12
She was standing in a dark room – a warehouse. On
her right was a window, covered over by fabric. Only the faintest
light managed to seep through the weave, offering her a dim view of
scattered crates, sagging posts. I have an
audience, she thought with a sudden flash of nervousness as she
realized shadows were moving around her.
A light sprang on, a single bare lightbulb swaying
from a wire.
She squinted against the glare, trying to make out
the faces surrounding her. There were at least a dozen of them, all
with eyes trained on her, watching her, waiting for signs of fear
or vulnerability. She tried not to show either.
‘So,’ she said, ‘which one of you is Jonah?’
‘That depends,’ someone said.
‘On what?’
‘On who you are.’
‘The name’s Kat Novak. And this used to be my
neighborhood.’
‘She’s a cop,’ said Leland. ‘Goes around askin’
questions like one, anyway.’
‘Not a cop,’ said Kat. ‘I work for the medical
examiner’s office. People die, my job’s to find out why. And you’ve
had folks dying around here.’
‘Hell,’ someone said with a laugh. ‘Folks dyin’ all
the time. Nothin’ special.’
‘Nicos Biagi wasn’t special? Or Xenia? Or
Eliza?’
There was a silence.
‘So why do you care, Kat
Novak?’
Even before she turned to face the speaker, she
knew it was Jonah. The tone of command in his voice was
unmistakable. She found herself gazing at a magnificent man,
towering, with unnaturally pale eyes and a lion’s mane of brown
hair. The others remained silent, as he moved forward to confront
her in the circle of light.
‘Is it so hard to believe, Jonah, that I would care?’ she asked.
‘Yeah. Because no one else does.’
‘You forget. This was my neighborhood. I used to
hang out on the same streets you hang out on now. I knew your
mothers. I grew up with them.’
‘But you left.’
‘No one ever really leaves this place. You can try
all your lives, but it stays with you. Follows you wherever you
go.’
‘Is that why you’re here? To help the lost souls
you left behind?’
‘To do my job. To find out why people are
dying.’
‘To do your job? Is that all?’
‘And—’ She paused. ‘To warn your lady,
Maeve.’
Jonah stood stock-still. No one moved.
Then the steady click-click of boot heels across
the floor cut through the silence. A shadow, sleek as a cat’s, came
out of the darkness. Casually the woman strolled into the circle of
light where she stood with arms crossed, gazing speculatively at
Kat. She was dressed all in black, but in various textures of
black: leather skirt, knit turtleneck, a quilted jacket with
patches of shimmery satin. Her hair looked like broomstraw – stiff
and ragged, the blond strands tipped with a startling shade of
purple. She was thin – too thin, her eyes dark hollows in a
porcelain face.
The woman walked a slow, deliberate circle around
Kat, studying her from the side, from behind. She came around to
the front, and the two women stood face to face.
‘I don’t know you,’ said Maeve. Then, with that
declaration, she turned and started to walk away, back into the
shadows.
‘But I know your father,’ said Kat.
‘Congratulations,’ said Maeve over her
shoulder.
‘And I knew Herb Esterhaus. Before he was shot to
death.’
Maeve froze. She turned to face her.
‘You’re a suspect,’ said Kat. ‘The police’ll be
coming around, asking questions.’
‘No, they won’t.’
‘Why not?’
‘Because they already know the answers.’
Kat frowned. ‘What do you mean?’
Maeve glanced at Jonah. ‘This is between me and
her.’
After a pause, Jonah nodded and snapped his
fingers. ‘Out,’ he said.
Like magic, the circle of people melted into the
shadows. Maeve waited for the last footsteps to fade away, then she
reached for a crate and shoved it toward Kat. ‘Sit,’ she
said.
‘I’ll stand, thank you,’ said Kat, unwilling to
yield the advantage of height.
Maeve, unruffled, propped one black boot on the
crate and regarded her adversary with new interest. ‘Where did you
meet my father?’
‘The city morgue.’
Maeve laughed. ‘That’s a new one.’
‘He came in to look at a body. We thought it might
be yours.’
