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Authors: J. A. Jance

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“Well?” I asked.

“We never finished,” he said, “because we never found her. I was hoping she’d show up here. So far no such luck.”

“She wasn’t at the shelter?”

“She probably was there,” Jackson corrected. “If so, she wouldn’t come out to talk to us. And the woman who ran the place was pissed as hell that we had any idea that’s where Elaine was staying in the first place. It’s a domestic-violence shelter, you know.”

“But if LaShawn was her boyfriend and he’s dead, who’s she running from?”

“Good question,” Jackson said. “For right now, my money’s on Pastor Mark.”

“But he has an alibi for the time of LaShawn’s murder,” I said. “At least he claims to have an alibi.”

“He also has an attorney,” Jackson said.

Who also happens to be in attendance,
I thought, but somehow I didn’t mention that fact to Detective Jackson. This wasn’t a grudge match, but since he hadn’t told me about the nun, I figured that made us even.

By then the front pews of the church were finally emptying. When the King Street Mission people emerged, most of them wandered off toward three eight-passenger vans parked down the block. Pastor Mark and Dale Ramsey walked off together toward a black Lincoln Town Car that came complete with a driver in a black suit. The vans may have been good enough for Pastor Mark’s flock, but they evidently weren’t good enough for the shepherd himself.

“I guess that means he’s not going to the cemetery,” Jackson said to me. “And I guess that means Hank and I won’t be going either. We’ll just follow along and ask him if he has any idea why
Elaine would have left King Street and taken up residence in a DV shelter.”

“My guess is he won’t say a word.”

“Mine, too.” Jackson grinned. “But it doesn’t matter. Sometimes silence speaks louder than words.”

Hank showed up in their car right then. Detective Jackson hopped inside and they headed down MLK Way behind the retreating Town Car.

It took about fifteen minutes to get the funeral procession formed up and ready to travel. I walked back to my Mercedes. Once the procession rolled past, I pulled into what I assumed was the caboose position as we headed south for Renton and the Mount Olivet Cemetery. A block or two south of Church Street I noticed that another vehicle, an older-model Honda, had pulled in behind me. There was only one occupant in the Honda, a woman. She didn’t turn on her headlights, but as the procession made its way south, it was clear she was part of LaShawn Tompkins’s funeral cortège.

Homicide detectives always look for things that are slightly out of the norm, slightly off. Funerals aren’t fun, and most of the people who bother showing up for them want full credit for doing so. They sign guest books. They chat with grieving friends and family members. They
want
survivors to know they were there, almost as though they were storing up stars in their crowns or putting in markers for when the time comes for
their
own funerals. But the lady in the Honda clearly wasn’t looking for credit, and the fact that she was deliberately avoiding attention captured mine.

So before we reached the gates to Mount Olivet, I peeled off onto a side street. Most of the cars in the procession followed the
hearse on into the cemetery and stopped close to a canopy-covered grave site. The Honda, on the other hand, stopped just inside the gate.

The woman who exited the vehicle was sturdily built. She was black, in her mid-thirties, and wore her shoulder-length hair in a cascade of tiny braids. She was dressed in boots and a long denim skirt. She went over to the grassy edge of the road, far enough to see the people clustering around the grave site. The woman watched the funeral attendees, but none of them noticed her, and she wasn’t seeing me, either. I stepped out of the Mercedes and walked up behind her.

“Ms. Manning?” I asked.

Startled, she jumped and then spun around to face me. “Who are you?” she demanded.

“My name’s Beaumont,” I told her. “J. P. Beaumont. I’m an investigator with the Washington State Attorney General’s Office.” I held out my ID, but she kept her eyes on my face rather than on my identification or my badge.

“I shouldn’t have come,” she said simply.

“From what I’ve been told, you and LaShawn Tompkins were an item,” I returned. “Why wouldn’t you come to his funeral?”

“I don’t want to talk to you,” she said. “I don’t want to talk to anybody.” She dodged away from me and headed back toward the Honda, but I managed to beat her to the driver’s door.

“We’re trying to figure out what happened to him,” I said. “Don’t you want to help us?”

“Somebody shot him.” She was crying now. Tears streamed down her cheeks, leaving glistening tracks on her skin.

“Do you know who killed him or why?” I asked.

She shook her head. “All I know for sure is that LaShawn is dead.”

“Why did you leave King Street Mission, Ms. Manning?” I pressed. “And why are you staying in a domestic-violence shelter? What are you afraid of? Who are you afraid of?”

Without answering she tried to reach around me to grasp the door handle, but I was in the way. When the attempt failed, instead of falling back she leaned into me, weeping uncontrollably on my shoulder. For a moment I didn’t quite know what to do. Eventually, with no other choice, I wrapped my arms around her and held her close.

