It had been a good day, like old times. Rick was relieved that Laurel had not joined them. He needed this. Jim never even complained about being out on the water. They drank beer, talked cases, and as they climbed back into his car at the marina, Rick invited Jim home for dinner.
They swung by Pigeon Plum Circle on the way. Rick's card was still in the door. “Wonder where the hell that woman is?”
“It's not like her to go off and sulk without letting us know where she's at.”
“Maybe she left word at the station,” Rick said.
A police crime-scene truck whizzed by as they drove leisurely across the causeway. “Wonder where they're headed in such a hurry?” Jim said. They saw the answer when Rick turned onto the island minutes later. The scene seemed a replay of the night Rob Thorne died, the eerie rhythm of flashing lights, the morgue wagon, men in uniform measuring out yellow crime-scene tape. Even a distraught woman in the arms of her husband. The woman this time was Beth Singer. Rick's first thought was that something had happened to Benjie. Then he realized that the tape was being strung around his house and his lieutenant was striding toward the car, his face strained and solemn.
Beth ran toward them. “Rick! It's Laurel! It's Laurel!”
“What the hell happened?” Rick stepped from the car, his mouth suddenly dry.
“Christ,” Jim was saying behind him.
Beth's husband caught her and she turned, weeping into his shoulder. “What is happening here?” she wailed. “My baby! I don't want my baby to grow up here.”
“I'm sorry, Rick,” the lieutenant shook his head. “You can't go in there.”
Rick ignored him and bolted for the front door. “Laurel! Laurel!”
Two uniforms, men he knew, barred his way, looking back uncertainly to the lieutenant for instruction. “This is
my
house! I'm going in there.”
“Sorry, Sergeant.”
“Then you're gonna have to arrest me! It's my fucking house!” He tried to push past them.
“Christ, Lieutenant, ya gotta let him in there for just a few minutes.”
“It won't give him any piece of mind, Jim.” The thin, sallow-skinned lieutenant ran a hand through his thinning hair and relented. “Go with him, don't let him touch anything. In and out. Taggerty and Dominguez have the case.”
The uniforms stepped aside. “The bedroom,” the lieutenant said, and turned away.
“Hang in there and be cool,” Jim muttered. He held Rick's elbow tight as they stepped carefully. The bed was bloodstained. The body lay on the floor covered by bedclothes and a gingham apron. A bare, blood-smeared leg was visible, and a sweep of blonde hair. Brain matter clung to the ruffled bed skirt.
Rick moved no closer. “Get me out of here,” he whispered, paler than Jim had ever seen him.
Steered out the front door, Rick sank down onto the stone bench where he had found Laurel the night of Rob Thorne's murder. Jim left him there, elbows on his knees, face buried in his hands.
He was in the same position when Jim returned from conferring with the lieutenant. “Beth, your neighbor, heard a shot and saw a red Datsun take off. She found the body.”
Rick raised his face from his hands. His eyes were a luminous glimmer.
“Lotsa red cars in the world,” Jim said. “We have to go down to the station, give statements.”
“Us?”
“Routine. They wanna know about the threat she got, the note. Where we were today, whatever leads you can offer.”
Rick got to his feet slowly, like a man numbed by novocaine. Jim guided him to a patrol car. “No.” Rick shook him off. “I can drive.”
The lieutenant moved to intervene, and Jim stopped him. “I'll go with him. We'll meet you there.”
Jim drove. Rick spoke only once. “She was so young. I didn't even say good-bye. She was still asleep when I left this morning.”
“We got an early start,” Jim said.
Dr. Feigleman was impatiently pacing the detective bureau. He had responded quickly to the call of a bereavement. This was a unique case. Since his association with the department, he had counseled only two other officers who had lost loved ones to murder. Both were patrolmen. Robbers had killed the young brother-in-law of one, and the sister of another had been shot by an obsessed would-be lover. There had been nothing like this, the young sweetheart of a detective who investigates murders, slain in the home they shared. He double-checked before leaving the house, to be sure that the detective himself was not a suspect. A domestic dispute would not be nearly so desirable a case from his point of view. The department had already confirmed the man's presence on a boat, at a marina, in the company of another detective at the time of the slaying. This would be an extremely interesting case study.
