THE ART OF DECEPTION by RIDLEY PEARSON
Also by RIDLEY PEARSON
The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red (writing as Joyce Reardon)
Parallel Lies
Middle of Nowhere*
The First Victim*
The Pied Piper*
Beyond Recognition*
Chain of Evidence
No Witnesses* The Angel Maker*
Hard Fall
Probable Cause
Undercurrents*
Hidden Charges
Blood of the Albatross
Never Look Back
features Lou Boldt / Daphne Matthews
Writing as WENDELL McCALL
Dead Aim
Aim for the Heart
Concerto in Dead Flat
SHORT STORIES
"All Over but the Dying" in Diagnosis: Terminal,
edited by F. Paul Wilson
"Close Shave" in Murder-Love-Set-Match,
edited by Otto Penzler
COLLECTIONS
The Putt at the End of the World, a serial novel
TELEVISION
Investigative Reports: Inside AA (A&E Network, June 2000)
For Bob and Ellen
I wish to acknowledge the following for their help and guidance in the research and editing of The Art of Deception. The mistakes are all mine.
Donna Meade, Rachel Farnsworth, David Laycock, Ray York:
Idaho State Police Forensics Lab. Dr. Alyn Duxbury-University of Washington, Oceanographic
Sciences, retired. Andy Hamilton, United States Attorney's Office, Seattle,
Washington
Detective Marsha Wilson, Seattle Police Department David Thompson, Murder by the Book, Houston, Texas CJ Snow, Book Source St. Louis, Missouri JB Dickey & Tammy Domike, Seattle Mystery Bookshop,
Seattle, Washington
The Underground Tour, Seattle, Washington Heidi Mack, ridleypearson.com website design management Nancy Litzinger, Louise Marsh, office management Mary Peterson, Hailey, Idaho Chris Towle, Towle and Co." St. Louis, Missouri Gary Shelton, Ketchum, Idaho Robbie Freund, Creative Edge, Hailey, Idaho
Thanks, too:
Matthew Snyder, CAA, Beverly Hills, California Albert Zuckerman, Writers House, New York
Editors:
Leigh Haber Ed Stackler Leslie Wells Albert Zuckerman
____________________
The Ride of a Lifetime
Mary-Ann Walker
She lay on her side, her head ringing, her hair damp and sticky. She understood that she should feel pain-one didn't fall onto blacktop from a three-story fire escape without experiencing pain-and yet she felt nothing.
She saw the Space Needle in the distance, regretting that she had gone up it only once, at the age of seven. Perhaps that had been the start of her fear of heights. Images from her childhood played before her eyes like a hurried slide show until she heard a car start and the first trickle of sensation sparked up her broken legs; she knew undeniably that this was only the beginning. When the floodgates opened, when nerve impulses reached their mainline capabilities, the pain would prove too great, and she would surrender to it.
For this reason, and a desire to glimpse the glimmering black mirror surface of Lake Union, she pushed herself off the pavement with her shaky right arm, its elbow finally propping her up.
She could feel her father's locked elbows on either side of her, smell his boozed-up breath, although he'd been dead in his grave for two years now. She shrank from the contact of sweaty skin, nauseated by his sour smell and the repetition of his needs, and sought sight again of the body of water that had been a kind of bedtime prayer for her.
She clawed herself high enough to catch a moonlike curve of shoreline, just to the left of a bent Dumpster, pitched toward its missing wheel, that loomed over her and made her think of a coffin.
The two white eyes that winked and quickly narrowed before her were not headlights, as she first had believed, but taillights meant to keep drivers from striking objects in their rear path.
"Stop!" But her faint voice was not to be heard.
Her head led the way to the pavement this time, and she answered the call of the pain.
Below her she saw the waters she had come to think of as her own, flat black like wet marble. Darkness punctuated by pinpricks of light swirled as he carried her away from the humming car to the bridge's railing. She had no strength to fight, no will. Not even her acrophobia could power her to kick and claw for her life. Tears brimmed in her eyes, blurring any image of him, blurring the lights, blurring the boundary between the living and the dead.
In the next few moments she would be both.
When he threw her over, it felt like the act of someone distancing himself from something undesirable, like hearing a rat in the garbage bag on the way out to the cans. But as she dropped, she thought of a ballerina's majestic beauty; she saw herself as elegant and refined; she found a balance, a weightlessness that was surprisingly pleasant. And she wondered why she had feared heights all these years. This was the ride of a lifetime.
Of Mice and Spiders
Daphne Matthews negotiated the aisle between cots occupied by, among others, a spaced-out seventeen-year-old methadone addict, a girl shaking from the DTs, and a street-worn fifteen year-old seriously pregnant. With the continuing spring rains and cool weather, like mice and spiders, the young women migrated inside as conditions required.
The basement space held an incongruous odor: of mildew and medicine, spaghetti and meatballs. Bare bulbs, strung up like lights at a Christmas tree sale, flickered and dimmed over twenty-some teens, two resident RNs, and two volunteers, including Matthews. This was the Shelter's third home in three years, a cavern like basement space accessed via the Second Presbyterian Church, one of the five oldest structures still standing in Seattle. A thirty-block fire in 1889 had taken all the rest, just as the streets would take these girls if the Shelter ceased to exist.
For the past five months Matthews had doubled her volunteer time at the Shelter, less out of a sense of civic duty than the result of a combination of guilt and grief over the loss of a despondent teenage girl-a regular at the Shelter-who had taken her life. The girl, also pregnant, had jumped to her death from the 1-5 bridge.
Matthews knew the young woman on the cot before her only as Margaret-no surnames were used at the Shelter. She asked if she could join her, and the girl acquiesced, less than enthusiastically.
Matthews sat down beside her onto the wool blanket, leaning her back against the cool brick wall.
Sitting this close, Matthews could see a curving yellow moon of an old bruise that lingered on the girl's left cheekbone, an archipelago of knitted scars curving around that same eye. No doubt Margaret told people they were sports injuries or the result of a fall. She was fifteen going on forty.
"We spoke the other night," Matthews said, reminding the girl. The methamphetamine, booze, and pot wreaked havoc on the short-term memories of these kids. Not that they listened to the counselors anyway. They tolerated such intrusions only to serve the greater purpose of a warm meal, a shower, free feminine products, and a chance to wash their clothes.
"You're the cop. The shrink. I remember."
"Right, but here, I'm a counselor, and that's all. You were going to think about calling your grandparents."
"I wasn't thinking about it. You were."
"After five days you have to leave the Shelter for at least one night."
"Believe me, I know the rules."
"I don't like to think of you up there in the weather."
"That's your problem. I live up there." Defiant. An attitude. But behind the eyes, fear.
Matthews rarely lost her temper, though she could pretend to when needed. She debated her next move in what to her was a chess game that could make or break lives. "You can call for free. It doesn't have to be collect."
"I wouldn't mind getting out of here so much," the girl conceded.
Matthews saw an opening and seized it. To hell with the regulations. She pulled a Sharpie-an indelible marker-from her purse, grabbed hold of Margaret's forearm, and wrote out her cell phone number in letters the size of the top row of an eye test. Clothes came and went with these girls. Notes in pockets came and went. Forearms were a little more permanent.
"Day or night," Matthews said. "No questions asked. No police.
You call me and it's woman to woman, friend to friend."
Margaret eyed her forearm, angry. "A tattoo would have lasted longer."
"Day or night," Matthews repeated and pulled herself off the cot with reluctance.
"Can I ask you something?" the girl asked.
Matthews nodded.
"You think this place is haunted?"
Matthews bit back a smile. "Old, yes. Creepy, maybe. But not haunted."
"Haven't you felt it?"
It wasn't the first time Matthews had heard this. "Maybe a little," she confessed.
"Like somebody watching."
"There's no such thing as ghosts," she said, aware she was sounding like a schoolmarm. "The imagination is powerful. We don't want to mislabel it."
"But you've felt it, too," Margaret said.
Matthews nodded, stretching the truth. It took a long time to establish anything close to trust with one of these kids.
"I heard this place used to be a storeroom or something. Pirates, or smugglers, or something. Like a hundred years ago."
"I've heard it called lots of things: a slaughterhouse, a jail, a house of ill repute." She delivered this comically, and won the first signs of light in that face. "Smugglers? Why not?" Matthews hesitated, unsure if she should leave it here-the first tendrils of rapport connecting them-or drive home her point once more. "If you do call your grandmother, we have funding for transportation. No one's kicking you out, you understand. But I want you safe, Margaret. The baby, safe."
The girl glanced around the room, uncomfortable. "Yeah," she said. "We'll see."
As Matthews reached the surface and her car, her police radio crackled, and the dispatcher announced a 342-a harbor water emergency-a body had been spotted. The location was the Aurora
Bridge. Matthews ran four red lights on the way there.
The LaMoia
John LaMoia awoke from a two-hour afternoon nap (he was on night tour for all of March) wondering where his next OxyContin would come from. Then he remembered he'd quit.
The California King contained his feet despite the fact that he liked to sleep with his arm under the pillow and out toward the headboard. At an inch over six feet, he'd been hanging ten off the ends of mattresses for his entire adult life, so he thought of the California King as a "spoiler," a luxury item that, once used, makes you wonder how you ever lived without it.
LaMoia could get around the bedroom blindfolded, as he'd built it himself, hammer and nail, two-by-four and Sheetrock, as the first element of Phase One of his refurbishing the cannery warehouse loft, a stone's throw from Elliott Bay. He was currently in Phase Three-the last of a series of storage closets by the guest bedroom.
At nearly four thousand square feet, the loft gave him plenty of space to play with.
It remained a quirky space with a bachelor's sense of independence, a cop's sense of budget, and a man's sense of decor. There was no long line forming at the door to shoot it for a magazine spread. But for the view alone it was worth the price of admission.
He rolled over and petted his dog, his nagging dry throat reminding him of his former addiction. He wondered if it would ever fully go away.
The treatment that had begun following a broken jaw suffered in the line of duty had matured from medical necessity to medicinal abuse, an addiction of legendary proportions. LaMoia still couldn't understand how he had allowed it to happen; and even now, three months into rehab, he found himself still in the unforgiving grasp of need.
LaMoia felt warm breath glance his neck, followed by the wet nose of an Australian sheepdog, formerly called "Blue," but renamed "Rehab" when LaMoia found himself using the dog as a sounding board. LaMoia wasn't entirely comfortable with the responsibility the dog's existence perpetrated upon his bachelorhood.
But then again, bachelorhood didn't feel so right either; since recovery, his world had turned upside down.
LaMoia did not run his life as a democracy, but as a dictatorship.
He sat on the throne, he chaired the board, he dropped the gavel, he made the choices, and to hell with those who misunderstood him. It had always been so-or certainly since puberty and his discovery that women of every age, shape, size, and color could not do without him. This interest on their part had long since gone to his head. Sex was an addiction all its own. He had lost himself to the sport of winning women for the better part of his adult life. Only OxyContin and prescription drugs had finally lifted him into another realm, where indulging himself in new, untested flesh no longer mattered. In the end, only the pills mattered. Time-release pain medication. What kind of geniuses were these guys? When finally he could neither see nor have any desire to see the benefits of sobriety, he had stood his ground, defiant in his right to self-destruct.
During those long months, work had become a tolerated distraction, a necessary evil. That it was police work might have struck him as ironic had he been capable of conceiving of irony.
But such conceptions escaped him, especially objectivity. To the contrary, during this period he had been as self-absorbed as any other time in his thirty-odd years, and entirely blinded to it. Beyond caring. A living illusion. And entirely without hope.
Six months ago, with his lieutenant, Boldt, on leave at the time to assist a capital murder investigation in Wenatchee, Washington, LaMoia had found himself in charge of the Seattle Police Department's Crimes Against Persons Unit. It had been like putting a kid in the cockpit of a 747. He had floundered his way through insignificant homicide investigations that might have meant something to him had the OxyContin not dominated his every thought. A domestic here; a gang bang there. Could do them in his sleep. Morale at Homicide hit at an all-time low under his stewardship. When Boldt returned, he pasted things back together and identified LaMoia's addiction. At that point, things had gone to hell in a handbasket.
LaMoia had wrecked the Camaro, totaling his only one true love, and requiring hospitalization and more painkillers. He took a leave of absence, and that proved his undoing-too much free time. One November night, Lou Boldt and Daphne Matthews had performed an intervention-confronting LaMoia with his drug problem and offering him a chance to save himself or to face the inevitable consequences. The intervention had worked. By Christmas, LaMoia was prescription-free and enjoying turkey at Boldt's house. By New Year's Day, he'd been back on the job.
But a dark, cold March evening in rainy Seattle could own a bite, could drill an ache into formerly broken bones and make it hurt just to walk across the room to the toilet.
Heaven came in all shapes and sizes: whether a 34C, a hot Seattle's Best, or a clear head. With sobriety, solid thinking had returned, but oddly enough, not the overriding need to have every woman who eyed him. LaMoia wanted something different now. More connection, less infatuation. He wasn't sure what love was, but he thought that might be it. As a result, he stayed away from the "badgers" at the cop bars, the coworkers, the waitresses who came on to him, avoiding the urge to slip his hand between the jeans and the soft skin and light them up. God, how he had lived for that power, the ability to reduce a grown woman to outright need. They still called, leaving casual messages on his answering machine, the implications and invitations subtle but not misunderstood. They wanted him. Only months ago, he had let that want of theirs run his life, dictate his arrogance, demand his attention. And now he had to live with that past, and he found it embarrassing.
When the phone rang, he peeked at the caller-ID, dreading to play that role-the flirtation that came packaged with expectation.
But the phone number proved familiar to him: the fifth floor. A case. Something to get him outside himself. He answered the phone: It was a jumper, a drowning. As good a way to start a night tour as any.
Bridge Over Troubled Waters
The bridge shook with traffic, making her knees dance. Daphne Matthews tucked her rain-dampened hair behind her right ear in a gesture that was more automatic than necessary because of the headband. Her hair fell into her face if she let it because of a haircut she didn't like but could do nothing about. The result was a black velour headband that put a speed bump just behind her forehead and, she feared, made her ears stick out.
The blue emergency strobe lights from patrol cars, the amber lights of Search and Rescue, and the blinding white pulses from an ambulance whose services would not be required hurt her eyes to the point of headache. This, along with the rain and the vibrations coming up her legs, gave her a bout of vertigo. She reached out to steady herself but stopped at the last moment, discovering she had not yet donned the latex gloves required at any crime scene. Her hand locked instead around a forearm, nearly as hard as the steel bridge railing. When she realized this arm belonged to King County Deputy Sheriff Nathan Prair, she let go and stepped back and away.
"It's been awhile, Daphne."
"Deputy Prair." She addressed him like a hostess to an uninvited dinner guest. Nathan Prair had been a client of hers-a patient. Departmental counseling following a shooting. She'd had to pass Prair off to a civilian colleague when he'd attached to her, professing he loved her. It had gotten to the point where thanking him or even speaking to him risked leading him on, sending some unintended signal.
The question was why he was here. This bridge was within city limits, SPD jurisdiction. Why the involvement of the King County Sheriffs Office? Either one of their guys had spotted the body-she hoped it wasn't Prair-or perhaps the lake itself fell into KCSO jurisdiction. The way politicians drew the maps, anything was possible.
"How have you been?" Prair moved to fill the space she'd made between them. He was in that group of patrolmen that spent a couple of hours a day at the gym, though he lacked the jutting jaw and heavy brow that seemed ubiquitous features of the other G.I. Joes. In fact, Prair's overly round face housed narrow-set soft brown eyes that left him a confusing mixture of boyishly handsome and mean-spirited. Even with the Marine cut, Matthews had always thought his blond hair was more that of a surfer than the take-no-prisoners cop he hoped to portray. Prair's biggest problem was that he believed women found his looks irresistible. It had gotten him into all sorts of trouble. It had gotten him dismissed from SPD and later moved over to the Sheriffs Office.
"Deputy Prair, I don't think it appropriate that we have this, or any conversation." She looked around the bridge for John LaMoia, who was supposed to be on the scene already.
Prair shook his head, smile still in place. "That was what... over a year ago? I got a little jiggy-it happens. Tell me that's never happened to you before, one of your couch potatoes getting hot for you."
"I'm glad you found reassignment," she said as a concession. "I hope it works out for you on the job."
"You sound like my grandmother, or something. This is me, Daphne!"
"It's Matthews, and it's lieutenant. Your charm is lost on me, Deputy."
He leaned closer and he lowered his voice into a whisper that cut through the damp air. "So it was you the Titanic hit. Mystery solved."
She stepped back as John LaMoia called out her name and approached in a stiff-legged hurry.
John LaMoia didn't walk, he swaggered, carrying his entire personality in a confident stride, for all to see. Most of all, LaMoia existed to be noticed. His trademark ostrich cowboy boots easily cost him a month's salary, and he was not shy to replace them when they scuffed up. The thick brown hair, cascading in waves and curls, proved the envy of every woman on the job. The deerskin jacket seemed an anachronism, a relic of the flower power generation into which LaMoia barely fit, having been born too late to be certifiably hip and too early to be a yuppie. Equally loved by the brass and the patrol personnel-not an easy feat-as a detective LaMoia got away with behavior that would have won others suspension. He crossed boundaries and even violated ethics, but always with that contrived, shit-eating grin of his, and always in the name of right and good. Like everyone else, she had a bit of a soft spot for him, though she would never admit it.
