the left-and opposite this, a small hall flanked by two closets and the back door directly ahead.
Her eyes beginning to adjust, she reached out and found the arm of the rocking chair. Good, she knew exactly where she was. Some light off the lake found its way through the window behind the sofa, though not enough to help: the room oozed with a gray, ghostly paste. She inched ahead and slightly to her left and brushed up against the rough wood of the room’s central support post. Small waves lapped against the pier, sounding like an animal licking the floats. The refrigerator hummed loudly. The lamp she sought remained a few feet to her right and then directly ahead: its fuzzy image loomed before her.
She crossed the room. Just as she reached the lamp, she heard a board squeak. It came from the back of the house, past the galley by the head. She reminded herself that the houseboat was always making such noises. On any other night, she might not have noticed a squeak. But that particular sound was as individual, as distinct, as the voice of a friend. A year or so ago rain had leaked in under the back door and had warped the floorboards. When stepped on, one of the wide pine planks, and only one, chirped like a bird-the sound she had just heard.
With her thumb on the lamp switch and her voice caught somewhere between “Hello?” and a scream, she froze. It must have been something else, a voice inside her reasoned.
It’s nothing! Right?
But the voice warned: A person has to step on that board for it to make that sound.
Her heart hurt in the center of her chest. Her ears burned. I’m overtrained, she thought, as a dozen instructions from her police training flooded her head noisily. Paranoid is all. Each idea separate and individual, she processed them differently, sorting out contradictions as best she could.
Get out of the building. Call someone! Seek help.
Turn on the light and see … It’s nothing.
Go for the gun, then turn on the light.
Her gun was in her purse, and her purse was on the table by the front door.
Indecision plagued her. She despised herself for just sitting there-a policewoman frozen in fear.
She crouched, held her breath, and switched on the lamp. She didn’t look toward the source of that noise first, she looked toward her purse.
She processed more information: A few steps to get there: A few added milliseconds to flick the safety off and load one into the chamber. From the moment she made her move, to having a functional weapon in hand, perhaps five seconds. An eternity if someone is inside this house.
A lifetime?
A good cop could not afford indecision. And if that was the only measure of a good cop, then she was not a good cop. Indecision had provided her with a four-inch scar across her throat. She hated that scar, not only for its appearance, but because she wore it like a flag. Indecision.
At this point, all she wanted was to prove herself wrong: That squeak had been nothing. She wanted a hot shower, a warmed-up dinner, and a glass of Pine Ridge on the deck. After that, a good book, with every door and window locked tight. Tomorrow, a security system, courtesy of Kenny Fowler. Her feet felt nailed to the pine planks.
The light, which had been on perhaps two seconds, went out. She grabbed for it and threw the switch. Nothing!
Silence! she thought. Not even the refrigerator was running. The power was out!
The board squeaked again.
She moved fast: two quick, bounding steps. She planted her forehead smack into the center post and went down hard and fast. Head swimming. Nauseated and dizzy. She imagined dinosaurs in a tar pit struggling to get out, sinking deeper. Black and gooey. She didn’t know how much time had passed, if any. She struggled to her feet and clawed her way over to the gun.
She announced in a slurred voice, “I’m armed. I have a weapon! Go away now!” Training. Arms sagging with the weight of the gun, her head swimming. “Go away now,” she mumbled. She fell to one knee and struggled back up to standing, feeling a thousand pounds heavier. Her head complained with the slightest movement. She inched her way forward, her right toe feeling in front of her. “Go away now,” she repeated in an unconvincing voice that sounded to her like someone else talking.
Her left hand searched out the flashlight that she kept in the kitchen drawer with the knives. She plunged her hand inside the drawer. “Shit!” she said as she caught a knife blade on the tip of her finger and yanked her hand out quickly, instinctively delivering the cut to her lips and sucking on it.
She switched on the flashlight, its beam a white tunnel splashing a large circle on the walls. But her vision was all wrong.
Sweating heavily, heart beating furiously, she staggered uncertainly out of the galley and pivoted left, bracing for a shot. No one.
Slowly, she lowered the intense beam of light until it illuminated the warped plank responsible for the bird chirps. She gasped as she saw beads of water catching the light like jewels. This was not her imagination. Someone was inside.
Assess the situation! She had a 50 percent chance. The intruder could be to her left, hiding in the head, or to her right, down the small hall, about to go out the back door. She hadn’t heard the back door open or close, and although it wasn’t a terribly noisy door-might have been opened and closed without her knowledge, the intruder gone-she didn’t believe this.
Think! But she could not.
“I’m armed,” she repeated, this time more strongly, her strength returning.
