Dead Sleep (40 page)

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Authors: Greg Iles

BOOK: Dead Sleep
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“What do you want to do?” he asks softly. “Whatever you say, I'll make it happen.”
“I want to walk.”
“You want company?”
“No.”
“You feel that Wheaton and Smith are both innocent, don't you?”
“Yes.”
“Okay. I'm going to go back to the office and study the aerial photos of the courtyards. Call if you want to talk. Wendy has a cell phone.”
I'm going to have company after all.
John squeezes my forearm, then motions to Wendy, who gets out wearing her usual Liz Claiborne skirt and jacket combo, the jacket there to hide her pistol. I resist the urge to say something smart; she's only doing her job as best she can. She falls into step a couple of yards behind me, and the sedan pulls forward and then passes us. As it recedes, I see John looking back at me over the rear seat, his eyes unreadable.
20
AS I WALK along the oak-shaded sidewalk of Esplanade, Agent Wendy trailing a few yards behind, my mind swirls with images I have no desire to ponder, and my stomach roils with the low-level nausea I've felt since Dr. Lenz badgered Roger Wheaton into telling us his disease rendered him impotent years ago. Frank Smith's revelation of Wheaton's plea for euthanasia only made it worse. The impact of my shoes against the sidewalk offers a metronomic distraction from those thoughts, so I focus my mind on that.
From Esplanade I turn onto Royal Street, which farther on becomes the center of the antique trade in the Quarter, but here on the downriver end it's a peaceful lane of homes and shuttered warehouses. I spent a good deal of time walking this grid of streets when I moved here at seventeen, getting to know a world at once seamier and more exotic than the provincial one I left in north Mississippi. Two decades later the sights, smells, and sounds are the same. Ornate wrought-iron balconies laden with ferns and flags climb the faces of pastel buildings, not so bright as those in the Caribbean, but festive in their stately way; the aromas of baking bread and simmering gumbo drift from the direction of St. Philip Street; and shouted cries of the urban New Orleans pa tois collide with rapid precise French spoken by tourists standing on the corner of Ursulines.
Just three blocks to my left, beyond Decatur Street and the levee, rolls the Mississippi River, where great ships bob higher than the roofs of the buildings. I feel myself drawn toward it, but since the water is blocked by the wharf at the end of Ursulines, I stay on Royal, walking at a native's clip. My inner ear confirms what I have long known, that I am below sea level, walking in a world that exists only provisionally, that a hurricane making landfall here would spill the lake and the river into the Quarter like a great bowl and cover everything from the Lucky Dog men to the tourist traps of Bourbon Street, leaving only cathedral spires, Andy Jackson on his horse, and screeching gulls circling the electrical towers.
At St. Philip I break left, making for the river. Wendy's flats go staccato as she moves to keep pace with me. The sound of a slide guitar jangles from the doorway of the Babylon Club, and with every step the Quarter grows more commercial. There are restaurants and pubs now, lawyers' offices, small hotels. Yet still the odd doorway leads down a tunnel that opens onto a secluded courtyard, beckoning with the promise of midnight trysts and masked soirees. I shudder in sudden awareness that the Sleeping Women may have been painted in one of these courtyards. How strange to know that last night, while the people down here drank and laughed and loved and slept, government planes crisscrossed the sky above, shooting thermal images of the buildings, searching for a garden private enough in which to paint a dead woman without interruption.
Joan of Arc awaits me at the Place de France, a little concrete island in the traffic. She sits high on a golden horse, holding a golden flag against the gray clouds, an imperfect monument to a woman who overstepped what those in power saw as her place; an honest monument would show her burning at the stake. Wendy moves alongside me here, for suddenly we are awash in a sea of humanity, surging waves of tourists and cars and French Market merchants hawking vegetables, coffee, and strange souvenirs. I can smell the river now, a muddy, fetid scent on the cool air. Slipping between two fat cream-colored columns, I trot up some flagstone steps, and then I'm looking over a narrow parking lot at the levee and the booms of a freighter whose red-painted waterline floats at the level of my eyes.
