2
Kat shut the drawer and followed Adam into the hall.
‘Wait. Mr. Quantrell.’
‘I can’t help you. I don’t know who she is.’
‘But you thought you knew.
Didn’t you?’
‘I don’t know what I thought.’ He was striding
toward the elevator, his long legs carrying him at a brisk
pace.
‘Why did she have your phone number?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘Is it a business number? One the public might
know?’
‘No, it’s my home phone.’
‘Then how did she get it?’
‘I told you, I don’t know.’ He reached the elevator
and stabbed the Up button. ‘She’s a total stranger.’
‘But you were afraid you knew her. That’s why you
came down here.’
‘I was doing my civic duty.’ He shot her a look
that said, No more questions.
Kat asked anyway. ‘Who did you think she was, Mr.
Quantrell?’
He didn’t answer. He just regarded her with that
impenetrable gaze.
‘I want you to sign a statement,’ she said. ‘And I
need to know how to reach you. In case the police have more
questions.’
He reached into his jacket and pulled out a card.
‘My home address,’ he said, handing it to her.
She glanced at it. 11 Fair Wind
Lane, Surry Heights. Sykes had been correct about that phone
prefix.
‘You’ll have to talk to the police,’ she
said.
‘Why?’
‘Routine questions.’
‘Is it a homicide or isn’t it?’
‘I don’t know yet.’
The doors slid open. ‘When you make up your mind,
call me.’
She slipped into the elevator after him, and the
doors shut behind her. ‘Look,’ she said. ‘I have a dead body with
no name. Now, I could just call her Jane Doe and leave it at that.
But somewhere, there’s someone who’s missing a sister or a daughter
or a wife. I’d like to help them out, I really would.’
‘Fingerprints.’
‘I’ve done that.’
‘Dental X-rays.’
‘I’ve done that, too.’
‘You sound capable. You don’t need my help.’ The
doors slid open and he stepped out. ‘It’s not as if I don’t care,’
he said, leading her on a brisk chase down the hall, toward the
reception area. ‘But I don’t see why I should get dragged into
this, just because my number happens to be written in some – some
restaurant matchbook. She could’ve gotten it anywhere. Stolen
it—’
‘I never told you it was from a restaurant.’
He halted and turned to her. ‘Yes, you did.’
‘No, I didn’t. I know I
didn’t.’
He fell silent. Their gazes locked, both of them
refusing to yield ground. Even a guy as smooth
as you are can slip up, she thought with a dart of
satisfaction.
‘And I’m sure you’re wrong,’ he said evenly. He
turned and went into the reception area.
Sykes and Ratchet were standing by the front
desk.
Sykes tuned to Kat and said, ‘We got your
message . . .’ His gaze shifted to the man with her,
and he reacted with surprise. ‘Mr. Quantrell. What brings you down
to . . .’ Suddenly he glanced back at Kat.
‘It was his phone number, Lou,’ said Kat. ‘But Mr.
Quantrell says he doesn’t know the woman.’
‘Talk to her, Lieutenant,’ said Adam. ‘Maybe you
can convince Dr. Novak I’m not some ax murderer.’
Sykes laughed. ‘Novak giving you a hard
time?’
‘Since I can see you two already know each other,’
said Kat in irritation, ‘I’ll just take Mr. Quantrell at his
word.’
‘I’m so relieved,’ said Adam. ‘Now, if you’ll
excuse me . . .’ He gave Kat a brief nod. ‘Dr.
Novak, it has been . . . interesting.’ He turned to
leave.
‘Excuse me, Mr. Q.?’ called Sykes. ‘A word,
please.’
As the two men moved to a far corner of the room,
Kat caught Adam’s glance. It said, This has
nothing to do with you.
‘We’ll see you downstairs, Lou,’ Ratchet said. Then
he gave Kat a nudge. ‘C’mon. You got anymore of that god-awful
coffee?’
She could take a hint. As she and Ratchet walked to
the elevators, she looked over her shoulder. The two men were still
in the corner, talking in low voices. Adam was facing her, and over
the head of the shorter Sykes, he caught sight of her backward
glance and he returned it with a look of cool acknowledgment. The
tension in his face was now gone; he was back in full
control.
In the elevator she said, ‘Okay, Vince. Who is
he?’