LaMoia's timing couldn't have been better. She'd have to thank him later.
"The shrink and the shrunk," LaMoia said. No love was lost between most detectives on the force and Nathan Prair, a man who by most accounts had tarnished the SPD shield. "I need to borrow her a minute." He hooked Matthews by the elbow and steered her away, out of earshot, back down the bridge toward a gathering of patrolmen.
"Am I ever glad to see you," she said.
"Listen, you stand too close to garbage, you start to smell like it. Couldn't let that happen to you."
"Oh, sure."
"Truth be known, Lieutenant," he emphasized, "I'm surprised to see you here. Night tour, raining, and all."
"I was nearby when I heard the call," she stretched the facts slightly.
"This wouldn't have anything to do with that other teen jumper, and you getting all sideways over your not stopping it?"
"Whose analyzing whom?" she asked.
"I'm just asking."
"You're using an interrogative to make a statement, John."
"I just love it when you talk dirty."
She elbowed him playfully, and he chuckled. This was not their typical rapport, and she found herself enjoying a LaMoia moment.
"You can almost see your place from here, huh?"
"I suppose." She was looking down toward the black water where the scuba divers swam beneath the surface with powerful flashlights, the beams of which looked gray in the depths. The body, believed to be a woman's, had been spotted on the surface less than an hour before but had blown its bloat and sunk during the attempt to recover it. Some people didn't want to be found.
"SID caught it," he said. Scientific Identification Divisionthe crime lab.
"Caught what?" she asked.
LaMoia was spared an answer as a semi passed too closelya patrolman shouted at the driver to slow down-causing the hastily erected halogen light stands to shake and nearly fall. Instead he pointed to where a lab technician worked over what looked like a tiny patch of dried blood on the bridge railing.
Sight of the blood took her aback-not for what it was, but for what it implied. She'd come to the crime scene because of the implication of a jumper. The presence of blood indicated foul play.
"How'd we find that?" Matthews asked.
"Very carefully," the woman lab technician answered without looking up. She added, "Doesn't mean it's hers."
"Of course it's hers," said LaMoia.
"We'll know by morning."
"Could be anything," Matthews said.
"Yeah, sure. All sorts of bleeders choose this section of the bridge for a view."
It was then Matthews saw the drip line. Some of the droplets had been stepped on and smeared, but the line was clear. A second technician was busy delineating the area of sidewalk that contained the blood pattern that led from the roadway. A more scientific study of the blood splatter would determine both direction and approximate speed of that trail, but on first glance it seemed obvious.
"Car parked there," LaMoia said. "Guy hoists her out of the trunk or the backseat, carries her to here-carries, not drags bumps her against the rail as he gets a better grip and voila. To bed she goes."
"Who's lead?"
"A/o/," LaMoia said.
"Try Spanish, John. You don't wear the French very well."
"Si," he said.
The Hispanic lab tech winced at his lack of accent, or maybe she was flirting with him. She wasn't the first.
Matthews studied the drip line again, a part of her relieved that maybe it wasn't another jumper. She knew she couldn't voice such a sentiment-others wouldn't understand.
Excited shouting from below alerted them to the diver that
>k had surfaced and was waving his flashlight toward the nearby dive boat. MARINE UNIT was stenciled on its side. A phone number.
A website address. A new world.
A King County Sheriffs special operations section, the marine unit's involvement helped explained Prair's presence.
"They found her," LaMoia said, stating the obvious.
A quiet descended over the four of them. A moment of respect, as the shouting spread up onto the bridge. Two of them were collecting her blood. One of them was assigned to figure this all out and attribute it to someone.
Matthews was there to observe. But as the pale, swollen mass that had once been a woman came to the surface with the three divers, she turned and walked away, very much aware that Nathan
Prair watched her every step from his huddle with several other KCSO officers. She crossed her arms a little more tightly.
Happy to be gone from the scene, she realized she might leave, but she could not, and would not, leave this case behind. This one was hers as much as it was LaMoia's.
Pretty in Pink
Late afternoon the following day, on the heels of several detectives-in-training poring over the two dozen local missing person reports, as well as the pages of six three-ring binders filled cover to cover with sheets of reported runaways suspected headed to the Northwest (these binders representing only the last two months of flyers sent to SPD), a phone call was taken by the duty sergeant at Public Safety.
"Yo!" LaMoia answered.
"Sergeant, it's Phil at the front desk."
"Yeah, Phil. Whassup?"
"Phone call just now come in. The individual is one Ferrell Walker. Male. Sounded kind of young. Claims the description in the paper fits his sister, and that for all he knows she's gone missing-something about some asshole boyfriend who won't return his calls. Should I kick it upstairs on a memo or what?"
"No. I'll take it. Give me the four-one-one."
The duty sergeant read the particulars to LaMoia and repeated his recollection of the conversation.
"Give me the TOD," LaMoia said, wanting the exact time of day the call had been logged. All incoming calls to the switchboard's main number were recorded digitally. LaMoia could access and listen to the message himself, but his preference was that IT. lift the message off the master and preserve and protect it so they'd have it available later.
He caught up with Daphne Matthews in her seventh-floor office, a hundred and fifty square feet of femininity in an otherwise grayish male world. It always felt comfortable to him, which he supposed was the point-she did her counseling here-chintz curtains on the window, landscape artwork on the walls. But it was the personal furniture that made such a difference, even if it was from Home Depot as she claimed-dark wood and leather, instead of the gunmetal gray steel that came courtesy of the taxpayers.
An electric kettle, a wooden variety box of tea, and packets of Splenda occupied a counter to the right of her desk.
"Here's my problem," he said without a greeting.
Matthews was packing up for the day, filling a narrow black briefcase that looked more like a handbag. "I'm done for the day."
"The Sarge keeps asking me to rewrite the report on the bridge."
"Try English, John."
"Ha-ha. You're really cracking me up, here."
"I'm not writing your report for you."
"And in the meantime," he continued, "I got this guy that says his sister's split the scene and that she matches the description we gave to the paper."
She looked up.
"The thing is, I got to make like Shakespeare here for the next couple hours, and when you call the number this guy gave the desk it comes up some grouch who says our boy ain't coming to the phone while he's on the job-and the job turns out to be cleaning fish up at Fisherman's Terminal-and seeing as how that's damn near on your way home ..."
"That's a stretch," she said.
"But you'll do it."
"I shouldn't. I'm tired, and I want a glass of wine."
"But you will" He said, "I swear, if I didn't have this damn report to write-"
"Yeah, yeah," she complained. "And I'll whitewash your fence while I'm at it."
"I don't have a fence," he said, "but I do have a couple closets I just built that need a couple coats."
"Rain check," she said, standing at the ready. "Tell me again whom I'm looking for?"
She left the Honda alongside a rusted heap of a pickup truck in a parking lot of cracked and heaving blacktop that oozed a brown mud apparently too toxic to host even the heartiest of weeds. Dickensian in both appearance and smells, the commercial fishing docks of south Ballard had changed little in the last century. A dozen or more small trawlers, battered and destitute in appearance, evacuated their catch to cleaning tables with open drain spouts that ran pink with guts and grime emptied back into the canal water where overfed seagulls and shore birds battled noisily for territory, their cries piercing and sharp, yet apparently unnoticed by all but Matthews.
A few of the men, mostly young and scraggly, overtly inspected her as she followed directions down the line to the third of the cleaning tables. Even in jeans and a work shirt she would have felt self-conscious in this setting, but dressed in tweed wool pants pleated at the waist and crisp in the crease, and a navy blue Burberry microfiber rain jacket with leather trim, she felt about as comfortable as the silver salmon under the knife.
Ferrell Walker looked more seventeen than twenty. LaMoia had pulled two driver's licenses for her: Walker's and his sister's, one Mary-Ann Walker, twenty-six. Matthews knew from the data that his eyes were listed as green, his hair brown, his weight 170 and that he wasn't an organ donor. He wore a black rubber apron smeared with the snotty entrails of his livelihood.
The apron attempted to protect a pair of filthy blue jeans and a tattered sweatshirt equally smeared with resident stains. He pulled off mismatched thick rubber gloves, one black, one yellow, stuffing them into a torn pocket on the apron that hung down like a giant tongue. He rinsed his hands in cold water from a rubber hose that ran constantly above his cutting stand. He dried them on a soiled section of torn towel and thankfully did not offer one to shake. Obliged to display her shield, she made sure he saw it.
Walker's face was pinched, as if he'd been sat on as a baby. She couldn't see the green for the dark, deep eye sockets. Behind him, on the high wooden workbench where the water ran pink, a wood-handled fish knife rested, its curving blade like an ill fashioned smile. Walker's Adam's apple bobbed like a buoy as he answered her first question. Had he called the police to report his sister as missing?
He looked at her almost as if he knew her-men did this to her all the time, but Walker's variation was pretty convincing, and disquieting.
"Not like Mary-Ann to miss work," Walker said. "And when that asshole said he hadn't seen her either, that didn't sound right, so I called you guys ... you people ... whatever."
She asked for and received the sister's pedigree, some of which matched what she'd learned from the driver's license: twenty-six, blond, 135, five foot six, smoker, worked here at dock five. Last seen-and this was the most troubling to her of all-roughly three days earlier. Those in the know put her in the water over forty-eight hours. This timing made Mary-Ann Walker a likely fit. Matthews had a Polaroid of the woman's waterlogged, crab-eaten face in her pocket but couldn't bring herself to deliver it to this kid. Mention of "that asshole" made her think she might have another candidate to ID the body.
"You're making reference to a boyfriend?" she asked.
"Wait, tell me it's not Mary-Ann," he said. "Tell me this didn't happen."
"What's her boyfriend's name?"
"Lanny Neal." He still had hope in his voice. "The description in the paper... tell me I'm wrong about it sounding like Mary-Ann."
Matthews looked around for a place to sit, but thought better of it. She didn't like the smell here, the sound of the dead fish slopping wetly down onto the cutting tables. She didn't like the sad look in Walker's tired eyes, or the thought that LaMoia had passed this off to her so that she'd be the one delivering bad news.
"Anna's a cleaner, too," Walker said. "Boss is on me that it's somehow my fault she hasn't showed. So basically, I'm picking up her work, putting in a double." He hesitated. "She wouldn't leave me hanging like this-not without calling or something. This body ... it looks like her?"
"Unfortunately, the body doesn't look like much, Mr. Walker.
Too long in the water. Now, you asked this Lanny Neal about her, and his reaction was what exactly? And I urge you to recollect what was said, not what you felt about what was said." She interrupted herself again. "I take it your sister is living with this individual, or involved in a way that suggests he might have knowledge of her whereabouts?"
"He's jumping her, if that's what you're asking. And, yeah, she's pretty much shacked up, since we don't have the boat no more. Which is on account of Neal anyway. "Cause once they started hanging out, she bailed on me-thirty years of our family fishing these waters, down the drain-and that pretty much finished me off with the fucking bankers, thank you very much."
"Mr. Neal's reaction to your call?"
"Lame," Walker answered. Dead fish were piling up, awaiting him. "You mind?" he asked, indicating the table.
She did mind, but she told him she didn't, and so they stepped up to the cleaning table where Walker, gloved once again, worked the curved blade of that knife in such an automatic and efficient way that it bordered on graceful. He tore loose the entrails and tossed them into a white plastic pail.
"Take me through the call, please. You asked to speak with Mary-Ann."
"Listen, lady ... lieutenant... whatever ... Neal's a scum sucking piece of shit. I know it, and he knows I know it. He beats her up, and she goes back to him, and I just don't fucking get that, you know? And me? I'm looking out for her, and she blows me off like I'm the pond scum, not that dirtbag she's hanging with, so what I'm saying is, we didn't exactly get into it, Neal and me. He essentially blew me off."
"His exact words were?"
"Just tell me it isn't her." His fingers moved, the blade sliced and another fish was processed.
She waited for his attention. He was sad-eyed by nature, a dog starved for affection. Her job biased her into such snap appraisals, and though loath to admit it, she went with first impressions.
"I sincerely hope the Jane Doe is not your sister. The fact remains, your cooperation is essential if we're to clear Mary-Ann's name from our list, and that means answering my questions as they're asked. Do you understand?"
Walker's gaze lifted off the fish he was cutting, the look he gave her so penetrating that she averted her eyes.
"We haven't identified the body." She now wondered whether she had handled this correctly. She observed grief on a regular basis and tried to avoid labeling it. Some screamed, some cried, some went silent, some became violently sick. Some became violent, period.
"Neal said she wasn't there, that he hadn't seen her, and that at this point if he did it would be for the last time."
Matthews scribbled down notes. "Okay ...," she said automatically.
"It's not okay," he said. "The guy beats her, lady. He's awful with her, and if he's done anything to her ..." He lifted the fillet knife. "I'll turn him into chum and feed him to the crabs." His eyes reminded her of killers she'd interviewed. Grief could do that-make us do things we never intended.
"It's important we all keep cool heads, Mr. Walker. We're still just collecting the facts, the evidence. There has been no positive ID-identification-of the body we found. It would be a mistake to make assumptions about Mr. Neal's involvement at this point."
"I'm not making an assumption," he said. "I'm just telling you how it is."
"It isn't anything until we know who, and what, we've got." He was more kid than adult, she thought. A lovesick brother with a fishing knife sharp enough to split hairs-she reminded herself to thank LaMoia for this one.
Rain fell, wetting her pad.
"Did she take prescription drugs? Recreational drugs?"
"If she was drinking and drugging, Lanny got her into it."
She wrote that down as affirmative. Booze, drugs, abuse the father, son, and holy ghost of domestic disturbances.
As the rain increased, she debated pulling up the hood on the jacket but decided she wanted him to know she could take the weather.
"Do you have an address, a phone number for Mr. Neal?"
Walker recited a Wallingford address and Matthews wrote it down. He went back to the fish. This time, he hacked the head off with a single blow, then the tail. Then he minced the body, entrails and all, into pieces and swept it down the drain and the seagulls attacked the surface of the water with a frenzy.
"Remember, Mr. Walker, we have not connected Mr. Neal to any suspicious act. This is the first I've heard of Mr. Neal. Are we clear on this?" Matthews worried where a younger brother might take this. He'd lost the family boat, the family business. What had she been thinking, implicating Neal? She hoped she might steer her way back out. "Women disappear, Mr. Walker. Tens of thousands every year. Some just up and walk away, from their families, their husbands, their boyfriends-their brothers. That's right. Most show back up, a few days, a few weeks later. I'd like to think we can pretty much put Mary-Ann in that last category."
He dragged a salmon in front of him with the knife's sharpened tip. "If it is Mary-Ann," he said matter-of-factly, "then all the more reason you'd better talk to Neal. Anna's afraid of heights."
"Acrophobic?"
"Whatever."
She made note of the phobia on the page of her notepad.
As it rained harder, she again almost pulled up the jacket's hood but decided against it once more. Rain drizzled down both their faces. His eyes hardened, making him seem much older than his twenty years.
"So what do we do next?" he asked.
"You tell us if Mary-Ann shows back up." She passed him a business card that carried the office number and wrote LaMoia's extension on the back. "I'm concerned I may have given you the wrong impression, Mr. Walker. About this being Mary Ann
I apologize for that. I don't want you doing something stupid-harming Mr. Neal in some way. All for nothing."
"People get what they give in this world. It's no concern of yours."
"Sure it is. It's every concern of mine." She added, "Could you give me a phone number? Residential. Something other than work."
"I told you, after Neal got into her head... I don't have a phone."
"An address?"
"I'm kind of between places right now, okay?"
"This is pretty miserable weather, this time of year."
"There's ways around it."
"So this is where I reach you," she said, looking around. "What's your work schedule right now?"
He ignored the question. "I asked what's next, in terms of if I don't happen to call you, if Anna doesn't happen to show back up."
"We're attempting to identify the body."
"And I should be part of that."
She heard herself say, "We could arrange for you to view the body, but there's absolutely no requirement for you to do so at this time. Mr. Neal could do it, if you'd prefer."
Walker read meaning into her statement. "That help you get him? Watching him look at her? Something like that?"
"I'm not going to speculate on where the lead detective might take this. I am not the lead detective."
"You are as far as I'm concerned," he said.
Matthews wished she could start again.
He said, "If Neal looks at that body, then I want to be there. I got any kind of rights like that, me being her brother and all?"
"None whatsoever," she said, unsure herself. "It's all up to the lead detective."
"Yeah? Well, you tell him I want to be there."
"I'll pass it along."
"You do that," he said, hoisting the next fish on the tip of the knife to its place of evisceration. "You help me, I'll help you."