“Shhhh,” I said, patting her. “It’s going to be all right.”

Finally she drew back, wiping fiercely at her eyes. “I’m sorry,” she said. “That was stupid of me.”

“Grieving isn’t stupid,” I said. “But not talking to me about this would be. Please, Ms. Manning, that’s all I’m asking you to do—just talk to me. Tell me what you know or even what you think you know. Don’t you owe LaShawn that much?”

“Yes, but not here,” she said, turning back toward the group clustered around LaShawn Tompkins’s open grave. “Let’s go somewhere else.”

“My car or yours?” I asked.

“It’s not mine,” Elaine answered. “It belongs to a friend of mine—from the shelter. But I can’t leave it here. I saw a Burger King on the way here, down by 405. What if I meet you there?”

“That’ll be fine,” I said. “You lead the way.”

I
thought Elaine might try to skip out on me, but she didn’t. We drove straight to the Burger King and parked side by side. Inside she went to one of the window booths while I placed our order—coffee for me, Diet Coke for her.

By the time I got to the booth she was putting away a com-pact, having repaired the damage her tears had done to her makeup, and she seemed to have her emotions well in hand.

“I didn’t see Pastor Mark get out of any of the buses at the cemetery,” she said.

“That’s because he didn’t go there,” I told her. “He was at the funeral, but I think he was annoyed because he didn’t get to run that show. He left the church and drove off in the opposite direction with Mr. Ramsey.”

“Oh,” Elaine said.

“Is Pastor Mark the one you’re afraid of?” I asked.

She nodded. “Is it that obvious?”

“I’m a detective, remember? But what isn’t obvious is why.”

“Pastor Mark has a temper,” Elaine said.

“I already figured that out,” I interjected.

“And he didn’t approve.”

“Of you and LaShawn?”

She nodded. “Pastor Mark claimed we were setting a bad example for the other people at the mission, and he made it pretty clear that if LaShawn and I insisted on being a couple we’d have to leave King Street.”

“Would that have been a problem?” I asked.

“More to Pastor Mark than for us,” Elaine returned.

“Why’s that?”

“Because we were his best worker bees. LaShawn did a lot of the physical labor around the place, in addition to much of the active counseling. He was the one who made sure people were doing the work they needed to be doing.”

“You mean work as in jobs—as in the duty roster I saw?”

“I ran the household end of it—made up the duty roster and ordered supplies,” she said. “And I handled client intake. Yes, Pastor Mark is the one with the degree in divinity, but LaShawn was way better than Pastor Mark at doing the kind of spiritual work it takes to turn lives around. After all, LaShawn had actually
been
there. He knew what it was like to be cast into the lion’s den and walk out unscathed because it happened to him. His was an example other people could relate to and copy.”

“You still haven’t answered my question,” I insisted.

“About why I’m afraid of Pastor Mark?”

I nodded. She sipped her Diet Coke for several thoughtful seconds. “I think he was jealous of LaShawn,” she said finally. “And I think he did it.”

“Wait a minute,” I said. “You’re saying you think Pastor Mark is responsible for LaShawn’s death?”

It was Elaine’s turn to nod.

“But he has a foolproof alibi,” I returned. “At least he claims to have one. He says he was teaching a Bible study class at the mission at the time LaShawn was shot and he says he has a list of participants to prove it.”

“Pastor Mark knows a lot of people,” Elaine said. “Not very nice people,” she added. “Ones who may have come to the mission at one time or another but who, for one reason or another, have gone back to their old ways.”

“So he knew people and could put out a hit. But would he have done that over you? Would he gave gone that far?”

“I think he was afraid LaShawn and I would go out on our own and start a new mission somewhere else.”

“In competition with Pastor Mark?”

“He’s not good at competition of any kind,” she answered. “Yes, he was jealous of LaShawn and me, but I think he was even more jealous of the relationship LaShawn had with some of the clients. Thought it was undermining his authority somehow.”

“Was it?” I asked.

“Yes,” Elaine said simply.

“What happened Saturday morning?” I asked. “I heard you and the good pastor did a few rounds in his office.”

“The cops had come to talk to him the night before, but he never said a word to me about it until Saturday morning, when
he made the public announcement at breakfast. He knew what LaShawn meant to me. I couldn’t believe he’d be that cruel. I went to talk to him about it and things…got out of hand.”

“What do you mean?”

“I accused him of having something to do with LaShawn’s death. And he just snapped. Told me if he heard I’d even hinted to the cops that he might be responsible, that the same thing could maybe happen to me.”