Ratchet shrugged. ‘Owns some pharmaceutical
company. Cyrus, something or other.’
‘Cygnus? He owns the Cygnus
Company?’
‘Yeah, that’s it. He’s always in those society
pages. You know, this or that black-tie affair. Surprised you
haven’t heard of him.’
‘I don’t read the society pages.’
‘You should. Your ex was mentioned in them the
other day. He was at some campaign benefit for the mayor. Had a
nice-looking blond on his arm.’
‘That’s why I don’t read the society pages.’
‘Oh.’
They got out of the elevator and headed to Kat’s
office. The coffee machine was doing overtime today. The glass pot
had already been emptied twice, and what was left in it now looked
positively vile. She poured out a cup and handed it to
Ratchet.
‘How does Lou know Mr. Society?’ she asked.
Ratchet frowned at the evil brew in his mug. ‘Some
private thing. Quantrell asked Lou for a little police assistance.
Something to do with his daughter.’
‘Quantrell has a daughter?’
‘That’s what I hear.’
‘He didn’t strike me as the daddy type. Not a guy
who’d let sticky little hands anywhere near his cashmere
coat.’
Ratchet took a sip from the mug and winced. ‘Your
coffee’s improved.’
‘What sort of help did Lou give him?’
‘Oh, the girl dropped out of sight or something.
You’d have to ask Lou. It happened a while back, before we got
paired up.’
‘Was he working South Lexington?’
‘Been on that beat for years. That’s where his
partner went down. Drive-by. Then I lost mine in Watertown, and Lou
got stuck with me. The rest, as they say, is history.’ He took
another sip of coffee.
‘Adam Quantrell doesn’t live anywhere near South
Lexington.’
Ratchet laughed. ‘That’s for sure.’
‘So why did he tap a South Lexington cop for
help?’
‘I don’t know. Why don’t you ask Lou?’ Ratchet’s
cell phone rang. Automatically he glanced down at the number on the
display and sighed. ‘Ratchet here,’ he said. ‘Yeah, what have you
got for us now?’
Kat turned her attention to the stack of papers on
her desk. They were the request forms to be sent with the body
fluid samples to the state lab. If she wanted to make the three
o’clock pickup, she’d have to fill them out now. She sat down and
began checking the appropriate boxes: Gas chromatography/UC;
immunoanalysis. Every test that might possibly identify the drug
that had killed Jane Doe.
She looked up at the sound of footsteps. Sykes
walked in. ‘Sorry to brush you off,’ he said. ‘It was sort of a
personal matter for Mr. Quantrell.’
‘So I heard.’ She resumed filling out the
forms.
He noticed the papers. ‘Is that for Jane
Doe?’
‘Courier comes by at three. I know you want quick
answers.’ She gathered up the slips, wrapped them around the test
tubes, and stuffed it all in a lab envelope. ‘So here it is, off to
the races.’ She dropped the bundle into the basket marked Pick up.
‘Thought you were going to run some tests
here.’
‘I’ll do them when I do them. First, I’ve got
deadlines on a few autopsy reports. Court dates coming up. And my
ex has already sent me nasty messages over voice mail.’
Sykes laughed. ‘You and Ed still at each other’s
throats?’
‘Lou, love is fleeting. Contempt is forever.’
‘I take it you’re not going to vote for him.’
‘Actually, I think Ed’s got the right temperament
for a DA. Don’t you agree he’s got that striking resemblance to a
Doberman pinscher?’ She went to the filing cabinet and began
rummaging for papers. ‘Besides, Ed and the mayor deserve each
other.’
‘Hell,’ grunted Ratchet, snapping shut the phone.
‘Now we’ll miss lunch.’
‘What is it?’ asked Sykes.
‘We just got a call. They found another one.
Female, no signs of trauma.’
Kat looked up from the file drawer. Ratchet was
already scribbling in his notebook. ‘Another OD?’ she asked.
‘Probably. And my stomach’s already growling.’ He
kept writing in that matter-of-fact way of his. Too many corpses, too many deaths, and this is what it
does to us, Kat thought. A dead body means
nothing more to us than a canceled lunch.
‘Where’s the vic?’ she asked.
‘South Lexington.’
‘What part of South Lexington?’
