Authors: Edna Buchanan
As the historic old mansions disappear, falling to high-rises, hotels, and loft apartments, such offers are increasingly rare and coveted by cops who are divorced, or separatedâas Burch was, when he first occupied this sanctuaryâor single, like Nazario. When Burch and Connie reconciled, Nazario inherited the digs at Casa de Luna.
He rode herd on the landscaper, the twice-a-week maid, the car washer, and the pool man. Should a hurricane threaten, his job was to secure the premises. Each night he checked the house, the alarm system, and the doors and windows. Not long ago he also wound up riding herd on the owner's sad, bad, errant daughter, Fleur. A small price to pay for this retreat.
Casa de Luna, old Spanish-style architecture, elegant and graceful, with bubbling fountains, lavish gardens, and a pristine infinity-edge pool, was built in the 1920s but had since been renovated, updated, restored, and refurbished, inside and out, no expense spared.
The owner, W. P. Adair, Wall Streetârich, robust, and full of life for a man in his sixties, was currently traveling in Europe with a young trophy wife, his third or fourth, a knockout named Shelley.
Nazario parked his car in the fragrant shadows of the long driveway, drank in the salty breeze off the sea, just across the Intracoastal Waterway and Collins Avenue, and climbed the stairs to the apartment above the four-car garage.
Some might think it smallâit had originally been built for a live-in housekeeperâbut it was actually larger and more comfortable than many places the detective had lived.
Not bad for a Pedro Pan kid who arrived alone on a flight from Cuba. He never saw his parents again and spent the rest of his childhood shuttled between orphanages and foster homes all over the country before finding his way back to Miami as a young man. He never had, or required, many possessions. He was accustomed to living simply. And this was by far the best place he'd ever lived.
Not bad.
He thought about Colin Dyson, racing to his lawyer's office in his big Jaguar, and smiled again.
Tonight he felt richer than W. P. Adair.
Â
“Sounds like we got lucky.” Lieutenant K. C. Riley wore a wide grin at the morning briefing.
“The guy's guilty of something,” Corso said.
“Dyson has a record,” Stone reported from his computer terminal. “Domestic battery, traffic, and a DUI. No major felonies.”
“Not yet,” Corso said, cheerfully rubbing his hands.
“His lawyer just called.” Nazario hung up the phone. “He's bringing Dyson in.”
“You were right, Pete,” K. C. Riley murmured, when Dyson and his lawyer, Franklin Gray, stepped off the elevator. “He does have a unibrowâyou know, like Frida Kahlo.”
“Frida who?” Corso said. “You talking about that new female recruit inâ”
“Shhh,” she said.
Dyson looked subdued in an expensive suit and tie.
“I read the newspaper this morning about the York case, the homicide you're investigating,” said Gray, well known as a high-priced and aggressive criminal defense attorney. “I advised my client, who is guilty of absolutely nothing, that under the circumstances it would be in his best interests to cooperate.”
They gathered in the conference room with a tape recorder on the table.
“I was stupid,” Dyson sheepishly admitted.
“We're interested in the night York spoke at the Fathers First meeting,” Nazario said.
“Look.” Dyson turned both palms up, the open gesture of a man with nothing to hide. “To our group of screwed-over fathers, York was like a visiting celebrity. He'd gone to jail for the cause. He might be going back. They gave the guy a standing ovation. There was a lot of anger and passion in the room that night.”
“So they treated York like their patron saint,” Corso said, glancing at Burch.
“Right. But if any crime was committed”âDyson's forefinger jabbed the airâ“I was the victim. That son of a bitch ran off with my money. He ripped me off to finance his getaway.”
“How so?” Nazario asked
“I hired him to snatch my kid, Colin Junior. He never grabbed the kid. He never did a goddamn thing.”
The detectives exchanged glances.
“My ex-wife moved to GeorgiaâSavannahâwith my only kid. He was eleven. I had visitation, but I had a life, a fiancée, a business to run. How am I gonna fly to Savannah every other weekend? Or fly him down? Impossible.”
