The Betrayal

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The Betrayal Page 12

by Jerry B. Jenkins


  “He didn’t like being touched?”

  “Well, he jerked his hand away, so I guess.”

  Boone turned at the assistant manager’s knock, and the man pointed at his watch and mouthed, “Two o’clock.”

  “Oh, my,” Mrs. Archibald said. “My break’s over.”

  Boone rose. “We’re done, unless you can think of anything else.” He put his pen and notebook away and maneuvered a card from his wallet. Mrs. Archibald took it and accepted his help extracting her from the chair.

  “I hope nobody’s in trouble,” she said.

  “Well, you’re certainly not.”

  “I was pretty sure I did everything right. And I don’t think Ms. Lamonica’s uncle did anything wrong.”

  “To my knowledge, none of Ms. Lamonica’s relatives have anything to worry about. You know we just look into out-of-the-ordinary transactions.”

  “Oh yes. I always thought ten thousand was the cutoff, but that’s your business.”

  As Mrs. Archibald hurried back to work, Boone told the assistant manager he needed something else.

  “Why doesn’t that surprise me?” the man said.

  “Do I need a warrant? I don’t think either of us wants that, do we?”

  “Hardly. If it’s in my power to get what you need, I’ll do my best.”

  “I need to see the videos of the day in question.”

  “The others already looked at all of those and downloaded shots of Ms. Lamonica making her transactions.”

  “Transactions, plural?”

  “I thought it was plural.”

  “And did they download pictures of the subsequent deposit?”

  “Not to my knowledge.”

  “But they were informed of it?”

  “My understanding is that Mrs. Archibald told everyone the same story.”

  “May I see the recordings?”

  The assistant manager returned in a few minutes with a DVD he popped into his computer. He advanced to the time of Haeley’s deposit, turning the monitor so Boone could see. “You can advance with the mouse or the arrows.”

  The camera angle was from above and behind Mrs. Archibald and showed each customer full-on as they approached and transacted their business. Haeley looked sober and in a hurry, though she seemed to force a smile at Mrs. Archibald’s greeting. Her deposit took just a few seconds, and she hurried off, probably to pick up Max.

  The camera soon showed the man in question fourth in line, though there was no clear view of his face. He wore a long overcoat and a brimmed hat. Boone was sure it was Garrett Fox. He could hardly wait for the straight-on look.

  But when he finally came into view, the DVD went haywire. Blocks of color and streaks of white blocked any clear view. “Is this in the recording or is something wrong with your computer?”

  The assistant manager leaned close. He pulled the DVD out and polished it on his shirt. Before reinserting it he clicked on YouTube and found a random video. “No problems here,” he said.

  He put the DVD back in and returned to the spot. Same problem. And it lasted until Mrs. Archibald reached for the man’s hand and he quickly pulled away. The assistant manager shook his head. “We’ve talked to her about that.”

  “Who had access to this DVD?”

  “Well, me, the manager, and the other law-enforcement personnel who’ve been here.”

  “Anyone have it alone?”

  “Yes, I think both the police department and the US Attorney’s office.”

  “How easy is it to mess up one of these?”

  “Not hard if you know what you’re doing. You click on Record, go to an editing program, and just fiddle with the mouse.”

  “Brilliant.”

  “Well, we don’t expect people to do that.”

  “And yet someone did, didn’t they? Seems you’d protect these kinds of things.”

  “Protect them from law enforcement? Who’d have thought of that?”

  The early-afternoon sun was still prominent, but the temperature had dropped. Boone sat in Mrs. Lamonica’s car in the parking lot of the bank, shivering and rubbing his palm on his thigh. What a disaster this was turning into. Everything he dug into left him with more questions, but his energy level was so low and his pain so intense that he found it hard to concentrate.

  Boone was long overdue for his meds, but he didn’t dare drive under the influence. There was just too much to do. He talked himself out of driving all the way to Naperville just to see Pete Wade’s house. He knew enough about it, if indeed Pete’s wife’s maiden name was Johnson and it was where they lived, to tell him more than he wanted to know.