Ratchet shut his notebook and looked up. ‘Same
place we found the other one,’ he said. ‘The Projects.’
Adam Quantrell walked briskly across the street,
his shoulders hunched against the wind, his hands thrust deep into
the pockets of his raincoat. It was April already, but it felt like
January. The wind was cutting, the trees skeletal; people on the
street wore their winter pallor like masks.
He unlocked his Volvo, slid into the driver’s seat,
and shut the door.
He sat there for a moment, safely hidden behind
tinted glass, relieved to be in a place where no one could read his
face, divine his thoughts. It was cold inside; his breath misted
the air. But the real chill came from within.
It wasn’t her. At least I
should be thankful for that.
He started the engine and guided the Volvo into
city traffic. His first inclination was to head for Surry Heights
and home. He should call his secretary and tell her he wouldn’t be
in the office today. What he needed was a chance to regain his
composure, something he’d lost when he’d first heard that doctor’s
voice on his answering machine.
What was her name again? Novak. Yes, that was it.
Vaguely he wondered what Dr. Novak’s first name was, thought it had
to be something blunt and to-the-point, like the woman. She was a
straight shooter; he appreciated that. What he hadn’t appreciated
were her sharp eyes, her keen antennae. She’d seen far more than
he’d intended to reveal.
He merged onto the freeway. Still a half hour to
Surry Heights. He wanted out of the city, out of all this gray and
gloomy concrete.
Then he passed a highway sign that said: South Lexington, exit ½ mile.
What came next was a snap decision, a crazy impulse
that rose purely out of guilt. He turned onto the ramp and followed
the curve until it eased into South Lexington Avenue. Suddenly he
was driving through a war zone. The area around the ME’s office had
been shabby, but at least the buildings were occupied, the windows
intact.
Here, on South Lexington, it was hard to imagine
anything but rats residing behind all this red brick and shattered
glass. He drove past empty warehouses and dead businesses,
reminders of the city’s better days. Two miles south, beyond the
abandoned Johan Weir tannery, he came to the Projects. He could see
them from blocks away, those seven gray towers propped up against
an equally gray sky.
They were relics from an earlier age, born of good
intentions, but doomed by location and design. Built miles from any
jobs, constructed of monolithic concrete, they looked more like
prison towers than public housing. Even so, they remained occupied.
He saw cars parked on the road, clumps of people gathered on
corners, a man huddled on his front stoop, a kid shooting baskets
in an alley hoop. They all glanced up as Adam drove past, every
pair of eyes taking note of this territorial incursion.
Adam drove another block, pulled over to the side,
and parked in front of Building Five.
For an hour he sat in his car, watching the
sidewalks, the alleys, the playground across the street. Mothers
shuttled babies in strollers across broken glass. Young kids played
hopscotch on the pavement. Even here, he
thought, life goes on. He knew people were
watching him; they always did.
Someone tapped on his window. He glanced out
through the lightly tinted glass and saw a young woman. She had a
wild mane of uncombed black hair, dark eyes, a white face heavily
caked with makeup. Upon closer scrutiny, he realized it was just a
young girl under all that rouge and powder.
Once again, she tapped on the window. He rolled it
down a few inches.
‘Hey, honey,’ she said sweetly. ‘You lookin’ for
me?’
‘I’m looking for Maeve,’ he said.
‘Don’t know any Maeve. What about me?’
He smiled. ‘I don’t think so.’
‘I’m open to anything. Indulge your
fantasies.’
‘I’m really not interested. Thank you.’ He rolled
up the window.
At once her smile transformed to a scowl. She
muttered an obscenity, audible even through the closed glass, then
she turned and walked away.
He watched her blue jean-clad hips sway as she
headed down the street, saw her pause by a gathering of young men.
Automatically she tilted her head up in a smile. No interest there
either. With a shrug, she kept walking.
Something about that young woman – her
raven-colored hair, perhaps, or that walk, announcing to the world:
I can take care of myself, reminded him of
someone. Dr. Novak, the woman with no first name. She had hair that
color, a thick and glossy black, just long enough to lap at her
shoulders. And her gait, what he’d seen of it in the dim basement
corridor, had that confident spring to its step. He suddenly wished
he’d told her the truth, about the matchbook, about Maeve. He knew
she knew he’d been lying. It was necessary to hide the truth, but
he felt uneasy about it. And it troubled him that Dr. Novak now
considered him some sort of miscreant, whose word was not to be
trusted.
