“Do you regret shooting Harlan Spencer?” she asked him.
He looked around the visitation room. “It put me in here.”
“So you would have made a different choice, if you had it to do over?”
“Is that your angle?” he said, his voice sharp. “You want me to say how sorry I am?”
“I don't have an angleâ”
“You can say whatever you want. Say I'm sorry as hell. I'm sorry the SUV drove off. Sorry that Floyd was lying dead in the street. That Sutton Bell shot me in the goddamn leg. You can say I'm sorry I didn't make a different choice, with my blood running out of me and Spencer's gun aimed at my face. Say I wish I took more time to reflect on my decision.”
Dawtrey's voice had risen, and one of the guards came over to tell him to calm down. The guard put a thick-fingered hand on his arm and Dawtrey seemed to wilt. He bowed his head and didn't lift it again until the guard went away.
Lucy pitched her voice low. “Is it the guards?” she asked him. “Are they the ones who beat you up?”
Dawtrey squared his shoulders and his smile came back. He shook his head at her.
“You're cute, cuz,” he said. “What paper you from?”
“The
National Current,
” she told him.
“Why didn't you say so?” he said, laughing. “If I knew that, I coulda give you something juicy. Tell you about the time I slept with Callie Spencer. You looking for a good story, all you got to do is ask.”
“I'm only looking for the truth,” she said.
“You sure that's not the truth?” Dawtrey said. “You know everybody Callie Spencer ever slept with?”
“Okay. When did you sleep with her?”
“You fill in the details any way you want. I'm just giving you the idea.”
“That's not an idea I can use,” Lucy said. “What else have you got? Something real.”
He glanced around, leaned closer to her. “I got something real. But I don't think you'll use it.”
“Try me.”
“Floyd Lambeau,” he said.
Lucy raised her brows. “Lambeau slept with Callie Spencer?”
“You got a one-track mind, cuz,” Dawtrey said, laughing. “She woulda been awful young for him. But Floyd and I did see her once, in Sault Sainte Marie.”
That got Lucy's attention. “When?” she asked.
“A month before the robbery. We went there to take a look at the bank.”
“And?”
“And Floyd pointed her out to me.
That's the daughter of the sheriff of Chippewa County,
he said.
At least, that's what the sheriff thinks
.”
Dawtrey rolled his shoulders back and waited.
“So . . . what?” Lucy said to him. “You're telling me Harlan Spencer isn't Callie's real father?”
“Better than that, cuz,” he said with a sly grin. “You think about it.”
She thought about it, and it dawned on her. “Lambeau?” she said.
Dawtrey winked at her. “Puts a whole different spin on Callie Spencer, doesn't it? It's one thing if she's the daughter of the cop who shot the bank robber. It's another if she's the daughter of the robber. That won't get her in the Senate, will it?”
Lucy shook her head slowly. “I can't print this.”
“I told you you wouldn't.”
“I'd need proof. Otherwise it's hearsay.”
“Go get some proof, then.”
“It would have to be DNA,” she said. “How am I going to get DNA?”
Dawtrey gave her a disappointed look. “You make me sad, cuz. I tell you just about the best story I got, and all you do is complain.”
“It's not like I can ask Callie Spencer to give me a blood sample. I don't even know if you're being straight with me.” Lucy gazed at the ceiling of the visitation room, her thoughts racing. Suddenly she looked back at Dawtrey. “Wait a minute, what did you say? This is
just about
the best story you've got?”
His sly grin returned. “You heard that, huh?”
“I heard it,” she said. “If this is just about the best, what have you got that's better?”
He made a clicking noise with his tongue. “You're not ready for that, cuz.”
Naturally it was right then that the guards announced that visitation was over. Dawtrey stood up out of his chair.
Lucy stood too. “What the hell have you got?”
“I like you, cuz,” Dawtrey said. “You come back, we'll talk again.”
“Tell me.”
“One thing at a time,” he said. “You print what I told you andâ”
“And what?”
“And then we'll see. Maybe I give you the driver.”
Â
Â
BY THE TIME Lucy finished her story, she had stopped pacing. She stood by the window in her pale yellow dress, looking at me expectantly.
“The driver?” I said. “He was talking about the fifth robber, the one who got away? Do you think he was putting you on?”
“I don't know.”
“It doesn't make sense,” I said. “If he knew the identity of the fifth robber, why would he keep it secret all these years?”
“I don't know that either,” Lucy said. “I never got a chance to talk to him again.”
“What about Dawtrey's story about Callie Spencer? You didn't print it.”
I watched her shoulders shrug beneath the straps of her dress. “Even the
National Current
has standards.”
“Could it be true?” I asked her. “Could Floyd Lambeau be her father?”
“Dawtrey's not the only one who thinks so,” she said. “I found an obscure website that mentions the idea, with pictures that are supposed to show the family resemblance.”
“Do they?”
“They do if you want them to. Otherwise no. As far as I can tell, the website went up during Callie's first campaign for the Michigan House of Representatives. But the idea never caught on. No respectable news outlet would touch the story.”
“But you looked into it.”
She spread her hands in a noncommittal gesture. “It could be true. Floyd Lambeau and Ruth Spencer were about the same age. He's known to have given lectures in Sault Sainte Marie. You can place him there around the time Callie Spencer must have been conceived.”
“Which proves nothing.”
“Right,” she said. “So Lambeau may or may not have been Callie Spencer's father. But what I know for sure is that Dawtrey told me he wasâand a few weeks later, Dawtrey wound up dead.”
I shook my head. “I have a hard time believing Callie Spencer had anything to do with that. How would she even know you talked to Dawtrey?”
“There were other people in the room. Visitors, prisoners. Guards.”
