He Was Not There
Page 23
“No. She worked really long hours. They were supposed to be at the office before their boss got in, so like six-thirty or seven at the latest. And she would work past dark. She would come home late, sleep for a few hours, and then be back at the office before I even had breakfast. Her hours were crazy.”
“How long could she keep up like that? She must have had to take breaks on the weekend at least. Did she get a day off? Sunday?”
“She worked every day. It wasn’t a rule that they had to work on weekends, but everybody did. It was so competitive. If the other interns were there on the weekend, then Lauren had to be there on the weekend. Otherwise, people would think that she wasn’t as dedicated, and when her internship was up, they would just say goodbye and she’d have to find something else. No other investment banking firm was going to take her if she failed her internship there. She’d be… damaged goods. She’d have to find a job in something else, and she really wanted to be in finance. She really did.”
“Why was it so cutthroat? Is that normal?”
“For investment banking, I guess it is. They’re all like that. And Chase Gold is just a small firm, so if she couldn’t make it there, there’s no way that some Wall Street or Japanese company would look at her. She had to get a permanent position with Chase and work there for three years before she could go on to look for something else. No one would look at her otherwise.”
Zachary shook his head. “Why would anyone want to work like that?”
Barbara pushed tendrils of hair away from her face, making a half-hearted attempt to push them back into the bun. “Lots of professions are like that, not just finance. Look at doctors and nurses. They’re the same way. Long-distance trucking. Cab drivers.”
“They all have rules now about not being able to work more than a certain number of hours in a row to prevent people from falling asleep at the wheel or cutting off the wrong leg.”
“I guess. But this isn’t that kind of place. I don’t think there are any rules about not being able to work that long. She always worked for hours and hours. She slept at the office on the floor sometimes. Or didn’t sleep at all for two or three days. You can’t even imagine how bad it was.”
Zachary thought about that. He pulled out his notepad and jotted down a few notes to himself. Avenues to pursue. Things not to forget. Barbara’s eyes tracked his pencil as he scratched out the lines.
“You look like you’ve never held a pen before,” she commented.
Zachary’s cheeks heated. He looked down at his awkward grip on his pencil. Many teachers had tried to correct it during school. He’d moved among a lot of different schools, classrooms, and institutions, and the first thing they always tried to do was correct his grip.
“I have dysgraphia,” he said. “That’s the only way I can write. I know it looks bad to you, but it’s the only thing that feels right to me. It’s the only way I can see what I’m doing and form the letters.”
She shook her head and didn’t make any comment on his chicken scratch. He could write neatly. He did when he was filling out forms or writing something down for someone else. But it took two or three times as long if he wanted to make it tidy. When he was writing for himself, he could scrawl it however he wanted to. He could still read it. Usually. Sometimes. He could normally figure out what he had meant, even if he couldn’t read every word.
“Lauren had beautiful handwriting,” Barbara said, tears starting to make their way down her cheeks. “She should have been a schoolteacher, it looked like something out of a handwriting textbook. But…” she sniffled, “of course, teachers don’t make anything, and Lauren wanted to make a lot of money. A lot of money.”
2
“I don’t really know what an investment banker does,” Zachary said, “but I know it is something that I associate with making a lot of money. She was pretty wealthy, then?” He was thinking about motives. If there were anything to Barbara’s fears—and he had to assume for the purposes of his investigation that there was—then whoever had killed her needed a motive. And money was always a good motive.
“No, not yet,” Barbara said. “She was just starting out, so she wasn’t making a whole lot. We rented an apartment together, and it’s a nice one, not some little rat’s nest, but neither of us could have afforded it on our own. Maybe we could, but only if we didn’t need to eat or pay for heating or internet.”
Zachary nodded. “And if she was just starting, then she probably still had school loans to worry about too.”
“Yeah. All of that stuff. She wanted to get rich, but she wasn’t there yet. We are—were—both making good money for our age, but nothing like it would be if she got to be a permanent employee with a few years under her belt.”
“That makes sense. What’s the name of the place that she worked?”
“I have to look it up…” She pulled out her phone and fiddled with it. “We always just called it ‘Chase Gold,’ because it was close to that, and that’s really what they were trying to do. Chase after the gold and get as much as they could. For themselves and their clients.”
Zachary waited while she tapped through a few screens on her phone, searching for it in her contacts or on an internet browser. He made a couple of other short notes while he waited. Things to look into. Questions to ask. Who would want to kill a young woman who spent all of her time working and was still in debt?
“Yeah, here it is,” Barbara offered. “Drake, Chase, Gould.” She spelled Gould for him to make sure he got it right. “She was really devoted to her job. And I don’t just mean that she liked it or put a lot of hours in. She did, but there was more to it than that. She thought they were the best company to work for, and that they were going to get her everything she wanted. She was always saying how good the management was, how well they took care of their employees, how good the other people she worked with were. She thought they were going right to the top. That they would compete with the Goldman Sachs and Wells Fargos of the world. They just started up a few years ago, and their portfolios were amazing, especially considering how short they had been in business. Or so she told me.” Barbara sniffed and rolled her eyes. “Multiple times.”
