Dead Ringer (26 page)

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Authors: Allen Wyler

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BOOK: Dead Ringer
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Josh worked himself free of Lucas’s arm and began massaging his hand. Lucas realized he’d squeezed him too tightly and patted Josh on the knee to apologize.

The congregation was singing a hymn. He had no idea which one or when it started. Another thought hit. What if … ?

No, it wasn’t possible. Was it?

L
UCAS AND JOSH STOOD
at the chapel door, shaking hands and thanking people as they shuffled out. He hugged Laura’s teary sister and kissed her cheek.

She whispered to him, “A detective called. Lange, I think. He asked about you and Laura …” Eyebrows arched, she searched his face.

“Tell him the truth. I have nothing to hide,” he said, then turned his attention to the next person in line.

He couldn’t believe it; Andy’s ex-wife hugged him and said, “I know you miss her. I do. She loved you, Lucas. And I know you love her.” It was the only warmth she’d shown him in years.

He noticed Wendy working her way forward. When she finally reached him, they shook hands. She said, “I’m sorry for your loss.”

He nodded and introduced her to Josh. Then said to her, “I have an idea I’d like to talk to you about. Maybe tomorrow.”

She nodded solemnly. “Whenever you feel up to it.” She walked away as he greeted the next person in line.

After the chapel emptied, Lucas wrapped Josh in his arms and hugged, and for a moment they stayed like that, staring past the rows of empty pews toward the altar. This wasn’t the same Episcopal church his parents forced him to attend as a kid, but the interior evoked the same hollowness in him as it had back then, as if he were supposed to feel something he couldn’t. And he always marveled at those who could believe in their religion of choice and the comfort it seemed to give them. Or at least that’s what people claimed. He wished it could give him some comfort now, but it didn’t. He wanted to cry from the ache in his heart for Laura, but he also wanted to be strong for Josh.

Okay, so maybe there was a supreme power. If so, Lucas wasn’t about to give it a formal name. He believed when you die you’re gone, completely leaving behind only a decomposing body. Your legacy is only in the memories of the living. But at this moment, he wanted more than anything to believe in a heaven and that Laura was there. Most of all, he wished things
had been different between them, that he’d been able to wrap his arms around her while telling her how much she meant to him. Instead, she left life with the bitter taste of a deteriorating marriage and the beginnings of a divorce.

Josh said, “Sure you’ll be okay if I head back?”

They’d talked at length about whether Josh should stay or return to school to classes, a girlfriend, and a part-time job. Josh had said, “I need to get my head around Mom not being here. It’ll be easier if I’m not in the house. It’s so strange to be in my room and know she’s not coming home. And the garage … it’s …”

As much as Lucas wanted his son near him, he decided Josh knew how best to handle the grieving process. After all, it was only a few hours drive and they could talk on the phone. Lucas hugged him, said, “I’ll be okay.”

Josh looked at him. “You sure?”

Lucas nodded.

His son hugged him back. “I love you, Dad. Call if you want me back. I’ll be here as soon as possible.”

They descended the few stone steps to the asphalt drive and started across the empty parking lot to where they’d parked both cars. Lucas noticed three males loitering at the far end of the lot. Low-hanging baggy pants, baggy shirts. They didn’t seem to be paying him or Josh any attention, but their unexplained presence left him edgy, so he waited until Josh was inside his car, doors locked with the engine running, before he stepped away and waved good-bye.

Josh returned the wave and drove out of the lot.

Lucas checked to see what the bangers were doing. They were heading straight toward him.

43

L
UCAS GLANCED AROUND, SAW
no one else in the lot. Without trying to rush or show concern, he headed toward his car, thinking maybe he could make it before they caught up to him.

“Yo, McRae.”

They know me?
He turned to look at them.

The lead guy pointed at him in that overhand-elbow-extended-from-the-shoulder sort of way. “Hey, chill, man. Ain’t gonna do you no harm.”

The other two hung back as the lead guy pimp-rolled over and swung his hand out. “Luis Ruiz.”

A zigzag scar crossed Ruiz’s left cheek, and his nose was never set correctly after being fractured. Shitty blue tats marred his right deltoid.

