“What do you think of Rachael's friend William?”
Another pause, a longer one. “Nice kid, I'm sure. I have to go.”
“Sonia! What is
up
with you?”
“Really, it's about to start, I'm heading for the podium now, and I have to get my PowerPoint loaded. Talk to you later.”
Click.
Theresa stared at the receiver for a moment before replacing it in its cradle, then continued to stare, ignoring the blinding summer sun through the lab windows and the fact that Leo had approached with a stack of blue-covered case reports, no doubt marked up with his red pen so he could be seen to be doing his job, and now stood tapping one foot.
I don't like this. I don't like this at all.
She picked up the phone again and dialed her cousin. Leo dumped the stack on her desk and walked away.
Frank said, “Just so we're clear on this, you don't want Rachael to know?”
“She'd probably never speak to me again. One year of college under her belt, but she's still in that teenage âI'm an adult with a right to privacy, and you have to respect limits la-di-da' stage. And it's all a matter of public record, right? It's not like I'm spying on the kid.”
“All right, I'm looking.” She could hear him tapping keys. “William Rosedale. Got four of them. Dates of birth: '63.”
“No.”
“How about '58?”
“No.”
“Or '93?”
“Maybe.”
“Rachael's dating a black kid?”
“No, white. And she's not dating him, not yet.”
“Then what's your problem?”
“I can tell when she's interested and when she's really interested. And when a public defender clams up around him and then won't even deny it, I get worried.” Theresa had lived with Sonia for three years and knew her every mood. Whenever she was less than voluble, that meant uncertainty, fear, or worry. Which, in turn, worried Theresa.
“Last one's '99. Too young to interest Rachael. So no matchesâthat's good, right?”
Theresa drummed her fingers on the Sirchie catalog. “Maybe not. Sonia does mostly juvenile cases.”
“What is
up
with that bitch anyway?”
“Don't call her that. Ever.”
“Look, I can understand an us-versus-them mentality, but she goes way overboard.”
“Sonia has her reasons.”
“Yeah, you said there was some history with her brother. Is it reason enough to be completely unreasonable?”
Theresa fiddled with the plaque on her desk that read
NON ILLEGITIMI CARBORUNDUM
âfaux Latin for “Don't let the bastards grind you down”âand debated briefly with herself. Then she said, “When Sonia was in high school, her dad split. Sonia's older brother, unsurprisingly, began to act out.”
“Let me guess. He was a good kid, just fell in with the wrong crowd.” Every parent's stock answer. Theresa and Frank had heard it so many times they could recite it in their sleep. No parents ever wanted to face the fact that their kid
was
the wrong crowd.
“More or less. He and some buddies stole beer and cigarettes from a 7-Eleven, flashed a gun at the clerk, and ran out the door, tripping over two patrolmen who had stopped for coffee. There's a scuffle, and her brother got a billy club in his left eye.”
“He lose the eye?”
“Yep. Then he got a judge who wanted to teach these boys a lesson and put them in adult lockup. Her brother was a naïve eighteen-year-old with one eye and didn't last long. He hung himself after three weeks.”
“Tragic,” Frank said, and she knew he meant it to a certain extent. “So this is the fault of all cops?”
“She figures her brother got a death sentence for stealing beer.”
“It was armed robbery, not joyriding in Daddy's car. What she sees as youthful high jinks looks to me like the first act of a budding career criminal.”
“I hear you. But according to her, she's seen the same story a million times since. She spends most of her time trying to get her clients into drug programs and halfway houses and places that might actually help them become more productive citizens, and she's stymied at every point by cops, prosecutors, and judges who think these kids are incorrigible and worthless. Yes, some are, but she figures she has to tryâfor the sake of the few who aren't and for the sake of the taxpayers who have to pay for all these trials and jails.”
“My heart bleeds. You want frustration? Try arresting the same guy for assaulting every girl he dates over and over because his charges get pled down to nothing. You want a sob story? The last woman that got mixed up with him lost her baby.”
