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Authors: John J. Lamb

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BOOK: The False-Hearted Teddy
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“To sabotage the inhaler.”

“That’s what I think, too. But, I’m also convinced he didn’t come up with the idea spontaneously on Friday night. He’d been considering it for at least several hours, because I’m pretty certain I saw him stealing the card key to Jennifer’s room from her purse on Friday afternoon.”

“Which means he was already thinking about breaking into their room.”

“Exactly, but I’m beginning to wonder if his motive was actually murder.”

“How do you mean?”

I heaved a sigh of frustration. “I don’t know yet.

Something the VP said about Todd is bothering me. By the way, where is he?”

“Still holding court at the Cheery Cherub Bears booth, I think. I’ve stayed away from him, just like you asked.”

The False-Hearted Teddy

227

“Good. And how are our bears selling?”

“A fresh bunch of people came to the show after lunch, so we’re getting a little more foot traffic at our table now.

Before that . . .”

“I know. Almost everybody stayed away because the word got around that the cops thought I’d killed Jennifer.

So, how many bears have we actually sold?”

“Just two, including Suzy Cinnamon Streusel from earlier this morning.”

“Ouch. We aren’t even going to cover our registration fee, much less the hotel bill for the weekend, are we?”

“Probably not . . . and thank you.”

“For what?”

“For not reminding me that it was my idea for you to get involved in this investigation. This is all my fault and I’m sorry,” Ash said gloomily.

“Ash honey, you didn’t make me do anything and you’ve got nothing to apologize for. Would it make you feel any better if I told you that I’m having a blast?”

“A little, but that doesn’t mean I’m happy that someone had to die.”

“Now, tell me: is the award ceremony still set for five?”

“Yes, but they’ve moved it to a different ballroom, because the CSI people are still processing the other room for evidence.”

I looked at my watch. “And it’s a little after four now.

We’ll be—hang on a sec, love.”

Kinney emerged from the roll call room and half-jogged toward the exit. Hard on his heels were Wintle and Coburn, the trio apparently prepared to search the terminal on foot for Fielding. I hoped she’d hold out for a large pay raise along with her reinstatement. Next, the Baltimore detectives appeared.

Delcambre pointed toward the door and gave me a toothy smile. “Ready for another ride with the Road Warrior?”

228

John J. Lamb

I told Ash, “Sweetie, I’ve got to go now, but can you do me a little favor?”

“Of course. What?”

“I’m going to give Sergeant Delcambre the phone.

He’s bringing me back to the hotel and enjoys driving like a lunatic. Would you like to explain what you’ll do to him if we get in an accident and that further delays me getting back to you and the teddy bear show?”

“I’d be happy to, darling. Please put him on the phone.”

I handed the receiver to Delcambre. He didn’t get much past saying a jolly hello before the grin began to slowly vanish. Ash didn’t yell, so I don’t know what she said, but before another ten seconds had passed, the detective was wearing an uneasy and alert expression that reminded me of how our dog Kitch looked when we lectured him on the evils of taking an empty pizza box from the trashcan.

Mulvaney noticed her partner’s sudden transformation and said, “Can we put this on the speaker phone?”

Delcambre glowered at his boss and quickly covered the speaker button with his hand. Meanwhile, he was saying, “Yes, Mrs. Lyon . . . I understand, ma’am. . . . No, I wouldn’t do that. . . . He was exaggerating a little, ma’am. . . . Just one, ma’am, and it wasn’t my fault. . . .

No really, someone else rear-ended my car. . . . You’d what, ma’am? . . . No, I don’t think I’d like that. . . . I’ll be very careful. . . . I promise you, Mrs. Lyon. . . . We’ll be there soon—but not real soon. . . . Good-bye, ma’am.”

As he gently lowered the receiver into its cradle, I asked, “So, are we ready to roll?”

“Your wife must really love you, because she just told me that if you so much as got your hair mussed on the ride back to the hotel, she’d . . . just what is a whipstitch?” Delcambre sounded a little dazed.

“It’s the way you hand sew fabric together very snuggly. A really good whipstitch—which I can’t do, by the The False-Hearted Teddy

229

way—is so tiny it’s almost invisible. Ash can do it, though,” I replied.