Bowing to Buddha
Lou Boldt had an ordinary look that few would expect in a cop. Fewer would expect the traits that accounted for a homicide clearance rate that shattered every SPD record: an enduring patience and an empathy with the victim that had gained such legendary proportions that the man made the law enforcement lecture circuit a second source of income. His heightened sense of hearing not only kindled a love of bebop jazz but also could discern the most subtle nuance in the voice of a suspect or a witness in the throes of a lie. His rise through the ranks had been predictable, though far from supercharged. He got the job done and seemed to enjoy himself in the process. He shunned exposure in the press, and yet notoriety proved inescapable. The only sergeant to decline consideration for a lieutenant's shield five years running, he had remained in that position for more than a decade, succumbing to promotion only when family finances necessitated. He walked with something of an exaggerated stoop-typically lost in thought. A family man, he'd come to fatherhood somewhat late in life. Whenever he attended preschool parent functions, he found himself with little to talk about. Dead bodies, murder, and assault made him a reluctant conversationalist. It was while at one such function that his wife, Liz, had introduced him to Susan Hebringer.
Hebringer, who had last been seen downtown, had now been missing for several weeks, following on the distant heels of one Patricia Randolf, who'd disappeared nearly two months earlier. Both missing, and now presumed dead. The case was eating a hole in Boldt's stomach to go along with other such scars-his medals were empty bottles of Maalox liquid, discarded like the bodies of victims whose deaths he hoped to solve. Thankless work, but a job he wouldn't trade. The Susan Hebringer case was an exception-it put a voice to the face, a child watching the back door for mommy-it put Boldt on notice, serving up a reminder of the randomness of it all. It could have been Liz. It could have been him and his two children staring at that back door, waiting. The ghost of Susan Hebringer, a woman he'd met only briefly, but a friend of his family, had come to own him.
Boldt's relationship with Mama Lu, on the other hand, had begun with an illegal immigrant scam involving shipping containers, and it had developed over time into a professional association of sorts, in which she acted as an unpaid informer in exchange for later favors. Boldt understood perfectly well that such relationships were two-way, and he believed that his current visit to Mama Lu signaled traffic flow in the reverse direction-she needed a favor, and he was obliged to do his best to deliver. Tonight he knew only that her inquiry involved a death and that like it or not, if he could help, he would. If not, he would do his best to appease her.
Boldt knew from prior visits to the Korean grocery that he needed to clear himself with the first of the two Samoans, a thick-necked, squinting structure of a human being dressed in black. It felt vaguely humiliating for a twenty-odd-year homicide veteran to seek the approval of a bodyguard, but Boldt came to get the job done, not pee on a fire hydrant, so he flashed the man his shield, playing along, and announced-he did not ask, his one concession-that he was there to see the venerable Great Lady.
Thick with the smell of pickled ginger and sesame, the grocery's interior made him suddenly hungry. An elderly Korean man with few teeth, a chapped grin, and expectancy in his arched eyebrows welcomed Boldt from behind a deli counter that offered mostly unrecognizable cuts of meat, fish, and poultry.
Fish heads and chicken feet quickly killed Boldt's appetite.
Canned goods and sundries reached floor to ceiling, enhancing the narrowness of the aisles-a claustrophobic's nightmare. Two ceiling fans spun lazily, a dusty cobweb trailing from a paddle like a biplane banner at the beach. Boldt climbed the steep stairs, cautious of a trick left knee, the sweet pungency of chai overtaking the ginger. Oddly out-of-tune Chinese string music grated on his musician's ear. Of all the affronts to the senses, this dissonance proved the most difficult to take.
A Buddha of a woman, Mama Lu occupied an ornately inlaid black lacquer chair like a queen on a throne, so wide and vast of flesh as to fill out a muumuu like a sleeping bag in a stuff sack. Her eyes shone like tiny black stones in a balloon of a face accented by generous swipes of rouge, implying cheekbones now submerged in an overindulgence at the soup bowl. Her lips gleamed a sickening fire-engine red, a color echoed in an application to her blunt fingernails, one of which, her index finger, curled to invite Boldt closer.
"Mr. Both," she said, having never gotten his name right in the several years they'd been associated.
"Great Lady."
"You like some soup?"
"Thank you." He had learned long ago not to refuse. A female attendant of seventeen or eighteen, a petite thing with a wasp waist who wore embroidered silk from neck to ankle, delivered a small table before him. She averted her face, avoiding his eyes as he sat.
Mama Lu chewed on a string of Chinese words, and the girl if took off in a flash to points unseen. The place was a rabbit warren.
"You mentioned a death, Great Lady." He tried to push her, knowing she might drag this out for over an hour. He didn't have an hour. Neither did Susan Hebringer. Mama Lu smiled, but said nothing in reply.
There was only the music as they awaited delivery of the steaming bowls, also black lacquer. A won ton dish with streams of egg swirled in a dark broth. The Chinese spoon, flat on the bottom and wide at the mouth, allowed the soup to quickly cool. Mama Lu concealed a burp that she clearly savored.
"Greatest detective ever work this city."
"You must need an awfully big favor," he said.
"Do I exaggerate?"
"Always."
"My heritage." A face-consuming grin. "Please excuse."
"You are a friend to this city, Great Lady. You give much back. Others should follow your example."
"You humor me."
"I honor you," he said. "You are a dear and noble friend."
"Since when you running for office?"
"I'm just trying to stay above water these days."
"Soup make you feel better. You tell Mama Lu what troubles you."
Boldt took a spoonful. The soup defined depth and character. "The two women who've gone missing," he said, feeling no need to fill in the blanks-the whole city knew about Hebringer and Randolf. "My wife and I knew one of the women."
Mama Lu grimaced and after a long moment nodded.
Boldt ate more and requested a second bowl, winning great favor with her. If he could have raised a burp, she might have adopted him. "You should write a cookbook sometime," he said.
She said, "You busy man, Mr. Both. Forgive an old woman her selfishness."
"I am always at your service, Great Lady." Protocol was not to be dismissed. Boldt let her have her self-deprecating moment but waited for her to reveal the true nature of her summons. The second bowl of soup proved even tastier than the first.
"You familiar with water main break, Mr. Both?"
"I might have missed that, Great Lady."
"Yesterday night."
"I caught the rain. We had a couple of assaults overnight. A huge trash spill in the bay. I think I missed the water main."
"Lucky you. Not so lucky for second cousin."
Here it came-the reason for his soup. Her cousin. A euphemism for anyone of Asian descent for whom the Great Lady felt morally or physically responsible. Over the years, Boldt had learned some of the code. Not all, not by any stretch. "Do you mind if I take notes?"
She gestured for him to do so. Boldt pulled out the worn notebook, taller than it was wide. If fit into his hand like a cross to the devout.
She said, "Billy Chen. His mother sister to my cousin's husband."
She smiled. All an invention on her part. "Work road crew, here in city. Good boy, Billy Chen."
"And how was Billy unlucky?" Boldt said.
"Billy dead," she said.
"I'm sorry for your loss," he said. "How did it happen?" And then it registered, though too late. The sinkhole on Third Avenue.
Interpreting "yesterday night" had left him on the wrong date, and it took him a moment to back up the calendar, to relocate himself. The sinkhole raised a red flag only because of its location. The only two reliable witnesses in the Susan Hebringer disappearance had put her last-seen nearby on Columbia Street, once on First Avenue, and a few minutes later crossing
Second heading east, uphill. Randolf was believed to have been in this same area at the time of her disappearance. Shop owners had been questioned, bus drivers, pamphlets distributed-and to date, not a single other lead had come. Then that immense sinkhole.
And now a dead body. He sat up, his pulse quicker, pen ready.
"Billy working broken water main. Your people say he drown fixing it-that he no good at job. Medical examiner office.
Mama Lu, not think so, Mr. Both. Billy Chen no good worker? Want better job done. Much grief, Billy brings us all. Mama Lu have no answer. Turn to good friend for answer."
"Where exactly was the body found?" Boldt said.
"Do I ask you to do my cooking for me? Run grocery?"
Boldt grinned. She intended for him to start from the start. This woman didn't run a grocery, she ran Seattle's Asian economy.
Who was she kidding?
He said, "The medical examiner, Doc Dixon, is a close friend. He can be trusted. He's very good at his job. If he says Billy Chen drowned, then I'm sure that's right. I don't know the particulars, but if Doc Dixon-"
"You will know particulars, yes, Mr. Both? If not accident, you investigate. Yes? As favor to good friend."
"We-my department-are only authorized to investigate deaths ruled suspicious causes, Great Lady. I can certainly look into this ... accident, or whatever it was ... no problem. But unless there is a determination of suspicious causes, my hands are tied."
"But you untie as favor to friend."
"I can work after hours. Maybe take some lost time. I just wanted you to understand it may go a little slowly."
"I no understand."
"I'm very busy right now. The family might prefer a private investigator, someone who can tackle this full-time." He couldn't believe he was recommending they use a PI. He hoped he'd worded this carefully enough. He didn't want to offend the likes of Mama Lu. Not now. Not ever.
"Chen family prefers you, Mr. Both." She set her spoon down and gently pushed at the small table before her. She meant she preferred him. As she dabbed her chin with the generous linen napkin, the wisp of silk swept through the room and the bowl of soup disappeared. A magician at work.
As close to a direct order as he was going to get. The choice was now his. "Let me see what Dixie, the ME, has to say about it." Boldt nudged his table. Same reaction: bowl gone; table dry; table removed from in front of him.
"You like fortune cookie?" she said.
"No, thank you."
"You no like fortune cookie?"
"We make or break our own fortunes. I don't need a cookie interfering."
"But taste so good," she said, crunching down on hers and raining crumbs into folds. She smiled. Thankfully she had her teeth in.
"Billy Chen," Boldt said, making sure he had the name right. "C-h-e-n."
But he was thinking about both Hebringer and Randolf having last been seen in the same general area when Mama Lu said, "Little birdie tell me Cherry and Third part of old underground city. How you know what kill Billy until you look?"
"The Underground extends up there?" Boldt asked, adrenaline warming him. In the late 1800s, Seattle had been rebuilt following a colossal fire. The reconstruction, made in large part because of tidal flooding, developed a city on top of a city enormous retaining walls built around each of twenty city blocks and streets between them built up with soil and rock sometimes as high as thirty feet. A good deal of the original city now lay underground. He'd done the tour once-it was a world unto itself down there: antique storefronts, stuff wreathed in darkness for more than a century, some of it frozen in time, some intruded upon by shop owners desperate for storage.
Boldt couldn't have been less interested in Billy Chen. It was all Hebringer and Randolf for him at that moment. A pave dover section of the city left undisturbed for a hundred years. The Phantom of the Opera, Boldt was thinking.
"Maybe so," she said, but with a twinkle in her eye that told him she knew more.
"Who is this 'little birdie," Great Lady?"
The wide shoulders shrugged.
Boldt suddenly possessed enough energy to jog back to headquarters.
The Underground? She'd handed him a hell of a lead. "I can look into this," he told her, trying to hide his enthusiasm.
"You good man, Mr. Both," she said, reading whatever was on that fortune and finding it extremely amusing. Her body shook like a mountain of jelly.
Hide and Peep
Nordstrom and the tourist thing had worn Melissa Dunkin's legs down to a pair of aching calves that would be shin splints by the following morning. At 7 P.M." practically stumbling into her suite in the Inn, she headed straight for the bath. With dinner scheduled for 8:30, she had no time to waste. A few minutes for a "lie-down" in front of CNBC if she hurried.
Melissa used the brass security hook-and-latch lock to ensure her privacy against a random minibar inspection or turndown service. She started the bathwater and began undressing immediately, the water steaming piping hot and making her think, for no reason at all, of home and her husband and kids, whom she missed. On reconsideration, more honestly, she was happy to have the time alone. Nothing wrong with some self-indulgence once or twice a year.
Her blouse off and hung up, she drew the living room sheers across a large window with a panoramic view of Puget Sound. Slate-green water, densely forested islands, and the Olympic mountain range served as a backdrop. She drew the curtains in the bedroom as well, mildly annoyed that they wouldn't close completely, but as they faced a darkened construction site, a skeleton against the slowly fading evening sky, she didn't worry about it. She undressed fully, off to one side. Nothing mattered much at this point but that bath.
She slipped into the complimentary terry cloth robe, angled
the TV to face the bathroom, angled the bathroom door's full length mirror, and readjusted her efforts twice so that she could see a reversed image of Market Wrap from the tub. Turned the volume way up. Toe in the water. Heaven.
She shed the robe, slipped into the foaming tub, and nearly squealed with delight it felt so damned good. A moment later, she climbed back out, ignored the robe, and sneaked into and across the suite's living room where she snatched a beer from the minibar. She returned to the tub a conquering hero.
Twenty hedonistic minutes later, Melissa Dunkin dried herself off with a towel the size of a rug, slipped back into the robe, and headed straight for bed. Do not pass Go. The covers drawn, she shed the robe and lay back into the crisp sheets, naked, glowing, the bath's heat slowly seeping out of her flushed skin. She zapped the TV's sound and dozed, as relaxed as she'd been in ages. If that dinner hadn't been on her Palm Pilot, she'd have let herself sleep until morning.
She would never have accused herself of woman's intuition. She left that for the touchy-fee lies the Birkenstock set who frequented the whole-food stores and took Chinese supplements they couldn't pronounce. Melissa Dunkin considered herself pedantic but effective and efficient as a businesswoman, adequate as a mother, accomplished as a lover. She pulled the sheet up over her chest as she cooled, luxuriating in the serenity of a self induced stupor.
It was at that moment she saw the man's reflection in the bathroom mirror, which, at its present angle was trained with a view out the bedroom window. He glowed red, then suddenly green as a traffic light changed. He held something to his face.
Binoculars.
Aimed into her window.
At her.
Naked, until only seconds before.
Oh, my God!
She coiled into a fetal ball, stretching for the phone while clinging to the sheet that hid her from him. She snagged the handset and ended up dragging the phone by its cord across her oversized pillow. She was dreadfully cold all of a sudden, her skin coursed with gooseflesh, her teeth actually chattering. The talking head on the TV looked out at her, so calm and collected. The collision of fear and dread inside her left her nauseated.
She wasn't about to call some minimum-wage hotel receptionist.
Not Melissa Dunkin. She dialed 9 for an outside line and punched in 9-1-1.
Catch, As Catch Can
The ringing phone demanded to be answered, but John LaMoia hesitated. In Crimes Against Persons the telephone was its own kind of crap shoot its own lottery. The detective that answered a call automatically accepted whatever case presented itself, sometimes a murder worthy of his time, but mostly domestics. Beatings with baseball bats, stabbings with kitchen knives, gunshot wounds of every variety-it was enough to keep a man like LaMoia single. Enough for him to give it time to let someone else catch this one.
He'd had one bit of good news, and he felt reluctant to spoil it with some worthless case that would demand his time: A truck driver had read a story about Mary-Ann Walker and had called in that he'd seen a car parked on the bridge right before midnight.
He hadn't gotten a good look at the driver, but LaMoia had put a detective on a telephone follow-up (the trucker was currently on a run to Boise) to try to get a decent description of events. When the trucker returned to town, they would follow up yet again.
His office cubicle was personalized with a Sports Illustrated swimsuit calendar, an audaciously pink rabbit's foot hanging from a thumbtack, a collection of classified newspaper ads, each offering a Chevy Camaro, and a Life in Hell comic-strip frame. His home, eight to twelve hours a day, or night, or holiday. Never mind the razzing he took for the pressed blue jeans, the ostrich cowboy boots, the deerskin jacket. He, and only one other CAP detective, carried a sergeant's shield. If he didn't want to answer a cold call, then he wouldn't.
Finally he picked up the phone-duty overcoming reason.
"LaMoia."
"Is this a detective? Am I speaking with a detective? I'd like to report a Peeping Tom."
He immediately had her in his mind as white, thirties, well educated. The caller-ID helped. The Market Inn catered to a certain set, a set that could make trouble for a detective.
He sat up in his chair and grabbed for a pen. Any homicide detective worth his salt would have paid attention to this call. Susan Hebringer, one of the two women missing from downtown, had reported a peeper twenty-four hours prior to her going missing. An alarm sounded in LaMoia's brain-he'd caught a good call.
"Sergeant, ma'am. Crimes Against Persons. It's my squad."
She whispered into the receiver. "He's ... right... across ... the ... street. Right now. I can see him over there."
"Let's stay calm, okay?" He checked the clock and wrote down the time: 7:38 P.M. "I'm assuming you're in the Market Inn. What floor?"
"Five."
"Do you happen to know what direction you're facing?"
"No."
"The water? Do you have a water view?" LaMoia spun around to face the map of the city and the clearance board above it that tracked which cases remained active. Hebringer and Rando/fwere up there in red marker with Boldt's name in the Lead column. They'd both been up there way too long.
"The living room. If I'm facing the water, this guy's to my right."
"North. Okay. Fifth floor. And you are currently where?"
"In bed."
"Alone?"
"Yes, alone." Indignant. Afraid.
"Clothed, or unclothed?"
"Not clothed, no. There's a robe on the floor."
"I'd rather you not move, if he's still there."
"He has binoculars, I think."
LaMoia's pulse pounded at his ears. A peeper with binoculars.
Susan Hebringer.