“I know, hon,” she sympathized. “You're preachin' to the choir here, and I know the answer is that there is no easy answer. But it broke something inside Sonia that's never healed. She would still cry in her sleep sometimes, five, six, seven years later. But look, back to William Rosedale. Would juvenile records show up on your database?”
“No. I can't get into them without a reason. Have to protect those sweet children's rights.”
“What kind of a reason do you have to have?”
“There's a variety, but my niece sorta kinda liking this boy at work is not one of them.”
Theresa examined the sense of urgency she felt, trying to decide if she was a paranoid or a simply conscientious mother. Unfortunately, the paranoid explanation seemed to have more going for it. “Isn't there anything else you can do, without getting in trouble?”
“You make it sound like my boss will send me to the principal's office. I'm a cop. We
live
to get in trouble. Just get some more information out of your lawyer friend so I can figure out where to look.”
“I'll try, butâDamn, my phone's ringing. Can you hang on a minute?”
“Only a minute.”
Theresa flicked open her Nextel. “This is Kelly,” the cop said without preamble, “and you're not going to believe this.”
“Okay, I promise I won't believe it.”
Her humor went unappreciated, or perhaps unregistered. The words tumbled from him as if personally painful. “We've got another one. Another freakin' dead lawyer.”
The lobby of the Ritz, true to the genteel, blue-blooded roots from whence Theresa imagined it sprang, had not changed much in the past twenty-four hours despite having had two murders in about that same period. Rachael continued to hand out room keys with only a shadow of tension behind her bright smile, the older lady in the pink sweater accepted another Bloody Mary from a waiter who didn't look old enough to serve it, and Sonia crossed the elegant carpet clearly ready to embody her last name.
“They're killing us, Theresa,” she began, as if laying out her argument before this jury of one. “Someone's declared war on defense attorneys. Yesterday that would have sounded completely insane to me, but after seeing the response to Marie's death I believe it absolutely. The news, the paper, things I hear on the rapid transitâpeople don't hate al-Qaeda as much as they hate us. Surfer Girl even started leaving death threats on my answering machine again.”
Theresa wanted to offer sympathy; she could see how upset Sonia felt in the way she obviously hadn't combed her hair since early that morning, hadn't noticed a large run on the inside of her left calf, and her blouse, never well tucked into her conservative skirt, hung in a lopsided pouf. But when Theresa opened her mouth, all she could think to say was, “Why do you call her Surfer Girl?”
This distracted Sonia, but only momentarily. “Because I happened to notice her surf-shop T-shirt in the split second before she punched me in the mouth. Why?”
Theresa shifted her grip on the equipment she carried in both hands. “Just wondering. How are you doing?”
“They're killing us offâhow do you think I'm doing?” Sonia gave her a piercing glance that moved her right from the jury box to the witness stand. “You've heard about Bruce?”
“Is that the guy they just found?”
“Yeah. Your two cop buddies are up there now, I think dancing a jig over his body.”
Enough. “That's unreasonable, Sonia. They were doing everything possible to investigate Marie's deathâwith, I might add, no cooperation at all from her officeâand those cops are the ones who will be up most of the night again tonight to find this new guy's killer while you're in bed dreaming up ways to make them look like idiots on the stand.”
Sonia had the grace to flush, a faint rose that spread to the roots of her lank blond hair.
“And who's Bruce?” Theresa demanded.
“Bruce Raffel. He's the one whose body they just found. He's from Atlanta, butâ”
“Don't tell me you know him, too.”
“Sort of.”
“Theresa!” Neil Kelly appeared at her elbow. “Body's upstairs.”
“Okay. Soniaâ”
He added, “The hotel doesn't want us hanging in the lobby. They're worried we might scare the guests.”
Theresa popped Sonia's cell phone from the plastic clip at her waist.
“Hey!”