She leapt ahead, spun completely around, and slapped her back into the corner-the head now to her right, the back door nearly straight in front of her. No silhouette. She shined the flashlight there. No one.
Hiding in one of the closets? Or is he gone? Did he get out without me hearing?
She summoned her courage, maintaining a firm but awkward grip jointly on both the gun and flashlight. She spun to her right, first aiming into the head-nothing! — and then, in self-defense, spinning fully around and covering the closets. The quick motions drove her to the edge of vomiting.
The intruder made contact from behind-pushed her hard. She screamed loudly as she lost her balance.
Her furtive glance into the head had been too quick. He must have been standing in the tub, she realized, as she struck the opposing wall face-first. She heard two heavy steps, the back door come open, and then two more footsteps. In her mind’s eye she could see the intruder leaping to the next platform, the adjacent house, then, no doubt, the next after that, and the next. Too fast to be stopped. In the shadows, too dark to be seen.
She clambered back to her feet and surged forward and out the back door, handling the gun with great care. She knew she had lost him, but her training and her nerves required her to determine the area was clear. She made no attempt to try to follow or catch up. Her intention was self-defense. The area was clear: There was enough ambient light here to see. She reentered the house, shut and locked the back door, and hurried to the front door, which was still locked.
She found the flashlight, shook it several times, but it did not respond. Dark.
Trembling, her heart now running away from her-slipping into shock-she came around the corner, found a chair that offered her back against a solid wall, her eyes on the front door, the back door down the short hall to her right, and she dragged the phone toward her by its cord.
Twenty minutes later she unlocked the door for Boldt as she heard him running down the dock.
Shining a flashlight on her, he said, “Jesus!”
Daphne said, “The fuse box is inside the closet by the back door. I wasn’t about to go back there.”
A moment later Boldt called out, “Do you have enough coats?”
It made her laugh. Made her feel better. So did the light coming on.
The refrigerator growled back into operation. A digital clock on the microwave blinked CLOCK at her.
Boldt came around the corner wearing her faux leopard-skin hat. “Salvation Army time, if you ask me.” Daphne laughed. It hurt her head. He noticed her wince. “Gotta get you some pictures taken,” he said, meaning X rays.
“I’d rather have a glass of wine.”
He poured her one. He said, “I’m not going to harp on it, but I do think you should have that looked at.”
“Maybe later, okay?”
“It’s your call.”
“You must make a nice husband,” she said. She did not mean anything more than to give out a compliment, but the comment made Boldt uncomfortable anyway. It made him think of Liz and Miles at home, where he had left them with barely any explanation. It made him think of Owen Adler. Then he looked at her forehead again and said, “Did he get anything?”
“Haven’t looked,” she said. She locked eyes with him and stated, “It isn’t your standard breaking and entering.”
“Not when they pick a cop’s house, it isn’t.”
“I don’t mean like that.” She tried the wine. It tasted good. She drank some more.
“Then how do you mean it?”
“I’m being followed-stalked-I don’t know … Someone’s out there.” Another sip. “That someone was in here, I’m sure of it.”
He did not argue; he did not question. He went to work. For Boldt it was sometimes the only thing he knew.
Boldt conducted a thorough search of the house. Daphne was a compulsively neat person, so he assumed it would not be difficult to spot a burglar’s handiwork. The bedroom was tidy; the galley, he had already seen. He checked the bathroom-the head-and the back hall and closets. Daphne sat all the while, a bag of ice pressed against her forehead, the wine in the glass getting lower.
His second time through the house, gloves on, he opened drawers, checked shelves and closets. He had not done any robbery/burglary work in years, but it came to him naturally: He had searched too many homicide crime scenes to count.
The third time through the residence, he concentrated on minutiae-looking for smudges on the glass of doors and windows, crawling hands and knees across floors, alert for everything from bodily discharge to spilled change or a receipt-or even pet hair (Daphne did not own a pet). If she were being stalked by a parolee, it meant one kind of danger; if it was someone attracted to her looks, another entirely. For reasons that went mostly unexplained, Washington State and the greater Seattle area in particular attracted more than an average share of what the papers called “psychos.” Daphne and her colleagues used different terms. But to Boldt it all boiled down to the same thing: sick people, often violent, often targeting women; and when they snapped, their crimes were among the most heinous.
It was during this third inspection that Boldt discovered the charred electrical outlet in the head and the small drops of water next to the sink. Without telling her, he checked the toilet thoroughly, as well as the shower/tub stall in case the stalker had used these. Masturbation was often the last step prior to the acting out of whatever violent act was planned.
When Boldt had completed his search, he pulled up a chair alongside Daphne’s and said, “Why don’t you tell me about it?”
