Read Dead Past Online

Authors: Beverly Connor

Dead Past (28 page)

“This is interesting. You think someone was up here spying on McNair?” said Diane.
“Yeah, I think so. There was a light snow the night McNair was murdered and there hasn’t been one since. The butts I found had a light covering of snow. They are recent, but not after the murder.”
Diane looked through the lens again. She could see the reporters photographing the scene; she saw Garnett standing by watching. She saw Neva open the door to the truck. It was a good vantage point for spying.
“Continue to scout around,” said Diane. “See if you can find any tracks. If we could get a line on a vehicle, that would be great. When you finish, help David and Neva. I’m going to hitch a ride back to the lab and work on the bones we found.”
“The rest of the cook?” asked Jin.
“I’m not sure now that the guy I reconstructed was the cook, or was the only cook. There was at least another person in the basement when it exploded.”
“That’s good—I mean the more clues we have, the faster we can solve this thing,” said Jin. “Not that we have another dead body from the explosion.”
“I’m hoping I have enough facial fragments for another reconstruction,” said Diane. “Carry on.”
Diane worked her way down the embankment, slipping a couple of times in the snow. When she got back down she went inside, pulled Garnett away from the media, coaxed him into the van, and told him about the other person in the basement—and about Jin’s find.
“This is good. I can tell the media how valuable information could have been lost if we hadn’t found where McNair hid it.”
Get your mind off payback,
thought Diane. “Have you found anyone alive who lived in the apartment house,” she asked. “What about the landlord? Who was renting the basement?”
“No one was renting the basement, according to the landlord,” said Garnett. “I’ve got some men sitting on him. I can’t believe someone could have a lab in his house and not know about it. We’ve pushed him pretty far, but so far he’s not budging.”
“How about residents? One of them could have allowed someone in the basement,” said Diane.
“Most of them were killed in the explosion. There’s a kid who does have an apartment in the house. He went on vacation to Europe with his parents just before this happened. We’re hoping when he returns he’ll have some answers to your questions. I’ve got your drawing out there, no hits. I’ve sent it to the old members of the drug unit. I’m waiting to hear. Now, what do you have on the Stanton kid?”
Diane told him about the museum thefts, his relationship with Darcy, the possibility that they were on a date and neither had any idea that there was a meth lab in the basement.
“I’ll be damned. That puts a new face on it. Why did he try to jack your car?”
Diane shrugged. “He was hurt and dazed after the explosion. He panicked. Maybe he really didn’t know what he was doing. He probably carried a gun as a macho thing. I don’t know and probably never will. But we have found no trace connection with him and McNair. Have you found any links?”
“No,” Garnett confessed. “None whatsoever. They were both shot with Berettas, but not the same one. The two murders are so similar, but at the same time there are some important differences. This museum theft makes me think the similarities are simply coincidences.”
“Look, Garnett, don’t lock me out of this. I need to know what you know. We can help and I’m very motivated.”
“I’m telling you all I know. This find in the warehouse here puts you back in the game. Right now I need to get back to the media. I’m hoping for some press that’ll stop Adler in his tracks. He’s hurt a lot of good men.”
“Would you get one of the patrolmen to give me a ride back to the lab? I’d like to start working on these bones.”
“Sure,” said Garnett. “Izzy’s here; I’ll get him to take you.”
“He’s working? I thought he’d be off mourning his son.”
“He’s due time off, but he wants to find out who did this, and I’m letting him help. I think he needs to be involved.”
“Poor guy,” said Diane. They emerged from the van and Garnett went to get Izzy. Diane got the box of bones and, hoping to look inconspicuous, stood behind the van. She looked up on the ridge and saw a beam of light extending from the ground upward like a small spotlight. She watched it for several moments. It didn’t move.
Jin!
she thought.
Chapter 35
 