“Where are we going?” asks Wendy.
“The river. There's a walkway on the levee, across the streetcar tracks.”
“I know. The Moonwalk.”
She stays at my shoulder as I march to the little streetcar stop at Dumaine, then cross over the tracks and climb to the brick walkway atop the levee. The river is wide here, and the water high for this time of year, a gray-brown flood separating New Orleans from Algiers. Push-boats and tugs churn across the water at surprising speed, gulls dipping and diving around them. We walk toward Jackson Square, and in the distance I see the hotels and department stores of Canal Place, the old Trade Mart building, the Aquarium of the Americas, and the twin bridges arching across to the west bank.
We're not alone on the walkway. There are tourists with cameras, joggers wearing headphones, buskers with open guitar cases full of change, and restless bums trying to catch the eyes of passersby, searching for likely marks. As we approach and pass each, I feel Wendy tense beside me, then slowly relax.
Below us on the right lie the streetcar tracks and the parking lot that runs the length of the Quarter; to our left the levee slopes twenty-five feet toward the water, an earthen wall lined with riprap, the heavy gray rocks the Corps of Engineers uses for erosion control. Driftwood clogs the riprap at water's edge, and every forty yards or so stands a fisherman with a cane pole or rod, hoping for a catfish or a gar.
“Wendy, do you remember the big scandal about FBI lab people giving false evidence testimony? Dummying up results to give prosecutors what they needed?”
“Yes,” she says in an inquisitive tone.
“Wasn't it proved that a lot of the Bureau's high-tech forensic tests weren't half as accurate as claimed?”
“In some cases. But Louis Freeh made it a priority to correct all that. You're thinking about the sable brush hairs?”
“I'm wondering if the four people we've been badgering are tied to this case in any way at all.”
“The lab wasn't aiming for some known result in this case, Jordan. They just came up with a rare type and lot of brush hair, and one of the few places that lot went was New Orleans.”
Her answer is solid, and that reassures me a little. I can hear myself breathing harder from exertion, but Wendy speaks as though we're sitting across from each other at lunch.
“I've never worked a murder case,” she says. “But I have total faith in John and Mr. Baxter.”
I nod, but my faith is far from complete. Down at water's edge, a huge bearded man in an overcoat looks up the rocky slope as we walk past. He's far enough away that Wendy doesn't tense, but I sense that she could have her gun out in a second or less.
“What was Thalia Laveau like?” she asks.
“Really nice. She had a tough childhood. Her father and cousin sexually abused her.”
“Yuck.”
“Mm-hmm.”
“She was gay?”
“She still is, I hope.”
“God, yes.” Wendy's face colors. “I didn't mean that to sound like it did.”
“It's okay.”
As we walk on, she seems to withdraw into her own thoughts. Then out of the blue she says, “I don't want to offend you or anything, but I heard during the interview with Laveau, you told her you got raped once. Is that true?”
I feel a flash of temper, knowing the story is probably making the rounds of the field office, but it's hard to be angry at Wendy, whose curiosity seems part of an eternal quest for self-improvement. “It's true.”
“I really admire you for speaking up like that, knowing those guys could hear you on the wire.”
“It was a long time ago.”
“Does it feel like a long time ago?”
“No.”
She nods. “That's what I figured.”
“Have you ever had trouble like that?”
“Not that bad. A baseball player got really pushy with me in college once, in the backseat of his car. I waited until he exposed himself, and then I made him regret it.”
“Good for you.”
“Yeah. But something like this, where they snatch you off the street, someone who's all prepared with a rape kit—”
“We don't know the victims are being raped,” I remind her.
“Well, right, except for the woman taken from Dori gnac's.”
A wave of heat comes into my cheeks.
“I shouldn't assume anything about the others from that,” Wendy goes on. “We don't know for sure the UNSUB took her.”
