Mr. Monk Goes to Germany (2 page)

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Authors: Lee Goldberg

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CHAPTER TWO

Mr. Monk and the Balance of Nature

It was a beautiful Monday morning, the kind that makes you want to jump onto a cable car and sing “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” at the top of your lungs.

But I wasn’t in a cable car. I was in a Buick Lucerne that my father bought me when my old Jeep finally crapped out. It was only later that I discovered the real reason for Dad’s largesse. He’d actually bought the Buick for his seventy-seven-year-old mother, who’d turned it down because she didn’t want the same car that everybody else in her retirement community was driving. Nana was afraid she’d never be able to pick her car out from the others in the parking lot.

So Nana got a black BMW 3 Series and I got a car that my fifteen-year-old daughter, Julie, won’t let me drive within a one-mile radius of her school for fear we might be seen. Supposedly Tiger Woods drives a car like mine, but if he does, I bet it’s only to haul his clubs around on the golf course.

The day was so glorious, though, that I felt like I was driving a Ferrari convertible instead of a Buick. My glee lasted until I turned the corner in front of Monk’s apartment and saw the black-and-white police car parked at the curb and the yellow crime scene tape around the perimeter of the building.

I felt a pang of fear that injected a hot shot of adrenaline into my bloodstream and made my heart race faster than a hamster on his wheel.

Since I’d met Monk, I’d visited lots of places cordoned off with crime scene tape, and the one thing they all had in common was a corpse.

This wasn’t good. Monk had made a lot of enemies over the years and I was afraid that one of them had finally come after him.

I double-parked behind the cop car, jumped over the yellow tape like a track star, and ran into the building. I was terrified of what I would find when I got inside.

The door to his apartment was open and two uniformed officers stood in the entry hall, their backs to me, blocking my way.

“Let me through,” I said, pushing past them to see Monk facing us. He was perfectly relaxed, his starched white shirt buttoned at the collar and his sleeves buttoned at the wrist. Believe me, for him that’s hanging loose.

I gave him a big hug and felt his entire body stiffen. He was repulsed by my touch, but at least his reaction proved he was alive and well.

“Are you okay?” I stepped back and took a good look at him and his surroundings. Everything was neat, tidy, balanced, and symmetrical.

“I’m a little shaken,” Monk said. “But I’m coping.”

“What happened?” I asked, glancing back at the two cops.

They were both grimacing. Either they’d eaten something that disagreed with them or they’d been talking to Monk. Their name tags identified them as Sergeant Denton and Officer Brooks.

“I was burglarized,” Monk said.

“What did they take?” I asked.

“A sock,” Monk said.

“A sock?” I said.

“A left sock,” Monk said.

“There’s no such thing,” Officer Brooks said. “Socks are interchangeable.”

Monk addressed Sergeant Denton. “Are you sure your partner graduated from the police academy?”

“Maybe you just misplaced the sock,” Sergeant Denton said.

“I don’t misplace things,” Monk said.

That was true. His life was devoted to making sure that everything was in its proper place.

“When did you notice it was gone?” I asked.

“I washed my clothes in the basement laundry room this morning and brought them back up to my apartment to fold,” Monk said. “Then I heard the sanitation truck arriving, so I put on my gloves and boots and went outside to supervise my trash collection.”

Officer Brooks stared at him in disbelief. “You supervise your trash collection?”

“Don’t ask,” I said to the officer, then turned back to Monk. “So then what did you do?”

“I came back inside to resume folding my laundry,” Monk said. “And that’s when I discovered that I’d been brutally violated.”

“You lost a sock,” Sergeant Denton said.

“And my innocence,” Monk said.

“Did you look for it?” I asked him.

“Of course I did,” Monk said. “I searched the laundry room and then I ransacked my apartment.”

“It doesn’t look ransacked to me,” Officer Brooks said.