Fathers First met in their usual place that night, a hotel banquet room near the airport. The menu never varied: steak, baked potatoes, and chocolate cake for dessert. They paid York a modest $200 speaker's fee. He delivered a rousing fire-and-brimstone, half-hour, give-'em-hell talk and then participated in another thirty minutes of Q and A with his audience. Afterward, they passed the hat for donations to help defray his expenses.
“Everybody kicked in, tens, twenties, hundred-dollar bills,” Dyson said. “We had a packed house. York wound up with a paper bag full of cash.”
Several members then gathered at the bar and bought York drinks.
“A few of us were interested in his services,” Dyson said. “I offered to drive him back to his room.”
“And where was that?” Burch said.
“Some motel over on Southwest Seventh Avenue.”
“Remember the name?”
He squinted, brow furrowed. “Sea Spray, Sea Bird, Sea somethingâ¦Had a little lounge off the main lobby. We had a few drinks and talked. He said he had to stay a little more low key, operate under the radar, because of his pending case, but he was up for it, more than willing. I agreed to pay him five thousand dollars, two thousand down and the rest, plus expenses, when I got my kid. I gave him pictures of my ex-wife and my son, and their Savannah address and handed him two thousand bucks that night. Cash. Never saw him again.”
“You always carry that much money?” Riley asked.
“No, but after I read the news story that morning, I took it with me just in case. It was stupid to give it to him. I guess I got carried away by the excitement of the meeting, and the Jack Daniel's I was drinking probably didn't help my judgment. I couldn't wait to see the look on my ex-wife's face when she got knocked on her ass and we took the kid.”
“When did you realize York was gone?” Burch said.
“He told me to petition for custody here in Miami-Dade first. I went to see my lawyer the next day, to start the ball rolling. York was supposed to call. He didn't. I had some questions, but he didn't answer the phone in his room for a couple of days. I finally drove over there. The clerk said he didn't check out; he skipped out, still owing them money. I kept expecting him to surface. But a couple weeks later they said he'd jumped bond. That's when I knew I'd been ripped.”
“Sure you didn't hunt him down for payback?” Burch said.
“Hell, no. I never would've been able to get custody of my kid if I got arrested.”
“
Did
you get custody of your boy?” Nazario asked.
Dyson's face screwed up in an expression of disgust. “Yeah. Biggest mistake of my life. That little bastard cost me a goddamn fortune. Lawyers up the wazoo. And what did it get me? A kid who didn't appreciate a goddamn thing I did for 'im. Started running away at twelve, smashed up my car when he was fourteen, stole money from me, always in and out of trouble, and when he was nineteen he slept with his stepmother, the bitch. I threw 'em both outa the house.”
“How old was the stepmom?” Burch asked.
“Twenty-four. What the hell does that have to do with anything?” he demanded angrily.
“Just curious.” Burch sighed. This was not what he had hoped to hear.
“You ever own a gun?” Nazario asked.
Dyson hesitated.
“Don't answer that,” his lawyer said. “My client has been completely forthcoming. When he saw the newspaper and realized what you're investigating, he wanted to put everything on the table. Mr. Dyson should not be treated like a suspect.”
“Did you physically harm Spencer York in any way?” Nazario asked thoughtfully.
“Nah. I would have loved to rip him limb from limb”âDyson shruggedâ“but I couldn't find him.”
“Where's your son now?” Burch asked.
“Beats me. I see him in my neighborhood, I call the cops.”
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“How lovely,” Riley said later. “What a delightful cast of characters. Is there anybody who
wouldn't
have loved to kill Spencer York?”
“Dyson said he'll supply us with the names of the others in the group,” Nazario said. “He tossed the records but said he has an old mailing list. He also agreed to take a ride with us to see if he can point out the Sea-something motel if we have no luck finding it.”
“The bad news,” Riley said, “is that York went from flat broke that morning to having about three thousand cash in his pocket, according to Dyson. Which means we can add every low-life robber, sneak thief, con man, and mugger in Miami to our list of suspects. If York was flashing that roll around, it could have been anybody.”
“How ironic would that be,” Burch said, “if the shooter was some stranger who didn't even know who York was? That would really leave our case FUBAR.”
