Authors: Randy Alcorn
Tags: #Mystery Fiction, #General, #Portland (Or.), #Christian, #Christian Fiction, #Fiction, #Suspense, #Religious, #Police, #Police - Oregon - Portland
Truth is, I don’t want to lose my job. It’s a little late to start over as a professional hockey player or home decorating consultant or Cinnabon employee, though the fringe benefits are tempting. Nobody hires guys to wear capes and come to their parties as Green Lantern.
I retreated to my cave, the old brownstone, guarded by my trusty sentinel. I sat on the couch because I still smell Sharon there. She didn’t wear much perfume. It’s actually her I smell.
I went to the closet and pulled out a Seahawks blanket I got her for our anniversary, on April 3. You may think it was a lousy gift, but she loved it. She was that kind of woman—a football-loving woman, a pizza-loving woman. A Hall of Fame woman. She bundled up in that Seahawks blanket all the time and still thanked me for it five years later. I’ll never wash it because her scent’s stronger there than anywhere else.
I can’t smell Sharon as much as I used to. I’m afraid one of these days I won’t smell her at all. And then the last living trace of her will be gone forever.
I have thousands of pictures of dead bodies and less than a dozen of my own wife. If I were a contortionist, I’d kick my rear end for this.
Will she just disappear as my memories fade? When I’m gone, will Saint Sharon be no longer?
“Open his eyes, Lord,” she said. “Help him see the unseen—to behold Your kindnesses to him.”
“I grant him hundreds of graces each day, from the air he breathes to the food he eats to the roof over his head. He sees none of them, so it’s no surprise that he doesn’t see the greatest gift I offer him. I’ve been patient, not wishing him to perish.”
“But the clock’s ticking.”
“Yes, Saint Sharon,” He said with a smile, placing His arm around her. “But I am bigger than the clock.”
I left home for Rosie O’Grady’s, returning three hours later. I’d managed to sip a few beers slowly and was proud of not being drunk. I turned the corner and saw a flashlight on in my dark house.
Not again. My head instinctively ached.
I drove past the house and pulled to the curb sixty feet away. I waited two minutes before the flashlight came on again.
I called Jake’s cell. “Where are you?”
“Home,” he said.
“Can you drive to the old brownstone right now? Just pull in the driveway and sit there. That’s all I’m asking.”
“Do I bring my service revolver, Sherlock?”
“Good idea.”
“You’re serious?”
I hung up and worked my way into the backyard behind the elm tree, next to the moldy pile of bark dust.
Five minutes later I saw the front of the house light up and knew Jake had arrived. The inside flashlight went off. Within five seconds the back door opened.
Fear kicked in when I realized Mulch wasn’t barking.
I followed the guy over the fence, through the Atkins’ backyard. I was grateful for that much, since as far as I know the Atkins don’t drink Earl Grey tea. He ran to a parked car, opened the door, and as he did, I saw he wasn’t a he.
He was a she.
He was Kim Suda.
I couldn’t follow her. I decided it was in my best interest to know it was her without her knowing I knew. I was also worried about Mulch. As Suda drove away, I ran back to the house, legs sore from my bike ride.
I ran to the front yard and raised my hands until Jake lowered his Walther from its bead on the center of my chest.
“What’s going on?” he asked.
“Intruder. I followed him. Her.”
“Her?”
“Tell you later. I think Mulch’s down.”
My keys rattled, but still I heard nothing. Truth is, I prayed Mulch was okay. There are no atheists when your dog’s in a foxhole. Or something like that.
I opened the door, where Mulch is positioned 100 percent of the time when I enter. Nothing.
“Mulch! Mike Hammer?”
I tripped over something big and baggy on the floor. Mulch. No movement.
“No. No.”
The light flipped on and I was looking at Jake six feet behind me.
“He isn’t moving,” I said. I smelled something, then saw it. A half pound of raw hamburger six inches from his mouth.
“It’s like he’s asleep,” Jake said.
“Is there a 911 for dogs?” I asked.
“There’s a vet named Megan at our church. I’ll call her.”
I lifted Mulch onto the couch. I shook him. One eye opened just enough to show his inner eyelid.
Five minutes later Dr. Megan Wood showed up. She put her hands on Mulch’s chest and by his snout. I pointed out the hamburger.
“We hide pills in hamburger. I think someone gave him a sedative.”
“They slipped Mulch a mickey?”
“Hamburger’s the best way.”
“It’d work for me,” I said. “What should I do? Make him coffee? Coke? There’s a hangover recipe with Tabasco sauce and black pepper.”