Diane opened the van, shoved the box of bones in, and raced up the hill. She slipped on the snow and scraped her knees through her pants.
“Damn!” she exclaimed, picking herself up and hurrying up the embankment.
At the top of the ridge she saw the flashlight leaning against a rock. She searched the ground quickly with the beam of her flashlight. Just as her light played on a hiking boot at the bottom of an embankment on the other side of the ridge, she heard a groan.
“Jin!” she shouted.
She ran down the embankment, half sliding on the rocks and snow, fortunately not falling.
She knelt beside him as he struggled to his knees. “Jin, what happened?” she asked. “Did you fall?”
“Fall?” He said confused. “No. I don’t think so.” He sat up. “Damn, my head hurts. He rubbed his hand on the back of his head. “Ouch!” He brought his hand back around. “It’s wet,” he said.
“Let me look.” She aimed her flashlight at the back of his head and parted his hair. “You have a cut and it looks like you’re going to have a sizable bump. You’re sure you didn’t fall? What’s the last thing you remember?”
Jin tried to stand up.
“Just sit there for a moment, and tell me what you remember.”
“I was kneeling down, digging at something I found,” said Jin.
“More evidence?”
Jin shook his head. “An arrowhead.”
“An arrowhead?”
“Yeah, milky quartz, looked like, from what Jonas called the Old Quartz Culture, about eight thousand years ago. There’s a zillion of those kinds of points in Georgia. Don’t you visit your own museum?”
“Yes, I know what the Old Quartz Culture is. That’s the last thing you remember—digging out the arrowhead?”
“Yes.”
“Someone hit you,” she said.
“Hit me?” Jin stood up suddenly and checked his pockets. “The cigarette butts are gone. Someone stole my cigarette butts. It had to be the killer. He was right here with me and I let him get away.”
“We don’t know it was the killer . . . ,” began Diane.
“Who else would give a shit about cigarette butts? Jeez, I don’t believe this.” Jin retrieved his flashlight and began searching the ground.
“You all right up here?”
Diane looked up at the top of the ridge. It was Izzy Wallace. He was followed by Archie, the policeman from the morgue tent, and another patrolman Diane recognized as one of the two who helped her when Blake Stanton was locked in her car. The three of them came down the slope.
“We saw you running like a bat out of hell up the embankment,” said Izzy. “What happened?”
“It looks like someone hit Jin over the head and stole some evidence,” said Diane.
“Here?” said Archie. “While we were all down at the warehouse? Somebody was up here?”
“Looks like it,” said Diane.
Izzy saw Jin searching the ground. “What do we need to be looking for?” he asked.
“An evidence bag with cigarette butts,” said Jin. “Maybe I did fall and it just fell out of my pocket.”
“From the bump on the back of your head, I think you were hit,” said Diane. “You were unconscious for a while. You need to see a doctor.”
“I’m fine.”
“You need to do what she says, son,” said Archie. “We’ll search up here. If there’s anything to be found, we’ll find it.”
“Let them look, Jin.” She saw something on the ground and picked it up. It was the quartz arrowhead. She handed it to Jin.
“I’m sorry, Boss,” he said.
“That’s all right, Jin. None of us expected anyone to be up here, with all the police around.”
“There’s all kinds of roads and paths around here,” said the patrolman.
“He could have come and gone up any one of them,” he said.
“He was sure quiet,” said Jin.
“This snow,” said Archie. “It cushions your footsteps.”
“Come on, Jin,” Diane said. “I need to get back with the bones and you need to see a doctor.”
“Really, Boss . . .”
“That’s an order, Jin,” said Diane.
She, Jin, and Izzy worked their way down off the ridge by the light of their flashlights.
“I’ll be back for you, Archie,” called Izzy.
“No problem, Izzy,” he called back.
“You and Archie riding together?” said Diane.
“Yeah, temporarily. I’m not really back officially, and Archie usually works in the evidence locker. We’re just a couple of old guys waiting for retirement, trying to make a difference.”
Izzy wasn’t that old; neither was Archie for that matter—perhaps in their early fifties at most—but Diane imagined Izzy felt old right now. The death of a child puts the weight of the world on you.
Diane put Jin in the front, and she rode in the backseat.
“How are you and your wife doing, Izzy?” asked Diane.
“Not good. Her sister’s come to stay with us for a while. I need to find out who did all this. I’m supposed to protect people, and I can’t even protect my own son from the people I should be arresting.”