“It was a ransacking followed by a ran-put-everything-backing. ”

“Socks disappear all the time, Mr. Monk,” Sergeant Denton said.

“They do?” Monk said.

“Nobody knows where they go,” the sergeant said. “It’s one of the great mysteries of life.”

“How long has this been going on?” Monk asked.

“As long as I can remember,” Sergeant Denton said.

“And what’s being done about it?”

“Nothing,” the sergeant said.

“But it’s your job,” Monk said.

“To find lost socks?” Officer Brooks asked.

“To solve crimes,” Monk replied. “There’s some devious sock thief running rampant in this city and you aren’t doing anything about it. Are you police officers or aren’t you?”

“No one is stealing socks,” Sergeant Denton said.

“But you just said there’s a rash of sock disappearances,” Monk said.

“It happens,” I said. “I’ve lost tons of them.”

“You’ve been victimized, too?” Monk said. “Why didn’t you say anything?”

“Because they weren’t stolen,” I said.

“Then what happened?”

“I don’t know,” I said.

“Then how can you say they weren’t stolen?” Monk said. “Socks don’t just disappear.”

I was surprised and a little disappointed that Monk was becoming so unhinged over this. He’d been doing so well the last few weeks.

“Why would anyone want to steal your socks?” Officer Brooks asked.

“They are very nice socks,” Monk said. “One hundred percent cotton.”

Sergeant Denton sighed. “We’re leaving now.”

“You haven’t even taken my report yet,” Monk said.

“We do that and then we have to detain you until someone from psych services arrives and does an evaluation, which could take hours,” Sergeant Denton said. “I don’t think any of us want that, do we, Mr. Monk?”

“Somebody broke into my home and stole my sock,” Monk said. “I’ve secured the crime scene. What I want is a thorough investigation.”

“Can you handle him?” Officer Brooks asked me. I nodded.

“I’m a consultant to the police,” Monk said to them. “I work directly with Captain Leland Stottlemeyer in Homicide.”

“So why didn’t you call him?” Officer Brooks said.

“That would be overreacting,” Monk said. “It’s only a sock, for God’s sake. It’s not like someone was killed.”

“It’s nice to know you have some sense of perspective after all,” Sergeant Denton said. “There’s hope.”

“There’s never hope,” Monk said.

The officers turned their backs to us and walked out.

Monk looked at me. “They are shirking their duty.”

I didn’t feel like arguing with him. “It’s not a very valuable item, Mr. Monk. I suggest you just forget it and buy another pair of socks.”

“And what do I do with the remaining sock?”

I shrugged. “Use it as a rag to clean around the house. That’s what I do.”

“You clean your house with your socks?” Monk said, his eyes wide with shock. “That’s barbaric! I don’t even want to think about what you do with your underwear. Not that I ever think about your underwear. Or anybody’s underwear. Oh God, now I am seeing underwear. I have underwear in my head. What do I do?”

“You could throw the sock out.”

“I can’t,” Monk said. “It will haunt me.”

“It will?”

“I’ll always know that a pair has been broken and that somewhere out there is a sock waiting to be reunited with its other half.”

“The sock isn’t waiting,” I said. “It’s a sock. It has no feelings.”

“I will pursue my sock to the ends of the earth,” Monk said. “I won’t rest until the balance of nature has been restored.”

“One sock is all that it takes to knock nature off balance?”

“Can’t you feel it?”

The phone in the living room rang. I answered it for Monk. It was Captain Stottlemeyer.

“Perfect timing,” I said. “There’s been a crime.”

“That’s why I am calling,” he said.

“You already heard about the sock?” I asked.

“I heard about a murder,” the captain said. “What sock?”

“The one Mr. Monk lost and that’s going to haunt him until he finds it.”

In other words, Stottlemeyer could forget about Monk concentrating on any murder case as long as his sock was missing.

“I see,” Stottlemeyer said. “You don’t get paid enough.”

“Neither do you,” I said.