‘He must’ve been disappointed when it
wasn’t.’
‘No, as a matter of fact, he was terrified by the
prospect. As it turned out, it was someone you probably
knew.’
‘Eliza?’ Maeve shrugged. ‘Everyone knew her. You
couldn’t avoid it. She’d empty your pockets one way or
another.’
‘And your last matchbook?’
‘What?’
‘She had a matchbook. L’Etoile Restaurant. Had your
father’s phone number written in it.’
Again, Maeve shrugged. ‘She needed the matches. I
didn’t.’
‘What about Nicos and Xenia? Did you know them
too?’
‘Look,’ said Maeve. ‘They were stupid, that’s all.
Took some bad medicine.’
‘Who passed it to them?’
Maeve didn’t answer.
‘You know, don’t you?’
‘Look, it was a mistake—’
‘On whose part?’
‘Everyone’s. Nicos’s. Xenia’s—’
‘Yours?’
Maeve paused. ‘I didn’t know. The bastard never
bothered to tell me. He just said he wanted to make a delivery,
needed a runner out to Bellemeade.’
‘And you told him Nicos was available.’
‘I didn’t know Nicos was dumb enough to snitch a
sample for himself. Pass it to his girlfriends.’
‘So you arranged it all,’ said Kat, not bothering
to keep the disgust out of her voice. ‘You do this sort of thing
all the time?’
‘No! It was a favor, that’s all! Old times’ sake. I
didn’t know—’
‘That it was poison?’
‘He said it was a one-time thing! All he wanted was
a delivery boy.’
‘All who wanted?’
Maeve let out a breath and looked away. ‘Herb.
Esterhaus. He and I, we used to be . . .’
‘I know, Maeve. We saw the photos.’
‘Photos?’
‘You know. All that X-rated posing you did for your
good friend Herb.’
There was a flash of regret in Maeve’s eyes. ‘Dad
saw them too?’
‘Yes. He wasn’t pleased. Would’ve strangled
Esterhaus if the man wasn’t already dead.’
Maeve snorted. ‘I’d like to strangle him myself.
For using me.’
‘Did he use you often? For these deliveries?’
‘I told you, it was just a one-time thing.’ She
shook her head. ‘And I thought he was clean, you know? After he got
busted last year, he was real careful to—’
‘Wait. Esterhaus was arrested? When?’
‘About a year ago. It was small time, a few pot
plants in his backyard. I don’t know how he squirmed out of the
charges, but he did. I figure, the feds stepped in and helped him
out. They look after their witnesses.’
‘You knew he was in the Witness Protection
Program?’
‘He told me about Miami. When he got busted, that
really scared him. He didn’t want Miami to find out. And he didn’t
want to lose his job. Hell, he liked being
cooped up in that lab! Me, I hated it. After a while I couldn’t
take him either.’
‘So you left him.’
‘I wasn’t mad at him or anything. I just got
bored.’
‘The police say you’re a suspect in his
murder.’
‘They’d say anything.’
‘You have a better suspect?’
Maeve moved away from the crate and began to pace,
weaving in and out of the shadows. ‘Herb was just your average guy,
trying to make a living. And trying to stay clean.’
‘Then why was he stealing Zestron-L? Moving it out
onto the streets?’
‘He was being squeezed.’
‘By whom?’
Maeve turned to look at her. ‘Try the people at the
top. The ones who’d like to wipe South Lexington off the
map.’
‘Who, City Hall? The cops?’
‘The list goes on and on. People at the top, they
look down at us like we’re rats, crawling around in the sewers. And
what do people do with rats? They exterminate them.’
Kat shook her head. ‘Wild accusations won’t earn
you any points, Maeve.’
‘No. People like you never listen to people like
us.’
‘Hey, you’re not exactly scraping bottom, okay?
You’re a Quantrell.’
‘Don’t remind me,’ snapped Maeve. She turned and
started to walk away.
‘Your father’s waiting out on the street,’ Kat
called after her. ‘He wants to talk with you.’