Mulvaney did a double take. “How do you know that?”

“My wife taught me. And you know, as much as I’d love to be a homicide detective again, I really enjoy being a teddy bear artist and working with her.” I turned to Delcambre. “Why did you ask about a whipstitch?”

There was a haunted look in Delcambre’s eyes. “Well, apparently, she’s going to whipstitch my . . . um, never mind. I’ll drive very safely.”

Twenty-one

Although my leg was aching, I passed on another electric cart ride, because it would have taken too long to have one dispatched to our location. Even so, it took ten minutes for me to hobble through the terminal and out to the patrol car.

Outside, it wasn’t raining now so much as misting, and off to the west, I saw a tiny patch of blue sky among the gray clouds. We got into the cruiser and after starting the motor, Delcambre surprised me by using a component of the steering system he’d thus far ignored: the turn indicator.

A minute or so later, we were clear of the terminal and traveling westbound along Interstate 195. Leaning forward to peer through the Plexiglas barrier and over Delcambre’s right shoulder, I saw that he was locked on to the posted speed limit. Both his hands were on the steering wheel—at the two and ten o’clock positions—and he looked as if he belonged in an old drivers’ education film.

I looked to the rear and noticed there was an ever-growing mass of vehicles stacked up behind us because, of course, no one would pass the police car.

The False-Hearted Teddy

231

There was a burst of brief and undecipherable squawk-ing from the police radio. Mulvaney grabbed the microphone to acknowledge the message. Then she pulled her wireless phone from her coat pocket and made a call.

From the way she talked, it sounded as if she was receiving some mildly good news.

Once she disconnected from the call, Mulvaney turned around in her seat to face me. “That was district headquarters telling me that the media just left the station.”

“Tired of waiting for the press conference?” I asked.

“That and there was a fatal car crash up on Loch Raven Boulevard.”

“And people need
something
to watch over dinner.

Any word on processing the gloves?”

“The techs just began fuming them. It’ll be hours before we know whether there are even any latent prints, much less matching them with Todd’s knowns.”

“You can’t wait that long to talk to him.”

“I know.”

“So, are you ready to give some thought as to how to work the contact with Todd?”

“Yeah. What do you think?”

“I’d just stroll up and say howdy. If you make it look like a formal interview, you’re all but begging him to get a lawyer.”

Mulvaney looked pensive. “Do we consider giving him Miranda?”

“Why read him his rights? You can’t arrest him, so the contact will be consensual and non-custodial.”

“And we don’t have anything even close to P.C. to hook him.” Delcambre signaled and gently guided the car into the lane that led to the Baltimore-Washington Parkway.

The P.C. that Delcambre was referring to was Probable Cause, the legal concept that allows cops to arrest people for felony offenses that didn’t happen in their presence. It’s the combination of objective information, 232

John J. Lamb

evidence, and circumstances that would lead a normal person to conclude that a crime occurred and that the suspect committed it. Hunches, feelings, and unconfirmed suspicions can’t be factored into the equation, which meant that Delcambre was absolutely right; there wasn’t Probable Cause to arrest Todd.

In fact, we possessed next to nothing in the way of hard evidence. Until the crime lab completed its forensic work on the latex gloves and the Baltimore detectives had the opportunity to show the photo lineup with Todd’s picture in it to the fifth-floor maids, all we had was an iffy motive and one observation on my part that might point to opportunity. What’s more, the significance of what I’d witnessed was almost valueless, because I couldn’t state for a fact that I’d seen Todd remove the card key from Jen’s purse. I’d only seen him rifling the bag. However, there was nothing to prevent the detectives from talking to Todd.

As the police cruiser rolled sedately onto the north-bound slow lane of the Baltimore-Washington Parkway, I said, “Can I make a few suggestions?”

“Absolutely,” said Mulvaney.

“First, you guys have to talk to him without me being present. If Todd sees me with you, he’ll realize that you’ve figured out that I was framed and assume you think he planted the stuff in my room.”

“Which will mean he’ll also know we suspect him.”

“And you don’t want to telegraph your moves.”

“Makes sense. Where will you be?”

“With Ash at our booth or in our room. And here’s an officer safety tip: I’m done playing cops-and-robbers and she won’t react well if you ask me to go anyplace else today. Come to think of it, if you ask me, I won’t react well either.”

