Chapter Eighteen

Okay, Ray Weir was thinking, I’ve waited long enough.

He had gone to the service that morning, waited with Courtenay and Warren until they brought out the urn with what was left of Maxine. Then they’d all ridden out under the Golden Gate with one of Warren’s money friends who owned a yacht-champagne, toasting Maxine’s memory, dumping the ashes into the sea, freezing their butts off.

Now he was back home, and he’d waited long enough. It was a legitimate question, and he had all the paperwork here in front of him.

He had to wade through four receptionist types before he got someone who could talk to him.

He gave the number of the policy on Maxine’s life, then the dates of both the accident and the settlement agreement. “I’m just checking the status of the payment,” he said.

The woman asked him to wait and returned after most of ‘I Write The Songs’ had finished playing in Ray’s ear. Across the miles her voice was tiny. “You haven’t received it?”

“That’s why I’m calling.”

“It must be in the mail,” she said.

Ray’s hands tightened on the mouthpiece. “The check’s in the mail? When did you mail it?”

She cleared her throat, but didn’t come back any louder. “Just another minute, please.” Some Connecticut radio station was playing ‘Soft Hits All The Time’- soft hits for the soft brained, Ray thought as they rocked into a muzak version of ‘I Am, I Said.’

“Sir?”

“I’m still here.”

“There must be some mistake. We sent the check for the full amount, eighty-five thousand dollars, ten days ago by registered mail, return receipt requested, overnight delivery, and it was signed for by”-she paused-“by Maxine Weir.”

Ray suddenly felt light-headed and had to sit down. “What do you mean?” he said.

“Sir?”

“I mean, when was this?”

After a short silence, figuring it out, “We sent it out on Friday, so it probably, yes, here it is, it was delivered on Monday, last week. A week ago today.”

“To Maxine Weir?”

“Yes, sir. The signature is very clear. Would you like me to send you a copy of the receipt?”

Ray almost had to laugh. He hung up.

Well, it was possible the check was still at her apartment. The policy was in both of their names-either of them could sign it. Maybe the police had found it and hadn’t notified him yet.

Or she could have taken it down to the bank and deposited it. They still had a joint account, not that there was ever much in it. He would call customer service.

He lit up a joint and punched buttons on his telephone. No, there had been no deposit made to the account, would he like to talk to a manager?

He didn’t know what he’d like to do. The world was spinning.

Though he was back in the Hall, Glitsky did not check into Homicide. If he ran into Batiste or one of the guys he would say he was feeling better and had decided to come in. Otherwise he’d keep it casual. He might do a little work. He was still thinking L.A., but there were items to tie up here and his father was right. If you’re going to do it, don’t do it half-assed.

The Filipino boy in the lab, Ghattas, had been a help on Saturday, and he had no trouble locating the gun again -Ray Weir’s gun- and bringing out the report on it. He had stood on the other side of the counter while Abe did a quick scan of the results…

“You understand, sir, it was found in mud under about sixteen feet of water?”

“So you wouldn’t expect any prints?”

“Prints are funny, you know. Oil-based. It’s not so much you wouldn’t expect them. It wouldn’t be a shock either way…”

Abe looked up from the report. The boy had something else to say. “But?”

“Well, in fact we didn’t find any.”

Abe tried to hide his disappointment.

“But I got to thinking.”

Abe was starting to like this guy. He grinned his scar-slashed grin.

“What’d you get to thinking?”

“Well, as I said, the gun didn’t have any prints, but it didn’t even have any smudges. It was like it had never been held.”

“But it had been fired?”

“Oh yeah, no question about that. But still, even with the mud and salt water, you’d expect something. Some oil residue.”

“So?”

“But there wasn’t anything. Which is, maybe, I don’t know, a little suggestive. So I did a trace test for Armor All.”

“Armor All?”

“You know, the car stuff? Hell’s Angels got wise to this first. You wipe a weapon down, then spray it with Armor All and you won’t leave a print.”

“And there was Armor All on this gun?”

“Right.”

“And so?”

“And so that means that whoever shot the weapon knew about Armor All.”

“Uh huh?”

He leaned over the counter, eyes shining in his excitement. “It means the perp was a pro. Anybody else would have just wiped it down afterward, don’t you think?”

Glitsky acknowledged that. “Okay.”

“So your shooter is in the business. This isn’t high tech, but I wouldn’t say it’s general knowledge either. So if you got two suspects and one is, say, a civilian, then maybe that one isn’t so likely to be your guy.”

“Ray Weir,” Abe said, “the husband. A live one, up to now.”

“It’s something to think about, is all I’m saying.”

Drysdale was going over the ground rules again. Outside the window, cars were starting to back up on the freeway heading toward the Bay Bridge. Gubicza leaned backward and could make out the clock on the Union 76 sign-4:38. The day had been shot to hell on this idiocy, and it wasn’t over yet.