Zachary smiled at that. Nice to hear about someone who liked her job. “That’s great.”
He leaned back in his seat. The coffee shop didn’t have particularly comfortable chairs. He supposed it was to encourage people to have their coffees and to move on, not to just camp there drinking lattes and using the free Wi-Fi all day long. He looked at Barbara.
“So what makes you think it wasn’t an accident? Tell me about the things that made you concerned.”
“You think I’m just crazy, don’t you? Everybody just looks at me like I’ve got two heads. How could a slip in the bathtub not be an accident? It’s like being hit by a bus, the classic accident that everyone uses as an example.”
Zachary waited. He wasn’t the one who was doubting her opinion or sanity. He waited for her to stop defending herself and to fill the silence with her concerns. She would, if he just waited.
“It just doesn’t fit that Lauren was even home,” Barbara said. “Like I said, she was never home during the day. Between ten in the evening and six in the morning, if she was lucky. That’s it. No weekends. No days off. No afternoons going home to have a nap. She just shouldn’t have been home.”
“What was the time of death?”
Barbara looked at him. She shook her head. “I don’t know.”
“What time had she gotten home? You were out of the apartment from when until when?”
“I was out with a friend overnight. So I didn’t get back until… ten or eleven o’clock. That’s when I found her. But she was never home at that time of day.”
“But if she had been running a bath at six, and hit her head then, that would make sense.”
Barbara sighed. “I know. Everybody says it makes perfect sense. But it doesn’t. She was young and healthy. She wouldn’t just fall down and die. She wasn’t drunk or doing drugs. She didn�
��t have any diseases that would have made her pass out. To just step into the tub and fall down and die…? That doesn’t make sense either.”
“Sure. I understand that. No one expects something like this to happen. But she could have had the flu, or just wasn’t paying attention and slipped.”
“She wasn’t an old lady. Maybe old ladies slip and fall like that, but Lauren never did. If she slipped, she would have caught herself. If she got hurt, she would have called someone to help her.”
Zachary made a couple of notes of questions to pursue. He’d have to talk to the medical examiner’s office, and he really didn’t want to. He would have to psych himself up for it.
“What was the mechanism of death?”
Barbara frowned. “She… fell…?”
“Yeah. Did she drown? Or did she die from the blow to the head? Brain swelling or bleeding?”
“Drowning, I guess. She did hit her head, but then she went into the water. That’s where I found her. I guess… she knocked herself out, and then she didn’t know that she was drowning, couldn’t do anything about it.”
“The medical examiner hasn’t made a finding yet?”
“I don’t know. I guess that’s what they’re working on right now.”
“Okay. We’ll need a copy of their report once there is a finding. I’ll put in a requisition for it.”
Which meant that he would take the elevator down to the basement level at the police station. He would walk up to the desk and fill out one of the forms in his neatest printing, trying his best to avoid an intensely awkward situation with Kenzie.
He wasn’t sure how she was going to react. Things had been pretty quiet since they had broken up. He felt horrible about the way everything had ended, but he hadn’t called her and begged for her to come back. He hadn’t given her excuses for his behavior or followed her around in his car. He had done his best to just back out of her life and forget about what they had shared together.
But going back there, onto her turf, he didn’t know how she was going to treat him. Would she yell at him and call him out the way that Bridget did? Would she go all quiet or ignore him? Or just stare at him with her dark, intense eyes boring into him, hating him for the time she had wasted on him?
“Uh… Mr. Goldman?”
Zachary blinked and refocused on Barbara. It was Barbara he had to talk to and interact with. He needed to stay focused on her. “Sorry, just thinking about something. What was that?”
“If the medical examiner says that it was just an accident, that will be the end of it, won’t it? The police won’t investigate it as a homicide. They won’t hold anyone responsible.”
“No. But if I find something, we can get them to open an investigation. I’ve done it before. I’m assuming you already know that. That’s probably why you picked me out, isn’t it?”
She gave an embarrassed little shrug and nodded.
“I can’t guarantee anything,” Zachary said. “I don’t know whether it was an accident or something else… but it sounds like it’s going to be pretty hard to find evidence that it was anything else. I’ll look. I’m just warning you… Don’t expect miracles. Just because I’ve been able to prove that other deaths were homicides, that doesn’t mean that I can prove any death was. Some of them are going to be just what they look like.”
“I know. But… no matter what anyone else says… I want to do everything I can for Lauren. I can’t just close my eyes and say ‘oh, what a bizarre accident.’ I need to know. I need to do everything I can to bring the responsible party to justice. If there is a responsible party.”