“Sounds like you’ve had some experience. His breathing’s normal. I don’t think it’s an overdose, just a deep sleep that he’ll come out of eventually. No sense taking him to my office. He’ll be more comfortable here.”
She wrote down her cell number and handed it to me. I told her I’d never forget her, and if she needed a homicide detective, I was her man.
Jake was checking out the whole house, pointing his father’s Walther P38, taken from a Nazi soldier, into every nook and cranny. I put Sharon’s Seahawks blanket over Mulch and sat beside him. Jake’s one of the few people I trust with a gun as much as I’d trust myself. He was a Green Beret in Nam.
Half an hour later I talked Jake into leaving. For the rest of the evening I thought about Kim Suda, trying to connect the dots. I never left Mulch for more than a few minutes, but I noticed a few things in my office that seemed out of place. The phone on my desk was positioned perfectly, at a right angle to the front edge of the desk. Too perfect.
I disconnected it from the wall. Then I opened the mouthpiece quietly. In it I found a tiny device.
Kim Suda had bugged my phone.
I heard a gurgle eight feet away. I rushed back to see two tired eyes peering at me. I stretched out my hand, and he licked it. I hugged him and fried him some bacon, unleashing its magical healing properties. He ate it slowly but gratefully.
Mike Hammer was back.
And I vowed to make the dog drugger pay.
31
“Come, Watson, come! The game is afoot. Not a word! Into your clothes and come!”
S
HERLOCK
H
OLMES
,
T
HE
A
DVENTURE OF THE
A
BBEY
G
RANGE
S
ATURDAY
, D
ECEMBER
21, 9:00
A.M
.
MULCH
SLEPT
NEXT
TO
ME
. For breakfast, I made him waffles and threw an extra egg into the mix. He likes them fluffy. I usually toss him waffle portions, and he jumps to catch them. Never misses. But this time I hand-fed him, in bed. He seemed to appreciate the extra butter.
When Ray arrived two hours later, we stood on my front lawn, Mulch on his leash, breathing deeply. Some places you want to close your mouth and keep the air out. Not Oregon. The air’s so incredibly good, you want to keep breathing just to remind yourself.
“Suda’s toast,” I said. “She invaded my home, planted a bug, and drugged my dog. That’s as low as it gets.
Kim Suda
. Even her name sounds dark and slippery. Just try it on your tongue—
Kim Suda
. Close your eyes. Whisper it in the dark a few times. It’ll give you the willies.”
Ray closed his eyes and whispered, which is more than I could’ve gotten Abernathy to do.
Then he pulled out his bug detector, a TD-53, to sweep my house. He told me he’d test it on the phone I already knew was bugged. He said I should just do what I usually did, talk to Mulch but not to him. He suggested I turn on music too. Johnny Cash, the only country singer I ever liked, sang in the background to cover for us.
When we got two feet into my office, three feet from the phone, the audible tone on the TD-53 clicked faster and faster, like a Geiger counter. Ray turned it low enough not to be heard by whoever was listening in. The signal was strong.
Ray found two other bugging devices, one by the kitchen phone, perfectly hidden in the seam of a pen holder. The other was inside the lamp shade by my recliner.
We stepped outside to discuss it. I wanted the two we’d just found deactivated, but we’d leave active the one in my office phone.
We went to the front of the house, and he turned on the bug sweeper to check my car. Nothing. Still, he beckoned to his car and we got in to talk.
“A phone bug and two others?” Ray said. “Wow. I’m pretty sure I found everything, but some bugs can be turned on and off remotely, and when they’re off they can be missed.”
“They’re department issue, aren’t they?” I asked.
“Technically a private party can get them, but given these brands and considering the cheaper equipment you can buy publicly, I’m sure it’s police department hardware. Which means she’s in big trouble.”
“Can you access e-mail without someone knowing?” I asked.
“Private? On a secure system?”
“Her computer’s thirty feet from my desk, but she’s usually carting around her laptop.”
“Wireless?”
“I guess. Is that good?”
“I’ll let you know.”
Ray called me at 11:00 a.m.
“Suda’s home and her computer’s running, but she’s not on it. I’m parked curbside at her neighbor’s, inside her wireless range. She’s got a good firewall. Can’t get in without an alphanumeric password. You’re going to have to check her desktop. Computer stays on at the precinct, right?”
“Unless there’s a power outage.”
“That means some people will leave their e-mail open,” he said. “It’s Saturday, so she probably won’t be in, right? If Outlook’s open, just watch the screen and make sure there’s no movement. Otherwise if she’s accessing remotely you’ll bump her off.”