Lucas reached out, half-expecting to be embarrassed by some sort of complicated ritual shake. But Ruiz simply pumped his hand once and let go, very businesslike, but the move didn’t put Lucas any more at ease. He hoped a cop would cruise by and take an interest.

“Do I know you?”

“No reason you should.” Ruiz rolled his neck, like working out a kink. “Lupita Ruiz. That name mean anything to you?” The guy sounded more inquisitive than threatening, and his body language was loose instead of hostile.

Lucas answered, “No. Should it?”

“I think so. She’s my sister. Or maybe I should say
was
my sister. That’s one of the problems. And the reason this should interest you. My sister dropped out the same time as your homie, Andy Baer.”

For several seconds Lucas stood openmouthed, shocked this guy knew about Andy. “How do you know that?”

“The cop, bro. Detective Elliott. She and Sis were tight.” He raised two fingers squeezed together.

It clicked. Lupita must be the missing prostitute Wendy mentioned. Lucas nodded slowly. “So what’re you saying? There’s a connection?”

“Don’t know for sure, but here’s what I do know. Your friend had a thing for girls like her. His car was found near where she worked. His head turns up in fucking Hong Kong, and a Suburban belonging to DFH was definitely seen in the area. I ain’t no A student, but I sure as hell ain’t stupid.”

“How do you know all this?”

Luis Ruiz ignored the question. “I need to find out what happened to her. Elliott seems to think your friend’s the key. And that Ditto’s the man.”

“I have no proof.”

“You saw your man in Hong Kong.”

“I
think
it was Andy, and I told the police everything I know.” The frustration and rage about the situation bubbled up to the surface, and he felt his jaw muscles clamp tight and loosened up.

“There’s got to be a way to find out what really happened.”

“Christ, you don’t think I’ve thought about this? I’ve gone through everything I can possibly do hundreds of times, and believe me, there’s not a damn thing more I can do.”

“That’s where you wrong, bro. There always something you can do. You just haven’t thought about it long enough. Maybe I can help you.”

“What can you do?”

“I don’t know. We just starting to talk. But we know a couple things. One, is the heads you saw in Hong Kong came from Seattle.”

“We don’t know where they came from. They were
brought
from Seattle, but Ditto denies the one I saw was Andy. What can I do about that?”

Ruiz shifted his weight and looked around. “What you can do is think. Think back on anything that happened around the time your homie went missing.”

“Why you so interested in what happened to Andy?”

“Because my sister went missing about the same time he did. What if they’re related? Too many things give me strange thoughts about this. Too many coincidences.” He shook his head. “Way too many. It’s not fucking right. That’s all I’m saying.”

What could he say? Frustration and anger at Ditto and the helplessness of the situation was blinding him.

Ruiz handed him a folded slip of paper. “This is my cell. You need help on anything, call. I’ll, do whatever to help. But my gut tells me that if we find your man we find out what happened to my baby sister.”

44

“L
UPITA WAS A GOOD
person. I got to know her well. We got close.” Wendy shook her head. “No way she should be missing.”

It was almost dusk. Earlier in the church parking lot Lucas had watched Ruiz and company walk away before he climbed into the Volvo and fired the ignition. He’d sat there thinking over Ruiz’s words before calling Wendy on her cell. Now they sat in Lucas’s car facing a six-foot galvanized fence intertwined with thick blackberry vines. Beyond that stretched a breath-stealing panorama of Elliott Bay and downtown Seattle stretching west to Alki Point. Wendy’s car was parallel to his. At the other end of the parking lot a brood of Asian shutterbugs milled around a tour bus.

Elliott said, “Luis hated what she was doing. I mean, he isn’t a model citizen himself. Nor is the gang he runs with. But he really loved her. And he made sure she didn’t get into the drug thing or any of the other occupational hazards.”

Lucas nodded for her to continue.

“The impressive thing is that these two kids were able to survive on their own by living on the street after their parents died.”

Lucas realized he was only paying half attention to her; the other half was zeroed in on Ditto, ruminating over what role he played in Andy’s death. Or had he only brokered his body
after the fact? Either way, Ditto was involved. The question was: how to prove it?