Maeve turned around. ‘Why? He never bothered to
talk with me before. It was always at me,
not with me. Ordering me around. Telling me to clean up my act,
toss out my cigarettes. He’s not even my real father.’
‘He wanted to be.’
‘But he isn’t, okay?’
‘So where is your real
father? Tell me that.’
Maeve glared at her, but said nothing.
‘He isn’t here, is he?’ said Kat.
‘He’s living in Italy.’
‘Right. In Italy. But Adam’s here.’
‘He’s not my father.’
‘No, he just acts like one. And hurts like
one.’
Maeve shoved away a crate and sent it
toppling.
‘Oh, great,’ said Kat. ‘Now we’re going to have a
tantrum.’
‘You’re a bitch.’
‘Maybe. But you know what I’m not? Your mother. And
I don’t have to take this crap.’ With that, Kat turned and walked
away. She heard, off in the shadows, a scrambling of footsteps,
then Maeve’s command: ‘Forget it. Let the bitch go.’
Kat managed to navigate her own way out of the
building. It took her a few wrong turns, a half-dozen rickety
flights of stairs, but she finally found her way outside. Looking
back, she realized she’d been in the abandoned mill building.
Boarded-up windows and graffiti-splashed brick was all one saw from
the street. She wondered how many pairs of eyes were watching her
from behind that wall.
She walked on, heading briskly back to South
Lexington Avenue, back to Adam.
She saw him pacing by the car, his fair hair
tumbled by the wind, his hands deep in his pockets. The instant he
spotted her, he started toward her.
‘I was about to call the police,’ he said. ‘What
happened?’
‘I’ll tell you all about it.’ She opened the car
door and got inside. ‘Let’s get out of here.’
He slid in beside her. ‘Did you see Jonah?’
‘Yes.’
‘And?’
‘It was an unforgettable experience.’
He started the engine and muttered, ‘So was waiting
for you.’
They pulled onto South Lexington and headed
north.
‘I saw Maeve,’ said Kat.
Adam almost slammed on the brakes. ‘She was
there?’
‘Celeste got it right. She’s Jonah’s lady.’ She
glanced back at the line of cars honking behind them. ‘Keep moving,
you’re holding up traffic.’
Adam, still rattled, turned his attention back to
the road. ‘Did she seem . . . happy?’ he
asked.
‘To be honest?’ Kat shook her head. ‘I don’t think
that kid was ever happy.’
‘Will she talk to me?’
Kat heard it in his voice and saw it in his face: a
father’s fear, a father’s despair. All at once she wondered about
her own father, that nameless man with the green eyes. She wondered
where he was, if he knew or cared he had a daughter. Of course he doesn’t, she thought. Not the way this man does.
She looked ahead, at the line of traffic. ‘She
isn’t ready to see you,’ she said.
‘If I tried to—’
‘It isn’t the time, Adam.’
‘When will it be the
time?’
‘When she grows up. If she ever does.’
He gripped the steering wheel, staring ahead in
frustration. ‘If I only knew what I did
wrong . . .’
‘Some kids are just born angry. In Maeve’s case, my
guess is she’s angry at her real father. But he’s not around to
scream at, so she takes it out on you. Nothing you do is right. You
exert a little control, and you’re a tyrant. You try to set limits,
she smashes them.’ Kat reached over and touched his knee. ‘You did
the best you could.’
‘It wasn’t enough.’
‘Adam,’ she said gently, ‘it never is.’
He drove in silence, his troubled gaze focused on
the road. How quickly he accepted the blame, she thought. As if
Maeve had no responsibility for her own life, her own mess.
‘She did clear up a few things,’ said Kat. ‘In
fact, she cleared up a lot. Esterhaus was
the source. He stole the Zestron and passed the drug to Nicos for a
delivery. Nicos must have kept some for his own use. That’s how it
got into the Projects.’
‘A delivery? To whom?’
‘Maeve didn’t say. But you know who she says is
behind it all?’ Kat laughed. ‘The city elite, unspecified. Meaning
all the creeps in power. She figures they’re distributing the drug
in order to clean the trash off the streets.’