The department chaplain was also waiting at headquarters, clutching a leather-bound Bible and looking soulful. His presence annoyed Feigleman. If Sergeant Barrish wanted a clergyman present, he could call in his own, if he had one. The two men did not speak as they waited. They had never been on the best of terms.
As Rick emerged from the elevator, still clad in a pullover shirt, blue jeans and boat shoes, both men lunged out of their seats and rushed toward him.
“My son,” the chaplain said.
“Sergeant,” Feigleman said, “it's important to sort outâ” Jim brushed them to one side with a sweep of his big hand and a cold stare that meant business.
He steered Rick by them, speaking bitterly from between clenched teeth. “Goddammit! This man has just lost somebody close to him.”
“Precisely. Which is why I am here,” Feigleman said. “To do everything I can for him.”
He needs words of solace and assurance,” the chaplain said. “We can pray together.”
“Maybe later,” Jim said brusquely.
“The press is already calling,” a harried-looking civilian clerk told him.
“No calls,” Jim said, “no reporters. Refer them to public information.”
A man in uniform escorted a well-dressed elderly couple into the detective bureau. The woman was weeping. The man walked with difficulty, using a cane. Rick swept them into his arms. “How did you get here so fast?”
The woman clung to the front of his shirt as if she was drowning and he was a life preserver.
“Laurel called her mother again earlier today and said she needed help. We started the drive down an hour later. When we got to the house, they told us⦔
“She called for help?” Rick looked bewildered.
“They want to take a statement from us,” the old man said, his eyes swimming. “What happened?”
“We don't know yet,” Jim said. He grasped Rick's right shoulder and spoke into his ear. “The ME needs somebody to make the official ID. I'll go. You stay here with her folks. I'll be back.”
Rick nodded.
Feigleman and the chaplain still hovered nearby, like birds of prey. Feigleman was scribbling in a small notebook.
Miriam manned the front desk at the medical examiner's office. “This is a tough one,” she said sympathetically.
“Life sucks,” Jim said.
“How is Rick?”
“Not good,” Jim said. “They were living together. I don't know what their plans were. He wasn't ready to lose her.”
“Not like this,” Dr. Lansing said. He had stepped out of the morgue to join them. “From what I can see, there was a hell of a fight. She was sexually molested with a foreign object, looks like a can of hair spray. We'll know better in a little while. They're cleaning the body up right now.”
“Let's fill these out,” Miriam said briskly, reading aloud as he filled in the blanks on the official forms in front of her. “I, James Ransom, do hereby assert that I have viewed the body and identified the deceased as Laurel Trevelyn, whom I have known for a period of”âshe looked up at Jimâ“how long did you know the deceased?”
This is all it comes down to, he thought, looking into her bright, questioning eyes. How long did you know the deceased?
“About eight months, but I helped them move her things into Rick's house.” Images of that day flickered through his mind like an old home movie. He quickly blocked them outâforever.
“Before you leave, you can sign, and I'll witness the signature,” Miriam told him. She patted his hand like a grandmother about to serve cookies and milk.
“She's a mess,” Lansing said as they entered the morgue. “Shot in the face. It's good that you came by instead of Rick or some family member.
“We took the initial photos, and the guys from the lab were here. They did laser printing of the body. God, that machine is a pain in the ass. She was lying partially on a sheet pulled from the bed, so we wrapped her in that so there would be no contamination and we would be sure to bring everything in with her.
It was a contact wound to the forehead, the muzzle right against the bone, almost between the eyes. Pulverized the inside of the skull. You can see the result.”
She lay on a stainless-steel tray with raised sides locked over the end of a large sink. There was the smell of blood, disinfectant and oily peppermint from the polish cleaner used on the trays. The only sound was the gentle whoosh of water running from two clear rubber hoses. The water circulated around the edge of the tray and emptied into the sink through a hole at the foot.