“So someone overheard you? And then what?”
“And then it got back to Harlan Spencer. You think he doesn't have connections at Kinross Prison?”
I shot her a skeptical look. “So he told his daughter and she arranged to send a nut with a rifle to kill Terry Dawtrey at Whiteleaf Cemetery?”
“Maybe Spencer never told her. Maybe he arranged it himself.”
“You're forgetting something,” I said. “The nut with the rifle didn't kill Dawtrey. One of the deputies didâPaul Rhiner. Did Spencer arrange that too? Did he arrange for Terry Dawtrey to try to escape?”
“I still have some details I need to work out.”
“You have nothing but details you need to work out.”
Lucy came away from the window and sat down across from me again.
“First things first,” she said. “I need to talk to Callie Spencer. You'll call her for me?
“I'll call her. Don't expect much.”
She pointed to the manuscript on the desk. “What about this? What's it going to take for me to walk out of here with a copy?”
“I can't let you do that.”
“The
Current
would pay.”
“Not interested.”
“No. You've got ethics, and not the journalistic kind. Maybe you could answer a couple of questions for me, then.”
“You don't quit, do you?”
“Two questions, Loogan. First, the man who wrote thisâwhy did he send it to you? It would be more natural to send it to the police, or to the newspaper. Why send it to the editor of a mystery magazine?”
I could have told her my theoryâthat the man in plaid had been drawn to
Gray Streets
because of a story I'd written, a story based on the Great Lakes robbery. But I didn't feel like explaining it all to her.
“Maybe he's a fan of mysteries,” I said with a shrug. “What's your second question?”
She smoothed an errant lock of hair from her brow. “Who would want to break into your office?”
“You mean, apart from you?”
“Apart from me.”
“I don't know. Why?”
“Because somebody did. I came here tonight with every intention of breaking in, but I didn't have to. Someone else cut that square of glass out of your door.”
CHAPTER 22
T
he knock on Anthony Lark's door came at noon on Monday.
Perched on a stool by the kitchen counterâone of the few pieces of furniture that came with the apartmentâhe listened to the sound. A soft tapping, not the loud thump that a cop's fist would make.
He swallowed a mouthful of orange juice and refilled his glass. Whoever was tapping gave up and went away.
Lark had taken a tablet of Keflex on Saturday night. He had taken two more on Sunday and another this morning. His fever had broken. The wound on his left hand seemed less swollen, but was still painful to the touch.
The orange juice was good, better than anything Lark could remember tasting in a long time. He thought about going out to get something to eat. It would be too risky to sit in a restaurant and order a meal, but he toyed with the idea just the same. He wanted a steak. And a beer to wash it down.
He would settle for take-out Chinese. He knew a place nearby. As he looked around for his keys, the tapping started again. Soft. Persistent.
He shuffled to the door. Through the peephole he could see a woman's face. Brown-skinned: Indian, or Pakistani. Young, slightly exotic, with fine cheekbones and black hair that came to her shoulders.
He watched her raise her hand to tap again on the door. Her dark eyes stared at him, as if she could see him through the peephole. He waited for her to leave.
When she brought her hand up yet again, he opened the door.
She stepped back as if he had startled her. “Here you are after all,” she said.
He heard a trace of an accent. Not Indian. British.
“I was getting dressed,” he told her.
“Sorry to be a bother. We haven't met. I live 'cross the hall.”
She offered her hand. Long, delicate fingers, no polish on the nails. He clasped it for a polite interval and let it go.
“I wonder,” she said, “have you seen a cat?”
“A cat?”
“He's a faded calico, gray and orange.” The woman took a stack of flyers from under her arm and handed one to Lark.
“His name is Roscoe,” she said. “I had a friend visiting at the weekend.” She stressed the second syllable: week-
end.
“She left the patio door open and Roscoe got out. He's not used to being outside.”
Lark made a show of studying the picture on the flyer. “Have you looked out by the Dumpsters? I've seen cats there before.”
“I've tried there,” the woman said.
He offered the flyer back to her. “Sorry I can't help.”
“Hold on to it, would you?” she said. “My number's there. In case you see him.”
“Sure,” he said.
She lingered in the doorway. “You're new here, aren't you? Just moved in?” “That's right,” Lark said.
“Where from?”
“Ohio.” A safe answer. No one cares about Ohio.
“Toledo?” she asked. “That's the only place I've visited in Ohio.”
Lark tried to make sense of her. The questions were friendly and she seemed genuinely interested in him. She was making eye contact, but she was also stealing glances past him into the apartment.
“Not Toledo,” he said. “Cincinnati.”
She looked past him again and he realized what she was doing. She wanted to see if he had her cat.
“Where are my manners?” he said. “Would you like to come in?” Without waiting for an answer he stepped back from the door and into the kitchen. He put the flyer on the countertop.
“Something to drink?” he said. “I've got orange juice.”
She hesitated in the doorway and then made up her mind. “That would be lovely.”
He filled a glass from the cupboard, one of a set he'd bought at a Salvation Army store. She came in and stood on the other side of the counter in his living room, looking around at his bare possessions. He had a small television set; a milk crate filled with books and magazines.
“I'm still waiting for my furniture to be delivered,” he said, sliding her glass across the counter.
She turned back to him and laid down her flyers. “Are you at the university?”
“No.”
“What do you do?”
“Claims processing,” he said, “for an insurance company.” It was the last job he'd held.
“That sounds interesting. Do you enjoy it?” She asked the question carelessly, looking down the narrow hall that led to the bathroom and his bedroom. He could tell she wanted to go down there, to reassure herself that he wasn't holding her cat prisoner. He watched her thinking about how to manage it.