Fred, still enthusiastic and confident, was in the process of getting hooked up by the polygraph technician, a woman in uniform who with Drysdale would be the only people present when Fred was questioned. This was Manny’s great concern. Polygraphs didn’t work with distractions-with a trained subject, they didn’t work at all-and Manny would not be in the actual room when the procedure took place. There would be no court reporter, no other attorneys, no one except Fred, Drysdale, and this woman, who would probably sit behind Fred, out of his line of vision.

This wasn’t as bad as it could be because Drysdale had already presented Manny and Fred with a complete list of the questions he would be asking, all either yes or no, and lawyer and client had gone over them for the past hour, making sure there was nothing Fred might slip on.

So Manny listened with half an ear, figuring that if Drysdale was planning on a blindside attack, there was almost no possibility he would do it now.

“So as I say,” Drysdale droned on, “this isn’t any formal proceeding, but the nature of your allegations”-here he smiled at Treadwell, at Gubicza-“are so… so unusual, that I believe you’ll get more”-again searching for the right word-“more enthusiastic cooperation from this office in general…” Drysdale spread his hands out, smiling, everybody’s friend. “This isn’t me, gentlemen. I’m selling the whole package both to my boss and my staff, and there is some concern-possibly justified at this stage, I’m afraid -well, let’s just say your cooperation here, Manny, will enhance your and your client’s credibility.”

“You don’t believe me, do you?” Treadwell said.

“Fred, please.” Gubicza wasn’t about to have his client get into an off-the-record discussion with Art Drysdale, who beneath his benign exterior was one of the craftiest attorneys Gubicza had ever opposed.

“Me?” Drysdale acted shocked. “I totally believe you. That’s why I’m doing this, we’re doing this.” He hiked a leg up on the table where the polygraph sat. There was no guile on his face, he wasn’t trying to sell anything, just convey information. “Manny, of course, is right to treat this as though we’re adversarial here. But, without mentioning names, I’m not giving anything away when I say that certain members of the staff here are skeptical. But this, today, this is just ammo to use against those people, so in a real sense, for today at least, we’re on the same side. You tell me what happened with Hector Medina, the polygraph corroborates it-okay, so it’s not formally admissible-it’ll get the team behind this case. And that’s what we both want. It makes my job easier.” He spread his arms again, his wide and sincere smile.

The technician was finished now, and Manny walked up behind Fred and whispered that he should remember to stick to the questions asked and above all to try to keep calm. Then he left the room.

“You can sit back if you’d like,” Drysdale said. He himself pulled up an old office chair covered with yellow leather and crossed one leg over the other. “As you know, we ask only yes and no questions, so we’ll start with the easy stuff to calibrate this thing. Your name is Fred Treadwell?”

Fred nodded.

“Please say yes or no.”

“I’m sorry. Yes.”

“Your name is Fred Treadwell?”

“Yes.”

They ran through the usual opening questions-name, address, day of the week-getting used to the slight scratch of the pencil on the lined paper, the hum of the machine.

“This isn’t so bad, is it?” Drysdale said.

“No,” Fred said, and Drysdale noted the skip in the pencil. So it was getting to him. Actually, the subject didn’t have to say anything to get a reading. The body reacted even when the words weren’t said. Drysdale knew this, was counting on it, and on Treadwell not understanding it.

“Okay, let’s tell a couple of lies.”

“But if I know I’m not trying to deceive by giving a false answer, the machine will register true, won’t it?”

Drysdale gave him a broad grin. “You get this stuff, don’t you? You’re right. So try and deceive me a little on this next set, okay.” He leaned forward in his chair. “We’re still in the test phase here, all right?”

Fred nodded, licking his lips. He looked to the door behind Drysdale, as though seeking assurance that Manny was out there to help him if he needed it.

“You have worked at your current job eight years, is that correct?”

“Yes.” True.

“And you’ve lived two years in your apartment?”

“Yes.” False.

“Two years?” Build on the falsehood and see what he does. “And you have painted it during that time?”

“The time I lived there or the last two years?”

Very good, Fred, Drysdale thought. He said, “I’m sorry, have you painted the apartment in the past two years?”

“No.” True.

“And your apartment is on the second floor?”

“No.” False.

“So it’s on the third floor?”

Pause. “Yes.” False.

“But if you fell from the third story, wouldn’t you do more than sprain your ankle?”

“That wasn’t one of the questions.” A light sweat had broken on Fred’s forehead.

All innocence, Drysdale held up his hands. “It seemed to spring naturally from the previous answers.” Not pushing it, he looked over at the polygraph. “Look, in any event, the machine seems to be working properly.” He came back to Fred. “You’ve not lived in your apartment two years and the apartment is not on the third floor. Are both of these statements correct?”

“Yes.”

Drysdale glanced at the machine again, took in a breath and held it a minute. Letting it out in a rush, he said, “All right, the test is over. Let’s begin.”

Drysdale had the typed questions in front of him. He also had Fred’s Statement of Facts on Medina’s attack, which he’d used to draw up the questions. He started at the beginning and asked the questions in order, lulling Fred into a space where his confidence was growing with the polygraph’s support to the point that he seemed almost unaware that he was wired. It was just a conversation between Drysdale and himself, even if one side of it was only yes and no.

