by T. E. Woods
Mort jotted in his notepad. “What else?”
“Three days before he dies. Two addresses in Olympia.”
Mort snapped his head up. “What’s a Seattle graduate student from Walla Walla looking for in Olympia?”
Micki smiled. “I wondered the same thing. Imagine my chagrin when I did a cross back on the addresses and found they’re listed to the same woman.”
Mort’s pulse quickened. “Who?”
Micki read off her notes. “A Dr. Lydia Corriger. One’s her home, the other’s her office. I looked her up. She’s a psychologist. You think our dead guy needed a shrink and went all the way to Olympia to find one?”
Mort wrote down the two addresses. The earlier playfulness in his voice was gone. “I don’t know. But I’ll look into it.”
Chapter Twenty-Six
Lydia decided against any disguise for her meeting with Cameron Williams. Whoever wanted the young caterer dead knew who she was and she needed them to see she was proceeding as directed. She sat at a small table in the Queen Anne headquarters of Elegant Edibles and sipped the cup of tea offered her when she arrived fifteen minutes earlier.
She was about to ask the counter worker what was delaying her boss when Cameron emerged from a back room. The caterer was pale. Her blonde hair pulled up in a haphazard grooming attempt. She approached with a leaden walk and forced a smile when she introduced herself, her green eyes bloodshot and flat. She wore blue jeans and a grey work shirt, both streaked with dried batter and berry stains. Cameron laid a large black binder on the table and sat down.
“What did you have in mind, Ms Corriger?” She showed no indication she was interested in Lydia’s answer.
Lydia tried to sound cheerful. “I’d like you to cater a dinner party. The winter’s been so dreary I think we could all use something festive, don’t you?”
Cameron didn’t react. Lydia had the impression she was medicated.
“Do you have a date in mind?” She opened her binder to the calendar section and glanced at several pages. “February’s nearly booked. March has some dates open.”
Lydia watched her closely. “I’m thinking a Saturday.”
Cameron flipped the calendar pages without glancing up. “It looks like the first Saturday I have is March 23 ^ rd. Then April 6 ^ th. After that we’re into wedding season.” She cast a look up at Lydia. “Does it have to be Saturday?”
Lydia smiled. “A mid-week party might be fun. Unexpected.”
Cameron nodded and returned to her calendar. “If you’re willing to host on Tuesday or Wednesday, we have several options.”
“Let me give that some thought. Perhaps we can discuss menu.” Lydia moved her tea cup to the side. “Do you cook at my home or is it done here?”
Cameron flipped to another section of her notebook. “It depends on the menu and the type of kitchen you have. Those are details we can work out later.” She pulled out two heavy vellum pages. “People usually start with a cocktail hour. Here’s our bar list and hors d’ouerve offerings.”
Lydia scanned the menus but kept her focus on Cameron. She watched her lean her head to one side and stare off into the void, completely detached from the customer seated across from her. Lydia moved the menus to her lap, placed her hands on the table, and leaned forward.
“Is this a bad time, Ms Williams? You don’t seem particularly interested in my party.”
Cameron blinked to attention. “I’m sorry. Please forgive me. Elegant Edibles is very interested in your dinner. Allow me to get one of my associates for you.” She pushed her chair away from the table. Lydia asked her to stay.
“Please.” Lydia set her voice to warm and soothing. “You come so highly recommended. I’d prefer to work with you.” She smiled as Cameron pulled her chair back. “I don’t mean to intrude, but you look a little off your game. Can I be of any help?”
The young blonde trained her vacant green eyes on Lydia. Her lower lip quivered. “That’s very kind of you, but I don’t see how anyone can help.”
Lydia glanced across the room and saw the counterwoman cleaning a glass shelf well out of earshot. “Let me try,” she said. “I’m a psychologist. People tell me a good one. And if you don’t mind my saying, if anyone ever looked like they needed to talk to a good psychologist, it’s you.” Lydia pulled her cup back in front of her. “What do you say we dispense with menu planning for a few minutes and have some tea?”
Tears welled in Cameron’s eyes. She bit her lip, nodded, and went to fetch them each a fresh cup.