“Yeah, right.” Mulvaney made no effort to conceal her disbelief.

“It’s true. This has been fun, but I’d forgotten just how The False-Hearted Teddy

233

sordid murder cases are. Also, ever since my retirement, my wife and I have been sort of joined at the hip and I miss her.”

“Then we can handle things from here,” said Mulvaney. “But we do . . . appreciate . . .”

“Don’t start going Sally Fields at the Academy Awards on me, LT. It’ll ruin my image of you.”

“You really are a smart ass, you know that?”

“Uh-huh. Suggestion number two: I’m not telling you what to do—”

“No, you’d never do that.”

“Hey, I prefer to think of myself as helpful. Anyway, don’t hardball him. Treat him initially as if he’s a witness who can clear up some troublesome points that have come up. Let him lie to you. Hell, encourage him to lie to you, because we all know how juries view that sort of behavior later on.”

“As consciousness of guilt,” said Delcambre.

“Exactly. Next, if and when you come to the point where the interview is transitioning into the accusatory phase, I wouldn’t try to run a scam that you’ve linked him to the crime through physical evidence or a witness.”

“Why not?” Mulvaney asked.

“Think about it. This guy is a paramedic. One of the main features of his job is going to violent crime scenes.

He’s seen how cops operate, so that means he’ll know you’re blowing smoke. Because if you had the evidence—”

“We’d just arrest him.”

“Right, and another thing: don’t talk down to him as if he were some sort of street hood or gangbanger. It’ll insult him.”

“And we wouldn’t want to do that to a killer,” said Delcambre. His gaze never swerved from the road ahead as he steered the car along the interchange ramp to the Harbor Tunnel Thruway.

“You really don’t, Richard. I imagine this guy is just 234

John J. Lamb

like the overwhelming majority of murder suspects we’ve handled during our careers. How many of them were actually Hannibal-the-Cannibal evil?”

Delcambre nodded slightly. “Just a few. Mostly they’re just stupid.”

“And since there’s no evidence that he’s delusional or otherwise mentally incompetent, don’t you think Todd is aware he’s done something very stupid? He’s about to lose everything. His career as a paramedic, his opportunity to write children’s books, his freedom, maybe even his life, if he’s smart enough to realize this could be filed as a capital murder.”

“So, why rub his nose in it and endanger our chances for a confession? I see what you’re saying.”

“And he will confess if you’re patient and remember something: people don’t like to confess to murder, but they’ll own up to making a mistake. So, let him depict the murder as a mistake.”

“Sorry, but how can it have been a mistake if he broke into Jen’s room to sabotage the inhaler and later planted murder evidence? That sure looks like premeditation to me,” Mulvaney said.

“Maybe. But who cares whether it’s the whole truth or not?”


I
do.”

“You’re missing the point. Which would you rather have, a confession from Todd that he poisoned Jen by mistake—a story you can later debunk faster than a James Frey memoir and portray as a nasty self-serving lie? Or, no statements from him and a theory of premeditation?” I said.

“When you put it that way, the confession.”

“Then let it be a mistake.” I saw that we were approaching the Harbor Tunnel entrance and glanced at my watch. “Can I make one final suggestion? It’s four-forty now and you probably want to get to the hotel before five.”

The False-Hearted Teddy

235

“Why?” Mulvaney asked.

“There’s an award ceremony scheduled for five and you can be certain that Todd will be attending it, because there’s a Cheery Cherub Bear up for a prize. You’ll seriously hink him up if you pull him out of that event once it’s started. So, you might ask your partner to drive just a
little
faster.”

Delcambre’s back stiffened. “I don’t think so. Your wife distinctly said that she’d whipstitch me and she didn’t sound like she was bluffing.”

“But, if I assumed personal responsibility for the slightly higher speed then—”

“She said she was going to use an upholstery needle and her heaviest thread.”

“That is a big needle,” I said.

“So
this
needle isn’t going any higher.” Delcambre momentarily released his left index finger from the wheel to point at the speedometer.

“Then let’s just hope that the award ceremony is like every other public function in the universe and starts the usual fifteen minutes late.”

BOOK: The False-Hearted Teddy
10.42Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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