Diane could relate to that. She couldn’t protect her daughter from the man she’d been trying to bring to trial for the atrocities he committed. To say it makes you feel like a failure doesn’t even begin to describe the impact it has on you.
“Bobby Coleman’s mom tried to kill herself,” continued Izzy. “They’re saying it was an accidental overdose, but we all know different. You don’t plan on outliving your kids. It’s just too awful.”
It is,
agreed Diane silently.
Just too awful.
Izzy dropped Diane and Jin off at the museum and she drove Jin to the emergency room. She stayed in the waiting room until he came out.
“Nothing to it,” said Jin. “The doctor put three stitches in my head and told me to call if I have pain, nausea, or dizziness—usual stuff.”
“Didn’t he say to go home and rest?” said Diane.
“Well, yeah, but they always say that. They’re just covering themselves. I’m fine.”
Diane drove him home and watched as he went into his apartment building. She headed back to the museum, but just as she was about to turn the corner, she saw his car backing out of his parking space. He was going back to the warehouse. She shook her head, reached for her phone, and dialed David.
“How’s Jin?” said David.
“He’s fine. Got three stitches. I just called to tell you that I think he’s headed back to you guys. Watch him,” said Diane.
“We will. Neva will get on his case. That usually works.”
“Finding anything interesting?” asked Diane.
“The basement of the apartment house had a kitchen, so we’ve got lots of metal. We’re looking for anything we can trace back to a person, but mostly it’s just stuff that’s part of the house. We’ve found some bone. One looks like a piece of one of the long bones. But it’s slim. Has kind of an oval cross section.”
“Sounds like it might be a radius.”
“We’ll bring all the bones to you. We’re thinking we’ll leave the other evidence here with a guard. Garnett’s bringing in an arson investigator whom he trusts to have a look.”
“Keep me informed.” Diane hung up the phone and drove the rest of the way to the museum. She parked by the outside elevator dedicated to the crime lab.
The night guard was already in the small first-floor reception room that contained the elevator. She spoke to him and rode up to the crime lab, keyed in her code, and, carrying the box of bones, walked through to her lab.
Her cell phone vibrated in her pocket just as she set the box down on the table. The display said LAURA HILLARD.
“Hi, Laura,” said Diane.
“I just called with some information. Juliet’s grandmother’s name is Ruby Torkel. She’s still alive and lives in Glendale-Marsh, Florida. She’s lived there all her life.”
“Just a minute, let me get a pen.”
Diane fished a pen from her purse, uncapped it, and looked around for a piece of paper. She found a pad in a drawer and wrote down the information.
“I don’t suppose you have a number.”
“Sure do.” Laura gave Diane the phone number. “Juliet says she’s rather cranky.”
“I deal with cranky every day. How is Juliet?”
“She’s good, considering the crime spree we’ve been having. I’m getting a lot of calls from people just needing to debrief and, unfortunately, from people needing help with their grief. Poor Juliet’s trying not to freak out over the murder in her apartment complex.”
“Her apartment complex? Where does she live?” asked Diane.
“Applewood Apartments. You know, where the Cipriano girl was murdered.”
“Juliet lives at Applewood? The poor girl. As if she doesn’t have enough problems.”
“Yes. She says it has everyone in the apartments calling locksmiths. All the people with a 131-something address similar to the victim’s are a little upset, including Juliet. She lives in 131 H. It was several buildings away from the murder apartment, 131 C, but it’s still spooky to have an address so similar to the murder victim’s.”
“What a coincidence,” said Diane.
“Yes, that’s what I told Juliet. When they ran out of the alphabet on those buildings, they started designating them AA, BB, and so on. Imagine how spooked the people are in 131 CC. Anyway, I know you’re busy, I just wanted to give you the info on her grandmother.”
“Thanks. I’ll get on it tomorrow,” Diane said. She flipped her phone shut and just stood in place for a moment.
That’s odd,
she thought. She slipped on a pair of gloves. It was an odd coincidence, too, that Joana Cipriano had blond hair and blue eyes—not as light as Juliet’s, but still, it was an odd coincidence. Diane felt a sense of unease as she started laying the bones out on the table.

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