‘I hate to admit it, but she’s got the city elite
pegged just about right.’
Kat glanced at him with a raised eyebrow. ‘But
systematically pushing poison? To clean the riffraff from Albion?
That’s a big leap.’ She gazed out at the numbing landscape of
abandoned buildings, shattered windows. ‘Still, I admit the same
thought did cross my mind a few days back. But that’s paranoia for
you. Conspiracies are seductive . . .’ She paused.
‘By the way. Did you know Esterhaus was arrested a year ago?
Possession of marijuana plants.’
‘No, I was never informed.’
‘Somehow it stayed off his record, and he walked.
Maybe the feds stepped in to protect their old witness. Had him
released.’
There was silence. Quietly Adam said, ‘What if it
wasn’t the feds?’
‘Come again?’
‘What if he made, say, other arrangements to avoid
the charges?’
‘You mean . . . bribery?’
‘He had access to an inexhaustible supply of
narcotics. At Cygnus. That’s a pretty persuasive bribe.’
‘So he cuts a deal. With a judge.
Or . . .’
‘The police,’ Adam finished for her.
They were back on the old conspiracy kick, but it
was hard to let it go. Esterhaus’s death had been an apparent
execution. She thought of what Maeve said – that Esterhaus was
being pressured to steal the Zestron and deliver it somewhere. The
bombing of her house had been a professional job. She thought about
all the doors that had slammed in her face when she’d tried to
publicize the overdose victims. The powers that be in Albion had
systematically shrugged off the deaths of those three junkies in
South Lexington.
Shrugged off? Or covered
up?
‘Head downtown,’ she suddenly said.
‘Why?’
‘We’re going to City Hall. I want to see Ed.’
Adam turned onto the downtown exit. ‘Why?’
‘Force of habit – I like to torment him. Plus, he
might get us the information we need. Namely, which cop arrested
Esterhaus – and then let him go. And what else the said cop has
been involved in.’
‘Would Ed know that?’
‘He has a direct pipeline into Police Internal
Affairs. If there’s a crooked cop involved, they might have a file
on him.’
‘Unless they’re all crooked.’
‘Please,’ she groaned. ‘Don’t even mention the
possibility.’
City Hall had been turned into a media circus.
Banners were everywhere: Mayor Sampson Presents
the Albion Bicentennial, 200 Years of Vision, Albion: looking
toward the third century. In the hall was posted a map of
Friday’s two-mile parade route. Anyone who bothered to study that
map would see that the parade didn’t even go anywhere near Albion’s
center, but skirted around it, along the northern city limits,
thereby avoiding the South Lexington district entirely.
Ed was in his office, barricaded by a fortress of
papers. Campaign posters were plastered across the wall behind him.
A picture of a kid serenely skipping rope caught Kat’s eye:
Albion. Safe, and getting safer. For whom? she felt like asking.
Ed, as usual, did not look happy to see her. ‘I
haven’t got a lot of time, okay?’ he grumbled as Kat and Adam
settled into chairs. ‘This bicentennial thing is turning into a
disaster. The weatherman says rain. Three high school bands have
dropped out because of sniper rumors. And now the cops say they
can’t guarantee crowd control.’
‘Yep, that’s our town,’ said Kat sweetly. ‘Safe,
and getting safer.’
‘What do you want?’ snapped Ed.
‘Some service for my tax dollars, Mr. DA.’
He sighed. ‘This isn’t about the drug ODs again, is
it?’
‘Peripherally. By now, you’ve heard about my
exploding house. And the dead Cygnus researcher.’
‘That was a paid hit, Miami mob. At least, that’s
what the cops tell me.’
‘The cops also say Esterhaus stole the drug from
Cygnus and bombed my house to stop me from asking too many
questions.’
Ed laughed. ‘I can think of a lot of reasons to
bomb your house.’
‘But that theory strikes us as too simple,’ said
Adam. ‘Blame all those acts on a dead man. Esterhaus kept his nose
clean for years. He had only one arrest – a year ago, for growing
marijuana.’