She chuckled nervously. “You sound like me: That’s how I often get a therapy session going.”
He waited her out. He knew she had to be terribly afraid no matter what exterior she presented. After a difficult silence she encouraged him, “Why don’t you go first? Please.”
“Your visitor knew your schedule well enough to enter while you were on your run.” She looked good-too good-in the tight jog bra/halter top and shorts, but he said nothing. They could deal with what she could do defensively later; a baggy T-shirt and running pants was a place to start. “You cut your run short,” he said.
This comment snapped her head toward him. “How did you know that?” she asked incredulously.
“To put it bluntly? If he had meant to harm you, to assault you, then I think he would have tried. We both know that you can hear a person approaching. Right? He was already in the bathroom. Where are you going to head after a run?” he asked rhetorically. “So all he had to do was wait. You’re not going to carry a weapon with you on the way to the shower. But he wanted out. See? That’s why after your description I thought it was a burglary. Maybe a well-planned one. It would fit with your feeling of being watched. He determines your schedule, times your run, and breaks in after a few days of sizing you up. But you surprise him by cutting your run short. When you open the front door, he freezes. Then he decides to get the hell out of there.”
“The door moved,” she interrupted, remembering. “The front door.”
“Moved closed,” he told her.
“Yes. But how-”
“In a place this small and relatively tight, when one door opens, it moves air. It moves doors, or a curtain in a window.”
“I think I knew that instinctively; when it moved, I was scared. I locked it immediately.”
“He was trying to get out, but he looked back-his eyes were more adjusted than yours-”
“There’s a night-light in the head.”
“There you go. He looks back-he’s left something next to the sink. He doesn’t want you to find it.
“He didn’t move after that. He stood very still, just inside the back door, which explains the small puddle of water. If you had come looking, he would have been out of there in a flash. But if he could pull it off, whatever he had left was worth going back for. I think we can be quite sure of that.”
“But I didn’t come looking. I tried to find a light that worked.”
“Exactly. And so he seized the opportunity. He stepped back into the house and you heard him.”
“I hate this guy.” She crossed her arms, fighting a chill.
“As you tried to find a light, the intruder crossed back into the bathroom.”
“I heard the floorboard.”
“Exactly.”
“And I turned on the light.”
“You can imagine his panic. But he’s a fast thinker. There’s a basket of bobby pins and whatnot on the bathroom counter. He’s wearing gloves. We know he’s wearing gloves because he takes the bobby pin, spreads it, reaches around the corner into the hall, and puts the bobby pin into the live wall socket. He’s lucky. This is a small house and he shorts out all the downstairs outlets, including the light you turned on. The place goes dark again. Again, he makes for the door.”
“I hear him and I run.” She felt suddenly colder. Perhaps it was not the sweat. Boldt’s descriptions enabled her to visualize the intruder. She felt violated. She felt lucky to be sitting here drinking wine.
“But he hears you smack into that beam, fall over the chair. He hesitates-just an instant-unsure what to do. You’re too fast for him. Suddenly you’ve got a gun. It’s doubtful he has one. The law views breaking and entering without a weapon so much more leniently. But in any case, he didn’t come here to be shot, or to shoot you. Things are definitely looking bad. And now here you come, shouting your warnings, as you said you did, and he’s in trouble-a cornered rat … and all that. But the point is-” He caught himself. “Are you okay?”
“You’re a little too good at this,” she said. “It wasn’t you, was it?” She forced a smile but winced with the pain it caused her.
“Well, you know the rest.”
She stood out of her chair and faced Boldt, arms crossed.
He knew that same look in Liz. “Need a hug?”
She nodded.
He wrapped his big arms around her and pulled her tightly to him unreservedly, unashamed, unconnected to their past and that evening when they had done this without clothes. She did not want to cry. She returned the hug, and buried her face. Her hair smelled like sweat. A boat motored slowly across the lake. She thanked him.
He said softly, “Why don’t you point me toward a newspaper? You get yourself showered and dressed. Let’s get you settled. Okay?”
“I’d like that. But I hate to take your time.”
“After that, we need to talk some more.” She nodded. “Do you want to report this? Officially, I mean? I don’t want to discourage that. You have every right-”
“No, Lou. No thanks. I’ve been there. You’re asking, do I want to stay up until two in the morning? Do I want to answer a hundred questions I’d rather not? Do I want to make a huge scene, all in order to never catch this guy? I don’t think so.”
“Still, it’s not right of me to discourage you.”
“I can do that all by myself.”
“You’re sure?”
“Absolutely. I’m a big girl now. But if you would stay. Have you eaten?”