  Boone wanted to talk with Haeley, knowing how agitated she had to be about possibly being incarcerated again. But more important, he couldn’t have her taking his questions personally. He knew how it all sounded, but she would face much tougher scrutiny in court. These were professionals he was dealing with, and they would be given the benefit of the doubt. If Pete Wade went so far as to say in court what he had said to Boone, who would doubt him? How could Boone even doubt him? A man of that caliber falsely admitting to a personal failure? Boone couldn’t imagine Wade stooping that low.

  As the car heated up, Boone took a call from Dr. Bob Valdez, the surgeon who was scheduled to work on his shoulder in exactly one week. “Been looking forward to meeting you,” the doctor said.

  “And I didn’t expect to talk with you until the pre-op, sir,” Boone said, a smile in his voice. “Don’t you have people who can make these calls?”

  “Ah, I had a minute, and I have some questions. I’m looking at your X-rays and your MRI, and of course I see all the bullet fragments. Can you tell me what kind of metal that is? If I find I have to leave any of it in, I’ll need to know that.”

  “You’re worried it might be lead?”

  “Exactly.”

  “I guess that’s the advantage of being shot with a Glock.”

  “Sir?”

  “It’s an Austrian make. More than half the law-enforcement agencies in the US use them. The Chicago PD is pretty much mostly using Berettas, but a Glock is optional. Anyway, Glock discourages using lead bullets because they have a different kind of rifling. I don’t know how much of this you want to know.”

  “I think I know what rifling is,” the doctor said. “Isn’t that the grooves cut in the barrel that give the bullet its rotation?”

  “Exactly. And Glock uses what they call polygonal rifling rather than the usual squared-off grooves. Apparently lead could build up on the rifling and damage the weapon.”

  “So unless the guy who shot you was using some ill-advised ammunition, you shouldn’t have any lead in you.”

  “That’s my guess. But let me check with the evidence guys and be sure, if it’s important.”

  “Believe me, it’s important.”

  They reconfirmed Boone’s pre-op interview appointment a few days hence, and when he hung up, Boone dialed another number.

  “Chicago Crime Lab.”

  “Detective Boone Drake calling for Dr. Ragnar Waldemarr.”

  When Waldemarr came on he said, “It’s been a while, Detective. You’ve been a busy boy.”

  “Busier than I bargained for. How long are you in the lab today?”

  “I have a meeting at four. What do you need?”

  “I want a look at the evidence gathered at the shooting site.”

  “Yours, I assume.”

  “Right. It was a Glock, right? And the spent shell?”

  “And blood—yours and the shooter’s. You want to see that?”

  “I’ve seen enough of that. Just the shooting stuff.”

  “GSR?”

  “Gunshot residue would be good.”

  “Come soon as you can then. I have to leave by quarter to.”

  Boone made one more call before he left. “Jack, I need another favor.”

  “You’re pushing the envelope, Boones.”

  “I know, but you love me, so you can’t help yourself.


  “Yeah, yeah. What now?”

  “I need you to run a plate for me.”

  “What are we, back on the street? Why can’t you do this?”

  “You said yourself I shouldn’t be related to this case. By the way, how’d your one o’clock meeting go with Pete?”

  “How’d you know about that?”

  “I’m a detective, Jack. I know everything. You taught me well.”

  “It was no big deal.”

  “I didn’t say it was.”

  “It went fine.”

  “Good. Run this number for me, will you?” He recited it.

  “Okay, but then can we be done with this?”

  “I’m seeing it through to the end.”

  “I never thought I’d say this, Boones, but I’m going to be glad when you go under the knife again so you’ll be off the streets for a while.”

  “That’s cold. I was kinda hoping you’d take over in my absence.”

  “Don’t start.”

  “C’mon, Jack. I know you’re a justice freak, and what’s happening here is not just.”