Her head was raised on a Formica-covered wooden block about four inches high to prevent blood from settling in the brain. Little shape was left to the face, which had collapsed in on itself like a Halloween pumpkin left too long in the sun. Lester, the morgue attendant, had picked up the larger of the two hoses and a fat sponge and was gently washing away the blood. It swirled red, then pink, and eddied away in the constant flow of water.
Jim watched with a clinical curiosity as the routine cleansing revealed the damage. The bullet had taken the left eye, leaving an empty socket. The right eye remained, big and blue. Blue.
Blue
. Jim rocked back on his heels.
“What's the height and weight?” He sounded normal, but his face betrayed him, eyes moving over the long legs, narrow hips, well-developed breasts, the blond hair.
Lester put down the bubbling hose and reached for the chart. “She weighed in at 129 pounds, five feet six and a half inches.”
“Doc, tell Miriam to tear up the ID form that says this is Laurel Trevelyn.” Jim's fists were clenched. “It ain't her.”
Lansing looked startled.
“Take a better look, Doc. You know this lady.”
Jim left the morgue quickly. Lansing walked around the tray for a better view. “Oh, my Lord,” he said softly.
Jim drove fast, back to the station. “Oh shit! Oh shit! Oh shit!”âhe slammed the steering wheelâ“Dusty! You were right!” Tears streamed down his face.
The clerk timidly intruded. “I know you're not taking calls, Sergeant, but it's a family member.”
Rick nodded, stepped back to his desk and picked up the telephone. His hunched shoulders dropped, and his spine slowly straightened as he listened. He spoke in a voice too low for others to hear, but the tone sounded urgent. A secretary walking by heard the end of the conversation as he pleaded with the caller, “Please, wait right there.”
He cradled the phone and walked out of the detective bureau. No one thought to stop him.
Jim walked into homicide, his face gray. “Where's Rick?”
“That's just what the fuck I was going to ask you,” Dominguez said. The short, muscular detective was furious. “We never got his statement. He takes a call, we turn around and he's gone. The guy at the front desk says he took off outta the parking lot like a bat outta hell. What the fuck is going on?”
“I guess he found out what I was just gonna tell him. The body at the morgue, it's not Laurel.”
“Whattayaâ?”
“Laurel's alive?” her mother asked weakly, clutching at a chair for support.
“Yeah. It looks that way.”
“Who the hell is the victim?” Dominguez said.
“It's Dusty.”
“You're shitting me. Oh, my God,” the short detective said.
Laurel's mother gazed at her husband, her head wobbling back and forth in an expression of denial. “We should have known. We should have known⦔
“What does that mean?” Jim said.
“Laurel, has always had ⦠problems.” The father said the word precisely, infused with meaning beyond its definition.
“What kinda problems?”
“You know she is our adopted daughter?”
Jim nodded. “No secret.”
“We adopted her late in our lives. She was six years old, a severely abused child. We were in our fifties, foolish and idealistic. We thought we could make up for all that had happened to her by giving her love and the things money could buy. It never worked out. There was always trouble. She was under care ⦠But she seemed to be doing so well that we thought that with a man like Rick⦔ his voice trailed off.
“In other words, you handed your problem off to Rick and blew town.” Jim's words were controlled, his eyes accusing.
“It's been very hard for us,” the woman said. “We're not young⦔
“Where the hell is he?” Jim roared to the other detectives. “Did he have a radio with him? His walkie was in the car. Try to raise him,” he told Dominguez. He turned away from Dusty's desk and the shriveled flower in her coffee cup. “Who was it that called him?”
“Somebody named Alex,” the clerk said.
The parents reacted. “That is a name that Laurel sometimes used,” the father said, raising his hand in a feeble gesture.
“I'm going by the house, in case he went back there,” Jim told Dominguez, and lumbered toward the door. “Put out a BOLO for both of them.”
Feigleman, still hovering, looked spellbound as he joined the parents.