“But I don’t have to see Monk every day if I don’t want to,” he said. “And I get to carry a gun and drive a car with a siren.”

“You’re blessed,” I said.

“I wouldn’t say that,” he said. “My wife left me and my last steady girlfriend turned out to be a cold-blooded murderer.”

“I guess life has a way of evening things out,” I said.

“With my help,” Monk added.

Stottlemeyer heard that. I could tell from his sigh. “Could you ask Monk to pick up the extension?”

I did. Monk got on the line in the kitchen. We could see each other through the open doorway.

“I want to report two officers who are shirkers,” Monk said. “Flagrant shirkers.”

“I’ve got a murder here, Monk,” Stottlemeyer said. “It’s a tricky case. I could use your help on this one.”

“I’ve secured this crime scene,” Monk said. “I can’t just walk away. Vital evidence could be lost.”

Stottlemeyer sighed again. I could visualize him rubbing his temple, fighting a growing Monkache in his skull.

“I’ll make a deal with you, Monk. If you come over here, I’ll reassign Randy to the Sock Recovery Task Force and send him to your place to lead the investigation.”

“You have a Sock Recovery Task Force?” Monk said.

“We do now,” Stottlemeyer told him.

Monk smiled. Balance was being restored.

Any other cop would have been pissed off about being taken off a homicide case and sent to Monk’s apartment to look for a lost sock. But not Lieutenant Randy Disher, the captain’senthusiastic and loyal right-hand man. Disher was just thrilled to be heading a task force,
any
task force, even if it existed in name only to satisfy the crazy obsessions of a single psychologically disturbed ex-cop.

It was still a task force. And Disher was the top dog.

Disher didn’t say this to me, but it was evident from the way he bounded into Monk’s apartment, with his notepad out and a big smile on his face.

“What have we got?” Disher asked.

Monk told him. Disher took detailed notes.

“Can you describe the sock?”

“White, tube-style, size ten to twelve,” Monk said. “For the left foot.”

“That’s a pretty common sock,” Disher said. “Would you be able to identify it if you saw it again?”

“Absolutely,” Monk said.

I wondered how he’d do that, but I kept my mouth shut.

“I’m on it,” Disher said. “I’ll develop a detailed timeline, retrace your steps from the laundry room, and question the suspects.”

“What suspects?” I asked.

“The ones that will emerge in my investigation,” Disher said.

“It’s a lost sock, Randy,” I said.

Monk leaned close to Disher and spoke in a whisper. “I would start with the new tenant in apartment 2C.”

“Why?” Disher whispered back.

Monk tipped his head towards the window. The three of us looked outside. A young man in his twenties was making his way down the sidewalk on crutches. He was missing his right leg.

“That’s him,” Monk said. “He’s obviously an unbalanced individual. I knew it instinctively the instant I saw him.”

“He’s missing a leg,” I said. “That’s not a crime or a reflection of his character.”

“He doesn’t have a
right
leg,” Monk said. “So he’d only be interested in socks for his left foot. And you’ll notice he’s wearing a white sock.”

I didn’t notice. “That doesn’t make him a thief.”

“The day after he moves in, one of my best left socks is stolen,” Monk said. “Coincidence? I don’t think so.”

So that was what this was all about. The new tenant had upset the delicate balance of Monk’s world. He couldn’t stand the idea that someone with just one leg was living above him. It had probably been all Monk could think about since the man moved in and that irrational anxiety had manifested itself in a lost sock.

I felt like a detective who’d just solved a case.

“I’ll question him,” Disher said, tipping his head towards the man outside.

“You’re not serious,” I said. “You’ll offend him.”

“I’ll use finesse,” Disher said.

“There is no way to ask a one-legged man if he stole his neighbor’s sock and not be offensive.”

“I don’t see how it’s any more offensive than asking the same question of someone who has both legs,” Disher said.