“Fucked up beyond all recognition,” Corso said, nodding.
“Unlikely,” Riley said thoughtfully. “Most robbers who shoot strangers just leave the bodies where they fall, they don't bother to hide them. But just in case,” she told Stone, “access records and print out a list of all the armed robberies, known suspects, and missing persons reported in that sector, along Southwest Seventh, during the three months before York disappeared and the three after. Especially in the area of his motel, if and when we find it.” She turned to Nazario. “How truthful was Dyson?”
He thought for a moment, then shook his head. “He wasn't lying when he said he wanted to rip York limb from limb or to see his ex-wife's face when they snatched his son. And he was truthful about giving York the money. He's so hostile, the rest is hard to read. Last night I really thought he might be the one,” Nazario said, his spaniel eyes sad.
Riley frowned. “Let's not rule him out yet. His son was old enough then to remember if he met York. Why don't you find Colin Junior and see what he knows.”
I slid my morning paper out of its condomlike sheath: two bylines. Not bad for my first day back. I couldn't be accused of not doing my jobâyet. The missing newlyweds had hit the front page, probably because of our exclusive photos. The wedding shot had caught the couple surrounded by well-wishers in a joyously exuberant moment as they left the church in their first public appearance as husband and wife.
The fate of the Custody Crusader was keyed to out front and led the local page.
I listlessly forced down Rice Krispies with milk, along with a banana for potassium, and drove to the paper early.
Where else did I have to go?
Nagging images from my dark dreams overnight nudged persistently at my consciousness. Spencer York's angry accusing eyes, their righteous indignation magnified by the thick lenses of his spectacles, his slightly stooped, bulky, middle-aged frame in incongruous combat fatigues. That tough-talking, harmless-looking fellow was no lovable curmudgeon, nobody's favorite uncle. He considered himself a warrior, at war with women.
I had rented a car in Texas, and as we drove somewhere, chatting during our day-long interview, his harangue about women became so offensive and vitriolic I had to restrain myself from pulling over and physically kicking him out of the passenger seat and into a roadside ditch.
I have spent time talking to serial murderers, Satan worshipers, crooked cops, wife beaters, and baby killers and never lost my cool. But Spencer York was something else.
He spewed outrageous theories: for example, that most women are totally unaware of basic feminine hygiene, accounting for what he described as America's huge epidemic of yeast infections and the resulting profits to pharmaceutical companies.
He chortled when he described how he stalked Brenda Cunningham, how he wrenched little Jason away from her as she screamed, begged, and struggled. He had spied on her in the dark and it paid off, he gloated. He had personally seen her leave in a car with a man and return home close to midnight. Proof positive, he said, that she was an unclean disease-spreading slut and a totally unfit mother. He wished he could have used a baseball bat, he said regretfully, instead of mere Mace when she dared fight to keep her son.
He had clearly tried to provoke me. Would the last person he provoked ever be prosecuted?
And, if so, would a jury convict? Some people would probably want to shower the killer with fresh-baked pies and medals for marksmanship, good fellowship, and public service.
Where were my notes from that outrageous interview? Did they still exist? I file notebooks by date, but over the years they had multiplied like kittens, far too many for my desk drawer.
So, I had packed away the oldest. I remembered marking my name and
DO NOT THROW AWAY
on the cardboard boxes and storing them atop a row of newsroom filing cabinets.
I scanned the vast, nearly empty newsroom. That row of filing cabinets had vanished, probably when the newsroom was remodeled two years ago. Sleek, more modern cabinets were posted like sentinels outside the editors' glass-enclosed offices. They were locked and bore signs warning that nothing was to be stored on top of them.
I checked the wire room and the hallways all the way to photo, then walked back to the library, known as the morgue in the good old days when reporting was more fun.
Onnie, always an early riser, was busy at her desk, marking with red grease pencil the stories in the morning paper that would be entered into the computer database.