“People who know you describe you as vivacious and enthusiastic.” Lydia accepted the warm pot and poured herself a generous amount of citrus-scented liquid. “What has you so down today?”
Cameron traced a lazy finger around a saucer covered in red English roses. “That woman they describe died in December. This is who I am now.”
“What happened? May I call you Cameron?”
She nodded. “My fiance died. Suddenly. Unexpectedly.” Cameron dropped her head and wept. “Friends tell me it’ll get easier. But it doesn’t.”
“Oh, Cameron,” Lydia whispered. “I’m so sorry. How did he die?”
She wiped her eyes with a damask napkin. “Heart attack. He’d been under a lot of strain at work. Long hours. I told him he needed a vacation.” Her voice shook. “We planned to elope to Paris the end of May. When classes were finished and before my summer season got too busy. He said we’d take a month and bike the countryside.”
“Were you with him when it happened?” Lydia asked.
“No. It was just before Christmas. The shop was crazy with holiday parties. We planned a late dinner. When he didn’t come by I called him.” Tears streamed down her cheeks. “No answer. I tried later. When he still didn’t answer I drove to his house.” She covered her face with both hands. “I could see him in the chair. I thought he was asleep. I let myself in. He was already cold.”
Lydia let her cry for a few moments, knowing the release would help. “I can’t imagine what you’re going through.”
Cameron shivered despite the shop’s cozy warmth. “Every morning I wake up. For a heartbeat or two I’m fine. Then I remember he’s dead. I’ll never see him again. Never hear his voice.” She turned to Lydia with an empty gaze. “My life is over.”
Lydia sat and wondered what kind of threat this grieving woman posed that could drive someone to order her execution. She hoped Cameron could provide clues to the person who held control over both their lives.
“You said you were going to elope when classes were over. Was your fiance a school teacher?” Lydia asked.
Cameron offered a brief smile. “No. He was with the university. His work was very important. I hate to admit I didn’t understand most of it. You give me six ingredients and I’ll give you a gourmet meal in twenty minutes. You start talking hormones and neurotransmitters and my eyes glaze over.” She shook her head. “Fred and I were about as opposite as two people could be.”
Lydia’s attention clicked into hyper-focus. “What position did your fiance hold at the university, Cameron?”
She lifted her tear-streaked face in pride. “He was chairman of the neuroscience department. Fred Bastian. Perhaps you’ve heard of him?”
“I believe I have.” Lydia felt herself tumbling down a black hole. The night at the warehouse flashed through her memory. Bastian butchering the Silverback Gorilla. A flush of sweat tickled under her arms. Bastian was the link between Cameron and Private Number.
“Didn’t your fiance work with animals? Something about emotions?” Lydia began with the obvious: was Cameron connected to the slaughter of Ortoo?
“I hated that part of his work. I mean, don’t we have computers for that nowadays? But Fred assured me his animals were well cared for. He even offered to take me on a tour of his lab anytime I wanted.” She crinkled her nose. “But I never did.”
Lydia sensed she was telling the truth. What else could Cameron know that would inspire someone to want her dead?
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br /> “Was there anything at work that was bothering him, I wonder?” Lydia hoped she sounded pleasant enough to keep Cameron talking.
Cameron shrugged and wiped her eyes with the hem of her apron. “Typical stuff. It’s not easy running a department that big. But he’d been doing it a long time and his people loved him.”
But Lydia knew someone wanted both Bastian and Cameron dead.
Cameron wiped her tears and tilted her chin. “Why are you interested?”
Lydia smiled. “I’m just trying to get you talking about your fiance, is all. Maybe help you see he might have had some peace when he died.”
Lydia watched Cameron consider the idea. “I’d like that. I’d like to know he was at peace.”
“Tell me how you met.” She hoped Cameron would reveal something that could lead to Private Number. “How’s a gourmet chef hook up with an Ivory Tower genius?”
Cameron’s shoulders relaxed and she took a deep breath. “Fred called it kismet. Every year he hosts a party. Invites the entire department to his home. Spouses, too. Well over two hundred people. He’s so generous. There’s always a theme for the decorations and the food. He holds it on Valentine’s Day so they’ll keep their heart in their work.” Tears gathered in her eyes. “That was his little joke.”