I went to detective detail and moseyed over to Kim Suda’s desk. Outlook was open. I did an MSN desktop search for “Ollie” and “Chandler.” It turned up some old e-mails to and from me, as well as a few recent derogatory comments about me exchanged by my fellow detectives, referring to me by a variety of anatomical terms. I opened her sent file and looked at the last ten e-mails.
Found an e-mail sent at 11:45 last night. It was the shortest I’d come across. All it said was, “Job done. Everything set.”
She’d done a job on me and Mulch, and I wondered if that’s what she meant. The e-mail went to an address without a name: [email protected].
I Googled “wearp” at my desk and tried searching for listed e-mail addresses. I found only forty-six people in America with the last name Wearp. Glad it wasn’t Jones. Finally I called Ray Eagle and briefed him.
I sat there thinking about dinner for me and Mulch. It was Saturday night, so my thoughts went to one place. One of the greatest natural resources of the Pacific Northwest—found nowhere else—is Burgerville USA, where hot beef under Tillamook cheddar cheese with the works can be bought alongside an unforgettable blackberry shake.
Sharon worked in a Burgerville on Eighty-second and Glisan, before we had kids. She’d give me extra fries and sometimes another slice of cheddar. In our last ten years together, besides Lou’s and Dea’s, it was my next favorite place to take her for special occasions. We used to kick up our heels and go there on Saturday nights. Sharon would call me a romantic fool.
Hugh Mulhaney, a cynical cop who’s been divorced three times, told me, “Being single’s really great. You make up the rules. You don’t call anyone to say you’ll be late. Don’t have to justify yourself to anyone. No one pokes you when you snore. No one suggests you clean out the rain gutters when the Cowboys are playing the Giants.”
Sharon would never make me miss a game over gutters, but if she were here, I’d do it for her in a heartbeat.
Ray called. “Name’s not Wearp. It’s W. Earp, as in Wyatt Earp.”
“Shootout at the OK Corral?”
“Got a billing address for the account.”
“So who’s Wyatt Earp?”
“Would you believe … Edward Lennox?”
Two things I’ve learned. First, never stand between Mulch and a bush he’s sniffing. Second, never trust Chief Lennox.
Ray, Clarence, Manny, and I sat in Ray’s living room. Manny, moving stiffly due to his broken rib, eyed Abernathy repeatedly, despite the big guy’s continual apologies and offers to help. Manny didn’t want to be there with us, but then Manny doesn’t want to be anywhere. He went on and on about the miserable failure it had been when I quizzed the detectives about their backgrounds.
Finally I stopped him. “We’ve got to know motives, and to do it we’ve got to find out people’s backgrounds, families, interests, habits. Their secrets. Since it didn’t work in our group setting—”
“Disaster,” Manny muttered.
“I asked Ray to do his own checking.” I looked at him. “You’re on.”
He glanced at an old brown clipboard, like a coach would use. “Truth is, I started on this a week ago. It represents lots of phone calls, Internet research, and beating the bushes.”
“We supposed to be impressed?” Manny asked, bringing Christmas cheer. “You haven’t told us anything.”
“Tommi Elam first,” Ray said. “Her father was a writer. He grew up in England—like Chris Doyle’s mother. Her dad met her mom while she was vacationing in England. He moved here to marry her. He’s successful enough to pay the bills. And he was involved in the kids’ education. Taught them to read and write.”
“No kidding?” I asked. “Never heard her say that.”
“He was a collector. Music, coins, stamps, baseball cards, pens, rare books, even a dozen typewriters from various eras.”
“How’d you find this out?”
“Somebody who admired his work made a website about him. Tommi’s divorced. Her first husband was a radical activist. Environmental stuff—chained himself to a tree. And animal rights. She got a restraining order against him. Said he was abusive and that he cheated on her.”
“She ever get violent with him?”
“No record of it. There were custody disputes. Two kids by that marriage. Now they’re in high school.”
“Where’s the ex-husband?”
“Passed away at age forty-four, two years ago, five years after their divorce. Surprise heart attack while jogging. No prior condition. Here’s something. Tommi went to Grant, same high school as Palatine. But he was older so they weren’t there at the same time.”
“She have brothers or sisters?” I asked. “One of them might have known him.”
Ray jotted a note, then continued. “Bryce Cimmatoni grew up in Pittsburgh. He’s a congenital Steelers fan, but we can’t blame him for that. His father worked in a steel mill. Most people of that profile resent those above and below them on the social ladder.”
“You’re a psychologist, too?” I asked.
“Does it describe Cimmatoni?”
“Yeah, except he also resents those who are level with him on the social ladder. I don’t think he’s ever met anyone, on or off a ladder, he doesn’t resent. Except his wife.”
“About his upbringing—his records are sketchy. Doesn’t look like he was popular.”