“He threatened you?”

Elaine nodded again. “So I went to the shelter. A friend of mine runs it. I knew she’d take me in.”

I knew that this tale of joint romantic and professional jealousy was one that would gladden Ross Connors’s heart. If Pastor Mark had set out to clear the field of competition, at least it couldn’t come back to bite the state of Washington in the butt. In order to prove that to be the case, I needed more information—and so would Kendall Jackson.

“What can you tell me about God’s Word, LLC?” I asked.

Elaine shrugged. “It’s an umbrella 501-C corporation. Donations go to that. God’s Word pays the mission’s bills, owns the property, that kind of thing. And that’s something else—the money. I’ve heard rumors that some zoning changes are in the works that might alter the makeup of the neighborhood. I’m guessing if that happened, God’s Word would stop being a mission and start making money.”

“What would LaShawn have thought about that?” I asked.

“He was never in it for the money,” she said. “That wasn’t what he was about.”

But it was certainly another possible bone of contention between the dead man and Pastor Mark.

“Do you have any proof that Pastor Mark might be responsible for LaShawn’s death?” I asked.

“I know he’s a dangerous man,” Elaine responded. “He went to prison for murder.”

“LaShawn went to prison, too,” I pointed out.

“Yes,” she agreed. “But he was innocent.”

“How about you?” I asked. “You went to prison for armed robbery. Are you dangerous?”

It was probably unfair of me to bring up Elaine Manning’s checkered past. Listening to her speak, it seemed clear she was smart enough. As far as I could tell, it appeared that in her case, the King Street Mission had worked its magic.

“That was different,” she said at once. “I got into drugs when I went to college—into them in a big way—and I stayed screwed up for a long time. I was high as a kite and looking for my next hit when I robbed that Krispy Kreme. I don’t do drugs anymore, Mr. Beaumont. I don’t do them at all.”

I believed her on that score, just as I believed she could very well be right about Pastor Mark’s being responsible for LaShawn Tompkins’s murder. But if I wanted to prove it, I would have to have someone else besides Sister Elaine telling the story and making the connections.

Elaine Manning’s concerns about Pastor Mark sounded good, and they might have convinced me, but whether she was well-spoken or not, a jury looking at her most likely wouldn’t look beyond the fact that she was a convicted felon. Unsupported allegations from a reformed armed robber/druggie wouldn’t carry much weight on a witness stand. I doubted they’d make the grade with Ross Alan Connors, either.

As I left Renton and headed home, it was after four-thirty,
and I was in the throes of Friday-afternoon rush-hour traffic. After half an hour of stop-and-go driving just to make it from the Renton entrance onto I-5 up to Boeing Field, I finally bailed and resorted to using side streets. By then they weren’t much better, but at least they gave me the illusion of movement. I had visions of getting home late and finding Mel dressed and ready to go to the shindig. I shouldn’t have worried.

On the way I called Detective Jackson to let him know I had connected with Elaine Manning. He was not a happy camper. “You mean, after I went chasing that woman all over God’s creation you ended up tracking her down after I left the funeral?”

“What can I say? I just lucked out.”

“What’s the deal?” he said, grumbling. So I told him what Elaine had told me, ending by letting him know that I had cleared the way for him and Ramsdahl to stop by and see her the next day. That made him a little less grumpy.

“All right, then,” he said. “You think she’s credible?”

“I think she definitely believes Pastor Mark Granger had something to do with LaShawn Tompkins’s death.”

“We’ll take a closer look at his alibi, then,” Jackson said. “And we’ll also start looking around at some of his associates.”

“Did he talk to you?”

“Are you kidding? His attorney wouldn’t let him say a word. But thanks for the help, Beau. I appreciate it.”

“Any luck tracking that nun that was seen in the neighborhood the night LaShawn was shot?” I put the question out there just to let him know that I knew and to see what he’d do about it.

“Not much,” he said. “We’ve been looking into it, but nothing so far.”

“You let me know if you do,” I said, “and I’ll do the same.”

When I finally walked in the door at a quarter to six I was astonished to find Mel dressed in the clothing she had worn to work much earlier that morning. She glanced up at me from the kitchen counter, where she and Todd were still hard at work.

“How’s it going?” she asked.

“Slow,” I said, kissing her hello. “Very slow. What about you?”

“Pretty much the same,” she said. “There’s a lot of material here.”

Todd roused himself from his computer and sent an unabashedly admiring look in Mel’s direction. “If you want me to hang around and work on this over the weekend…” he began.