Lydia sat quietly as Cameron relished the memory.
“Last year’s theme was Romance in the Rockies. Fred always used Julie Christopher as his caterer. But Julie fell and broke both arms five days before the party. She was frantic. Called and begged me to take it.” Cameron stopped for a moment. “I arrived at Fred’s house at noon to begin cooking for a party that started at seven. He hung around.” Cameron’s faraway smile seemed fueled by the thought. “He asked questions. Then he asked for samples. He pitched in and washed dishes. I was impressed.” She gave a small laugh. “By the time guests started to arrive I was sorry to see him leave. But he kept coming back, checking on things. He helped me close up after the party. Sent my staff home. When the last box was loaded into my van he took me into his arms and kissed me.”
“So you got the gig and the guy, huh?” Lydia hoped she sounded cavalier. “How did Julie Christopher feel about that?”
Cameron looked confused by the question. “Julie? She loves to tell the story. Brags that her fall made Fred fall. She’s a real romantic. She and Michael have been married over forty years but they’re as in love as a couple of high schoolers.”
Lydia felt the chill of another trail gone cold. Neither animal cruelty nor business rivalry appeared to be motivating the hit on Cameron. She tried again.
“It does sound destined, doesn’t it? And not just Julie’s fall landing you the job. I mean, what are the odds two people your ages would both be free to act on such an instant attraction?”
Cameron winced. “Fred was used to dating powerful career women. No one seriously. But I had an obstacle.” She looked down at her lap. “I was engaged at the time. The wedding was just weeks away, actually.” She looked up with sheepish eyes. “My fiance didn’t take my announcing I’d fallen in love with Fred very well.”
Lydia felt the tight muscles in her neck and shoulders begin to tingle. “Tell me about that.”
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Mort sat with his third cup of coffee and stared at the folder he’d just closed. He’d requested a background on Lydia after she offered to help with the Buchner investigation. The Mapquest files on Buchner’s computer made him even more interested to learn about the Olympia psychologist with such keen observation skills.
A lot of it was pretty much what he’d expected. No criminal history. Purchased the property listed at the Mapquested address four years ago. Paid her taxes on time. Credit score in the mid seven hundreds. Graduated with honors from the University of Pennsylvania with a Ph. D. in Clinical Psychology. Biology undergrad out of Carnegie-Mellon. Member of two professional organizations, one of which managed her retirement fund. Owns a four year old Volvo that’s never been ticketed or stopped for a traffic violation. Same office since she arrived in Olympia eight years ago, straight out of grad school. No complaints lodged against her professional license.
Squeaky clean. Not even a ne’er-do-well husband to check into.
How’s a woman like that end up being checked out by a guy who gets his face blown off?
It wasn’t Lydia’s boring background that kept Mort quiet and thinking. It was where the background check ended.
There was no trace of Lydia Justine Corriger before the day she stepped her freshman foot onto Carnegie-Mellon’s campus. Mort wanted to know why. He also wanted to know more about those personal reasons she mentioned for wanting to help find Buchner’s murderer.
His cell phone rang. He looked at the screen and pulled himself into the present.
“Hey, Robbie.” He looked at the clock. “How much snow you got in Denver?”
His son laughed. “I’m in Miami, Dad. I got sunshine and tropical breezes.”
“Miami? Claire and the girls with you?”
“They’re home. I’m out here following some leads on the Halloway case. You have anything for me?”
Mort reached for the folder beneath the one holding Lydia’s truncated background check. “What have you got, a spy in the department? I just got the stuff back a half hour ago.”
Robbie chuckled again and Mort found himself longing for the sound of his daughter’s laughter.
“Call me lucky,” Robbie said. “Or impatient. You make the call.”
“With you I’d go with impatient every time. Remember the time you slipped out of your cast because your broken arm was itching? I’ll bet that little bit of impulsivity still sings to you every time it rains.” Mort flipped the file open and scanned the contents. “Well, the taxpayers just spent some money running down a short blind alley. I’m afraid we got nothing on Anna Galeta Salada.”