"I'm going to ask you to sit tight. I'm going to take your room number and call you back on my cell phone. I'm maybe five minutes away, max. I'll have patrol cars in the area in less than that. The key here is not to give this guy reason to bail. If he thinks you've made him, he's out of there."
"I want him out of there."
"I understand that, Ms.... Your name please?"
He wrote down the particulars and practically begged her to remain in bed and to act calm. He made the calls on the run for the elevator. For a lousy peeper report, this would be the biggest show of manpower SPD had ever mobilized.
Susan Hebringer. If he had time, he'd get a call to Boldt. If not Boldt, then Matthews: top of the lineup; he needed the heavy hitters.
*
Assuming his role as commanding officer, LaMoia directed dispatch to put out an 041 for the Bay Tower construction site. Officers in two patrol cars responded within seconds and were advised to enter the area "cloaked," with a BOL (Be On Lookout) issued for an adult male possibly fleeing the area, possibly in possession of a pair of binoculars or a telescope. Another three foot soldiers called in, all in the general vicinity, and once advised of this fact, LaMoia used them to bracket the area in case the guy slipped the two teams from the patrol cars.
With just five minutes to act, he felt he'd done as much as humanly possible to throw a net around this peeper. The phone call to Boldt's residence put him onto voice mail, and he left a cryptic message to return the call. He asked dispatch to send Boldt a page. A call to Matthews paid off-she was on her way over.
He juggled all this while keeping an open channel and something of a running dialogue with Melissa Dunkin, still curled up under a cotton sheet in suite 514. When Dunkin reported the peeper gone, LaMoia dialed up the urgency to his people on the ground. Ten minutes later, fifteen minutes after receiving the call from Dunkin, a search was on in the construction site with LaMoia fearing they'd lost him. Thirty minutes later, that search included fifteen patrolmen, the foreman of the construction site, and a vice president of the company putting up the building.
By the time the construction site was crawling with law enforcement,
LaMoia found himself sipping coffee in the company of a visibly shaken Melissa Dunkin, who had eschewed the go juice in favor of vodka on the rocks from little minibar bottles with tiny aluminum caps.
Dunkin wore a dark wool suit that she'd thrown on hastily, judging by the wrinkled and incorrectly buttoned blouse. Matthews arrived in blue jeans and a T-shirt, looking great. Introductions were followed by the explanation that the prosecuting attorney's office no longer permitted a male detective to interview a woman without a female officer present. The truth, it was hardly why Matthews was there. A patrol officer would have satisfied regs. LaMoia wanted Matthews "to look under the hood," and she was present to willingly oblige.
"A dot-com in Redmond?" he asked.
"Yes."
"But you did tourist stuff around town here today."
"After lunch. Yes," Dunkin said.
"Shopping mostly?" Matthews asked.
"Not only shopping, but it included shopping. Yes. The aquarium. Pioneer Square. The monorail."
"A busy day," LaMoia said.
"Very."
Matthews asked, "And did you then, at any time, sense that you might be being followed or watched?"
"Not at all. Not in the least. My God, you think this guy was following me!"
LaMoia recapped. "You came back to the hotel, locked the door to your room, pulled the drapes-as far as they'd go-and undressed for a bath."
"That's correct."
"You were in a state of undress only twice when outside the bathroom," he repeated from his notes. "The beer, and in bed after the bath."
"I was in the tub," she reminded, going on to describe her arrangement of using the door's full-length mirror to afford her a view of the television.
This was a new one for LaMoia, and so he had her show him. He placed a hotel towel into the damp tub, stepped in, and sat down. She aimed the door until he could see the bedroom's armoire. She asked for him to verify the angle.
"Yeah, there," he said, stopping her. "I got the television, but I'm also looking right out that window at my men over there on the construction site."
"He had a view of me," she mumbled. He didn't know if her slurred tone was a product of the booze or shock. "I think he had binoculars. He was holding something in his hands."
LaMoia believed with certainty that a perv peeping a naked woman would most certainly be holding something in his hand, but he didn't comment. Instead, he asked, "A camera?"
"Oh ... God! You think? What, I'm going to find myself circulating the Internet?"
LaMoia doubted there was a lot of demand for pictures of naked middle-aged execs, even on the "Internet-ion al House of Pomcake," as he called the Web, but he bit his tongue. "Let me ask you this, Ms. Dunkin, and I apologize in advance for the way this may sound, but is your business with the Redmond dot-com of such a nature that advantage might be gained by ... influencing you in any way?"
"Blackmail?"
"Influence can take many forms."
"It's an LBO."
"Hostile or favorable?"
"I refuse to think-"
LaMoia interrupted. "Thankfully, you don't have to. That's why you brought me in on this-us-we do the thinking for you." He offered her his well-practiced smile. "We consider everything-every possible scenario-and then go about eliminating them, one by one. The more options we eliminate, and the more quickly we eliminate them, the sooner we're on the most probable set of circumstances, the sooner we're on a suspect and putting that person away for this. It's as simple as that."
"All parties involved support this buy out," she said. "This has nothing to do with that."
LaMoia was inclined to believe likewise but also didn't want to jump to the conclusion that she'd just been peeped by a serial kidnapper responsible for Hebringer and Randolf. He thought about Boldt, wondering why his lieutenant hadn't returned his call.
LaMoia considered bringing SID techs into the room to determine the likely line of sight; that, in turn, might suggest the exact spot the perv had been standing. From the suite he could see his guys scouring the construction site across the street.
Dunkin saw this too, and for the first time it occurred to her that the police were working a little hard for a simple peeper report. "Hey," she said, "what's with all the guys over there anyway?"
"They're looking for evidence."
"I understand that, but why, exactly?"
Matthews said, "Hopefully to help identify the person responsible."
"You do this for a peeper? A sergeant and a lieutenant? An evidence team? Am I in some kind of trouble here that I'm not aware of?"
"Maybe you'd better sit down, ma'am." LaMoia indicated the padded bench at the end of the bed.
"This may take a minute to explain," Matthews said.
Dunkin kept looking out the window. Several more officers had arrived to pull yellow tape around an area of the construction site.
"There have been some disappearances," LaMoia said.
"Women," Matthews added.
Melissa Dunkin sank to the edge of the bed and listened in stunned amazement.
It wasn't long before the hotel bedroom hosted an elaborate setup of tripods, measuring sticks, and a portable laser meant to re-create the angle from which the perv would have been able to view the room.
A Japanese-American SID tech wearing a Don Henley World Tour T-shirt called out for LaMoia. He showed him the setup and explained that the laser would "lay a frozen rope" out the window, across the street to the construction site. He switched on the laser, allowed it to warm up, and then sprayed a fine powder into the room. A tiny stream of bright green light hung in the dusty air.
"You do the voodoo very well," LaMoia said.
The radio crackled. "Got it," a deep voice reported. One of the guys across the way had located the beam and was waving back at them as he spoke on the radio.
LaMoia said, "I want the mirror shot out of the bathtub as well. Combine them and have that section of the platform over there dusted for prints, photographed, you name it."
"No problem."
"It is a problem," LaMoia corrected. "It's just not your problem."
Less than an hour later, LaMoia, Matthews, and two SID techs stood on the fifth floor of the construction site. The laser work had identified a square yard of floor space where the peeper had stood. On the edge of that area, delineated by crime scene tape, a tiny plastic stand held a two-inch, yellow plastic triangular tag bearing the numeral 7 that indicated several small piles of geometric mud and dirt presumed to be, because of the vague pattern it formed, discharge from a shoe or boot sole.
The construction elevator stopped, clanged open, and a silhouette of a fairly big man emerged. LaMoia identified Lou Boldt by the determined stride of his brisk walk.
"Hey, Sarge." LaMoia continued to address his lieutenant by his former rank, the same rank, the same job that LaMoia now occupied. Even in the relative dark of the construction site, Boldt looked tired and worn. LaMoia put this off to Susan Hebringer's disappearance. Some said he was having trouble at home; others claimed he was sick. But LaMoia knew the true source of
Boldt's physical decline, whether his colleagues understood it or not.
"Good work, John," Boldt said, shaking hands with his sergeant as they met. He nodded cordially at Matthews.
"Shoe treads," said the evidence guy, a little overeager for recognition. Boldt had a Norman Schwarzkopf reputation within the department. Newcomers always sucked up to him.
LaMoia said, "Maybe it's nothing more than some hump working his joystick."
Boldt looked to Matthews for confirmation. "He stayed in here a long time. He had at least a couple of opportunities for full frontals of her. Lots of time with her stretched out on the bed-also naked. If it was masturbatory, as John's implying, it would have been over much sooner."
"Maybe the guy's on Viagra," LaMoia said.
Fighting a grin, she said, "Another explanation would be that it wasn't masturbatory at all-but a collection phase, subsequent to trolling and prior to-"
"Abduction," Boldt said, completing her thought.
"A possibility is all," she said, "but yes."
Upon learning, after the fact, that Susan Hebringer had reported a Peeping Tom to police just prior to her disappearance, CAP's homicide squad had worked closely with Special Assaults to chase down each and every reported incident of sexual harassment and voyeurism, focusing a great deal of attention on any such reports in the downtown corridor, or filed by downtown residents. Uniformed patrols had been alerted to pay special attention to vacant buildings, billboards, parking garages, and construction sites-all possible viewing platforms for the peeper. Private security firms directly responsible for these same structures were contacted as well.
"Do we have any idea how long he was up here?"
LaMoia held his flashlight between his teeth while consulting his notes to make sure he had it right. Boldt liked it right the first time. "The vie personally witnessed him out here for twelve minutes. Digital alarm clock on the bedside," he explained. "Could've easily been a lot longer than that, since she was in the tub for over twenty and on the bed snoozing for an undetermined time."
"Any fluids or emissions up here?" Matthews asked the SID technician.
"Nothing to the naked eye so far. We could Luminol and the like, if you want." Under black light, when reacting with the chemical agent Luminol, human blood glowed green. Other tests existed for bodily fluids of so-called secretors-people whose blood contained a set of specific blood proteins.
LaMoia answered, "We want."
Boldt added, "Please. Any tricks you've got to detect saliva or semen. And if we come up with anything, I'd like it DNAed and run against the state and the fed's databases. Whether you get a hit or not, I want everything kept on file, and full written reports."
"Got it."
"Along with every girder up here, I want you to dust for prints on the stairway railing at every landing, both sides of the turn." He answered the technician's curious expression: "It's where people take hold. Just do it."
He signaled LaMoia and Matthews to step away, and the three shared a moment of privacy.
"Anything?" Boldt asked.
LaMoia looked across to Dunkin's hotel room. The Japanese tech was waving at him. LaMoia felt stupid waving back but he did so. These lab guys would never be cops.
"She'd done tourist stuff," LaMoia answered. "Some shopping."
"Anything specific in the shopping? Lingerie, swimsuit, anything that would have had her outside of a changing room partially clothed or at least wearing less than her street clothes?"
"I should've asked that," LaMoia was ashamed to admit. Boldt had been a paper shuffler for a couple years now yet still had better instincts than any two street detectives combined.
"Was it random?" Boldt asked.
"The million-dollar question."
"Your gut check?" Boldt requested.
Matthews shook her head no. LaMoia said, "Not random. Deliberate. But I got serious problems with that: Even if he trolls the tourist spots, even if he follows 'em to their hotels or their condos, how the flock does he know what room she's in?"
"Unless it's the other way around," Boldt suggested.
They'd worked these angles raw back at the Public Safety Building. For the sake of hearing it aloud, LaMoia said, "He spots 'em from up here-wherever-then waits for them to leave the hotel, and knowing what they look like, he stalks them. For whatever reason, at least twice he grabbed them."
Matthews said, "Timing and location-those are your reasons.
Nothing more complicated than that, which opens up the possibility-depending on why he took off-that our Ms. Dunkin just made his list."
LaMoia told Boldt, "She leaves town tomorrow. Taxi, straight to the airport. He won't be following her."
"Lucky for her. Too bad for us," Boldt said.
"We could still bait him," LaMoia suggested. "Install some babe on one of our squads to strip in front of windows."
Matthews said, "I wonder who'd be volunteering to oversee that operation."
LaMoia mugged at her.
Boldt was not happy. "The problem is it's not a specific hotel, a single building. Hebringer and Randolf both lived here. Ten blocks apart. You can't bait every town house, every hotel."
They'd been around this track enough times back in the situation room. Weeks, even months of it now. Boldt was in rough shape, under fire from the press, the brass, the families of the missing women, and even his own wife.
"So maybe Hebringer getting peeped was nothing but shitty coincidence," LaMoia said, referring to what they knew about the missing woman. "Drawing a look from us when it doesn't deserve it. Maybe it's got us by a nose ring when it's nothing but a black hole. Maybe I walked into that tonight."
"Maybe not, John," Matthews said. "We don't ignore this," she told Boldt. "His sticking around-that counts for something."
"Keep it up," Boldt told them. Pointing to the cordoned-off area, he said, "Make him talk to us, would you, please?" He added with a snarl, "A confession would be nice."
Room with a View
Doc Dixon, a big bear of a man with hooded eyes and a wide face, signaled Matthews and won her attention before pointing toward his receptionist, who manned a sliding glass window looking out onto the medical examiner's waiting room. His sign meant Langford "Lanny" Neal, the possible boyfriend of their Jane Doe, had just arrived and was being kept waiting.
Matthews acknowledged, checked the wall clock, and debated calling LaMoia one more time, resigning herself to the fact that a phone call wouldn't help the traffic situation. Nothing would help Seattle's traffic, not even an act of God.
Feeling obliged to do so, she'd left a message at the fish dock where she'd met with Ferrell Walker, providing the time and location of the identification at the medical examiner's office, hoping the message might not reach the grief-stricken brother in time. But one eye continually tracked to the reception window, wondering if Walker might appear.
Matthews had never liked the medical examiner's office and avoided it whenever possible. Dixon ran the ME's more as a doctor than a bureaucrat, displaying a keen interest in each and every body that passed through his doors and the legal system that claimed control of them in death. Matthews didn't have the same kinship or friendship with Dixon that Boldt shared, but through Boldt she had acquired a profound respect for the man. Where most of the homicide detectives had developed at least an uneasy comfort at the ME's, Matthews, a rare visitor, found the basement setting, the medicinal smell, and the overpowering silence repulsive. Perhaps her feelings stemmed from the doctor office look of the place: tube lighting, gray carpet, white lateral filing cabinets, the efficient young men and women spanning Seattle's ethnic palate, all dressed in white lab coats, some carrying clipboards, some answering phones. It felt too normal. One expected something more dismal and final-sweating rock walls and bars on the window, a doctor with a speech impediment, a nurse with a limp. This felt more like her OB-GYN's office. This setting didn't work for her at all.
LaMoia entered, his sergeant's shield clipped to the pocket of the deerskin jacket. He winked at the receptionist, an African American woman who had to be in her sixties, low-fived one of the young docs who made a point of catching up to him, and took Matthews around the waist, steering her toward the double swinging doors that led into the "meat locker"-the primary receiving room that housed twenty-one refrigerated drawers and sported three stainless-steel autopsy tables with drains, lights, and video cameras. There was at least one other autopsy room that she knew of-more of a private surgery suite where Dixon or his chief assistant occasionally tackled a sensitive or particularly gruesome case. She abruptly put on the brakes, not allowing
LaMoia to escort her through those doors before it was necessary, and her effort had the unintended effect of turning LaMoia toward her and briefly making contact with her. They bounced off each other, gently, and for a moment there was only that contact lingering in the nerve endings of her skin.
"That our guy out there?" LaMoia stepped back from her, keeping it business.
"Yes. Langford Neal," she said, giving her jacket a small straightening tug. "Boyfriend, or former boyfriend, if it's Mary Ann
Walker in there."
"And the doc thinks it is."
"The doc got hold of a better driver's license photo than I did. One of her eyes, the left, I think, is still where it belongs, and it's apparently a match for color: blue. Height's about right. Weight could be right, discounting for saturation and bloat. I've got a call in to the brother to try to locate dental records for her."
LaMoia glanced in the direction of the reception area. "Let me tell you something about our little angel, Neal. Two convictions as well as a number of complaints from previous love interests. This guy plays rough. He served thirty days in county for one of the convictions. The second, he was in for six months, out in four."
The news moved Neal up the list in both their minds. She understood the added spring to LaMoia's step now-he loved having the jump on information. "That certainly helps," she said, "but we shouldn't lose sight of the brother, either."
"Ten-to-one she was killed in or near the boyfriend's pad, given the underwear, the bare feet, and the rest of it."
"The brother could have harbored jealousy and anger over his being deserted for Neal. That's powerful stuff."
"Neal has two convictions for knocking women around. You kidding me? Not losing sight of the brother, that's okay. But we focus on Neal. If he does, in fact, ID the body as her, then from what you were saying, your take is to run him straight up to the bull pen and have a go at him. Is that right?"
"That, or use a conference room here."
"You're thinking that this viewing may put him off-balance her being so ripe and all-and that we pounce while we have the opportunity."
"You're a lot smarter than you look."
He took it in stride. LaMoia had his timing down to an art form. He kept it business-for the time being. This put her on edge, her defenses at the ready.