“You’re right,” I said. “So if I were you, I wouldn’t ask anybody that question.”

“But you aren’t wearing a badge,” Disher said. “I am. Being a cop means asking the tough questions.”

“He doesn’t shirk his responsibility,” Monk said.

I didn’t want to be there when Disher started his questioning.I visited Monk’s apartment almost every day and I wanted to be able to face his neighbors without embarrassment or shame.

“You wouldn’t want to shirk yours either, Mr. Monk. You have a murder investigation to consult on.”

Monk nodded. We got the address of the crime scene and the names of the victims from Disher.

“This shouldn’t take long,” Monk said.

“You don’t know anything about the case yet,” I said.

“It’s a murder,” Monk said. “How hard could it be?”

“It’s not like it’s a lost sock,” I said.

“Exactly,” he said.

Monk had no ear for sarcasm. Thank God for that. If he did, I probably would have been fired years ago.

CHAPTER THREE

Mr. Monk Takes the Cake

Eric and Amy Clayson were a beautiful couple leading a beautiful life. They were in their thirties, with fashion-model, airbrush-perfect bodies and complexions, living in a wonderful, very contemporary Telegraph Hill apartment in that was full of light and had a spectacular view of the bay. The Claysons were the ideal twosome pictured in advertisements for every product or service that promised health, vitality, sex appeal, and endless happiness. The only thing wrong with this picture was that the Claysons were dead.

But even in death, they looked great. There was no sign of violence or bloodshed, just their bodies frozen in rigor mortis like two toppled mannequins in a window display.

Eric was shirtless and wearing pajama shorts. His wife was in a nightgown and a thin robe. They were both on the floor beside the dinner table, their chairs still upright. On the table sat an open wine bottle, two glasses, and a half-eaten piece of birthday cake, with two forks on the edge of the plate.

When we came in, a team of forensic guys was waiting impatiently to bag the items on the table and two attendants from the morgue were waiting just as impatiently to bag the two corpses on the floor. I’d seen them lingering and fidgetinglike that before. They’d undoubtedly been told by Stottlemeyer to wait so Monk could survey the scene.

Before we could get there, we were intercepted by Captain Stottlemeyer, who pulled us aside for a quiet briefing and rubbed his bushy mustache with his finger. That was his tell. He was stressed.

“The victims are Eric and Amy Clayson. They sell real estate together. They were discovered this morning at eight a.m. by their maid,” Stottlemeyer said. “The ME pegs their time of death at about midnight.”

Monk cocked his head and regarded the bodies from an angle. “They were poisoned.”

“That’s what the ME thinks, too,” Stottlemeyer said. “We’ll analyze the wine, the cake, and their stomach contents. We shouldn’t have any trouble identifying the poison and what was tainted with it.”

Monk walked over to the table, holding his hands in front of him like a director framing a scene.

“What’s the tricky part?” I asked the captain.

Stottlemeyer brushed his mustache again and gestured towards a tight-lipped man who was standing by the picture window, grimacing at the view. He had a military-style hair-cut and seemed uncomfortable in his dull gray suit.

“That’s Andrew Walker, U.S. Marshals Service,” the captain whispered. “The Claysons were in the witness protection program.”

At the mention of his name, Walker whipped his head around. He had the super-sensitive hearing of a Doberman pinscher and probably the same groomer. He marched straight over. I was afraid he was going to either shoot us or bite us.

“What are these civilians doing here?” Walker said. He spoke through gritted teeth, as if his jaws were wired shut. Or maybe he was trying to speak and growl at the same time. “It’s bad enough our security was breached without widening the hole with two outsiders.”

“That’s Adrian Monk over there and this is his associate, Natalie Teeger,” Stottlemeyer said. “If you want this case wrapped up quick, Monk is the guy who can do it.”

Walker glanced at Monk, who was scowling at the cake, his nose nearly touching the dried white frosting.

“I’m not impressed,” Walker said.