“We eat early. Miles,” he explained.
“Right.”
“I’d like to use the phone if it’s all right.”
She nodded. She went upstairs and he heard her undressing and he thought maybe he should go. But he did not. A few minutes later she descended the ladder stairs with an unavoidable amount of leg showing, and headed straight to the shower without comment.
Boldt sat with her as she ate warmed-up leftovers and drank another glass of wine.
She glanced up at him occasionally and smiled through her eyes while chewing. “I feel kind of silly,” she said. “You sure you won’t have something?”
“Tell me, if you’re ready. I’d like to hear.”
She set her fork down, took some more wine, and nodded. He saw that she was going to have a bruise on her forehead, though maybe not too bad, and if she kept up the ice as she was, the lump might not be there in the morning. Sitting this close to her, both on stools at the galley’s food bar, he could see the dozens of flecks of gold and red in her otherwise brown eyes-magical sparks that seemed to increase in candlepower with her enthusiasm. She had a ferocious amount of energy, of reserve power that at times seemed boundless. She stepped him through her experience leading up to the monorail ride. It took Boldt some getting used to that the planetarium meeting had taken place only yesterday; if he had been told a week, he might have believed it. She also described how she had lost the man in the crafts fair. She told him about the blue car she had seen what seemed like one too many times. And then she confessed her general state of paranoia over the last few days. “I don’t know that a man can understand it,” she said. “Women come to feel when they are being gawked at. It is something society condones: men undressing women with their eyes. Call it a zipless fuck. Whatever the term, when you’re on the receiving end from the age of twelve or thirteen on, you develop a real sense for it-at least I have. The thing of it is, I feel as if the person can see what’s underneath the clothing. Does that make sense? I feel violated. More than once I’ve felt like just ripping my shirt open and getting it over with. The fifth floor is the worst. Present company excluded, I find cops the worst-and I’m surrounded by them. But the point is, I know when someone like Michael Striker is looking down my blouse.
“And that’s the way I have felt for the last three or four days. Just like that. As if someone has a pair of binoculars trained on me. As if someone is in the room with me when I’m undressing-when I’m in the shower-all the time. Like I’m being stalked. That’s the only way I know how to explain it. Someone back there. Someone creepy. Someone all over me, like an oil you can’t wash off.
“And then the car, and yesterday morning, and now this … I know it looks like a burglary, Lou. Especially from a male point of view. But I don’t think so. I can’t tell you what. I can’t tell you why. I wish to hell I could tell you who, but someone’s out there and he’s got my name written all over him”-her voice cracked-“and I want it over with.” Her eyes were pooled. She pushed her plate away, her appetite ruined.
Boldt felt responsible. In a strange way he even felt responsible for what was happening to her.
“I know I haven’t got a shred of proof,” she said, reading his thoughts.
“You confronted the guy on the monorail?”
“Yes.”
“And what did your feelings tell you then?”
“I’d like to tell you that I felt as if I were looking into the eyes of Jack the Ripper-because I’ve seen those eyes before; I know that look, and there is often a look. But truthfully, there wasn’t in this one. He seemed embarrassed, put on the spot. Weird thing is, for a moment there I even felt as if I knew him, as if we’d met. But that’s the thing about a stalker, you see-about the good ones, the Ted Bundys-they know how to project that air of safety. Old friends. Good buddies. Hop in the back of my van and I’ll rape and murder you. I’ll tear your liver out and eat it for dinner, good friend.”
“You know what Shoswitz would ask?” Boldt said.
“Am I overworked? Under stress? Sure. I know. And if it wasn’t me, I’d be sent to me for a little chat to see what’s up. But it is me. And I am under stress, and I am overworked. But no, I honestly believe it has nothing to do with that. Good enough?”
“For me it is.”
Daphne said, “Probably not for him, I know. But it’s you I care about anyway.”
Boldt asked, “Do we talk about what neither of us is comfortable talking about? That this may be related to your New Leaf work?”
“I want another glass of wine, but if I have one I’m likely to start belly dancing in the living room, or maybe I’ll just pass out. Ever carried a woman up a ladder?”
“I’ll leave you on the couch,” he said, standing and bringing the bottle of wine over for her. “Anesthesia. You’re allowed this once in a while.” He poured.
“It really sucks that I’m not allowed to see Owen.”
“I feel real sorry for you,” he said sarcastically.
“Jealous?”
“Maybe I am just a little.”
Her eyes warmed, those flecks sparkled, and she was about to say something but she caught herself. He wanted to hear it, but he knew it was better that he did not. He felt no confusion about his emotions or desires, but that did not mean he could not love this woman just a little more than was acceptable-not as long as he kept it to himself. And maybe she kept it to herself, too.
