Detective Wade Jackson Mystery - 02 - Secrets to Die For (27 page)

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Authors: L. J. Sellers

Tags: #Mystery, #Suspense, #Murder, #Detective, #Police Procedural, #Thriller, #Homicide, #crime fiction, #hate crime, #Eugene

BOOK: Detective Wade Jackson Mystery - 02 - Secrets to Die For
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“Get over it.” McCray laughed, then got back to business. “Sergeant Lammers said you could probably use me.”

 

“Always.” Jackson loved working with McCray because he was tenacious, but never competitive or egotistic. “In fact, I’d like you to take this subpoena to Judge Cranston and lean hard on him. I’ll give you the basics of the case now, then you can read my full notes later.”

 

Jackson’s briefing was interrupted by a call from Detective Quince. Jackson took the call and signaled for McCray to move on the subpoena. “What have you got?”

 

“I’m bringing Derrick Michelson in now. In fact, we’re in the parking lot. He wants his lawyer present.”

 

“Let him make the call.” Jackson started to hang up, then asked, “What does he drive?”

 

“Just a sec.” Quince repeated the question to Michelson, who Jackson imagined was in the back seat, handcuffed and indignantly annoyed. “He owns a 2005 Mini Cooper and a 1991 Dodge truck.”

 

Jackson tried not to react but made a little grunting sound anyway. The professor was still in the game. “See you in the interrogation room.”

 

Sophie drove south on Alder, a long residential street leading from the University of Oregon to 30th Avenue and Lane Community College. The houses were older and packed pretty tightly together, but it was a great location for anyone attending higher education classes in Eugene. It was also a great location for someone teaching poetry to academic types.

 

As Sophie approached the small duplex in the twentieth block, her phone rang and the screen said
Keesha Williams
. She pressed answer and kept driving. “Hello Keesha. Thanks for calling.”

 

“How could I not?” There was a hint of panic in her voice. “I did take a poetry workshop, but the teacher’s name is not Mac. Her name is Michelle Peterson, but some people called her Mick. How did you know? And what does it have to do with the assault on me?”

 

“One of the other rape victims also wrote poetry and had recently taken a workshop. I’m looking for a connection and I think I found it.”

 

“There weren’t any men in the class.” Keesha sounded skeptical.

 

“I realize that. But it is something you have in common. Maybe the rapist lives here in Michelle’s neighborhood.” Sophie instinctively looked around. An older woman across the street was retrieving her mail.

 

“Have you talked to the police about this?”

 

“Not yet. But I will right after I talk to Michelle.”

 

“Thank you for getting involved,” Keesha said, a little choked up. “Maybe they’ll get this guy.”

 

“They will. Take care.”

 

A rush of adrenaline ran through her veins as Sophie walked up to the door on the left. The first two rape victims had this woman and this duplex in common. This was the heart of the story. She could hardly wait to get the details and pull it all together in a narrative form.

 

Sophie knocked and waited, but no one answered. She went next door to the adjacent unit, which had a sign on the front door that said
Poetry Workshops
. Sophie thought it wasn’t particularly clever or literary—for a poet. She knocked on the matching dark red door and waited. No answer there either. Sophie’s grip tightened on her shoulder bag. Where was Michelle? This interview could not wait. Sophie knew she had to call Detective Jackson very soon and give him this lead, but once she did that, she might lose her access to Michelle.

 

The blinds were open in the window on this side of the duplex, so Sophie stepped off the cement walkway and peered into the living space. The room had a large rectangular table in the middle and padded kitchen chairs all around it. The table was bare except for a laptop at one end. Sophie thought leaving the portable computer in plain sight was an invitation to get robbed. The lights in the house were off, and she didn’t hear anyone moving around. No radio played in the background.

 

Not knowing what else to do, she walked back to the other door, which she assumed was Michelle’s living space and knocked again. Louder this time. While she waited, Sophie pulled her tablet from her bag and jotted a note:
Please call me immediately
.
I have something extremely important to ask you about
.
337-9821
,
Sophie Speranza

 

She folded the note and stuffed it into the tight crack between the door and its frame, then went back to her Scion. Now what? Sophie decided to wait for a while. Michelle Peterson was the key. The poet had to know something crucial to these hate crimes. Sophie turned her ignition to accessory and listened to the radio for a while. Heavy metal, head-banging music from the early 80s. Normally Sophie loved it, but today the intensity just added to her edginess. After a few minutes she shut it off and tried to read the current copy of
Newsweek
, which she always kept in her car for the occasions when she had to wait. That little voice in her head kept nagging her to call Jackson. Knowing it was the right thing to do, she finally gave in to it.

 

Jackson didn’t answer—he never took her calls—so she left him a message: “Detective Jackson. This is Sophie Speranza. I think I have important information about the rape cases. Please call me.” She felt a twinge of guilt for not giving him Michelle’s name and address, but how could she establish a relationship with the detective, or trade info, without having a live conversation? He had called her back last time and he would call her again. In time, she hoped Jackson would come to think of her as an ally. Of sorts.

 

Sophie decided to sit in front of Michelle’s house until the poet came back. That’s what a cop would do. She owed it to Jackson…and to all the women out there who might be potential victims.

 
Chapter 24
 

Ryan paced the house looking for his cigarettes. This whole thing with Jamie was not working out the way he had planned. Up close, she was not as perfect as he’d thought. Tiny acne scars on her chin and forehead marred her otherwise beautiful face, and her eyes were two different colors: one green, one blue. Ryan had never seen anything like it before, and it kind of creeped him out. Not that he saw her eyes much. Jamie kept them closed when they had sex. That part wasn’t going so well either. No matter what he said or how gentle or loving he tried to be, Jamie still cringed and cried and lay there unresponsive. He wanted to believe it would get better, but sometimes he thought he might have made a mistake.