Why should it bother me? I’ll
never see the woman again.
At least he hoped he wouldn’t. A trip to the city
morgue wasn’t the sort of experience he cared to repeat. He
wondered how she could stand it, dealing every day with death,
probing the contents of those ghastly refrigerated steel drawers.
How did one live with the images? He himself was having trouble
dealing with just one image he’d confronted an hour ago – the dead
woman, the one who’d been clutching the matchbook.
Thank God it wasn’t Maeve.
He reached for the car phone, dialed his office,
and told Greta he wouldn’t be coming in. She sounded surprised; it
was unlike him to skip work, even for a day. ‘Let Hal hold the
fort,’ he told her. After all, what were senior vice presidents
for?
Outside, a police car slowly cruised by and
continued down South Lexington. Children, just out of school,
skipped along the pavement, kicking glass. Adam told Greta he’d see
her in the morning, and hung up the phone. Then, grim-faced, he
settled back against the seat and resumed watching the
street.
Dr. Davis Wheelock, the chief medical examiner, had
an office on the fourth floor, in a distant corner of the facility.
It was about as far as one could get from the grim day-to-day
business of the morgue and still work in the same building. The
brass plaque on his door was a gift from his wife, who had been
distressed by the cheap plastic version provided by the city of
Albion. If one must be a public servant, so her reasoning went, at
least one could do so in style.
Dr. Wheelock shared his wife’s view, and his office
was a reflection of his expensive and eclectic taste. In various
places of honor were displayed Kenyan masks, Egyptian papyruses,
Incan statuettes, all acquired during his travels. The office faced
east, toward the river. On this overcast day it was an
unremittingly depressing view. The gray light through the window
seemed to cloak Wheelock and all his primitive artwork in
gloom.
‘Drug ODs are a fact of life in this town,’ said
Wheelock. ‘We can’t chase them all. Unless you’re sure it’s
something new, I can’t see getting distracted—’
‘That’s just it,’ said Kat as she sat down in the
chair across from him. ‘I don’t know if
it’s something new. But I think you should notify the mayor. And
maybe the press.’
Wheelock shook his head. ‘Aren’t you
overreacting?’
‘Davis, in the last twenty-four hours, I’ve had two
come in, young women, no signs of trauma. Both found in the South
Lexington area. Since they both had tracks on their arms and recent
needle punctures, I was ready to call them ODs.’
‘Heroin?’
‘That’s the problem. I can’t identify it. I’ve sent
blood, urine, and vitreous to the state lab for immunoassay, but
that’ll take a week.’
‘What have you run here?’
‘Thin layer and gas chromatography. Subject One had
a positive ethanol. Subject Two turned up salicylates, probably
just aspirin. Both subjects had the same peak on gas chromatography
– it looks like a narcotic.’
‘There’s your answer.’
‘Here’s the problem. It’s a weird peak, biphasic.
Not quite an opiate, not quite cocaine. I’ve never seen it
before.’
‘Impurities. Someone cut two drugs together.’
‘Maybe.’
‘Wait till the state IDs it. It’ll just take a
week.’
‘And in the meantime?’
‘You’ve only got two victims.’
She leaned forward on his desk. ‘Davis, I don’t
want any more victims. And I’m afraid we’re
about to get more.’
‘Why?’
‘After the second woman rolled in, I got on the
phone. Called around town to all the hospitals. I found out Hancock
General admitted three ODs yesterday. Two were obviously suicide
attempts. But the third was a young man brought in by his parents.
He had a cardiac arrest in the ER. They managed to pull him back.
He’s in the ICU now, still unconscious and critical.’
‘Hancock’s a busy ER. You’d expect ODs to show up
there.’
‘I spoke to the hospital lab. They ran a routine
gas chromatography on the man’s blood. It turned up a biphasic peak
on the narcotics screen. Not quite an opiate, not quite
cocaine.’
Wheelock said nothing. He simply sat there,
frowning at her.
‘Davis,’ she said, ‘we’re seeing the start of an
epidemic.’