‘I didn’t hear about that,’ said Ed.
‘He wasn’t charged. It appears he was rather
quickly released. We want to know who made the arrest.’
‘Why?’
‘Pot growing’s an open-and-shut case,’ said Kat.
‘Find the plants, you’ve got your conviction. Now, why go to the
trouble of arresting someone, and then let him walk without
charges?’
‘The decision could’ve been made on a number of
levels.’
‘We want to know the street level,’ said Kat. ‘The
name of the cop.’
‘Yeah? What else do you want?’
‘We want to know if Esterhaus might have offered
this cop a bribe. Whether this particular cop suddenly found some
new . . . prosperity. Check with Internal Affairs,
see if there’s a file.’
‘There may not be.’
‘Then just the name, Ed. Get me that.’
Ed shook his head. ‘You’re just fishing, Kat.
You’ve got nothing.’
‘I’ve got an empty lot where my house used to
be.’
‘And I’ve got a dead researcher,’ said Adam.
Ed leaned back. ‘So you’re both fishing, huh?’
‘You should be too,’ said Adam. ‘It’s part of your
job, Mr. DA.’
‘And he’s a terrific one, too,’ said a voice from
the doorway. They turned to see Mayor Sampson, looking dapper in a
three-piece suit. He strolled into the office and, like any good
politician, reached out to pump Adam’s hand. ‘Mr. Quantrell, good
to see you again. Coming to the bicentennial ball, aren’t
you?’
‘I hadn’t made plans.’
‘But I thought Isabel reserved two inner-circle
tickets.’
‘She didn’t mention them to me.’
Sampson glanced at Kat and she saw the look of
dislike on his face, quickly smothered by a smile. ‘Keeping busy,
Dr. Novak?’ he asked.
‘Too busy,’ grumbled Ed.
‘Oh, Lord. Not those junkies again?’ Sampson gave
Kat an indulgent pat on the shoulder, the sort of gesture she
resented. ‘You are taking this case entirely too personally.’
‘Yeah. It got real personal
when my house blew up.’
‘But Ed is right on top of things,’ said Sampson.
‘Aren’t you?’
‘Absolutely.’
‘Now, isn’t it time we got moving?’ asked
Sampson.
‘Huh?’ Ed glanced at his watch. ‘Oh, yeah. Gotta
go, Kat. Parade committee.’
They all walked out of the office together. In the
hall, Ed raised an arm, a gesture that could’ve meant either
goodbye or good riddance, and headed off with the mayor. Kat
watched the two men disappear around the corner and then snorted in
disgust. ‘Our tax dollars, hard at work. I’ll be glad when this
damn bicentennial is over.’
They got into the elevator, joining a City Hall
clerk, her arms loaded down with a pile of gaudy flyers. ‘Take
one!’ she said in a cheery voice.
Kat snatched one up and read it: Mayor Sampson’s Bicentennial Ball. General Tickets:
$500. Contributor: $2,500. Inner Circle: $10,000.
‘Do you think Ed will help us out?’ asked
Adam.
‘I’ll hound him to the grave if he doesn’t.’
Adam laughed. ‘I’d say that’s a pretty potent
threat, coming from you.’
They stepped off the elevator. ‘Hardly,’ said Kat,
still gazing down at the flyer.
Inner circle tickets were $10,000 each and Isabel
had two of them.
‘I’m not a threat to anyone,’ she muttered. Then
she tossed the flyer into a trash can.
The cook had laid out a lovely dinner for them:
Cornish hens glazed with raspberry sauce, wild rice, a bottle of
wine chilling in the bucket. And candlelight, naturally.
Everything, thought Adam, was perfect. Or should have been perfect.
But it wasn’t.
Kat was chasing a sliver of carrot around her plate
now. Where was her appetite? With a sigh,
she put down her fork and looked at him.
‘Thinking about Esterhaus again?’ he asked.
‘And . . . everything, I
guess.’
‘Including us?’
After a pause, she nodded.
