"Why were you and Lucy about to be arrested?" Rachel asked, turning toward the backseat.
"What makes you think we were going to be arrested?"
"I'm a reporter. I notice little things like the cops putting you in separate cars, and the two of you sneaking out of those cars and hiding in the crowd before trying to get on a bus instead of into your car which is being guarded by a cop who was about to nab you when Edie and I saved the day. You know, the kind of details that win Pulitzers."
"We were invited, not arrested," I said.
"That was some RSVP. But I'm glad Edie and I are not accomplices."
"Your conscience is clear."
She laughed. "A reporter with a deadline doesn't have a conscience. What happened back there?"
"I told you that I'd give you the story when it's over and it isn't over."
"And I just saved your ass. That's a deal changer."
"For you, not for me. If you've got a problem with that, pull over and we'll get out."
Edie slowed, swinging the wheel to the curb.
"It's okay, Edie," Rachel said. "He's stubborn enough to get out and then all I'll have is a story I can tell but can't write."
"Thanks," I said.
"Don't mention it because I won't. Not in the paper, anyway. Makes me part of the story and that's no good."
My cell phone rang. Caller ID said it was Quincy Carter.
"Don't answer it. Turn it off," Lucy said. "They can triangulate our location using cell towers."
I shook my head. "I've got enough problems without making Carter chase me."
I flipped the phone open.
"Hey, Carter."
"Man, you are a colossal pain in the ass, you know that!"
"What are you going to do? Taser me again?"
"If McNair doesn't get to you first, only he's gonna shoot you."
"I'll take those odds. He'll probably pull the wrong gun out of his pants."
"Remember you said that. He just had your car towed. I'm asking you the only way I know how, stay out of this. Let me handle Frank Gentry."
Killers, especially serial killers, don't look or act alike. They're the Cub Scout leader who bound, tortured, and killed his victims, the computer programmer who lived down the street until he snatched my son, and the crazy-eyed loner who strangled and gutted the neighbor's cat, bad seeds from worse homes with broken brains and disarming smiles. Knowing all that, I couldn't see Frank Gentry on the list and felt bad that I'd put him on it.
"That's a promise I can make," I said and hung up.
"Where to?" Rachel asked.
I gave her Simon's address. She nodded at Edie and we left it at that.
It was past five when Rachel dropped us off at Simon's brick and limestone ranch house. The driveway and walk had been shoveled but the clean concrete would be a faint memory if the front that was moving in brought more snow. A low, gray cloud layer was pushing dusk into nightfall, the wind picking up.
"Nice job," I told Lucy. "If nothing else works out, you can buy your own shovel and go into business."
She poked me in the arm. "It's good exercise."
Simon opened the door and Lucy swallowed him with a hug. Simon eased her arms down to her side; his eyes and mouth wide open as he looked at me over her shoulder, his expression saying how about that. I answered with a nod and smile that said good for you but I'll break both your legs above the knee if you break her heart.
"What's the latest?" he asked, leading us into the bedroom at the front of the house that he'd converted into an office.
I dropped into a chair and told him what we knew, ending with Frank Gentry.
"You really think it could be Gentry?" Lucy asked. "He looked as ordinary as mayonnaise to me. Came to work in a shirt and tie. How do you kill all those people and keep it together like that?"
"I had one case where the killer dumped the victim in the bathtub, poured bleach on the body and then had sex with his girlfriend on the bathroom floor. Coming to work like nothing happened is easy for someone like that but I don't think Gentry is the killer."
"Why not?" she asked.
"Unless we find out that Corliss dreamt he'd be slaughtered on the steps of an art gallery, his murder breaks the killer's pattern of mimicking the victims' nightmares. Corliss was killed for a different reason. Plus, judging from the extensive stab wounds, the killer was out of control. We saw Gentry today. He didn't look like someone who'd gone over the edge."
"Meaning," Lucy said, "the killer stays on the spree until it's over."
"You ask me," Simon said, "things don't look good for Maggie Brennan and the research assistants if they haven't turned up by now."
"I know. That's what worries me. Carter will spend the rest of the night questioning Gentry and the longer this goes, the more likely it is that all we will find is bodies."
"We've been looking for a place the killer could convince Maggie and the others to go without a fight," Lucy said. "But Corliss was the only victim we found at the art gallery. Maybe the killer is picking them off one at a time, finding a place each of them is willing to go."
"Makes sense," I said. "We don't know enough about Janet Casey and Gary Kaufman to know where to look but there's one person who might be able to help us with Maggie Brennan."
"Tom Goodell," Simon said. "And I found him."
"Where is he?"
"Living with his son, like you thought. They're in Olathe."