“Nothing at all?” Robbie asked. “How can that be?”
“Want me to read the entire one page file to you? Says here no records found in any database domestic or international. Several different spellings tried.” Mort let out a snort. “Here’s fun facts to know and tell. Says here ‘Galeta Salada’ is Spanish for ‘cracker’. Sounds like your little hooker has a sense of humor.”
“I’m thinking she isn’t a hooker at all. What about her passport? How’d she get into Costa Rica?” Robbie asked.
“No record of such a passport being issued legitimately. But you got enough money, Robbie, you can get anything.”
“And if my theory about her being a gun for hire is correct…”
“Then she’d have enough money to buy anything she wanted.” Mort closed the file. “You said you were running down leads. What else you got?”
“You tell me. You ever hear of somebody called ‘The Fixer’?”
Mort tossed Galeta Salada’s folder aside. “Isn’t that a television show? No, I’m thinking of something else.” He scanned his memory bank. “Can’t say as I have. Why?”
“While you were running background on Galeta Salada, I tried some different angles. The desk clerk at the hotel where Halloway died couldn’t stop talking about how beautiful this woman was. How Halloway was drawn to her right away. Said she was flawless except for a port wine stain on her neck.”
“I’m listening,” Mort said.
“I get to thinking that being a gorgeous hooker wouldn’t be a bad cover for a shooter, right?” Robbie sounded excited. “So I put out some feelers to see if anybody knows anything about drop-dead beautiful babes putting a hit on someone. I mean, gorgeous women draw attention, right?”
“Very clever. You’re a regular Woodward and Bernstein.” Mort reached for a pen and paper. “What did you learn?”
“Well, I didn’t get the names of anybody who’d been killed by a supermodel, but I did stumble onto something, could be nothing. Turns out a guy got nailed last summer for contracting a hit on his wife. Some low life scum owned car lots up and down the Florida coast. Gets tired of
his wife, hooks up with his kids’ nanny, and decides a divorce would cost too much. Hears about someone called “The Fixer” from a friend of a friend who knew some guy with a cousin who used the services once. Says The Fixer makes problems go away permanently. So this guy makes contact. Sets a meet at an airport hotel. The Fixer turns him down but tells him an associate will meet him tomorrow. The guy gets burned when The Fixer calls the local cop shop and busts the guy. Cops send in a decoy and nab his fat ass.”
Mort chuckled. “So what’s this Fixer got to do with Halloway?”
“Here’s the thing.” Robbie sounded like a kid at Christmas. “I interviewed this douche today. Martin’s his name, and he says The Fixer is a woman! A drop-dead looker. Martin said he got a hard on just looking at her. What d’ya think, Dad? Think I found my beautiful hit man?”
Mort was impressed with his son’s work and told him so. “I’ll see what I can find on this end. Martin have a name for this woman?”
“Yeah,” Robbie said. “Said she called herself ‘Graham’.”
Mort wrote it down and tapped his pen against the paper. “Like the cracker.”
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Mort slammed the door to the Subaru. He’d gotten the call half-way through lunch and could have handed it to anyone on the homicide squad, but this one was worth abandoning his pastrami-on-rye. He walked over to the body lying on the rain-slicked pavement, looked down, and fought the impulse to kick the dead man’s vacant stare off his face.
Angelo Satanell, Junior, aka Satan, had a gaping hole in his neck. Mort figured a. 36 caliber at least.
He glanced over to a nondescript middle-aged man sitting on the curb, staring into nothing, oblivious to the freezing rain. Mort recognized him. Mark Hane. Father to Meaghan, the oh-so promising cellist left stuffed behind the dumpster after she overdosed on Satan’s heroin.
“Why isn’t he in cuffs?” Mort asked the uniform standing next to him.
The policeman shrugged. “He hasn’t given us any grief. Called it in himself. We found him sitting right there. Handed us his piece soon as we pulled up.” The officer spit into the street. “You know who this dirtbag is, right?” He leaned into Mort and whispered. “The way I see it, this gentleman did us a favor. I got half a mind to cut him loose and let this one go cold.”