“He hasn’t done anything yet,” I said.

“I’m trained to assess the capabilities of an opponent in a nanosecond.”

“He’s not an opponent,” Stottlemeyer said.

“The same criteria apply,” Walker said. “He’s a lightweight. ”

“Why were the Claysons in witness protection?” I asked.

“It’s need to know, honey,” Walker said.

“They’re dead, Walker,” Stottlemeyer said. “What difference does it make now?”

“It reveals our methods,” Walker said.

“Which you ought to be changing anyway, since they clearly don’t work,” Stottlemeyer said, then turned to me. “The Claysons were lovers working as accountants for a mob family in New Jersey. The government threatened the couple with twenty years in prison unless they told us where the mob was stashing their money.”

I watched Monk. He was roaming around the apartment, straightening things on shelves and wiping away dust.

“They agreed to talk in return for protection, immunity from prosecution, and a big wedding in Manhattan,” Stottlemeyer continued. “They went off on their honeymoon and never came back. The government gave them new faces, new names, and new lives here in San Francisco. Everything was dandy, until now.”

No wonder the Claysons looked like the ideal couple leading the ideal life. They were fake, inside and out. But I appreciated the symbolism of them literally starting their lives anew on their wedding day. They were criminals with a sense of romance.

Monk stopped in front of the TV. The screen was black but the DVD player was turned on. He rolled his shoulders and cocked his head from one side to the other. He wasn’t straightening himself out; he was solving the crime. He hadn’t said a word yet, but I knew we were done here.

I glanced at Stottlemeyer. He knew it, too.

“We made sure they could never be found. But someone inside the Justice Department must have talked,” Walker said. “There aren’t that many people who knew who they were and where they were. I am going to find the leak and plug it with a bullet.”

“There is no leak,” Monk said.

“Then how did the mob find them?” Walker said. “Even if Big Carlo DeSantini himself bumped into them face-to-face on the street he wouldn’t have recognized them.”

“If this was a mob hit, why were they poisoned?” Stottlemeyer asked. “Why not shoot them or stab them or throw them off their balcony?”

“Dead is dead,” Walker said.

Stottlemeyer shook his head in disagreement. “But you’d think that DeSantini would want to make it as messy and brutal as possible to send a message to anybody else who is thinking about cooperating with the government: We’ll find you and you’ll die a horrible death.”

“The mob didn’t find them,” Monk said.

“The Justice Department was a week away from seeking multiple indictments against the DeSantini family,” Walker said. “The Clayson murders last night torpedo the entire case. You don’t see the connection?”

“The Claysons weren’t murdered last night,” Monk said.

I jumped in before Walker could shoot Monk where he stood.

“I think what Mr. Monk means is that, technically, itwas this morning,” I said. “The ME says they died after midnight.”

“It was dark out,” Walker said. “In my book that makes it night.”

“They weren’t murdered this morning either,” Monk said.

Walker turned to Stottlemeyer. “This imbecile is the best detective you’ve got? That doesn’t say much for law enforcement in Frisco.” He turned to Monk. “I see two dead people on the floor. What do you see?”

“I see two people who were murdered a year ago,” Monk said.

“Don’t you think they’d be a little more ripe? Besides, I was at their wedding a year ago, posing as one of the bar-tenders, and they were very much alive.”

Stottlemeyer rubbed his temples. “Monk, do you think you could be a little less cryptic and get to the point?”

Of course not. Monk had to have his fun. I knew it and Stottlemeyer knew it, but Walker didn’t, and his face was turning an ominous shade of red. Ominous for Monk, not for Walker.

“The whole story is right here,” Monk said, and hit PLAY on the DVD machine.

It was a wedding video. An attractive couple were taking their vows in front of a dour-faced judge in what appeared to be a grand banquet hall in an old hotel. I assumed, since we were talking about a wedding, that the couple were the Claysons before they got their new faces. Their old faces weren’t so bad either.