  “So all the evidence against Haeley—?”

  “Is turning out to be bull.”

  “No bias on your part.”

  “You know better than that.”

  Jack was silent awhile. Then, “I like Haeley. You know that. But Pete and I go back to the academy, before you were born. It’s awful hard to question his judgment.”

  Now it was Boone’s turn to fall silent. How he wanted to tell Jack even a little of what Pete had told him. And about the property and cars Pete seemed to own. A hundred fifty to two hundred grand a year was nothing to sneeze at, but was it enough to buy those things? Besides, Pete hadn’t always made that, and he had put kids through college. But Boone knew with all that was in him that these houses were going to prove to have been paid off. “I know, Jack,” he said finally. “Can we just mutually agree to keep open minds and let the evidence tell the story?”

  “That’s all I ask, Boones.”

  Again Boone laid his cell phone open on the passenger seat, ready to punch Answer and Speaker if necessary. Then he headed to a parking garage near the US Customs building on Canal Street. Among other things, the structure housed the Chicago division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s gang crime unit and crime lab.

  Boone was woozy and weary as he made his way through the frigid garage to the elevators, trying to tell himself he already had enough to take suspicion off Haeley. But he wasn’t completely sure himself. Just before emerging near the crime lab, he took a call from Jack.

  “New Toyota Avalon registered to Thelma Johnson, West Oak Street, Chicago. Significant?”

  “Might be. Thanks. You don’t happen to be sitting in front of your computer—”

  “Yes, what?” Jack said, sighing.

  “Just by chance, does she own other vehicles?”

  Boone heard keystrokes, then a whistle through Jack’s teeth. “Hmph. Two others. Good call. Couple of brand-new Bimmers, both 760Li’s, one black, one white. Has ’em listed at a different address, though. Naperville.”

  “What would those go for, Jack? It should be there in the stats.”

  More keystrokes. “Hmm. She got a deal. They retail in the high 130s. She got the two for a quarter million even, tax included. Whoever this is is well heeled, Boones. She paid without financing.”

  “Wow.” He tried to sound nonchalant with his thanks but apparently failed.

  “What’s all this about?” Jack said.

  “I don’t know yet. If it starts to make sense, I’ll get back to you.”

  “Can I stop playing secretary now?”

  “Only for now. It’s kind of fun having you at my beck and call.”

  “Ooh, if you were here right now . . .”

  “What, Jack? What would you do to your favorite protégé?”

  “How does a nice playful smack on the shoulder sound?”

  3:00 p.m.

  Dr. Ragnar Waldemarr met Boone in the foyer outside the crime lab, and it was obvious he was troubled. “You’re not going to be happy, Detective.”

  Boone followed the doctor to an anteroom of one of the largest evidence caches in the city. Two cardboard boxes lay on the table, each with its lid set off to the side. A short stack of paper sat in front of the boxes.

  “We have evidence missing, Drake.”

  “Don’t tell me . . . the Glock?”

  “And the shell casing.”

  “But they’re both still listed on the sheet, right?”

  “Naturally.”

  “And you have a record of who has been in here?”

  “Sure.”

  “Cameras?”

  “You know we do.”

  “Then it should be easy to—”

  “If someone hadn’t gotten to the recordings, yes.”

  “You have got to be kidding me.”

  “I wish. The problem is that the DVDs for the last two weeks are blank. As you can imagine, we’ve had dozens of personnel in here to study evidence, and each is logged in and out with a record of what they are looking at. We rarely, if ever, have occasion to check our tapes. But clearly the equipment has been malfunctioning for a long time. I only just now turned it to Record, so you and I can smile for the camera.”

  “What was it set on when you got to it?”

  “Play.”

  “That makes no sense.”

  “Well, at the very least it’s going to be hard to prove it was malfeasance. It could have easily been an accident. But it makes for quite a coincidence that we also have evidence missing. I mean, I checked the discs only because of that. As soon as I got the boxes down, I knew. A box with a gun has a certain heft to it. But see for yourself.”