Drysdale paused in the questioning. “All right,” he said, “now we’re where the talk with Mr Medina has turned to the alleged Valenti/Raines assault on you. Is that correct?”

It wasn’t a question on the typed list, but it was so natural that Fred didn’t seem to notice.

“Yes.” True.

“And Mr Medina said he represented Mr Raines?”

Fred didn’t answer.

“Mr Treadwell?”

“That’s not one of the questions.”

Drysdale settled back in his seat, not pushing it yet. “Fred, we’re corroborating the events of last Friday night, right? You want to look at your own Statement of Facts? You mention Valenti and Raines.” He was all reason. “I’m not getting back to that case-I’m verifying the facts in this statement.”

“But it wasn’t one of the questions.”

Drysdale smiled. “Come on, Fred. So I missed one. I made a mistake, but if you want, we can stop now. If you don’t answer this question I don’t see where we can go from here.”

The sweat had come back to Treadwell’s forehead. “All right,” he said finally. “What was the question again?”

“Medina said he represented Raines, yes or no?”

“Yes.” True.

“But he told you he had no formal connection to that case.” Drysdale went from the questions to the Statement of Facts. “He said he wanted you to know about the damage that just accusing somebody can do to their life?”

“Yes.” True.

“And he wanted you to know that because he thought you were falsely accusing Valenti and Raines of beating you up?” Good, they were way off the question list now.

“Yes.”

“And then he grabbed your dog, Poppy, was it?”

Treadwell swallowed, off the list himself now, remembering. “Yes. He was just petting it…”

“And he broke its neck?”

“Yes. Yes. He just…” He hung his head, suffering through it again.

“He broke your dog’s neck because he thought you were falsely accusing Valenti and Raines?”

“No! I mean, yes!”

“Yes, he thought it, or yes, you had falsely accused them?”

Treadwell was looking around, panic setting in. “He did it to threaten me,” he said, “to threaten my life.”

“If you didn’t retract your story?”

“Yes.” True.

“Your story? Your true story about Valenti and Raines?”

“Yes, he just-”

“Your story about Valenti and Raines is true, then, is that correct?”

“Yes! Yes, it’s true. That part is true.”

False. False. False.

“They did beat you?”

“Yes.” False. “He killed Poppy, and they beat me.” False. “Why don’t you believe me? He killed my Poppy.” Fred was slumped on his arms over the table. He raised his head. “He killed my Poppy.”

Drysdale reached over and patted his hand. “I believe you, Fred. He killed your Poppy.”

Fred put his head back down on the table. Drysdale kept patting his hand, feeling dirty and sad. “I think we’re done here,” he said to the technician. “You can unhook him.”

A rust sky presaged an uneasy dusk.

Lace was wearing an army-surplus all-weather jacket and, collar up against the cold, walked the periphery of Holly Park alone. From time to time he’d nod at one or another of the small groups of younger men hanging on stoops or by their wheels, but no one asked him to join them, or offered much more than a cock of the head. Jumpup was over to Lorethra’s house, inside, with her and her mama and the little ones. Lace, he’d looked in at Baker’s Mama, but she had come back from the hospital with a bottle and it was way down already.

He passed Dido’s old cut-his old cut-crossing the street away from it, making clear he understood the new territory. He stopped, hands in his pockets, and was startled by a hand on his shoulder. He turned around.

“Easy, my man.”

Samson had backed three steps away. His dreadlocks hung like thick cobwebs around the obsidian, small-eyed, expressionless face. Lace’s heart was pumping pretty good.

As though they’d been having a conversation all this time, Samson said, “Three ways it can go.”

Lace shook his shoulders loose, the casual attitude. He knew how Samson was. Like an animal, you show any fear around him and he attacks. “What is?” Lace said.

“The Man be lookin’, askin’ around maybe, sometimes the wrong stories get out.”

“I got no stories.”

“No. See? That’s one way it can go. You got no story, maybe you hang in the cut, run with me.” Samson’s teeth showed yellow. “Same ol’. Back to it, right?”

He stepped closer. There was a brightness in the tiny eyes as though he’d been using his product. Dido didn’t go in for that when he was working. Well, Samson wasn’t Dido, and Lace had better get used to that.

“Other story,” Samson said, “is the con-be talkin’ about taking over the cut, how Dido best be movin’ on, like that. Come down to blood.”

Lace was thinking that if Louis Baker had wanted the cut, and killed Dido, wouldn’t he have stayed to hold the claim? But he said, “What’s three?”

A cold wind from behind Lace blew some leaves and papers up the street. Samson squinted into it at Lace, his eyes even smaller, glinting. “Be no three,” he said. “Only two stories. Be no one tellin’ any third stories is what I’m saying.”

Lace wondered if the gun that had been used on Dido, the one Lace had originally assumed had been Louis Baker’s, whether the gun-Samson’s-was still in the cut, if he could find it and get his hands on it. He clenched his fists inside the pockets of the jacket, released them, fighting the shivering that was threatening to take over. “I hear you,” he said. “Hey, I hear you. It’s casual.”

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