Her words stop me dead on the walkway. “The woman taken from Dorignac's grocery was raped?”
Wendy looks confused. “Well, they found semen inside her. She could have just had sex, of course, but I think the opinion of the pathologist was that she was raped.”
As I stand speechless in the wind, a drop of rain touches my face. I had thought the police took DNA samples from the suspects to compare to skin found under the Dorignac's woman's fingernails. But they had more than that. And kept it from me. Turning left, I see a gray line of raindrops advancing across the river with the wind, dimpling the waves like soldiers marching over from the Algiers shore.
“I just put my foot in my mouth, didn't I?” says Wendy. “They didn't tell you.”
“They didn't tell me.”
“I guess they didn't want you to suffer any more than you had to, with your sister and all.”
My rising anger is dwarfed by hurt at John's betrayal. How could he hold this back from me? But then come images of Jane suffering terror and rape—
“God, I'm in trouble,” Wendy says. But instead of asking me to keep quiet, she says, “They should have told you.”
I turn and continue along the levee despite the rain, which is light and will probably pass quickly, if my memories of New Orleans are accurate.
“You know it's raining,” says Wendy.
“Yes.”
The tourists and joggers are moving a little faster, but the fishermen stand their ground, knowing the odds favor a quick blowover.
A clattering racket behind us startles Wendy, but it's only the streetcar. In a few seconds it trundles past us and stops opposite Jackson Square. To our right is the burnt-orange roof of the Café du Monde, and the smell of coffee and frying beignets wafts over the levee, making my mouth water and my stomach ache.
“Pavlov's dog,” I say quietly.
“Can we talk about something personal for a second?” Wendy asks in a hesitant voice.
“I thought we were.”
“This is different.”
I know what's coming. “Sure,” I tell her, dreading the questions to follow.
“I think John has a thing for you.”
“He does,” I reply.
“And you have a thing for him?”
“Yes.”
As a tall man in a sock cap approaches, she tenses and waits for him to pass. After he does, she looks back over her shoulder until he's well away.
“Well, I know you know I like him. John knows, too, I think. I mean, he'd have to be blind, I guess. When I feel something for somebody, I'm not very subtle about it.”
“Nobody is, when they really feel something.”
“I guess I'm just not what he's looking for,” she says, her voice remarkably free of self-pity. “I mean, I know he likes me and everything, but . . . you know what I mean.”
“I know what you mean. It's never easy.”
She shrugs. “The weird thing is, I'm not jealous of you. If it was another woman from the office, I probably would be.” She kicks a small rock lying on the bricks. “Who am I kidding? I know I would be. I'd be comparing myself to her and asking why I fell short. But you're different.”
Ahead on our right, there's a guitarist playing blues on a bench. A woman stands behind him, holding an umbrella over his head to protect the instrument from the rain. A knot of people listens with appreciation.
“Probably not as different as you think,” I tell her. “I'm just a woman.”
“No, you are. So many women I know—professional women—they're struggling for respect all the time. They're so conscious of how they're being treated, constantly looking for respect, that they're only using seventy percent of their brains for their job. Sometimes
I
feel like that. But you just go about your business like you never even think about it. You just expect respect, and you get it.”
“I'm older than you are. Got a lot more miles on me.”
“That's it,” she says. “Not the age, but the miles. The fact that you've been all over the world, covered wars and stuff. Seen combat. I've never seen John or the SAC act the way they act around you—with another woman, I mean. Not even with female ASACs.”
“You'll get there. It's not any great watershed moment, though. One day you just realize you're part of the game instead of a spectator. You're on the inside, and there's no getting back out again, even if you want to.”
“I'll be glad when that day comes.”
“Don't be in too much of a hurry.”
“I think about Robin Ahrens sometimes. She was the first female FBI agent to be killed in the line of duty. It happened in eighty-five. They were trying to arrest an armored car thief, and things got confused. She was shot by a male agent who mistook her for a bad guy.”

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