Wendy said, “If we want to take down Ditto, we have to do it in a logical sequence. Find a direct link to him. And that just
has
to be Andy. Which brings us right back to where we started. Is there anything you can think of to prove whose head that was in Hong Kong?”

“Jesus,” he snapped at her, “don’t you think I’ve been over that a thousand times?”

“I thought you called this meeting. If you want to leave, go right ahead.”

He held up his hand. “Sorry. It’s just … I’m so goddamn angry I …” Words failed him.

She appeared to soften. “Apology accepted. Believe me, I feel your frustration. But one thing I’ve learned is to keep going back over things again and again, looking for something to help jog your memory. Can we do that one more time?”

Lucas really didn’t see how that would help. Truth be told, he was sick of spending so much time discussing it. But he knew Wendy only wanted to help. “One more time and that’s it. I can’t do this any longer.”

She pulled out a small recorder from her purse. “I appreciate it. Tell you what. How about this time we listen to the tape of your initial statement?”

“Wait!” His pulse accelerated. It was too obvious. Worse yet, it’d been with him all along. How could he have missed it? “I can do it. I can prove it.”

45

W
ENDY LOOKED AT LUCAS
with suspicion. “Prove what?”

“That it really was Andy’s head in Hong Kong.”

“How?”

“HDTV.”

“Come again?”

“The dissection. They recorded the whole thing in high-definition.” A hundred and ten volts of excitement rippled through him, his mind running at warp speed, going back over the sequence of events that morning, making sure he had it right. Entering the room, walking to the table, looking to his right as he passed the rack of Sony equipment with the glowing blue lights and dials and the smell of warm electronics. They were recording
before
he removed the towel, meaning Andy’s face must’ve been clearly documented. “Yes. It should all be there. Everything I told you.”

She just stared at him.

“And now that I think about it, Andy had a scar … behind his right ear. When he was a kid he had a bad case of mastoiditis and ended up having his mastoid cleaned out. There was a scar behind his ear. The camera over the table should be able to show us that. Wouldn’t that help prove it was him?”

She stared at him a moment longer before saying, “I hope you’re not kidding. And if you’re not, please tell me you can get a copy.”

“I don’t see why not. Jimmy said after he edited it he’d send a copy, so no reason I can’t just ask for the unedited version. All we need are the initial shots that show his face.” Were they recording when the group using Andy’s head turned the head to the side? And would the recordings be clear enough to look for the scar? Probably. So, yeah, that should be there too.

Wendy held up a hand. “Hold on. Before we get too excited, let me think about this. We want to do it right. Not have any chain of evidence screwup. What was it? Tape or DVD?”

“I’m not sure. But I want to say DVD.”

“Where is it?”

“Hong Kong. Jimmy Wong has it.”

“No, I mean is the recording at the hospital or someone’s home?”

“I don’t know. The hospital, I suppose. That’s where they recorded it.” But Wong intended to edit down the files to just the essential teaching parts. Were the DVDs gone by now?

“Got a phone number, some way to contact Wong?”

Lucas had to think about that. The invitation to come to Hong Kong had come by mail, he remembered. But did he still have it? They’d exchanged a few emails, but again, they’d been deleted from the computer. Could he find them? “I don’t know.”

46

L
UCAS LEANED AGAINST THE
kitchen counter. Holding a copy of Wong’s emails in his left hand, the paper still warm from the printer, he picked up the phone in his right and used his thumb to punch in the long string of numbers for an international call to Wong’s office. Wong’s contact numbers—in Mandarin and English—were included in his signature on every email.

A female voice answered in Chinese.

Lucas asked, “Do you speak English?”

She answered, “Yes.”

“This is Dr. McRae. I need to speak with Dr. Wong. It’s an emergency.”

“I’m sorry. Dr. Wong is in surgery. May someone else be of assistance?”

He left the message for Wong to call back as soon as possible and emphasized this was an emergency.

Wendy sat at the kitchen table in the same spot Laura favored for various tasks—reading the newspaper, writing letters, playing solitaire on her laptop—as if it were her desk. Lucas felt uneasy about Wendy sitting there, but said nothing.

Wendy asked, “She say when he might be back in the office?”

“No. Just that she’d give him the message. When he’s not available, he’s usually tied up in surgery.”

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