“You said before that the police hadn’t asked you anything about an ex-boyfriend or anyone who might have wanted to harm her.”
“Yes. I mean no. They didn’t. They didn’t want to know anything like that.”
“Does that mean that she did have an ex-boyfriend who might have wanted to harm her?”
Barbara’s eyes widened. “Oh, no. I didn’t mean to imply anything like that… She did have ex-boyfriends, of course, but no one who was bitter or anything. No one who ever threatened her or stalked her.”
“Was there anyone who was abusive while they were together? She might not have told you that he hit her, but was there ever anyone that you suspected… that you thought might have hurt her? Even someone who was verbally or emotionally abusive. Someone you didn’t feel comfortable around or were glad that she broke up with him.”
“No… I don’t think so… everyone that she was with was pretty casual… it isn’t like she had any time for a relationship. She would take someone to a firm event, or sometimes she brought someone home from work… but she didn’t really have a life outside of the office.”
“She dated people from the office?”
“Yes… she went out for a meal with them, maybe brought one or two back to the apartment to…” she shrugged uncomfortably, “…to sleep it off. Just to crash somewhere before they had to go back to the office again in a few hours. There just was so little time, and she was under so much pressure… it didn’t leave time for a real relationship.”
“Even if it isn’t what you would call a relationship… men can still decide that they want what they can’t have. They might think that she should have spent more time with them, given them more attention, maybe not gone on to see someone else so soon… if they went out to eat, or he went home with her, then he might have expected more. He might have thought that it was turning into a committed relationship when it wasn’t.”
“I guess so. I don’t know. I never saw anything like that. The guys that I met from Chase Gold always seemed pretty casual. Not like they were pining after her or acting possessive.”
“Do you have the names of some of the men that she dated? Maybe an address list?”
“All of her numbers would be on her phone… I guess it’s at the apartment. The police didn’t take it, I don’t think. They just took a quick look at her electronics, but there wasn’t anything that didn’t look right to them, so they said they didn’t need to take anything with them.”
“Who is the detective on the case?”
“I don’t think there was a detective. Just… whoever comes out to have a look when someone dies suddenly. They’re not really investigating it. Just filling out the forms.”
“Someone would have been assigned to it. I’ll look into it. See if they have any thoughts.”
“They aren’t going to. They are just going to think that it was an accident, like a million other accidents that happen every day.”
Her Work Was Everything, Book #7 of the Zachary Goldman Mysteries series by P.D. Workman can be purchased at pdworkman.com
Also by P.D. Workman
MYSTERY/SUSPENSE:
* * *
Zachary Goldman Mysteries
She Wore Mourning
His Hands Were Quiet
She Was Dying Anyway
He Was Walking Alone
They Thought He was Safe
He Was Not There
Her Work Was Everything
She Told a Lie (Coming soon)
He Never Forgot (Coming soon)
She Was At Risk (Coming soon)
* * *
Kenzie Kirsch Medical Thrillers
Unlawful Harvest
* * *
Auntie Clem’s Bakery
Gluten-Free Murder
Dairy-Free Death
Allergen-Free Assignation
Witch-Free Halloween (Halloween Short)
Dog-Free Dinner (Christmas Short)
Stirring Up Murder
Brewing Death
Coup de Glace
Sour Cherry Turnover
Apple-achian Treasure
Vegan Baked Alaska
Muffins Masks Murder
Tai Chi and Chai Tea
Santa Shortbread
* * *
Reg Rawlins, Psychic Detective
What the Cat Knew
A Psychic with Catitude
A
Catastrophic Theft
Night of Nine Tails
Telepathy of Gardens
Delusions of the Past
Fairy Blade Unmade
Web of Nightmares
A Whisker's Breadth (Coming soon)
* * *
High-Tech Crime Solvers Series
Virtually Harmless
* * *
Cowritten with D. D. VanDyke
California Corwin P. I. Mystery Series
The Girl in the Morgue
* * *
Stand Alone Suspense Novels
Looking Over Your Shoulder
Lion Within
Pursued by the Past
In the Tick of Time
Loose the Dogs
* * *
YOUNG ADULT FICTION:
* * *
Between the Cracks:
Ruby
June and Justin
Michelle
Chloe
Ronnie
June, Into the Light
* * *
Tamara’s Teardrops:
Tattooed Teardrops
Two Teardrops
Tortured Teardrops
Vanishing Teardrops
* * *
Medical Kidnap Files:
Mito
EDS
Proxy
Toxo
* * *
Breaking the Pattern:
Deviation
Diversion
By-Pass
* * *
Stand Alone YA novels
Stand Alone
Don’t Forget Steven
Those Who Believe
Cynthia has a Secret
Questing for a Dream
Once Brothers
Intersexion
Making Her Mark
Endless Change
Gem, Himself, Alone
AND MORE AT PDWORKMAN.COM