“What the hell were they doing with their wedding video?” Walker said. “It’s a major security breach. If anybody saw that, it would have blown their cover.”

They were romantics at heart, so of course they kept the video, regardless of the risk, which didn’t seem too high to me.

“I don’t see how,” I said. “It could have been the video of a friend or relative’s wedding.”

“It got them killed, didn’t it?” Walker snapped at me. At least his teeth didn’t break my skin.

“No, it didn’t,” Monk said. “But it does show the murder being committed.”

“How could it?” Walker said. “That video was shot a year ago.”

“Now you’re getting it,” Monk said.

“I’m not getting a damn thing,” Walker said.

“Just spit it out, Monk,” Stottlemeyer said. “Who killed them?”

“I don’t know who did it.” Monk looked at Walker. “But you do.”

Walker marched up to Monk and got nearly nose to nose with him. “I ought to kick your ass right here, right now. Are you accusing me of being the leak? Or are you saying that I murdered them myself?”

Monk took a step back to put some space between them and bumped into the TV. “Neither. Here’s what happened. Somehow the DeSantini family discovered that the Claysons, or whatever their names were before, were going to cooperate with the authorities and that they would be entering the witness protection program that night. The couple would soon have new names and faces and would be next to impossible to find. So the wedding was the DeSantinis’ last chance to kill them, but the couple was too well protected.”

“You’re damn right they were,” Walker said. “All the guests were thoroughly checked out, there was security at all the entrances and exits, and all the servers were U.S. Marshals. Not even a mosquito could get in that room and bite them.”

“But the DeSantinis got to them anyway,” Monk said and skipped the DVD forward, freezing the video on the happy couple cutting the wedding cake. “It’s traditional for newly-weds to save a piece of cake and put it in the freezer to eat on their first anniversary. So someone poisoned the piece of cake, knowing that wherever they were, and whoever they’d become, the couple would eat it in twelve months, which happened to be how long it took the Justice Department to prepare their case. The cake was a time bomb. The Claysons were dead before they left the wedding. They just didn’t know it.”

I looked back at the couple, and at the cake on the table. They were celebrating their anniversary last night. That was why the wedding video DVD was in the player and the TV was still on. They were probably watching it when they died.

Until death do us part.
It was a tragic romance that was doomed from the start.

“It was the best man,” Walker said. “He was the one who saved the piece of cake and wrapped it for them. The DeSantinis must have gotten to him. But I was the stupid sonofabitch who kept the cake frozen and made sure it was in their freezer here when they arrived. So you were right, Monk. I was the one who killed them.”

“You were being thoughtful,” Stottlemeyer said. “You didn’t know the cake was poisoned.”

“I knew they shouldn’t take anything with them from their old lives, not even a piece of cake,” Walker said. “I’m turning in my badge and taking early retirement.”

“Over this?” Stottlemeyer said.

Walker gestured to Monk. “And him. I completely underestimated his abilities. That kind of mistake could get someone killed.”

I have to admit I took pleasure in Walker’s misery and pride in Monk’s success. Walker was a jerk and deserved to be knocked down a peg. And I was pleased, and relieved, that Monk’s incredible roll was continuing. I was losing count of how many murders he’d solved lately right at the scene.

“Can I go now, Captain?” Monk asked.

“Sure,” Stottlemeyer said.

Monk started to go, but Walker stepped in front of him, blocking his way, and held out his hand.

“I owe you one,” Walker said.

Monk shook his hand, then motioned to me for a disinfectant wipe. I gave him one. “As it happens, I could use the federal government’s help on a case.”

“What is it?” Walker said, watching Monk wipe his hands. It obviously offended him.

“I’m missing a sock,” Monk said.

Walker narrowed his eyes at Monk. “Are you messing with me?”

“I never make a mess,” Monk said.

“But he does a hell of a job cleaning them up,” Stottlemeyer said.

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