"You want to sit this one out, I'm okay with that. You're way too ... sweet... for a floater. Especially one that's been in the meat locker for a few extra days."
She knew she could handle it, she'd seen plenty of dead bodies, some in dreadful condition, but it didn't mean she wanted to. "I'll take that as a compliment. I think."
"You think too much," he said, meeting her eyes to drive home his point. LaMoia had large brown eyes and knew how to use them to effect.
"Meaning?"
"You gotta teach yourself to feel, Matthews." He leaned against one of the two swinging doors. He wasn't going to make her follow inside. "You're all engine. It's the handling that counts." Everything came down to cars for LaMoia. "You get that down, you'll be just about perfect."
"Who said I wanted to be perfect?" But he didn't answer her. He left her there to think about it. The door flapped shut behind him. Timing was everything.
Decades earlier, in municipalities across the country, medical examiner and coroner offices had learned to separate the individual making an identification from the room containing the body, as the smell tended to cause fainting and vomiting. Some used video, some a window-most used both, as did the King County Medical Examiner's Office, where a color TV was mounted to the left of a narrow window that housed a Venetian blind controllable from the inside.
Lanny Neal was handsome in a ski bum kind of way, cocksure of himself judging by the rigid shoulders, the smug expression, and his willingness to blatantly check out Matthews, leveling his gaze and drinking her in, head to foot.
She knew she should wait to question him, but he'd fired the first salvo with that rude survey of her topography, and she fell victim to the challenge.
"When did you last see Mary-Ann?" she asked.
The question didn't rattle Neal in the least-although LaMoia looked a little uncomfortable. Neal remained calm and collected, as if he were there applying for a job. This further irritated Matthews.
"Couple nights ago."
"How many nights ago?"
"Saturday, I guess."
"You guess, or you know?" Matthews pressed.
"Saturday night. Late."
"You weren't worried about her?"
"Pissed was more like it."
"You didn't report her missing. Why's that?"
"Why should I? She blew me off. Her tough luck."
Mary-Ann was gone. On to the next. Matthews knew the attitude. She asked him about the last time he'd seen Mary-Ann. Where they were at the time, what Mary-Ann had been wearing, her mood.
LaMoia interrupted. "I think they're ready for us."
A plain white sheet on a stainless-steel gurney filled the video screen. LaMoia knocked on the glass and the blinds came up like a curtain being raised. A hand appeared, on both the video and through the glass, drawing back the sheet and revealing the remains of a woman's head, at once both pathetic and terrifying. The lips were grotesquely distended, as if pumped full of air. An eyelid had been stitched shut, apparently to spare Neal the sight of an empty socket.
Matthews heard herself catch her breath. LaMoia remained intractable. Neal stared at her for a long time, exhaled slowly, shook his head slightly, and looked away with glassy eyes. It was not the reaction she would have expected of a murderer she and LaMoia met eyes and she knew he felt much the same leaving her to wonder just how good an actor Lanny Neal might be. This, in turn, prepared her for the Q&A she was already planning in her head.
"Yeah," Neal said, still looking away from the window.
"Mary-Ann Walker?" LaMoia asked.
Neal looked a little green, his skin carrying a light sheen that hadn't been there moments before. "You got a men's room around here?"
LaMoia directed him down the hall, meeting eyes once more with Matthews and communicating his own surprise at Neal's reaction.
The commotion came from the front of the office, where the receptionist stood out of her chair too late to prevent the entrance of a man wearing a torn sweatshirt and filthy blue jeans.
It took Matthews a moment to identify the late arrival as Ferrell Walker.
Walker paused in the middle of the medical examiner's central office looking lost yet determined. Matthews immediately picked up on the kid's frenetic energy. It jumped around the room like sparking electricity. He held the attention of everyone in the office as heads lifted and a silence of apprehension descended.
These people had no idea he was a grieving brother. This was the wild man on the subway, the lunatic in the hotel lobby. Of the employees in the room, only the receptionist made any attempt to intervene, and she reconsidered after taking a few steps toward the kid. Lanny Neal didn't yet see him.
Matthews left the small hallway that offered the viewing window and moved across the central room toward Walker, who avoided her by closing in on Neal. The fingers of his right hand danced like a gunslinger's.
"Don't!" Matthews shouted, but her reprimand had the unintended effect of stopping not Walker, but Neal, allowing Walker to close the distance even faster. Matthews knew, without knowing, what Walker had in mind; knew, without knowing, that for a few precious seconds Walker remained impressionable; knew, without knowing, that she was going to have to talk Walker down.
Walker, now to her left, lunged with reptilian speed, pinning Neal, who was a good deal larger than him. Down the small hallway, LaMoia drew his weapon instinctively, but Matthews waved LaMoia off as the curved blade of Walker's fillet knife flashed through the air and came to rest against Neal's throat.
"The question you have to ask yourself," Matthews began, addressing Walker as if she'd rehearsed for the role, "is not whether you believe Mr. Neal harmed your sister, or whether you think yourself capable of doing harm to him; it's not even about the prison time you will serve-you'll get a life sentence for something like this, Ferrell, meaning Mr. Neal will have destroyed both you and Mary-Ann-the question is what Mary Ann would say to you, were she here at this moment, whether or not she would approve of you destroying your own life in an effort to save hers, a life already beyond saving." She inched closer, now fifteen feet away.
She won his attention, though with no immediate results. The blade remained against Neal's throat.
She said, "Mr. Neal identified Mary-Ann just now. She's here, and you can see her for yourself if you want." She pounced on what she believed would be his greatest desire-to see his sister again-never taking her eyes off Walker as she pointed toward the hallway where LaMoia waited. She had to steer him back into his grief and away from anger and blame. "Do you want to see Mary-Ann again, Ferrell? That would be nice, wouldn't it? Believe me-you keep up like this, you'll never see her again. You'll be in prison when it comes time to bury her, and your actions here, right now, will have delayed any possible prosecution of Mr. Neal, for whatever role he may or may not have had in your sister's death."
Lanny Neal strained through clenched teeth, "This ... is ... bullshit."
Walker's eyes danced.
Matthews moved yet another step closer. Twelve feet now. "You're lying to yourself, Ferrell, if you think you're doing Mary-Ann a favor. You think murdering a man in cold blood is going to help her? How? Do you think it's going to help your situation in any way? You're making a lot of trouble here." She nodded at LaMoia. She wanted Walker's attention divided. "John! Is this going to save you trouble?"
"Me? I'm looking at writing up reports for the next week if this guy makes the wrong choice. Not doing me any favors."
"No," Matthews agreed. She extended her open hand toward Walker. "Once you pass me that knife, this incident is closed. Do you hear me, Ferrell? Closed. There's only Mr. Neal's word against your own. The sergeant and I, the people in this office: No one saw anything. A grieving brother got a little out of control. Big deal."
LaMoia said, "Where's the foul?"
"He did this to her!" Walker said, his voice raw.
"Bullshit I did," Neal groaned.
"We don't know what happened," Matthews said. "That's still being determined. If you're right, then you're right. But it's a risky assumption on your part. And what if you're wrong, Ferrell? What then? What if you kill an innocent man here today?
Where's that leave you? Mary-Ann's killer at large, and you, in jail, behind bars, where you can't do anything to help us. We need your help here, Ferrell. You're her only surviving kin-that's hugely important to our investigation."
Walker tensed instead of handing over the knife.
A man's thunderous voice boomed from the far side of the room. "Put down the knife, young man!" Doc Dixon, sounding like God himself. Behind Matthews, and to her right.
Walker glanced over in that direction, increasing the pressure on Neal's throat as he did so.
Dixon said, "You don't use a knife as a weapon in the basement of a hospital." It sounded so convincing. "There are a few hundred trained doctors in the floors immediately above us. Emergency rooms. Surgical suites. I'm a doctor. Several of my assistants in this room are also doctors. We're not going to let him die. No matter what you try, we're going to save him. The moment you try anything, Sergeant LaMoia over there will either put a bullet in you or break every bone in your body. And another thing to think about: No one here is going to be in any great hurry to help you, believe you me."
LaMoia was maybe ten feet behind her now. "This is one way, do not enter."
Matthews said, "There's a legal process that's meant to handle this. It's a process that works, Ferrell. Knives don't work. Trust me."
"Knives are messy," Dixon said. "You mess up my carpet and I'm going to personally beat the spit out of you."
Dixon moved for the first time, growing ever larger in her peripheral vision, cobra-like, as he approached. Matthews had somehow overlooked Dixon's formidable presence all these years. Suddenly she understood much more clearly the attraction between Dixon and Boldt-birds of a feather.
Walker's pale eyes flipped between Dixon and Matthews. "Stop right there," he warned.
Matthews took a step and said, "Hand me the knife and it stops. That's the only way it stops. Put Mary-Ann in this room, Ferrell. Take the rest of us out of here. It's only you, Mr. Neal, and Mary-Ann. Put Mary-Ann right here where I'm standing you can do that, I know you can-and then ask yourself what she'd say. How would she react to your threatening Mr. Neal this way? What would she tell you to do?" She took yet another step toward him. Six feet. "Don't listen to me; don't listen to Doc Dixon; you just listen to her, to Mary-Ann."
Walker stared at her. She said, "Drop the knife, Ferrell."
To her amazement, Walker dropped the knife.
LaMoia rushed him, tackled him, and had him on the floor, Dixon assisting.
Lanny Neal leaned over him. "You worthless piece of shit."
Matthews retrieved the knife from the carpet. It was heavier, sturdier, than she had imagined.
LaMoia cuffed Walker out of routine but then wondered aloud if they should book him, and Matthews put it onto Neal to make the decision to press charges or not. A grief-stricken brother facing a possible viewing of his murdered sister's body. How tough would the legal system be on Walker?
"Murdered?" Neal said, repeating her.
"Well, at least you're listening, Mr. Neal. That's a good place to start."
9 The Debt
"Where is he?" Ferrell Walker asked. He occupied one of the two guest chairs in Doc Dixon's spacious office.
Matthews patrolled the area behind Dixon's desk, where, at head level, the room's only window looked out at ankle-height to the sidewalk above.
"You need to convince me, Mr. Walker, that we're making the right decision concerning your release."
"The other guy's got him, right? The guy who tackled me?"
"You're not helping your case any."
"If I was going to do anything to that piece of shit, it would already be done. Okay? You think I'm going to have a chance like that again?" He tracked her constantly as she paced, his deep eye sockets fixed onto her every movement. "You saved me."
"I didn't save anyone. I intervened, and on Mr. Neal's behalf, not yours." Do not twist this around to your liking. "If we release you, we need some reassurance that you're capable of controlling your emotions, your anger."
"I lost my head." He grinned at her, cool and collected, like so many of the street kids they dealt with. "Is that what I'm supposed to say?"
"There is no 'supposed to," " she lied. In fact, that, or something close to it, was what he was supposed to say, but she didn't appreciate the irreverent tone. "And it's not what you say but what you do that matters to us."
"Okay. I get it now. If you let me go, then I owe you," Walker said. "You're saying I owe you something. Like a snitch. That kind of thing. Right? Listen, no problem."
"That's not at all what I'm saying."
"I get it. It's okay. I want to help you nail Lanny."
"It's not okay. You do not owe me, you owe it to Mary-Ann to let us do our jobs. You owe Lanny Neal the right for us to bring evidence against him or not. He is not guilty simply because he was her boyfr-"
"He hit her. Did things to her."
"And we'll look into all that. But in point of fact, Mr. Walker, a homicide investigation typically looks at the immediate family first, relationship partners second, and close friends last. You are the immediate family, the one we should be looking at first, not Mr. Neal."
"So look at me," he said, opening his arms to her.
"Did you kill your sister, Mr. Walker?" For Matthews it was a question that begged to be asked. She studied his body language carefully.
He stared at her, dumbfounded, cocked his head and said, "Who are you people? He beat her. He said he'd do this, and now he's done it."
He displayed none of the reactions she might have expected from a guilty party-a pregnant pause, rapid eye movement or breaking eye contact, adjusting himself in the chair. Even so, the idea would not leave her entirely and lingered in the back of her mind. Neal had the more likely motive, Neal the opportunity.
And, if what they knew about Neal was true, he had the sordid history as well. Walker's rage, his vengeance, was so prevalent that it filled the room. Assigning guilt was an easy jump for her.
He said, "From what I'm hearing I owe you a favor for helping me out. Stopping me like that. I'm good with that. I didn't
want him seeing Anna before I did. I was... upset. Okay? I can't thank you enough for what you did."
"It can't happen again," she said.
"I realize that. I'm sorry." The student cowering to the teacher; the little boy who knows better.
She cautioned him, "We will instruct Mr. Neal to file a restraining order against you. It'll be his choice to do that or not. That doesn't bring charges against you, but it serves to put you on notice. It draws a line in the sand that you'd better not cross."
"Anna and I, we repay our debts," he said.
"There is no debt. Are you hearing anything I'm saying?"
"I'll be a good boy."
"Don't push me, Mr. Walker."
"Lanny Neal is the one who needs restraining. You see to that, Lieutenant Matthews, and you'll have no problem from me."
"It's not how it works," she said. "You're damned close to threatening a police officer."
"She was murdered. You said so yourself. You have her killer in custody. So do something about it. You need help, I'll help. You helped me out. I won't forget that."
"You'd better forget it. That is not the point!" She'd lost her patience and her composure. Walker seemed to take this as a victory.
"He broke her legs, didn't he?"
Matthews felt a stab of surprise in her chest.
"You see? I can help you, if you'll let me. He said he'd do that... said he'd break both her legs if she ever tried to leave him." He watched her reaction, confirmation, and his eyes welled with tears. "He broke her legs, didn't he? Oh, God, poor Anna."
"I'm not at liberty to discuss the particulars."
He sat back. "Look at it this way: I didn't want your help either. Just now, I didn't want you getting in my face, in my head like that. But you did and it worked out for the better. Right? See? All I'm saying is... sometimes we get help when we don't see it coming. It's a good thing. I can help you like that."
"We're done here," she announced. "We'll want to speak with you again, and when we do we'll find you at your workplace."
"Unless I find you first," he said childishly, meeting eyes with her and straining to communicate something more.
She winced. "Go back to work. Go back to your life. If anything comes up regarding the investigation I'll make sure you're informed."
"You see? Another favor."
"That's standard procedure, Mr. Walker. That is not a favor. None of my actions should be construed as personal favors. Any such misinterpretation-"
"Save it," he said, rising quickly to close the gap between them. She could smell the overpowering fish odors and his sour perspiration. She nearly retched. "The only question I have is whether or not you give me back my fish knife."
Matthews glanced down at Dixon's desk where the gunsmoke gray blade rested by Dixon's pen stand.
"That knife has history," Walker said. "Family history."
It felt wrong returning that knife to him, but it felt equally wrong to confiscate the one item that was probably all he had left of his family. "Against my better judgment," she said, holding it by the blade and offering the knife back.
"I won't forget this," he said.
She closed her eyes as he left the office, torn between reversing her decision and watching him go. But then he was gone, the decision made for her.
Crossing the ME's to a conference room where LaMoia held
Neal, she put away her thoughts of Ferrell Walker. As she swung open the door that led out of the offices and into the small reception area littered with magazines, Matthews caught sight of a brown sheriffs uniform. The medical examiner's office was a county, not city, department, meaning KCSO had as much or more business here than SPD. Nonetheless, she knew in advance, knew instinctively, who this uniform belonged to.
The wide shoulders turned, the blond head swiveled, and just before the door shut she caught a glimpse of the profile of Deputy
Sheriff Nathan Prair.
What business did Nathan Prair have here? Was it Mary-Ann Walker or was it Daphne Matthews? She turned around quickly, hoping he hadn't seen her. She hurried toward the conference room, a part of her wanting escape; she knocked once, turned the handle, and stepped inside, her heart beating a little too quickly.
"Why don't you walk us through the events of the night Mary Ann went missing," LaMoia said.
Neal's erratic eye movement, constant swallowing to fight dry mouth, and perspiring upper lip warned Matthews to pay strict attention to the lies she felt were certain to follow. Here was more what she'd been expecting of Walker when she'd put the question to him. By prior agreement, she'd let LaMoia kick things off. At an appropriate time, yet to be determined, she would take over and he would be the one to stay quiet. If they sensed they had a live suspect, they would finish up by double teaming
Neal, at which point Matthews would play the hardass, and LaMoia the more patient, reasonable cop, turning stereotypes on end and hoping to keep Neal guessing.
"We'd been at my mom's, the two of us. We'd had a couple drinks. Dinner at my mom's. My mom likes rum. We'd had a few rums, I guess."
LaMoia clarified, "This is you, Mary-Ann Walker, and your mother?"
"Right."
"State your mother's name, please."
"Frances. Frances Kelly Neal."
"You had dinner, the three of you. Which night was that?"
"Saturday."
LaMoia took a moment to make a point of counting backward.
His favorite line of offense was to play the fool to begin with, slowly migrating to the hard-line cop any suspect learned to fear. "March twenty-second."
Neal said, "We come home after dinner ... to my hang, you know? And went to bed. I watched the sports while she ... you know, she was busy."
"Busy, how?"
"You know?"
"I'm afraid not."