 

Ryan found his smokes in the kitchen next to the stove. He grabbed them and wandered into the backyard, lighting up as he strolled through the door. Not having anything to do always made him restless. If he were back at his apartment, he’d listen to music or play his guitar. He hadn’t brought those things with him because he was afraid to make any noise that would get the neighbors’ attention. Ryan stood on the back deck and stared at the ancient gas grill, tucked just under the overhang of the roof. The finish had faded to a dull gray and the wooden handles were broken off, but he bet it still worked. His dad had used the grill year round. It’s how he always cooked pork chops. Ryan could see him sitting there with a beer and a cigarette while the meat sizzled. Now the faded lawn chair was empty, and his father would never use the grill again. Ryan fought the urge to yell at God for being so fucking heartless. That would certainly get the neighbors’ attention. He decided to get out of the house for a while, drive around, and clear his head. Driving always calmed him down.

 

Ryan went inside to let Jamie know he would be gone for a minute. He didn’t want her to feel abandoned. She was lying on the bed, eyes closed.

 

“Jamie, are you okay?”

 

She half sat up but didn’t respond.

 

“I’m going out, but I won’t be gone long.”

 

“Don’t leave me chained. Please. If you get killed in a car accident, I’ll slowly starve to death.” Her voice was weak and pathetic. For the first time, he thought about what would happen to Jamie if something happened to him. “Don’t worry, I’m a good driver. I’ll be back.”

 

He walked over and kissed her on the mouth. Jamie didn’t respond but she didn’t resist either. Ryan thought she might be coming around. He decided to give her some more time.

 

At first he drove aimlessly, ending up on Willamette. He’d heard it used to be called ‘The Gut’ and young people would drive up and down on weekends looking to hook up with some action. Ryan wished he’d lived in an earlier time when male-female relationships were less complicated. He noticed his gas tank was a little low, so he headed west and ended up near his apartment. Ryan decided to stop in and pick up his guitar. He could play it quietly for Jamie to help win her over. Girls liked him better when he played the guitar. They said it made him seem like a softer person.

 

As he turned on 19th Avenue to come up the back alley, his heart jolted in his chest. A dark blue cop car was parked near the alley entrance. Instinctively, Ryan pressed the brakes. The cops had gotten smart and were no longer driving the obvious black-and-whites, but he could still spot them.

 

Were the cops watching his apartment?

 

Ryan cranked the wheel into a driveway on the left. Heart pounding, he turned around and drove back in the direction he had come.
Shit
! Why were they watching his place? Did they know about Jamie? Ryan glanced in the rearview mirror. The cop car hadn’t moved. A wave of relief slowed his heart. Maybe they weren’t watching his place at all. There was a drug house in the alley with a lot of traffic, and the cops were bound to bust it sooner or later. He hit the accelerator, feeling compelled to get off the streets and back to the safety of his hideaway.

 

What if they were watching his apartment?

 

What did they suspect him of? Did the police know about his dad’s house? Probably not, Ryan tried to assure himself. The old man had been paranoid and kept everything in Ryan’s mother’s name, even after she ran off. Ryan turned off Jefferson, drove two blocks, and turned again, in case they were following him. They may have let him drive away, so he could lead them to Jamie. You could never be too careful, Dad always said. Ryan checked his rearview mirror again and didn’t see anyone coming up the road behind him.

 

Did they know about the van? It was still registered to the woman he’d bought it from for eight hundred dollars. She didn’t know that, of course. Nobody ever checked with the DMV to make sure the new owner filed the paperwork. If you drove carefully, the authorities might never know. The less the government knew about his business, the better. Still, a cop was sitting outside his apartment. How long until they found him? Two days? Three at most?

 

Ryan decided it was time to leave Eugene. He had to let go of his attachment to the old childhood home and move on. Start a new life somewhere. The big question was: Should he take Jamie with him? And if not, what should he do with her?

 
Chapter 25
 

Derrick Michelson was ridiculously good looking. He was also tall, lean, and perfectly dressed in gray slacks and a purple pullover sweater. He looks gay, Jackson thought as he sat down across from him.
What does that mean
? Jackson didn’t know anymore. That thought—he looks gay—had popped into his head many times before, but this time he felt guilty about it. Was Kera right about this issue? Was he part of the problem?

 

Michelson looked out of place in the dingy gray interrogation room, like a well-dressed man in a soup line. He seemed calm and confident, nodding first at Jackson, then at Quince who sat in a chair off to the side.

 

“Thanks for coming in,” Jackson said. “We need your help to clear up a few things in a case we’re investigating.”

 

Michelson’s first response was a sardonic smile. “I have nothing to hide, but my lawyer will be here in a moment and I’d like to wait for her.”

 

“If your lawyer is going to advise you not to talk to us, then we can’t clear you of these crimes, which means you’ll stay a suspect and we’ll exercise our right to hold you for a few days.”

 

Michelson’s expression lost a little confidence. “You can’t hold me.”

 

“We can and we will. Our job is to protect the public.” Jackson leaned back and waited, giving the suspect time to weigh his options. After a moment Jackson said, “We are recording this interview as a matter of record. It’s an opportunity for you to establish for the jury your willingness to cooperate.”

 

At the word
jury
, Michelson blanched. “I am willing to cooperate. I have never hurt anyone.”

 

“Where were you last Wednesday, February 13 between 5 and 9 p.m.?”

 

Michelson reached into his leather shoulder bag and brought out a little electronic device. “I’ll check my calendar, but I’m sure I was having dinner with friends.” He used his thumbs to call up a new screen, then after a moment said, “Yes. I was at the Oregon Electric Station. Our reservation was at six o’clock and we were in the restaurant for about three hours.”

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