She greeted me cheerfully. Tall and angular, she was an abused wife and mother, bruised in both body and spirit, when we first met. She'd been skinny as a rail, all sharp elbows and cheekbones, her collarbones like birds' wings. I aided and abetted her escape. We packed her meager possessions in a U-Haul trailer attached to the back of my T-Bird to make her getaway before her violent husband and his brothers were released from jail.
Now pert and clear-eyed, she has added some weight and makeup. Her hair is still in cornrows, her dark skin the color of burnt toast. She is good-natured, smart, and hard working, with high energy and an unwavering determination.
“You're just being polite,” I said plaintively, when she asked how I was. “You don't really want to know.”
“Of course I do.” She put down the pencil, her intelligent black eyes concerned as I plopped heavily into the chair beside her desk.
“I'm pregnant, unmarried, and broke. My mother is totally freaked out and has probably disowned me. My best friend has abandoned me. I'm about to become homeless. I can't find my old notebooks. And, oh, yeah, my car is about to conk out,” I added, remembering the AAA driver's admonition to charge the battery. “Otherwise, my life is just peachy.”
“Whatchu talking about?” She looked more puzzled than sympathetic. “I haven't abandoned you.”
I had to smile. “I meant Lottie.”
“Right. You have so many friends. But you were my best friend when I needed it most, and I'll never forget it. I wouldn't have this job or my life without you. Now, I don't know about all the trials and tribulations you mentioned, but I can help with a few right now. First, I know Lottie hasn't abandoned you. You two are like sisters. She thinks the world of you. You have more friends in high places than you think, Britt. God loves you too.
I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.
Make that your mantra. Repeat it whenever you feel lost or scared. It works.
“Now, about those notebooks. Did they happen to be in cardboard boxes with your name on them?”
“Right!” A slim shaft of hope pierced my gloom.
“I saw them when they remodeled the newsroom. They asked if we wanted those ratty old filing cabinets. We took them and I brought the boxes along. They should be here somewhere.”
I followed as she trotted briskly into the bowels of the library, past shelves of books written by former
News
staffers, past rows of old high school yearbooks, reference material, and stacks of city directories.
“There they are!” I marveled. “That's them, I think!”
I was right. We carried them out to the front.
“Now, where were we? What was next?” she said. “Your car?”
I elaborated.
She nodded. “If it has tires or testicles it will give you trouble. No problem. You work later than I do. When I get off I'll drive your car to Sears for a slow charge. My Honda is out in the parking lot; I'll leave you the keys so you can use it.”
“But how will you get home from Sears?”
“I won't. I can do a little shopping, grab a bite to eat, and then bring your car here or back to your place if you've already gone home.”
“You'd do that for me, Onnie?”
“Sure. That shortens the list.”
“Sounds like a plan. But wait, what about Darryl? Who will pick him up from school?”
“It's his night out. No problem.”
“His night out? For Pete's sake, he's seven years old.”
She laughed. “His night out with Kathy.”
“Kathy who?”
“Riley.”
I did a double take. “You don't mean K. C. Riley, the Cold Case Squad lieutenant?”
She nodded. “He really looks forward to it. She's been wonderful.”
“I didn't know you even knew her,” I said, stunned.
They had met briefly at Kendall McDonald's funeral, she said.
For a time McDonald had been seeing us both, me and Riley, his colleague and his childhood sweetheart. Like many cops, she didn't like reporters. We had first clashed when she was a rape squad sergeant, long before we realized we were also personal adversaries.
She grieved his death too.
Sometime after the funeral, Onnie said she was surprised when K.C. contacted her, asking to see Darryl.
“That doesn't sound like her,” I said, finding it difficult to mask my incredulity.
“We talked about it. She said that McDonald gave his life to save my son. That there had to be a reason,” Onnie said soberly, “and he would want her to watch out for Darryl.”
I blinked several times.
“She picks him up after school once a week. They play softball in the park, see a movie, or visit the police horses at the stable. They have dinner somewhereâsometimes she cooks at her placeâand she brings him home around eight.”
I still stared at her skeptically.
“You know how he's always loved to draw?”
I nodded. Darryl's crayoned creations had decorated my refrigerator since he was four.