He picked up his wineglass and took a sip. She
watched him, waiting for him to say something. It was unlike her to
hold back words. Are we so uncomfortable with
each other? he wondered.
‘It’s not healthy for me,’ she said. ‘Staying
here.’
He glanced at her scarcely touched meal. ‘At least
you’d eat properly.’
‘I mean, emotionally. I’m not used to counting on a
man. It makes me feel like I’m up on stilts, tottering around.
Waiting to fall. I mean, look at this.’ She
waved at the elegant table setting, the flickering candles. ‘It’s
just not real to me.’
‘Am I?’
She looked directly at him. ‘I don’t know.’
He pinched his own arm and said with a smile, ‘I
seem real enough to myself.’
She didn’t appreciate his humor. In fact, he
couldn’t get even the glimmer of a smile out of her. He leaned
forward. ‘Kat,’ he said. ‘If you always expect to be hurt, then
that’s what will happen.’
‘No, it’s the other way around. If you’re ready for
it, then you can’t be hurt.’
Resignedly he sat back. ‘Well, that pretty much
wraps up the future.’
She laughed – a sad, hollow sound. ‘See, Adam, I
take one day at a time. Enjoy things while I can. I can enjoy this,
being with you. But I’m going to ask you to promise something: When
it’s over, tell me. No BS, just the straight scoop. If I’m not what
you want, if it’s not working, tell me. I’m not crystal. I don’t
break.’
‘Don’t you?’
‘No.’ She picked up her wine and took a nonchalant
sip. The truth was, he thought, that she had a heart as fragile as
that wineglass, and she wouldn’t let it show. It was beneath her
dignity to be weak. To be human. She was convinced that one of
these days he would hurt her.
And maybe she’s
right.
He pushed his chair back and rose to his feet.
‘Come on,’ he said.
‘Where?’
‘Upstairs. If this is a doomed affair, then we
should make the most of it. While we can.’
She gave him a careless laugh and stood up. ‘While
the sun shines,’ she said.
‘And if it doesn’t work—’
‘We’ll both be fine,’ she finished for him.
They headed up the stairs, to his bedroom, and
closed the door, shutting out the rest of the world. One day at a time, he thought as he watched her
unbutton her clothes, watched the garments slide to the floor,
one moment at a time.
And what comes after is for
tomorrow to decide.
He took her in his arms, kissed her. He wanted to
be gentle; she wanted to be fierce. As though, in making love, she
was battling some inner demon, struggling against it and him,
against even herself. Love and war, delight and despair, it was
what he felt that night, making love to her.
When it was over, when she’d fallen asleep in pure
exhaustion, he lay awake beside her. He gazed around his darkened
bedroom, saw the gleam of antique furniture, the vaulted ceiling.
It comes between us, he thought. My wealth. My name. It scares her.
Clark was back from vacation, sporting a red
sunburn and even redder mosquito bites. While the mosquitoes had
found the pickings good, Clark, it seemed, had not.
‘One lousy fish,’ he said. ‘The poorest excuse for
a trout I ever saw. I didn’t know whether to cook it or put it in a
bag of water for my kid’s goldfish bowl. A whole damn week, and
that’s what I had to show for it. Lost three of my best lures, too.
I tell you, the rivers up there are fished out. Totally fished
out.’
‘So how many did Beth catch?’ asked Kat.
‘Beth?’
‘You know. Your wife.’
Clark coughed. ‘Six,’ he mumbled. ‘Maybe
seven.’
‘Only seven?’
‘Okay, maybe it was more like eight. A statistical
fluke.’
‘Yeah, she’s good at those flukes, isn’t
she?’
Clark yanked his lab coat off the door hook and
thrust his arms into the sleeves. ‘So how’s it been here? Anything
exciting happen?’
‘Not a thing.’
‘Why do I bother asking?’ Clark muttered. He went
over to the in-box and fished out a pile of papers. ‘Look at all
this stuff.’
‘All yours,’ said Kat. ‘We left ’em for you.’
‘Gee, thanks.’
