The Bar Mitzvah Murder (21 page)

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Authors: Lee Harris

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BOOK: The Bar Mitzvah Murder
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She had been angrier than she would ever have admitted to her father when her boss took her off the City Hall Park case and dumped her into a group of losers to satisfy the mayor's latest whim: raise the percent of cleared cases. Make the commissioner look good. Make the mayor look better, raise the status of the department, but keep the overtime down. Right.

It wasn't entirely a hopeless pursuit, but nearly so. The cases were cold. Besides the routine annual check—the Detective Division 5 reports, always called DD5s—to update the file and keep the squad commander happy, many of the cases had lain dormant for many years. A few of them were famous, and the best detectives on the job hadn't cleared them when they were fresh. Most of the cases never had a chance. The victims were old men and women who lived alone, whose bodies were found when the smell of decomposition awoke their neighbors. They were people whose histories were permanently buried in the past, people too poor to have heirs waiting to benefit from their deaths. They had long since ceased to be thought of as human beings and were now a collection of various colored forms, facts, and reports, or at best a memory in the mind of some retired detective. Science could learn a lot from dead bodies but it couldn't tell you what language was first on the tongue, whether it had been married, if it had living children, if it had a smile for everyone it met or found fault even with people who tried to help. Science couldn't tell you whether the body had nearly starved itself to death out of penury or hopelessness or just plain laziness. And the chances of finding answers five or ten years after death were slim.

The park murder had been, in its morbid way, a thing of beauty. The photograph alone was hypnotic. The eye traced the beams of sunlight, the shadows threatened, the metal side of the wheelchair flashed light. The little woman, almost invisible in the photo, had died of a stab wound, a knife in the stomach, inserted under the blanket that covered the lower half of her body. The killer must have stood in front of her, leaned over her, stuck the knife into her gut, forced it up toward the heart, and left. She must have seen him. Had she known him? Had she spoken to him? Joe, what are you doing here? Nice day for a concert in the park, don't you think? And then sudden death.

Or had it been random? Had some crazy acted on impulse or challenge, proving to himself or his gang that he could kill someone and get away with it?

No purse had been found at or near the crime scene. Either the killer took it with him or she left it home. But what home? She was without identification, but she had a few dollars in bills and coins in her jacket pocket. The team was unable to determine her identity. Her prints were not on file. No one fitting her description had been reported missing since the homicide. The wheelchair, they learned, had been stolen from a hospital. Someone's hard work failed to obliterate the number etched into one of the vertical steel supports, and it was traced. The hospital's property-marking system yielded one small bit of information: it had been missing from Bellevue for almost five years, not the only one, the clerk admitted. They were pretty pricey, and chances were it wasn't stolen by a person who needed it but by someone who could turn it into cash. The victim might have been the one who bought it from the thief, might even have commissioned him to steal it for her, meaning that the Bellevue connection was a dead end.

Jane started to get up from the chair, annoyed that she had let herself become involved in the case that was no longer hers. Forgetting that today's mail lay in her lap, she saw it spill to the floor as she rose. She gathered it up swiftly, noticing that a small envelope had freed itself from behind another.

It was handwritten on thin, crinkly pale blue paper in blue ink. The sealed flap provided an address halfway across the country, but no name. Something made her shiver, the flicker of a remote possibility. The address meant nothing to her, but that didn't calm her. What was remote was not always impossible. This was the wrong moment for the long arm of the past to reach into the present. I can't deal with this, she thought, at least, not now. Too much was happening, too much going on. There was Dad and the move and the new assignment. She knew those were just excuses, but she needed something to allay the panic. She carried the mail to the kitchen and put the small letter at the bottom of the pile on the counter. Along with the City Hall Park Murder, it could wait.

 

 

Ballantine Books
proudly presents

The
Christine Bennett
Novels

by

LEE HARRIS

Published by Ballantine Books
Available at bookstores everywhere

 

 

LEE HARRIS

THE GOOD FRIDAY MURDER
The
First
Christine
Bennett
Mystery

THE YOM KIPPUR MURDER

THE CHRISTENING DAY MURDER

THE ST. PATRICK'S DAY MURDER

THE CHRISTMAS NIGHT MURDER

THE THANKSGIVING DAY MURDER

THE PASSOVER MURDER

THE VALENTINE'S DAY MURDER

THE NEW YEAR'S EVE MURDER

THE LABOR DAY MURDER

THE FATHER'S DAY MURDER

THE MOTHER'S DAY MURDER

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