"Busy." He pumped his cupped hand up and down. "Beneath the sheets."
"Ms. Walker was performing oral sex on you while you watched the sports news."
Neal grinned proudly, but he couldn't keep his eyes still. "That's it."
Lies, she thought, as LaMoia caught her attention and rolled his eyes.
"What time would that have been?" LaMoia asked.
"After dinner, like I said."
"That would be the local news?"
"Q-13."
"That would be Fox."
"That would be correct." He mimicked LaMoia, and the sergeant impressed Matthews with his ability to remain calm and not rise to the bait.
Neal liked to hear himself talk. That played in their favor. "She wanted some of that action for herself-if you know what I'm saying-and I wasn't exactly complaining, but-"
LaMoia interrupted. "We'll skip the play-by-play, if you don't mind. You did, or did not have intercourse with Mary Ann
Walker on Saturday, March twenty-second?"
"That's a 'did." For sure."
Matthews asked, "Using a condom, or without?"
"That would be without." Neal gave her a tennis pro smile.
LaMoia said, "Following the intercourse, you watched more television, or read, or went to sleep, or what?"
"Slept. At least I did. Mary-Ann might have gone out the window."
"You want to explain that?"
"For a smoke," Neal clarified. "Can't stand that shit. She used the fire escape. Used it all the time. I saw her out there on the fire escape. It was later, a lot later. Probably for a smoke. Right? I saw her out there, yeah. I just said I did." Confusion fanned the edges of his eyes.
"Approximately what time was this?"
"Later."
"Can you be more precise?"
Neal glanced first to Matthews, then to LaMoia, as if hoping one of them might help him out. He pinched his temples between the fingers of his right hand and apparently appealed for divine intervention. She was beginning to put more faith in Walker's suspicions. Lanny Neal was a self-centered egotist who had a record of abusing his girlfriends. He didn't lie very well, despite what must have been a great deal of practice.
"I remember her out there ... seeing her out there. I didn't like it when she went out there dressed like that. She never seemed to give a shit what she was wearing. Claimed no one could see her, so high up and all. And that's another thing-she don't even like heights, but for a smoke, shit, she'd climb the Space Needle. Anyway, she'd go out there in like a T-shirt and underwear, showing skin and all.
"She was talking," he continued. "At first I wondered who the fuck was out there with her. Then I saw the cordless phone was missing. She was out there on the fire escape on the goddamn phone with someone. Maybe it was the phone ringing that woke me up in the first place. And I do remember what time it was." This seemed to dawn upon him, and Matthews thought he was making it up as he went. "All twos flashing at me. Two twenty-two. The clock by the phone on her side of the bed. I remember that. Two, two, two. Flashing away. And I looked out the window, and there she was on the goddamn phone."
"Two twenty-two A.M."
"You ought to be talking to that brother of hers. Always begging her for money, bugging her. Punk-ass kid, blaming her for everything bad happening to him. Probably him on the phone. Probably him who did this to her."
"What exactly do you think happened to Mary-Ann?" LaMoia asked.
"How should I know? All disgusting like that, the way she was. Looked like she drowned or something. Is that right?"
"What exactly was Mary-Ann wearing at the time? Out on your fire escape."
"I just told you! Next to nothing."
"A description of that clothing could prove useful to the investigation."
"Well, she sure as shit wasn't going to go out there bare-ass again, you understand. Not after the last time. I'd caught her again-"
He stopped himself.
LaMoia met eyes with Matthews, communicating that they had their first real look at Langford Neal's inner workings. Interrogators lived for such moments.
LaMoia supplied, "You'd smack her around, let her know who was boss."
"I didn't say that."
"Did you smack her around that night, Lanny? Hit her upside the head, or knock her off the fire escape, or what? She was bleeding, wasn't she? She was bleeding and you didn't know what to do."
"That's bullshit. I seen her out there and I went back to sleep. End of story. She would'a had on butt floss. White butt floss. She always wore the same thing."
Matthews said, "Thong panties. And what about on top? A T-shirt? A blouse? A robe?"
"One of those camel-things."
"A camisole."
"Two humps right where they belong. Nice and tight."
Matthews cringed at his reckless confidence. "A camisole and thong underwear. No sweatshirt, no robe?"
"She's hot-blooded, I'm telling you. Went out there all the time in next to nothing. For a smoke. A sweatshirt-how the hell should I know? Does she own one? Yes. But that night it was a freak show anyway. Warm for a change. You can check that, right?"
LaMoia said, "We'll check all of your statement, Lanny. Every last word."
He looked briefly bewildered, but then regained his confidence and restated that the last time he'd seen her she'd been out on the fire escape. "Woke the next morning and she wasn't there. Not that that was all that unusual. She went to sleep later than me and got up earlier. Probably headed straight for a coffee hit, a Seattle's Best, down a few blocks. You should check with them. Right? They open at six, and she's always one of the first through the door."
"So her clothes were gone," LaMoia stated. "In the morning, I'm talking about-when you woke up, whatever else she'd been wearing-those clothes were gone?"
"What clothes? How the fuck would I know?" Clearly flustered,
Neal shook his arms in front of himself as if his hands had gone to sleep. "She wore them to bed, that's all I'm saying."
LaMoia reviewed his notes. "A moment ago you said you fell asleep after having sex with Ms. Walker. That you fell asleep after the sex. Now you're saying she wore panties to bed? Can you be more precise?"
"She wore them to bed before I took them off her." He added, "And that would have been after the sports, after the hummer, to be more precise."
"And what clothes if any, did she leave behind at your apartment that morning?"
"She's the one picks up, not me."
LaMoia said irritably, "So you're saying she cleaned house that morning, before she left for the coffee?"
"Listen, she had clothes at my place, okay? How the fuck do I know what was there and what wasn't? She lived there with me, don't forget. Right? Clothes? What? On the floor or something?
How the hell would I know?"
Matthews thought the story was getting away from him. The little pauses. The rapid eye movement. She excused herself and left the conference room, returning a few minutes later with autopsy photographs of two different women.
She wasn't hoping to win a confession, to cause some Perry Mason moment in which Langford Neal hung his head, weeping, and detailed the events of that night. She did, however, intend to run Neal through a litmus test. If she came away with any thing, she hoped to at least identify his lies and to make sense of his motivations for telling them. Making a legal case was not her responsibility. All that she wanted was the truth. Until the attorneys were invited in-Neal had yet to request one-she could basically say anything she wanted, could match him lie for lie. She knew how to use her looks against guys like Neal. Just before reentering the conference room, she tucked in her blouse and squared her shoulders, emphasizing her chest. Let him look all he wanted to. Let him be distracted.
She placed the photos in front of Neal. LaMoia knew they'd made the han doff-Neal now belonged to her. She said, "We had a similar fatality last year. Also a young, attractive woman. We're investigating possible connections."
"The connections being bridges and water," Neal said.
"And/or the men these women dated."
"You're looking at me for some head case that jumped off a bridge a year ago?"
"No, we're looking at you for Mary-Ann Walker, Mr. Neal." She made a stage show of looking over at LaMoia. "Who said anything about Mary-Ann jumping?"
"Not me," LaMoia answered.
"Nor did I," Matthews said.
"Try the papers, the television," Neal protested.
Matthews said, "Mary-Ann Walker did not jump, Mr. Neal."
"But you just said-"
"She was beaten badly, possibly raped, and subsequently was discovered in water wearing a torn thong underwear and a cotton camisole top-just exactly as you've now described for us. How she arrived into that water remains under investigation."
Neal lost the shit-eating grin.
"You're clearly a smart man," she lied. "A man who understands women. You don't have to tell me that some women get themselves into difficult spots. Make promises and change their minds. Get a little too drunk and ask for it and then beg off the sex with the old headache excuse. They cock tease a guy and then refuse to put out."
LaMoia did a double take on Matthews.
Neal looked uncertain.
"Right?" Matthews said.
"Yeah, sure. I'd buy that."
"And sometimes a guy's got to tune her up a little, let her know who's boss. Sober her up. There's a way this works and there's a way this doesn't work, and it doesn't work when she's in some drunken, willing mood one minute, and then an ice maiden the next."
Neal saw the trap then. "I... ah... I don't know what you're talking about."
"No?"
"No."
"We've got a half dozen prior complaints against you, Lanny. All of them are for taking a heavy hand with your girlfriends. You logged a thirty-day stint at county. You put a girl named Eileen Rimbauer in the emergency room with a broken collarbone.
Are you aware that Mary-Ann Walker had five such emergency room visits in the last six months? Did she happen to tell you about those? Her brother knows, I'll tell you that. She claimed to have fallen down the stairs of the boat, said her hand got caught in a winch." She read all this as if it were printed on the page, which it was not. "Pretty lame excuses, you ask me. She also had some woman problems that make a lot more sense if some guy is playing it a little kinky and rough. So what you need to look at, Mr. Neal, is not the door, not my chest, not the detective, as you have been, but what happened that night. You need to look at the underlying circumstances that started whatever argument resulted between you, the conditions that escalated that particular argument into violence. We're cops, yes.
But believe it or not we're human. We've heard it all-there's nothing you can tell us that will surprise us. This being your third strike, with the battered-woman law in effect you're facing a serious uphill battle, if convicted. You want half a chance? Convince us that you and Mary-Ann had a disagreement that night, that things got a little out of hand. A disagreement takes two people, Mr. Neal. That's a whole lot better than some guy pounding on his woman for no reason whatsoever. Can we start there?"
"She was out on the fire escape. Talking on the phone maybe. I'm not sure about that. Smoking a cigarette, 'cause otherwise no way would she have been out there. I'm telling you, she did not like heights."
"Not to get away from you?"
"We had sex is all. Maybe I was rough. I don't remember. I was pretty loaded that night. But I'll tell you one thing: You never heard Mary-Ann complaining about the sex, believe me. She liked it rough. She asked for it rough. That night, out there on the fire escape, that's the last I seen of her."
"Two twenty-two A.M.," Matthews repeated.
"The woman hardly slept."
"You understand that where there are mitigating circumstances in a case-an argument, for instance-the investigating officer is required to take them into consideration. These things come out in trial no matter what. There's no sense for a detective to push for capital murder if there's a domestic case where the girlfriend was comp licit-say, acting like a drunken slut one minute and going for a carving knife the next. You need to think about that, because a guy beats up a woman, the sides get drawn long before the jury sits down for the first time. Believe it." Neal wore shock in his eyes, which Matthews took as a small victory. "Am I getting through, Lanny?" she asked rhetorically.
"She was all fucked up in the head. All bent out of shape
over her asshole baby brother. Said she'd let him down, losing the fishing boat and everything. That she owed him big time. But shit, he was just working her. Mooching. Crying in his beer. I wanted her taking care of things around home. For us to get something going. But I'm telling you, she was all fucked up."
"Okay." Matthews took a deep breath and savored the surprise that he'd begun to open up.
"She'd been drinking a lot that night, got herself all dumb and loopy. We had the sex, you know, just like I said. Her on top, all angry like. Fast and furious and, I don't know, meanspirited, you know? Like she didn't want to be doing it."
Matthews didn't like the next images that filled her head sweating through the camisole, sticky hair, the slapping of flesh.
"Sometimes it was like that with her," Neal said, quieter for the first time. "A little strange like that. Like she wasn't really there, you know? Tripping out. The more I seen of her like that, the weirder it was, to tell the truth. She'd get herself off. It wasn't about me. It was like I wasn't there."
Matthews attempted to wipe those images from her mind, but they wouldn't fade. She spoke over them. "Was there anything that night in particular that the two of you argued about? Anything said that maybe'd come up the other times you'd seen her like this?"
"I'm telling you, she got the most pissed off when I brought up Ferrell, and how it was bugging me the way he never left her alone. Jesus, the guy was always showing up at the weirdest times. Sniveling about money and how she'd fucked everything up. And she didn't like me talking about him. Bitching about him. She'd pretty much taken care of him since their old man bit it. Her mom-I don't know nothing about her mom. Whether she bolted or croaked, or what. She could be dead, too, for all I know."
"So you argued about the brother," Matthews said.
"That night? Not that I remember. I'm telling you: We got back to my place and she went all horny on me. She's half undressed and going down on me practically before I got the tube on."
"According to you, she was out on your fire escape in her panties and a camisole top. Maybe a sweatshirt; you don't know. Can't remember. I'm assuming barefoot. And now, fast-forward, she's in the water." Matthews paused. "There are problems with your story, Mr. Neal. Are you aware of that? We started out with you and Mary-Ann pretty much in the same miserable condition.
You watching your sports broadcast while she services you. Now you say she was oversexed and practically raping you. We started out with her getting up in the morning and heading out for coffee. But we know for a fact she ended up in the water the night before. How'd she get there?"
"How'd she get to the water?" Neal asked, as if he was suddenly on their side. "I'm telling you, I saw her out on the fire escape. Heard her talking on the phone."
He appeared less confident now. If there was a part of his story to exploit, it was Mary-Ann out on the fire escape. Matthews tried again. "How about this? Maybe she's still drunk out there on the fire escape. Maybe you've got the time wrong. Maybe she's drunk, tired, a little shaky still from the sex, and she smokes a cigarette and goes a little dizzy and goes right off that fire escape."
"Oh, yeah, I'm with you," LaMoia said.
"It wasn't like that," Neal objected.
"She's trying to help you out here," LaMoia said.
"She goes off the fire escape and she isn't getting up, and you, Mr. Neal, realize with your history this is not going to look right. Not good at all. Your half-naked girlfriend, carrying your sperm, at the bottom of your fire escape? How you gonna explain that one?"
LaMoia said, "But the condition of the body-that fits: going off the fire escape. That's good thinking, Lieutenant."
"It wasn't like that," Neal repeated.
"But to a jury? What you've got to ask yourself is how it'll look to a jury. "Cause I've got to tell you-it's pretty damn convincing to me."
"To me too," LaMoia chimed in.
Neal wore a full face of sweat now, his eyes jumping between his two interrogators.
Matthews leaned into the suspect where he could smell her, where he couldn't avoid her. "But sadly for you, the truth always plays better. You know what I think? I think you hit Mary-Ann. I think you got angry with her and you struck her, and things went badly for you. You thought she was passed out like the other times, but she never got up. Sometime that night, or the next morning, you discovered she was dead. You'd killed her. And now what? Maybe for whatever reasons, it turned you on. Maybe you're like that. Maybe you did things to her after she was dead." She lowered her voice. This was her ground now. "There's nothing quite like that anger of yours, is there? It gets away from you, that kind of anger. It turns back on you, doesn't it? Bites back. Then comes the moment you don't understand. You're riding a rocket while your little sweetheart's gone all limp. You're all over her with your stuff, because that's how the arguments always end-right?-the two of you in the sack, clawing at each other and starting out all ugly before the sex starts to heal things. Only this time it doesn't heal, does it? This time she isn't coming awake."
"Who the fuck are you?" he asked, his eyes dilated.
"I'm your way out of this mess. We are-the sergeant and I. You want out of this, don't you, Lanny?"
LaMoia dragged his palms across his pants. The jangle was in the air like the smell before a thunderstorm.
She said, "I want you thinking about the lab tests. When that nasty bruising occurred. When she broke those bones-before or after she died. What? You didn't think we knew that yet? Seventeen broken bones, Lanny. What? You thought we'd think her hitting the water did that? And speaking of water, what about when the water went into her lungs? Before or after death? You've got to consider the jury and how this could turn out for you, because this meeting, right here, right now, this is a good chance for you to help yourself. We don't deal in stories. We process the facts and let them tell the story. And that's the story the jury believes. The one and only story. The more you bend it around, the worse your chances of cutting a deal with us."
Matthews stood up and made a point of smoothing the wrinkles in her shirt, as if she'd picked up some of his filth by sitting a little too closely. Lanny Neal remained fairly composed, maintaining an air of self-importance that he wore on his face along with the good looks he didn't deserve.
Interrogations were as much about timing as the questions asked. She and LaMoia exchanged looks and LaMoia cut Neal loose, asking that he "stay close to home." No travel outside the city without notifying the police.
"Impressive," LaMoia said after Neal was gone, "if a little unorthodox."
"What'd you think of him?" Matthews asked.
"Mixed review," LaMoia said.
She felt disappointment seep through her. She wanted so badly for this to be over, to wrap it up and put Mary-Ann Walker to rest. But her review was mixed as well-Neal seemed something of a contradiction. "We wait for the lab results. Both SID's and Dixon's. Maybe that'll clear it up for us."
Wishful thinking, and they both knew it.
A Drowning Is a Drowning, a Fall, a Fall
The signature combination of antibacterials and preservatives never failed to remind Boldt of death, images of bruised and bloated corpses indelibly stamped in his consciousness from the 134 autopsies he had attended. He never lost count.
This was a place where the soles of feet bore identification codes in black marker, where nakedness reigned and was never attractive. Floor-to-ceiling stainless-steel refrigerated drawers with sliding trays capable of supporting four hundred pounds and six-foot-two frames. He hoped beyond measure that it was a place Susan Hebringer would never visit. But he had his doubts.