‘And you’ve got two dozen files on your desk,
waiting for signatures.’
‘Okay, okay. It’s enough to keep a guy from ever
going on vacation.’ He sighed and headed down the hall to his
office.
Kat sat at her desk, listening to the familiar
squeak of his tennis shoes moving down the hall. It was back to
business as usual, she thought. The same old routine she had had
for years. So why was she so depressed?
She rose and poured another cup of coffee – her
third this morning. She was turning into a caffeine junkie, a sugar
junkie. A love junkie. Hopeless relationships – that was her
specialty. She dropped back into her chair. If she could just stop
thinking about Adam for a day, an hour, maybe she’d regain some
control over her life. But he had become an obsession for her. Even
now, she wondered what he was doing, whether he was sitting at
his desk, missing her.
She grabbed a file from the stack on her desk,
signed her name, and slapped the file shut again. She almost
groaned when she heard those tennis shoes come squeaking back down
the hall toward her office.
Clark reappeared in her doorway. ‘Hey, Kat,’ he
said.
‘What?’
‘What the hell’s this supposed to mean?’ He read
aloud from a lab slip. ‘“Results of mass and UV spectrophotometry
show following, nonquantitative: Narcotic present,
levo-N-cyclobutylmethyl-6, 10-betadihydroxy class. Full
identification pending.”’ He looked up at her. ‘What’s all
this?’
‘You must have one of my slips. The drug’s
Zestron-L.’
‘Never heard of it.’
‘Here, I’ll take care of the report.’
‘But it’s got my name on it.’
A frightening thought suddenly occurred to Kat.
‘Who’s the subject?’
‘Jane Doe.’
‘Oh.’ Kat sighed with relief. ‘Then that’s
mine.’
‘No, it’s my Jane Doe.’ He
held the slip out to her. ‘See? There’s my name.’
Frowning, Kat took it. On the line next to
authorizing physician was typed the name
Bernard Clark, M.D. She scanned the Subject ID data. Name: unknown.
Sex: female. Race: White. ID #: 372-3-27-B. Processing date:
3/27.
A full week before her Jane
Doe had rolled in the morgue doors.
‘Get me this file,’ she said.
‘Huh?’
‘Get me the file.’
‘Whatever you say, mein Führer.’ Clark stalked away
and returned a moment later to slap a folder on her desk. ‘There it
is.’
Kat opened the file. It was, indeed, one of Clark’s
cases. She had seen this file before; she remembered it now. This
was the Jane Doe of the glorious red hair, the marble skin. The
page from the central ID lab was clipped to the inside front flap,
with a notice of a fingerprint match. As Kat now remembered, the
corpse’s name was Mandy Barnett. She had a police record:
shoplifting, prostitution, public drunkenness. She was twenty-three
years old.
‘Do we still have the body?’ asked Kat.
‘No. There’s the release authorization.’
Kat glanced at the form. It was signed by Wheelock
the day before, releasing the body to Greenwood Mortuary.
‘I called it a probable barbiturate OD,’ said
Clark. ‘I mean, it seemed reasonable. There was a bottle of
Fiorinal next to her.’
‘Were barbs found in her tox screen?’
‘Just a trace.’
‘No needles found on site? No tourniquet?’
‘Just the pills, according to the police report.
That’s why I assumed it was barbs. I guess I was wrong.’
‘So was I,’ she said quietly.
‘What?’
She reached for the telephone and dialed the
police. It rang five times, then a voice answered, ‘Sykes,
Homicide.’
‘Lou? Kat Novak. We’ve got another one here.’
‘Another what?’
‘Zestron OD. But this one’s different.’
She heard Sykes sigh. Or was that a yawn? ‘I’m
real interested.’
‘The victim’s name is Mandy Barnett. She was found
in Bellemeade – a week before the others. And get this – she was
set up to look like a barbiturate OD.’
‘Are you going to tell me what is going on?’ whined Clark.
Kat ignored him. ‘Lou,’ she said. ‘I’m going to
stick my neck out on this one.’ She paused. ‘I’m calling it
murder.’