  In the box marked Weapon, shell casings, crime scene photos, garage diagram lay a full velveteen sack.

  “I just checked that,” Waldemarr said. “It contains all twenty shell casings from the two Beretta M9 service pistols the officers emptied into the shooter. The single shell casing from the Glock is gone.”

  Boone pulled from the box a thin manila envelope. Inside was a folder containing photos of the garage where the shooting had taken place—from the stairwell door to his blood on the floor—and a dozen pictures of the riddled body of the bad guy. There was also a rough, hand-drawn sketch of the area indicating where the shots had originated—both from the assailant and from the responding officers.

  The other box, marked Blood, DNA, clothing, was intact.

  Among the stack of documents was a long list of those who had signed in and out for the privilege of studying the evidence. It included Jack, Pete, Friedrich Zappolo, various evidence technicians, members of the court, and personnel from the US Attorney’s office.

  “You’ll want to add your John Henry, Drake.”

  Boone studied the list as he signed. “Who’s this?”

  Waldemarr leaned in. “Antoine Johnson. Works out of the 18th, lists himself as an evidence tech. May be called to testify, I guess. But wasn’t the shooter killed?”

  “Yeah, but we’re looking at conspiracy here. The gun could help with that.”

  “Oh, there is the GSR I mentioned.”

  Waldemarr retrieved a small envelope that contained a clear pouch with what appeared to be tissue scrapings. “From the shooter’s trigger hand. The residue is consistent with the makeup of the bullet from a Glock .45.”

  “No lead?”

  “No lead.”

  “Let me see the specs on the gun.”

  Waldemarr pulled out a card. “This means nothing without the hardware.”

  “It didn’t happen to be a 30, did it? The subcompact?”

  The doctor shook his head. “Full-size. I want to say a 39 with the .45 GAP caliber.”

  “Good memory,” Boone said, studying the notes. “But like you say, we’re in trouble trying to connect this to a conspiracy without the hardware.”

  “Not totally,” Waldemarr said. “You
’re forgetting they’ll call me to the stand. I bring a modicum of credibility.”

  “But you would be biased toward the Chicago PD.”

  “My notes are based on my personal examination of the weapon the evidence techs delivered. It proved to have fired one round. And we had the shell casing for that.”

  “Had.”

  “And now all we have is you, Boone.”

  Boone laughed. He was the case.

  “Just make sure your surgeon delivers to me what he pulls from your shoulder. If it doesn’t match up with a Glock 39 with .45 GAP bullets, I’ll throw in the towel.”

  17

  The Dilemma

  Monday, February 8, 5:30 p.m.

  By the time Boone had parked Mrs. Lamonica’s car a few blocks away, so no one would connect him with the vehicle, and finally reached his apartment, he was so weak he could barely put one foot in front of the other. And he realized that he had not eaten anything at Fletcher Galloway’s party. A piece of cake might have tided him over. But also nothing since? And no meds? What was he thinking?

  Boone knew better than to medicate himself on an empty stomach, so he staggered to the kitchen and pawed through the refrigerator. All he found were sandwich fixings, and having to prepare something seemed the worst idea he could imagine.

  Above the fridge was a half bag of corn puffs, which strangely appealed. He’d been working out regularly and eating well before the shooting, but now he just wanted sustenance. And had that been a bottle of chocolate milk in the refrigerator? With a shudder he sat on the couch and found both weirdly satisfying.

  Boone turned on the news, then took his meds. Before he knew it, the news anchors’ heads were swimming, their patter making no sense, and he had collapsed to his right side.

  About twenty minutes later he was awakened by his phone. It was Haeley.

  “Oh, I’m so glad you called,” he slurred. “I didn’t want to leave it the way it was.”

  She sounded flat. “I don’t want to feel like I have to convince you, Boone. You’re more than my lawyer’s investigator. At least I hope you are.”

  “I am. Believe me, I am.”

 

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