Although state law required investigators to attend autopsies of any death of questionable or suspicious causes, it was not any such requirement that brought Boldt here. That requirement had already been fulfilled by Detective Chas Mimer. Instead, it was because it was here, at the ME's, that the dead whispered their last words through their translator, Doc Dixon. He of the large head, wide eyes, and soft smile.
Boldt said, "I hear things got a little western earlier." "We all handle grief differently. That kid is wound pretty tight."
"Daphne's not convinced she should have let him go." "She cooled him off. I think he'll be all right."
"It's the other guy I'm worried about," Boldt said, "this Langford Neal."
Dixon nodded. "Yeah, I know what you mean."
None of this was Dixie's problem. Boldt and Dixon discussed a re-release of a Chet Baker compilation on CD, Boldt describing the man's singing voice as "cream and honey." Dixon leaned toward Baker's horn playing, being a trumpet fan himself.
"Since when are you into vocalists?" Dixon asked.
"Liz is trying to convert me to opera."
"Sounds like she's trying to cure your insomnia."
"Same thing."
The cadaver in question was that of Mama Lu's "cousin," Billy Chen. Dixon double-checked the address, swung open the square stainless-steel refrigerator door, and slid out the tray containing
Chen on silent rollers.
"Let me ask you this," Dixon said. "Since when do you show interest in what went down in the books as an accidental drowning?"
"It's a favor to a friend."
Dixon answered by lowering his head and giving Boldt a look over the top of his reading glasses.
Boldt explained, hoping Dixon would see the connection. "This guy was found within a block of where Hebringer was last seen."
"There was a water main break."
"Caused by what?" Boldt asked.
"In other words, you're letting Hebringer get to you."
"Is that from Liz or Matthews?"
"I can understand how a disappearance is harder than a homicide.
The lack of closure."
"Two disappearances."
"Even harder."
"Susan Hebringer's husband calls Liz about every other day. She's stopped telling me about it, but I know it's continuing. Their daughter and Sarah are in the same ballet class."
"You're a lieutenant. What the hell are you doing in the field?"
Boldt answered, "The captain cut me some slack. She smelled a task force coming and wanted to avoid that. She untied my leash on this one. So what?"
"It should be your sergeant's case, not yours."
"You've never taken an autopsy away from one of your assistants?"
Boldt asked. That seemed to sting Dixon, but Boldt wasn't sorry. He enjoyed the freedom of the past weeks and didn't want it ending just yet. An exception had been made for him and he wasn't about to challenge it.
" "You lose perspective, you lose focus." Isn't that a Boldtism?"
"There are no Boldtisms," Boldt said. "There are two missing women and an experienced street worker who drowned in a couple feet of water. Add to that an area of unexplored Underground."
"That part of town?"
"That's what I'm told."
"So that makes things more interesting."
"Sure does. But tell me Chen was an accident, and I'm out of here."
"I wish I could." Dixon unzipped the body bag to the neck. Chen's face was the color of an athletic sock that gets washed with the wrong load of laundry, a faint purplish yellow. His lips were circled in a brown blue.
Boldt's chest tightened. Oddly, he needed complications, he needed unexplainables, he needed Billy Chen to point him somewhere. And yet he didn't want it. If Susan Hebringer walked into Sarah's ballet class tomorrow, Billy Chen went back into cold storage. Boldt was feeding off the dead, using Chen's death as a possible stepping-stone, and the thought of this repulsed him.
"His lips?"
"Believe me, I'd rather not admit this office made a mistake."
That word from Dixon's mouth electrified Boldt. "The source of this mistake?"
"My guess is that it resulted from this coming in as an accidental death. Head trauma. "Suffocation due to immersion of the nostrils and mouth in a liquid." There are no pathonomic findings for drowning. We put head trauma way up our list. Chen suffered head trauma, ergo, the drowning fit. We sometimes look for what we're told to see. It happens. Someone has a lunch date, he goes through the motions and lets his expectations determine his findings. We see a fine white froth or foam in the air passage, evidence of vomiting-a drowning is a drowning. A fall, a fall."
"His lips," Boldt repeated, wanting Dixon to translate the purple bruise that surrounded Chen's mouth.
"Michael, one of my best assistants, overlooked two items. The lividity is inconsistent with the suspected cause of death." Dixon drew Boldt's attention to the clown's face of discoloration around the man's mouth. Then he unzipped the rest of the body bag, snapped on a pair of disposable gloves, and lifted the corpse at the waist. "Notice the buttocks?"
Boldt observed a purplish, orange-black doughnut of discoloration on the dead man's left buttock. "Lividity."
"Exactly."
"Buttocks and lips?" Boldt asked.
"That's the point. One is either sunny-side up or over easy when one dies. We can't be both. This lividity," he said, returning
Boldt's attention to the dead man's buttocks, "probably occurred while he lay waiting to be found. Not after he was bagged. Not while he awaited his turn on the slab. Long before all that."
Boldt remained confused, and said so.
Dixon explained, "A head trauma drowning means that Chen took a blunt object to the head-an I-beam, a slab of cement probably as a result of the huge volume of water down there. He's either dulled or unconscious. The lungs fill with water. He coughs and vomits. At this point he's unconscious for sure. The heart stops pumping, the blood settles to the lowest spots and coagulates. In this case, his heels and buttocks." He hoisted the cadaver's stiff left leg. The bottom of the man's heel showed a similar discolored circle.
Boldt prompted him, "Which brings us to the lips."
"The discoloring around the mouth is not lividity, but more likely a hematoma."
"Asphyxiated?"
"His lungs contained only a few cc's of water. Enough to kill him, to be sure, but not the lungfuls we'd associate with accidental drowning."
"Resuscitation?"
"The EMT report doesn't indicate resuscitation, no. Chen was flat-lined when they found him down that hole. No vital signs. They never got far enough along with him to attempt ventilation. The patient was unresponsive to their initial attempts at CPR."
"Maybe they left something out of the report," Boldt said.
"Any of the various procedures would have showed up indirectly with inventoried equipment charges. We're not seeing that on Mr. Chen. Check, if you want to check."
"I'll check," Boldt agreed.
"Ask them about oxygen at the same time."
"Oxygen?"
"Michael missed this as well. He read the accident report, the EMT report, and he saw what he expected to see. What he missed was an elevated oxygen level in Mr. Chen's venous blood gases. We expect to see levels at right around seventy five percent. Mr. Chen's venous oxygen level was eighty-eight."
"He's in shape? A runner?"
"No way. Supplemental oxygen is the only explanation for levels like that."
"We're going around in circles. So you're saying it was the EMTs. They did attempt resuscitation."
"No, not according to their report they didn't. What I'm telling you is we've got inconclusive evidence to support a clear cut method of death. It's entirely possible that Mr. Chen was caught from behind," Dixon said. "Whoever it is, he's pretty strong. Chen struggles, winning the hematoma surrounding the lips. His assailant manages to drop him. Chen encounters the blunt object. He's unconscious and he's about to drown, and don't ask me how, but the air around him is spiked with O. I'd check to see if anyone was welding down there. Oxyacetylene. Something that might explain it."
"A sloppy EMT report explains it."
"We work closely with these people. I'm not going to mud sling
"Help me out here, Dixie. I've got a pair of missing women."
"With that sinkhole raining down around them, the EMTs could have hurried him out of there, and then later covered it up when it came report time, because they realized the guy died in their care. Improper care. You never know."
Boldt wasn't sure that helped him. He had no desire to prosecute a couple EMTs.
Dixon suggested, "A fireman would have supplemental oxygen.
Who responded to that cave-in?"
"A fireman killed Chen," Boldt said in total disbelief.
"I know it doesn't make any sense."
"Not unless it was someone who didn't want to be found."
"Then why apply the oxygen?" Dixon asked, as frustrated as Boldt.
"That's what we need to answer."
"We?"
"You'd better write it up, Dixie. I may have to stick it to those EMTs."
The Gift
"Lieutenant, we got a delivery at the Third Avenue entrance for you."
Matthews, who wasn't expecting anything, said, "Just sign for it and send it up, would you, Pete?"
"Can't do that anymore, Lieutenant, sorry. New regs."
She'd read that memo at some point. What a pain in the neck. "Well, at least sign for it, then. I'll be down to get it."
"Guy says he won't leave it for anyone but you."
"Then he's going to have to wait."
"He's been waiting, Lieutenant. This is my third call up there."
She'd been in meetings and hadn't checked her messages. It seemed possible. "Ask him what it is, who it's from."
She heard the inquiry through the receiver. Then Pete said he was going to put the guy on the line.
"Hey, Lieutenant."
She knew the voice, but it took her a moment to identify it. "Mr. Walker?"
"I told you I could help."
She suffered a chill like a small shudder rippling through her. The image that filled her imagination was that of the family dog leaving a dead squirrel on the doorstep. "We discussed this."
"You had to say those things. I understand that... I understand the way things work."
"I'm not sure you do. What's in the package, Mr. Walker?" She took a wild guess. What would the adoring student bring the teacher? "Some fish? Fresh fish?"
"Fish? It's hers" he said sadly. "Proof that sack of shit is lying if he says he didn't do anything to Mary-Ann."
"Mr. Walker... Ferrell, it's illegal to involve yourself in an active investigation. We went over all this." Another chill swept through her. This wasn't the first time a bereaved relative had attached him- or herself to a case, but she'd never personally experienced it. Instead of celebrating the cooperation, she felt boxed in.
"You've got snitches, right? So, I'm a snitch. Don't knock it 'til you check it out."
"If you leave the package for me, Mr. Walker, I'll pick it up later."
"No way. I get to see you, or I take it with me. What's wrong with you? You want to get this guy or not?"
"You have to leave the package, Mr. Walker. There's nothing I can do about it. They X-ray them, electronically sniff them there all sorts of security now that I can't do anything about. It takes a couple of hours. I'll look at it and I'll call you."
"No way. I'm waiting."
"What happened to your double shift?"
"New arrangements."
"Mr. Walker-"
"I'm waiting, like it or not."
She could hear the phone being passed back to Pete.
"Lieutenant?" the gruff voice inquired.
"Tell him I'm on my way down. Go ahead and start it through security, okay, Pete?" In fact, such security took only a matter of minutes. She wondered if it was stupid to show Walker she'd exaggerated the situation. To hell with it: She'd accept the package, get Walker out of there, and warn him not to try it again.
A few minutes later she passed the lobby coffee stand and approached the busy security checkpoint at the building's main entrance on Third Avenue. Ferrell Walker stood waiting-there were no chairs-just on the other side of the twin metal detectors, to the left of the lumbering X-ray machine. He wore the same sweatshirt and blue jeans that she'd seen him in earlier the same day. She could imagine that smell even at a distance.
Pete, a burly patrolman in his early fifties who'd worked the front entrance for years, indicated a somewhat soggy brown corrugated cardboard box that waited on a folding table. The noise generated at the entrance by all the security questioning and the signing in and the beeping of the metal detectors and the grinding of the X-ray machine's conveyor belt created a jagged tension in the air that Matthews always felt in the center of her chest as a threat of violence. She used the garage entrance on most days, appreciating the calmer approach taken there as a result of an officers-only policy. But here, in the coffee-scented foyer with its high ceiling, standing under the faint light of overhead fixtures with dull bulbs chosen for their low consumption of energy, she felt more like a tourist at the security check of an airport in a foreign country.
The cardboard box seemed to grow in size and significance. She lost sight of Walker, due to the security installation, but could feel him standing over there staring at her.
"Bring him through, please, Pete."
The officer on duty signaled for Walker to step through the metal detector, but Walker refused.
Matthews stepped around to where she could see the kid and said to him, "You can leave it with him. In the plastic tray. They'll give it back to you when you leave."
Walker looked skeptical.
"They'll give it back to you," she repeated.
Walker removed the long fishing knife from a hand-sewn leather sheath tucked inside the waist of his pants and hidden by his sweatshirt. He seemed impressed that she should have anticipated this. He placed it in the dirty plastic tray, and Pete, making a face of open curiosity, moved it aside and out of reach. Walker passed through the metal detector and Pete fanned his hand in front of his face, making light of the man's fish odors.
Matthews and Walker stood in front of the cardboard box and she asked that he open it. Pete drew closer, protective of his lieutenant.
"You open it," Walker said somewhat childishly. But there was a menace to his voice as well.
"It's policy that as long as you're here, you open it yourself, Mr. Walker. I gave you the chance to drop it off." She checked her watch, merely to drive home her next point. "We either do this now, or not, but I haven't the time to stand here discussing it." She wanted to show him a firm hand, dispel any notions that he might have that they had formed a personal friendship. She knew all too well that if she didn't watch it, Walker could attach to her, letting her fill the void left by his dead sister. She didn't want any part of that.
"It was behind the Dumpster, in the alley behind his place," Walker said, digging into the box. He pulled out a navy blue Michigan sweatshirt, with yellow block letters. Matthews tried her best not to react. Neal had mentioned the possible existence of a sweatshirt. This fit with that part of his statement, and she felt elated with the discovery. He tried to pass it to her, but Matthews refused and then called to the security officers, "Gloves!" She directed Walker to hold it at the shoulders, pinched between his fingers, attempting to initiate as little contact with him as possible. She fired off questions at him: "How much contact have you had with this?" "Can you identify it as your sister's?" "Exactly where and when did you find this garment?"
He answered her crisply that he'd boxed it for her, that it was his sister's, and that he'd found it behind the Dumpster in a search he'd done that same morning following their encounter at the ME's. Once protected by the gloves, Matthews took possession of the sweatshirt, turning it around to inspect the random pattern of dark brown orbs that speckled its fabric and a similar, but larger stain on the neck of the sweatshirt. Dried blood.
"I'm going to need an evidence bag here," Matthews instructed one of the gate personnel. This person took off at a jog toward the bank of elevators.
"I done good, right?" Ferrell Walker asked, testing her.
"You may have contaminated a vital piece of evidence." Matthews would not acknowledge that Walker had accomplished what she had not, could not, without a court order to search Neal's residence. Without probable cause-hard evidence against Neal-they still lacked that court order. Ironically, the sweatshirt, if found in a public area as Walker claimed, might present the necessary probable cause.
"I'm telling you: He did this."
"You have to leave this to me. Your participation has to stop here. Are we clear on that?"
"You helped me, I helped you," he said, looking a little wounded. "We're helping each other." Only his tentative tone of voice gave away that he was testing the situation, the relationship.
"I help you just like you help those girls."
Her breath caught: He knew about her volunteer work at the Shelter. Had he followed her? "We'll take it from here," she said strongly. "I'll be in touch."
"Not if I'm in touch first," he said, voicing the same childish sentiment he had earlier in the day. He stopped at Pete and took his knife back, though Pete required him to reach the other side of the security gear first. Pete said, "It's illegal to conceal that weapon."
"I'm a snitch," Walker said proudly.
With that announcement, Pete spun around to check with Matthews, who just shook her head in disgust. When she looked again, Walker was nowhere to be seen.
Now You See Him, Now You Don't
It went against all her training, her substantial education, and certainly the rules set forth for volunteer workers, but upon hearing from an SPD narcotics officer that a street kid-a girl-had invoked her name during a sidewalk shakedown from which the girl had been released, Daphne Matthews found herself personally involved. Her first stop was the Shelter, where she learned that Margaret had been kicked loose after the maximum stay allowed. Where to look next?
A late March storm swept angrily over the city, driving frigid rain behind a nasty wintry wind that made it feel more like December. She pulled up her collar and ran for the Honda. This wasn't a night for a pregnant girl to be out in the elements, and Matthews didn't want Margaret having to negotiate street favors for the bare necessities of warmth and a place to sleep. She knew what these girls did in order to survive. With Margaret putting her name out to an officer-an obvious cry for help-how was Matthews supposed to return for the evening to her houseboat and a glass of wine? She decided to make one loop of downtown looking for the girl. Forty-five minutes, max. It wasn't as if she had a hot date waiting.
Once into the driver's seat she brushed the rain off her and turned toward the backseat in search of her umbrella. Looking out the car's rain-blurred rear window, she thought she saw a figure-a man, for sure-standing behind the railing of the wedge-shaped concrete parking garage. Standing there, and looking across at her.
Turning around in the seat, adjusting her rearview mirrors both outside and in-she picked him up again: a black silhouette like a cardboard cutout, standing absolutely still on the second level of the triangular parking garage.
After the first spurt of panic iced through her, she thought it was probably Walker, and though disturbed he might be following her, she'd done nothing yet to shatter his regard for her, nothing to turn a fan into a foe, though she knew how fine a line she walked.
As she calmed ever so slightly, not one to shrink and wither, she decided to face up to him. She threw the Honda in gear, bumped it out of the Shelter's parking lot, and drove quickly around the block and into the garage entrance. She resented taking the parking stub, realizing it would cost her a couple bucks to get her message across to Walker, but peace of mind was cheap at twice the price.
She drove up the ramp to level two and parked in the first open space she encountered. She grabbed her purse, locked the car with the remote, and walked quickly toward the area of the garage where she'd just seen the silhouette. No one.
She called out, "Mr. Walker?"