“She takes him to an art class over at the Miami Children's Museum every other Saturday. They've been to the Metro Zoo, the Seaquarium, the Indian village in the Everglades, even a couple of Marlins games. It's a blessing for him, and it gives me a little break. She's a godsend.”
It was a side of K. C. Riley I had never seen. I knew she was smart and professional, a fearless stand-up cop who backed her detectives. But she could be as tough as nails to deal with, nearly impossible to pry information from, and a real bitchâat least to me.
“Darryl misses you, Britt.”
“He sounds much too busy to remember who I am.” Did I sound sarcastic and peevish? I guess I did.
“Kathy's a good woman, Britt. You're not still jealous of her, are you?”
“How can you even suggest that? I have no reason to be jealous. He loved me. I got the guy.”
Actually, I realized later, nobody got the guy. And I would give anything to go back to that place in time to the rivalry, the green-eyed jealousy, the envy, and pain. I'd embrace it all in a heartbeatâpain is healthier than the numb emptiness of loss. At least you feel alive.
We carried the storage boxes out to the newsroom and exchanged car keys.
Ryan, at the desk behind me, was hard at work on a feature about the ever-growing abandoned litters, packs, and tangled herds of rusting shopping carts blighting Miami's suburbs, endangering motorists, and costing us all. Shopping-cart theft had become an epidemic.
“Nice story this morning, Britt. Can I see more pictures of that honeymoon couple? She's hot. Shame if they're shark bait,” Ryan said. “Specially her. She looked so cute in those shorts. Same thing almost happened to me,” he told Onnie.
I rolled my eyes.
Ryan had been lost at sea when an assignment from Gretchen, the editor from hell, went awry. She decided that the
News
should set a reporter adrift for a first-person account of the Cuban rafter experience: what it's like to face strong currents and fifteen-foot waves in shark-infested waters, while escaping Castro's Cuba. She chose Ryan, a gentle, seasick-prone nonswimmer from Ohio for the job. He was to remain adrift for twenty-four hours but accidentally dropped his handheld radio overboard. Swept south, he was picked up by a Cuban fishing boat.
Since the authentic escape raft, borrowed from the Coast Guard, was built on Soviet inner tubes, his rescuers assumed he was fleeing the island. A Cuban patrol boat took him to Mariel. The military suspected he was a drug smuggler or a CIA agent. They set him free after questioning, but the tide kept sweeping him back toward Cuba, where he kept being rescued and returned to the same interrogators. Finally they put him on a plane to Mexico City. Since he had no ID or passport, authorities there were about to put him on a flight to Toronto when he managed to call the paper from the airport.
By then, the Coast Guard had abandoned the search and his obituary had been written.
“Anything can happen out there in the Triangle,” Ryan said, describing the ravenous sharks that had circled him. Their numbers multiply at each telling.
If Ryan could survive being lost at sea, so could the missing newlyweds, I thought, and checked the Coast Guard for word. No news. Sea and air search still under way. I reported in to Vanessa's parents in Boston. They hadn't heard anything either.
Coast Guard Lieutenant Skelly O'Rourke, the public information officer, invited Lottie and me for a ride along on one of the search-and-rescue flights. The offer was probably motivated by our help with the photos and the public interest generated by that morning's story.
We skimmed in ever-widening circles aboard a Dolphin helicopter, scanning the turquoise sea and the dark blue Gulf Stream, the world's mightiest river, that flows swiftly through it. Eyes straining, we squinted into blinding sunlight reflected off the water but saw no sign of the missing boaters.
Our veteran pilot pointed out Thunderbolt Cay, the secret sub base used by British and U.S. ships during World War II as they hunted the Nazi U-boats shooting at our ships in the dangerous deep water off Exuma. And Spanish Wells, where, he said, inbreeding among descendants of the Royalists has resulted in “a lot of creepy-looking people, albinos with pink eyes, on Iguana Cay.”
We arrived back in Miami with no news, good or bad. I called the Hansens, said the Coast Guard was doing all it could, then dug into my dusty storage boxes and eventually found the notebook I'd scribbled in during that hot, unpleasant day in Texas.