He reminded: “You first sensed this three or four days ago, you said. To both of us, that feels more like a week. Do you remember back three or four days ago? Can you separate it out?”
“We’re going to talk about it,” she said, their exchanges suddenly quicker.
“Yes,” he affirmed, “we are.”
“You think it’s connected to my work on New Leaf?”
“I think it may be. I think it’s worth exploring.”
She ran her hand through her hair in a nervous manner. “Someone knows what I’m up to and doesn’t like it. Is that it? Is that how it goes?”
“Several people know what you’re up to. Many more may suspect it. Maybe that guard at the archives said something. Maybe Kenny or Taplin saw you pass those keys, but hasn’t said anything. Maybe there’s an employee who figured it out.”
“An employee involved in the original fraud.”
“It’s serious stuff what you’re suggesting. People would have positions to protect-”
“Do not bring Owen into this!”
“I didn’t say anything,” he protested. He waited a second and said what he had to say, what had been on his mind for several days now: “Was Adler in on it? Has he said anything to you?”
She gasped, and the warmth in her eyes froze over. She stiffened and nearly spit at him, “Some things need not be asked!” She averted her eyes and said, “Do you think I would keep something like that from you? How can you possibly think that?”
“I think it would put you in a difficult position. You wouldn’t indict him without some damn good proof-not if you’re human. And maybe you’d look elsewhere for the proof, if things got a little too warm where you were looking. And maybe-just maybe is all-you would ask him at some point and he would say that he’d rather you didn’t, and what then? Where does that leave you?”
She softened some. “Well, it hasn’t happened like that.”
“It’s Longview Farms I’m focused on,” he confessed. “The New Leaf situation is of interest to me only insofar as that if it proves true-that State Health or someone at New Leaf deliberately altered records to throw blame onto Longview-then there’s all sorts of places I can run with that. We’ve talked about it. And what happened out there yesterday bears it out, I think. And maybe-just maybe-whoever was involved in document tampering at either State Health or New Leaf, if anyone, is also involved in this present situation. Crime makes strange bedfellows-we both know that.”
“More than one person?”
“There’s a woman involved. We’ve all but confirmed that. Is she alone in this? Is she working with a boyfriend? A lover?”
“The sheriff,” said the psychologist.
“I just don’t think a woman would have done that. Not what I saw.”
“Those burns,” she said. He nodded. “His genitals?”
“No.”
“His face?”
“Yes.”
She considered this. “The face? I don’t like that. Not for a woman, I’d have to agree. You may be right. Where the hell does that leave us?”
“I can put someone on you,” he offered, changing the subject. “Watch for someone watching.”
She said sarcastically, “With the dozens of people at your disposal you have to spare. Who do you have in mind, Sergeant?”
“Or maybe Fowler could. If you asked Adler-”
“He’d do it,” she finished for him. “Is that what you think? You’re probably right,” she admitted. “But they’re rent-a-cops for the most part. If there is someone watching me-and mind you, I hate that idea-and we scare him or her off, then we’ve lost whatever we had.”
“But on the other hand,” he countered, “if they caught the person and we could have a little chat, we might be light-years ahead.”
“Point taken,” she said. “I could fax Owen and ask.”
He offered her an expression that said, “I would if I were you.”
“And meanwhile, Sergeant?”
“We tear into Longview Farms. Physically, we already have: The lab is busy on a dozen fronts. But I mean historically. We find the wife. We find the people who worked there. We chat up the neighbors, the meat inspectors, the UPS driver. Anyone and everyone. My bet is that that’s where we’re going to find our boy.”
“Boy?”
He mocked, “You get this feeling when you’re a homicide dick.”
“And New Leaf?”
“Yes. I think we keep going … you keep going. If you’re up to it. We want that connection, if it’s there. From where I’m sitting, we want whatever the hell we can come up with.”
“The sheriff,” she said, coming back to Boldt’s nightmare. “Police involvement.”
“He warned us, and I blew it.”
“You didn’t blow anything.”
He gave her a look. Enough was enough. He knew what he knew. “You okay?” he asked, coming off the stool.
“Fine. Get out of here,” she teased.
“You sure?”
“Go.”
He leaned over and kissed her on the cheek. She blew him one back.
She stopped him when he reached the door. “Just one thing, Sergeant.”
He turned to her.
“You might want to take that hat off before someone sees you.”
He felt up there, realizing he had been wearing it-looking stupid-for the better part of two hours. “Jesus,” he said, throwing it at the rocking chair. “You could have said something.”
“Yes, I could have,” she admitted, laughing, and wincing with the pain.