But Mel jumped in to send him packing. “No,” she said. “You go right ahead with your plans. We have more than enough here to keep us busy all weekend. Besides,” she added, pointedly glancing at her watch, “we have an engagement this evening. If we don’t head out soon, we’ll be late.”

Todd Hatcher took the hint. “All right, then,” he said, closing his computer and starting to stuff it into his backpack. “I’ll go. Should I take the abstracts or leave them?”

I shrugged. Mel said, “Leave them. We may have time to work on them over the weekend.”

“All right,” Todd agreed. “But if you need anything, call me. And here’s a fax number. If you have more notes for me to add to the spreadsheet, you can fax them down to me.”

Mel ushered him to the door.

“You’re sure you don’t want me to…” he began.

“No,” Mel said firmly. “Take the weekend off, Todd. You work too hard.” Once he was outside the apartment she looked at her watch. “Better hurry,” she told me.

We went into our separate bathrooms to shower and dress. I
hadn’t tried on the tux after it had been altered—not with Lars Jenssen waiting out in the car—but the changes had been done expertly enough that the tux fit perfectly, sleeve length, shoulders, and all. At twenty after six Mel appeared in my bedroom door looking gorgeous in a long black beaded dress with a slit that showed a length of exquisitely formed leg. She held up a single-strand pearl necklace.

“Can you fasten this?” she asked.

Complying, I brushed her perfumed shoulder with my lips as I did so. “You’re beautiful,” I told her. “Poor Todd. The guy was practically salivating every time he looked at you.”

“I noticed,” Mel said.

“Did he tell you about his parents?” I asked.

“What about them?”

We were in the elevator and on our way to the car and I was starting to tell her the story when we were interrupted by a phone call from Jeremy letting me know they were safely back in Ashland.

“Good,” I said. “Glad to hear it.”

I thought that would be the end of the conversation, but it wasn’t.

“She’s upstairs right now,” he added. “Putting the kids to bed, but I don’t know what to do with her, Beau. She cried all the way home.”

“Kayla?” I asked, remembering that traveling with cranky preschoolers can seem like a long-term jail sentence at times.

“No,” Jeremy said tersely, “Kelly. I kept asking her what was wrong, but she wouldn’t tell me or couldn’t tell me. From Seattle to here, she just cried and cried.”

I felt a rush of impatience. It seemed to me that sometimes
twenty-something daughters and tantrum-throwing toddlers had a lot in common. After all, I hadn’t put all kinds of roadblocks in the way of Kelly’s romance with Jeremy, one that, to all outside observers, had seemed destined to fail. Now here she was raising hell over my relationship with Mel. It didn’t seem fair. If I was willing to treat her as an adult, didn’t I deserve the same courtesy? And eight straight hours of crying seemed to be overdoing it.

“Look, Jeremy,” I said. “This makes no sense. Kelly’s mother and I divorced years ago. Karen’s been dead for almost four years now, and I can’t for the life of me imagine why, all of a sudden, Kelly should take such an intense dislike to Mel. I mean, last weekend everything was hunky-dory. Now, less than a week later, Mel is evil personified. How can that be?”

“I don’t understand it either,” Jeremy agreed miserably. “Gotta go.” He hung up, just like that. Obviously Kelly had finished putting the kids to bed.

“What was that all about?” Mel asked as we climbed into the Mercedes.

I shook my head. “Kelly’s still mad at me, I guess, but she’ll just have to get used to it. I’m not giving you up.”

Mel gave me a radiant smile. “Good,” she said. “I’m glad to hear it.”

“Now tell me about tonight,” I said. “What am I in for exactly?”

“The pre-gathering gathering is in the Presidential Suite up on the thirty-fourth floor of the Sheraton,” Mel told me. “That’s for SASAC board members and their spouses and/or partners only. It’s the time when we all stand around having drinks and congratulating ourselves on what a great job we did. Then, at
eight, we’ll go downstairs for the fund-raising banquet itself. That’s in the ballroom.”

My tux, which had fit perfectly only a few short minutes before, suddenly felt too tight. “I’m going to a cocktail party?” I groused. “Oh, goody.”

“I talked to the catering staff,” Mel assured me. “They’ll definitely have nonalcoholic beverages available.”

“Right,” I muttered. “I can just imagine. God save me from the nincompoop who invented virgin margaritas.”

Back in my drinking days I pretty much regarded myself as the life of any given party—after I’d had a couple of shots of McNaughton’s, that is. Give me enough booze, and I’d overcome my natural aversion to small talk. I could chitchat away with the best of them, and swap off-color jokes with wild abandon. I always thought my party behavior above reproach, although, if my first wife were still alive, I’m sure Karen would have a few choice words on the subject.

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