She took hold of the railing and eased her head out for a more panoramic view. The new football stadium loomed to her left, dominating the skyline and obscuring a good deal of "The Safe," as residents called baseball's Safeco Field. To the right, skyscrapers competed for a view of Puget Sound. She looked above her and below her in the same general location, wondering if she'd gotten the level wrong. When she looked straight down at the sidewalk, she took into account all the pedestrians, alert for anyone hurrying, anyone fitting Walker's general build, his sweatshirt and jeans, anyone looking back up at her.
It was during this surveillance that she spotted the rooftop light rack and bold lettering of KCSO patrol car #89. It appeared on the street to her right, immediately adjacent to the parking garage's exit. Prair? she wondered.
A daily runner, Matthews ran, and ran hard. She flew past the rows of parked cars, circled down the oily car ramp she'd driven up, all in an effort to keep her eye on that moving patrol car as it cornered the parking facility. She wanted desperately to get a look at its driver. She wasn't merely running, but sprinting down the echoing confines of the garage, the myriad of colorful lights-neon, traffic lights, headlights, and taillights spinning like a kaleidoscope.
Focused as she was, she didn't see the group of four street punks until she was nearly upon them. Huddled together under the overhang of the garage's next level, they looked over at her with hollow eyes-hollow heads, was more like it-the pungent odor of pot hanging in the air.
The patrol car sped by on her right. She looked out, but too late.
One of the bigger boys in the group came out toward her from between the parked cars. "What are you looking at?"
She debated displaying her shield but decided against it. Kids like this held a particular dislike for authority. In doing so she experienced what must have been a defenseless civilian's panic. But if high on pot, they didn't represent much threat of violence, no matter what the posturing. It didn't fit the model. If the pot were an attempt at a comedown from an amphetamine high, though, she had problems. Her volunteer work at the Shelter had not gone for naught.
Another of the young toughs, this one with peroxide hair and a face that held enough piercings to set off an airport security check, followed on the heels of his friend. "She's fine-looking, eh, Manny?" The kid coughed and spat, the phlegm attaching to the car he passed.
Matthews stood her ground. "There was a man up here. Up there," she said, pointing to level two. "Just now. Maybe six feet tall, looking west. Maybe in a sweatshirt and jeans, maybe a uniform."
"Take it somewhere else," the bigger one said, but his eyes had locked onto her purse.
"She is damn fine," the kid with the dye job whispered to his buddy, encouraging him forward, defining his own interest in Matthews.
"Did you see a patrol car? King County Sheriffs?"
"Yeah, right," replied the leader sarcastically.
"Up there on level two," she said.
"There's four of us, lady." He stepped out from between the cars, now only a few feet from her.
Where was that sheriffs car now that she needed it? This south end of town was rough at night-the very reason the Shelter was no more than a block away. Some of these hotheads carried weapons; she didn't want that in the equation. Bribery, on the other hand, had its place. "Twenty bucks answers my question." She tried to put his attention on her purse out of her mind, not wanting to see him as a criminal but instead as a source of information. If the blond kid wanted to try his doped up luck at groping her, the purse carried a Bererta, a can of Mace, a single pair of handcuffs, a mobile phone, and a Palm Pilot. Connecting that purse to the side of his face would put the kid in the next county. Reaching into the purse, grabbing hold of the weapon, chambering a round-all that would probably take ten seconds that she wouldn't have.
"Didn't see no cruiser," the leader said, "but maybe the uniform, yeah. How 'bout that twenty?"
The option presented itself for her to grab the gun while pretending to retrieve the twenty, though it upped the stakes considerably. She had no intention of shooting some stoned kid, nor of provoking the remaining three to fire on her.
She asked, "What color uniform?" This question would separate fact from fiction. Blue for SPD. Dark brown khaki for KCSO.
"Army maybe." The kid took another step closer.
She found his answer intriguing, for if he'd believed a khaki uniform meant an army officer, it added credibility to why he and his pals hadn't fled, whereas a blue uniform would strike the fear of God into any one of these kids. But khaki was more likely King County Sheriff, not army.
Evaluating her situation came down to mapping an exit route. She felt confident she could outrun any one of these kids. The problem was that this leader stood between her and the exit. The only ramp available to her led up and into the garage. Cars streamed around this parking garage, their lights glinting like those of a carousel. So many people, so incredibly close by, and yet oblivious to her predicament. Her extreme isolation-one against many, alone and yet surrounded-bore down on her.
"What color shirt?" she asked.
"What about that twenty?"
She faced a choice then-her gun or the payoff? She clicked open her purse, and for a moment the sounds of the city surrendered to the intense drumming in her ears. She drew a twenty from her wallet, keeping her hands hidden behind the screen of her purse. There lay her gun. On the bottom of everything was the small can of pepper spray, a far more reasonable means of defense given the threat. She made one stab for it-fingers darting through the contents of the purse-and by an act of divine intervention, she touched the can's cold metal and drew the Mace from her purse, her hand concealing it.
They all heard the car enter from the other side of the building, saw the spread of its headlights as shadows crawled across the stained concrete. During this brief distraction, Matthews placed the twenty at her feet and, cradling the pepper spray, turned and walked toward the ramp that led to level two. She heard the big kid hurry to retrieve the money, the scratching of the soles of his boots on the concrete. She sensed the other kid's bold advance as he tested the possibility of following her, maybe scoring a little payoff of his own-maybe money, maybe something else.
"Dude!" the big one called out as the headlights swung to encompass them all.
Matthews hurried then, not running, not wanting to signal her fear, up the ramp and straight toward her Honda. The lights flashed and the horn beeped behind the signal from her remote button.
She wondered what the message was, as she bumped the Honda out into the busy street, like stepping through a stage curtain and walking into the audience. She searched for significance in every incident, every encounter she experienced, the psychologist seizing upon every opportunity to learn something about herself.
In the process, she nearly forgot about the man in the khaki uniform overlooking the Shelter's parking lot. Nearly, but not quite.
Old Friends, New Enemies
"You want peepers? We got peepers. But I gotta tell you, Johno: " Your guys have been through these already, because of Hebringer and Randolf." Marisha Stenolovski slid a file cabinet drawer open. The files went back twelve or fifteen inches.
Stenolovski stuck out a few inches in all the right places herself. He'd been there, done that.
"Last thirty days. I'll know it when I see it."
It had been a year earlier. A cop bar. Both of them flirting a i((, little too openly. She stood a good three inches taller than he. Lanky. Dark Slavic skin, brooding eyes. A screamer-he remembered that as well. It had lasted a week or two. He'd dumped her for someone, no doubt. Couldn't remember for whom just now. The problem with relationships at work, they came back to bite you.
She lowered her voice. "You're an asshole, John. Until you need my help, you don't give me the time of day. What am I, damaged goods? Leftovers? I don't care that you leave me for
AK some singer. Good riddance. But the way you avoid me now. It's disrespectful."
The singer. He remembered now. "I don't avoid you."
"Have we said two words in the last six months?"
"A woman got peeped over at the Inn. I'm looking for similar complaints."
She slapped the steel file drawer. "There. All the peepers a guy could ask for. Look hard, Johnny. Maybe you're in there too."
She walked off. He remembered that walk. Strong. Alluring. Legs to the moon. One foot placed exactly in front of the other, like a runway model, so her butt shifted back and forth like a pair of puppies in a paper sack. She'd donned a pair of his boxer shorts one morning. Topless, just the boxer shorts, nothing else. They ate bagels together at the kitchen table, her, dressed that way. He remembered more about her than he might have thought.
It shouldn't have surprised him that the one case file that interested him turned out to have Stenolovski's name listed as the investigator. Life was like that. He should have known, because there were only a couple full-eights in Special AssaultsSA.
The rest worked it part-time.
He caught up to her as she sat atop a metal stool in an office cubicle covered with magazine tear sheets of barefoot water skiers. A photo of a nephew. Another of Prague or Moscow, someplace gray, bleak with billboard ads he didn't recognize. Definitely Eastern European. In the photo she had her arm around a very old lady with hair the color of winter clouds.
He cleared his throat. "With me, you get what you get. Sometimes that's a good thing. Sometimes not. If you're pissed, you're pissed. But if I apologized, it would be wrong because it would be insincere. I'm not sorry for any of it, anything we had, except that since then maybe I've treated you wrong."
She smiled, "So pull up a chair, asshole."
He smiled back. "Yeah. Thanks."
"Ms. Tina Oblitz?" The phone cradled between his shoulder and ear, LaMoia was guessing that the Oblitz file had been passed
over during the Hebringer/Randolf race for lack of what his department called "connective tissue" because Oblitz herself had tried to withdraw the complaint. That sticky note in the file would have tainted it-why further investigate something that "didn't happen"?-but it was just this Post-it that intrigued John LaMoia.
"This is she."
LaMoia introduced himself by rank and awaited the mandatory pause of shock value. Telephones weren't the greatest.
His beeper chirped and he yanked it off his belt, wondering if Rehab was bugging the neighbors. The dog had attached himself to LaMoia and reportedly would wail hours on end when LaMoia was off on night duty. No such problem during the day shifts. The dog needed a shrink. Maybe Matthews would give it a spin.
He recognized the phone number on the pager as the ME'sDixon must have completed the autopsy on Mary-Ann Walker.
"Yes, Sergeant?" Tentative. Cautious.
"You recently filed a voyeurism complaint with us. Then you called back to attempt to retract the complaint."
"It was nothing. I was mistaken."
"And we," he continued, as if uninterrupted, "Detective Stenolovski, actually, informed you that once filed, a complaint cannot be retracted."
"It's fine. It's nothing."
"It's not fine with me, Ms. Oblitz. I've got a case I'm working, a stalking, voyeurism. I've just been reviewing a similar case file. From your initial complaint, I'm thinking our current case might be the same guy who was watching you."
"No one was watching me, Sergeant. I was mistaken."
"If there's blackmail involved, extortion, then I can help with that, Ms. Oblitz."
"It's nothing like that."
"Then what is it like?"
"I beg your pardon?"
"Stenolovski says the initial complaint was quite convincing. You saw this guy out your hotel window. That's important to me, Ms. Oblitz. Then you call to distance yourself. Suddenly you don't want anything to do with it. I've got to ask myself: Is it because you're afraid? Have you been threatened? Extorted? I need to know about that."
"It's not that... it's just that I was mistaken."
"Okay, so I'm wrong. I still got to talk to you, Ms. Oblitz, about that original complaint. A woman's gone through something awful-two others have gone missing-and I think you may be able to help me with this. I think you know what she's going through."
A long pause. He could hear her breathing. "Not now. Not over the phone."
LaMoia experienced a great sense of victory. He closed his eyes, drew in a deep breath, and combed his free hand through his hair. "Okay. Thank you. So when? Where?" He added, "You're in ... the Bay Area. It's going to have to be by phone, I'm afraid."
"I'm traveling up there on business, Monday. I'm in the W."
"Name a time," he said.
She asked him to wait a minute. "I have an opening at four. Four to five. Will that suit you?"
"Four o'clock. Fine."
"Whatever you do, don't announce yourself at the desk, would you not, Sergeant? Just call up to the room, please."
"Done." He hung up the phone with a smile. He owned Ms. Tina Oblitz. She just didn't know it yet.
The Discovery Process
"Bernie Lofgrin typed the blood on that sweatshirt your boyfriend delivered," LaMoia explained to Matthews. "It matches Mary-Ann Walker's. They're running DNA now. Meanwhile we're here for a little chat."
"SID?" she asked. "We're going to search his apartment, right?"
"If he lets us in, we get a plain-sight search," LaMoia answered.
"But for anything more than that, we'll need a court order, and for that Mahoney wants a print or prints developed on the sweatshirt, some hairs other than Mary-Ann's, a second blood type, semen ... something to bring Neal into the picture with physical evidence."
"And the lab?"
"Is working on it." He added, "Call me reckless-I don't feel like waiting another twenty-four hours on this."
"And I'm along because?" she asked.
"Because I like you, Matthews. Why else?"
She felt herself blush and tried to cover it by saying, "Gee, John, you've got me all feverish."
"That's the idea," he said. "We'll cool off with a drink later."
"Don't count on it," she said, though it didn't sound so bad. LaMoia? she asked herself. Who was she kidding?
"Because you see things the rest of us don't," he said, answering her original question. "And because someone has to keep an eye on him while I inspect his car." He allowed this to sink in. "She was sitting up facing a car when she was hit, not standing, not running away. Dixie can prove that. If not the sweatshirt, maybe Neal's car. The point being something is going to win SID a ticket into Neal's apartment, and I'll take it however we can get it."
He gave her one of his high-voltage smiles as he used a credit card to trick open the lock on the apartment house's street-side door.
The dark stairwell smelled sour, of spilled beer and wine, tobacco and other things in various states of organic decomposition that she didn't want to think about-street sex and intravenous drug use, and always that tinge of the sea. These combined with an odor that she took to be poisoned mice or water rats entombed in the walls in various stages of silent decay.
"Should we have maybe called for backup?" she asked in a forced whisper.
"We're fine," LaMoia said, climbing the stairs two at a time and reaching inside his jacket for his handgun as he got to the landing.
It didn't feel all that "fine" to her, and she nearly said so.
"You didn't have to come," he said.
"Then why'd you ask me along? What the hell, John: These aren't even my hours."
"Because I knew if I didn't you'd be all moody about being left out." This irritated her-not the comment, but the fact that he had her dead to rights. "I asked you because I knew you had nothing better to do tonight, and I thought you might enjoy seeing me take this guy down."
"Seeing you take him down," she restated. "So I'm what, your audience?"
"It's not like that and you know it."
"What is it like, John?" she whispered. They stood outside the apartment number listed on LaMoia's slip of paper. She was angry now. Angrier still that she allowed it to show.
He met eyes with her and whispered back, "I like your company,
Matthews. You're smart, you're clever, and like I said, you see things in shit-balls like Neal that the rest of us miss. A case like this ... maybe we find evidence, maybe we don't. And if we don't, the evidence may boil down to this guy's behavior. His reactions. Am I right? And who better than you to sit up on that witness stand and charm the shorts off a jury to where they buy a collection of circumstantial evidence that pins him as capable of anything, including lying."
LaMoia reached up and rapped his knuckles on the door. He indicated for her to step back, and he readied the weapon before him.
She understood then that the pistol was nothing more than posturing on LaMoia's part-he wanted to scare Neal with this entrance, to establish a degree of distrust that would set the tone for the interview to come. She admired him for this gut instinct of his; sometimes she wondered who, of the two of them, understood human behavior better.
"Who is it?" Neal asked through the door.
"Sergeant LaMoia and Lieutenant Matthews, Mr. Neal."
The man opened the apartment door with none of the reluctance or hesitation that Matthews might have expected of the guilty, and she took note of this. Such cocksure confidence could be its own telltale, its own undoing for a rare breed of suspect.
The door opened into a room dominated by a large worn couch covered in an unpleasant green cotton that looked more like a bedspread, a wooden chair facing it, and a coffee table with badly scratched veneer that clearly doubled as a footrest. A shabby, aluminum card table that belonged in an Airstream trailer held two empty beer bottles and a pair of disposable picnic containers of salt and pepper. The table was situated in front of a large double-hung window. Its jamb and sill pockmarked by a dozen coats of poorly applied paint, it looked out onto a black metal fire escape and beyond, an unexpectedly impressive view of Lake Union. Finding the one-man kitchen neat and clean surprised her. She would have expected Neal incapable of housekeeping.
A plain-sight search of the small bedroom revealed the television he'd mentioned previously as well as a second window access out onto the fire escape, also part of his earlier statement.
At least in his description of the place, his earlier statement held up.
The artwork, if it could be called that, amounted to travel posters of beach resorts showing scantily clad bronzed women enjoying bright sunshine while surrounded by palm trees and umbrellas.
He caught her staring. "I was an Internet travel agent until the meltdown happened. Put most of us out of business."
"And now?" LaMoia asked. "I don't think we established your employment, Mr. Neal."
"A little of this, a little of that. Between jobs right now."
"Between women, too," LaMoia muttered.
"Mary-Ann was helping with the rent?" Matthews said.
Neal shrugged. "A little. You'll hear it from the maggot anyway, if you haven't already."
"The brother," LaMoia clarified.
"He's a parasite, and don't look at me like I'm the pot calling the kettle black because it's my apartment in the first place, my car, my things. I'm between jobs is all, and Mary-Ann helped out. So what?"
LaMoia said, "Sit down, Mr. Neal," an order, not a request.
Neal displayed his disgust as he slouched into the grasp of the green monster, outwardly reluctant in this act of obedience. Matthews purposefully stood over by the table, out of Neal's peripheral vision but with a clear view of him, temporarily pushing away the continuing concern for Margaret's whereabouts and the confusion over both Ferrell Walker and Nathan Prair that had robbed her of sleep. She focused on the suspect, alert for every twitch, every nuance as he reacted to LaMoia's line of questioning.
With his detective's notebook lying on his pressed blue jeans, LaMoia said, "You mentioned your car. What kind of a car is it, please?"
"Ninety-two Corolla."
"Color?"
"Kind of gold."
"Champagne?"
"Right, champagne."
"You said the car was yours?"
"Yeah."
"Only yours?"
"Yeah."