“This is my number I'm putting in here, missy. I want you to call me before you go home for the day. I need to talk to you.”
Neil looked at her in alarm. “You're not discussing the case withâ”
“Who? The enemy?” Sonia snapped.
“Not the case,” Theresa said over them, and then, with a glance at Rachael thirty feet away, “about William Rosedale.”
The flush left Sonia Battle's face.
Theresa followed Neil Kelly to the elevator bank, shifting her crime-scene kit to her other hand. She would probably need more equipment out of her car before she finished, and she'd have to rouse the fresh-faced valet to bring it around for her for yet another fee. The county would not be happy with the expenses, but what could she do? The traffic cops wouldn't let her park it on Public Square. Neil jammed his finger into the “up” button with a violent snap; exhaustion had probably set in.
“Who's William Rosedale?” he asked as soon as the doors closed.
“Personal matter. Who's Bruce Raffel?”
Neil paused just a beat before responding, no doubt debating whether to push her to define “personal.” Sometimes cops got a little too accustomed to interrogating witnesses and felt free to ask anyone about anything. Lord knows Frank did. But then part of that was due to their having grown up together, and an even larger part due to Frank being Frank.
Neil apparentlyâand wiselyâdecided to err on the side of caution, swallowing his curiosity with a heavy gulp. “Victim number two. Defense lawyer from the firm of Jones, Klein and Washington in Atlanta. Thirty-six, divorced, two children, checked in Tuesday. At least there's no mystery about how he got into the room.”
The elevator car stopped on the fourteenth floor. “Why not?”
“It's his. Standard king, no smoking, single, paid for by a credit card issued to Jones, Klein and Washington. Can I carry something for you?”
She handed him her ALS and stopped asking questions, preferring to see the rest for herself. They emerged into the hallway. It stood empty except for the bland but tastefully framed artwork on the walls and, she could swear, the same two cops who'd stood guard outside Marie Corrigan's room. After they recorded her name on the contamination list, she donned two Tyvek booties and went through the door Neil held for her. She tried to observe everything around her as she went but really saw only the dead man's knees, protruding from the other side of the bed and pointing their empty faces at the TV set.
She drew closer, careful to check the carpeting beneath each step before placing her foot, until she reached the far corner of the bed.
In the space between the bed and the deeply burnished end table next to the window, a man lay facedown, his hands and feet tied together behind his back with what looked like a black dress sock. No other clothing interrupted the expanse of naked skin. His head had taken more than one blow, and dried blood seeped through the carpet underneath it.
“Wow,” Theresa said.
“Not exactly my response, but I know what you mean,” Neil said.
“Some sort of sex club gone wrong?” Theresa said aloud. “Or maybe Sonia's right.”
“Right about what?”
“Someone's declared war.”
The battered body of Bruce Raffel had been discovered by an already nervous maid at approximately nine-thirty that morning. She had knocked, announced herself, received no answer, and entered. After seeing the body, she'd screamed, caught her breath, screamed again, screamed a third time and maybe a fourth (she lost count), and run out. She assumed the door had shut behind her but couldn't be sure. She hit the button for the elevator, decided she didn't want to be stuck in one with a homicidal maniac in the event he got in on another floor and found an unarmed maid waiting to be murdered, so she ran to the stairwell. One look down fourteen flights of dingy, isolated concrete steps and she changed her mind about the elevator, returning to it just as the bell dinged and the doors opened. Inside were an elderly man and his equally elderly wife, in town from Phoenix to visit their daughter, and by the time the car reached the lobby they were as agitated as the maid by her hysterical and largely incoherent tale. Upon entering the lobby, she shrieked at the desk clerks until they summoned the unlucky day manager. The maid informed her of the situation and, almost in the same breath, of her intention to quit just as soon as they could cut her a check to include that morning's hours. From there she went directly to her locker. By the time the cops arrived, she had all her belongings stowed in a cardboard box that had once held frozen fries and had decided not to wait for the check.