“Surprise,” Manny said.
I looked at him. “Not everybody can be Mr. Sunshine like you.”
“Not many social activities,” Ray said. “Won a chemistry award. First two years in college he was premed.”
“Cimmatoni?” I said.
“Yeah. He was accepted into med school. His sister was murdered, and next thing you know he became a cop.”
“No kidding?”
“Shot in the head.”
“He’s never mentioned his sister’s murder,” I said.
“You hang out with him?”
“No. But cops are like old ladies. There’s always gossip. How come I’ve never heard that story? You heard it?” Manny shook his head.
“Some people don’t like to talk about stuff like that,” Clarence said. “I don’t talk about my sister’s murder.”
“How’d you find this out about his sister?”
“Cimmatoni’s other sister has a blog. I did a search on Bryce Cimmatoni, and three minutes later I’m reading the inside story of the family, including the sister’s murder. She’s the one who said her brother decided to be a cop instead of a doctor.”
“A blog?”
“Yeah, I forgot—you don’t know how to use your answering machine either. I was able to access Cimmatoni’s Internet history—don’t ask me how.”
“Let’s leave it there unless it’s relevant,” I said.
Ray flipped a couple of pages. It’s odd to be a detective for a living and find yourself scared to hear what a detective can find out about you.
“Kim Suda,” Ray said. “There’s some interesting things she didn’t mention. In high school she got in big trouble for fighting three times. Twice with girls.”
“Catfights?”
“She was the Queen Cat. In one case she broke two teeth of the cheerleader who was homecoming queen.”
“Ouch.”
“Suda was suspended and the other girl wasn’t.”
“What about the third time?”
“She decked a male teacher.”
“You’re kidding.”
“She claimed he made a lewd comment to her. He went to the hospital. There were rumblings of a lawsuit, but he didn’t pursue it. I checked court records.”
“Sue a teenage girl for decking you? No thanks.”
“Suda has an old boyfriend, Skeets, some brainiac at Microsoft. He supplies her software. Still has a crush on her, I think.”
“Where do you come up with this stuff?” Clarence asked.
“Karl Baylor.” Ray flipped another page and smiled as he ignored Clarence’s question. “Single-parent home. Dad wasn’t around. Close to his mom. No great student, but he didn’t get in trouble.”
“Figures,” I said.
“Transcript said he was a journalism student. In Barlow High School’s library I got a copy of a school newspaper editorial he wrote. Baylor was a Christian.”
“Still is,” I said, restraining myself.
“Good article. You should read it.”
“This stealth evangelism, Ray?”
“No. If it were stealth, you wouldn’t have seen it coming. Baylor has a petite wife, two kids, and two hamsters.”
“Hamsters? Don’t let Clarence near them. He’d dunk ’em in a heartbeat.”
Abernathy’s eyes threw darts at me.
“How’s Brent doing, anyway? Remember that Boys Town emblem? You and Brent could do one, with Brent on your shoulder: ‘He ain’t heavy, he’s my hamster.’ ”
All three of them stared. I can’t help myself.
“Jack’s records are harder to get to,” Ray said to me. “He’s even older than you.”
“Funny.”
“Everything checks out. Wrestling. Student body president. Model citizen. Did you know his daughter died when she was at Linfield College?”
“Yeah,” I said. “She was friends with my daughter. Kendra was at Portland State while Melissa was at Linfield.”
“How’d she die?” Clarence said.
“Suicide. She got on drugs. Coke and meth. Grades dropped. Became despondent.”
“Jack’s wife’s an alcoholic,” Ray said.
I felt my neck tighten. “What’s that got to do with anything?”
“You’re looking for information. Secrets. Problems, you said. Doesn’t that qualify?”
“She’s been sober for years.”
“Glad to hear it,” Ray said.
“It’s private information.”
“So’s everything else I’m giving you. I didn’t know some of the detectives had immunity.”
“They don’t.”
Everybody was looking at me. Ray went on.
“Noel Barrows grew up in Liberty Lake, Washington. Dad was a postal worker.”
“So he said.”
“Found a couple of job references from back in the day. They were good. No rocket scientist, but competent, dependable. In high school, average grades. Got into trouble once. Caught smoking dope. Played baseball two years.”
“Not golf?”
“He took up golf after high school,” Clarence reminded me.
“He’s good,” Ray said. “Two years ago, he placed fifth in a big club tournament.”
“Dirt on Noel?” I asked.
“No, but something sad. His senior year, two weeks before graduation, his parents went to Idaho for the weekend. When they were coming back, fifty miles from home, a drunk driver hit them head-on. Killed both parents.”