by J. Bertrand
Start Reading
© 2011 by J. Mark Bertrand
Published by Bethany House Publishers
11400 Hampshire Avenue South
Bloomington, Minnesota 55438
www.bethanyhouse.com
Bethany House Publishers is a division of
Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan
www.bakerpublishinggroup.com
E-book edition created 2011
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
ISBN 978-1-4412-3228-1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
Praise for
BACK ON MURDER
“A rogue homicide detective is assigned to a grisly murder case, and through the investigation discovers core life values that overturn his world. Bertrand’s first novel is an astonishing and powerful mystery. Extremely well-crafted.”
—Davis Bunn, bestselling author of Lion of Babylon
“Bertrand’s got a pitch-perfect ear for dialogue. The cop-talk, for fans of the tough guy genre, hits the right note every time. . . . Each sentence builds anticipation; each scene leads deeper into the distinct but converging crimes.”
—Comment
“In comparison to many crime series protagonists, Roland March is cast on a refreshingly human scale.”
—Books & Culture
“The first paragraph makes you feel like an astronomer discovering a growing brightness in an unmapped area of the sky, and as you continue you get the excitement of realizing you’re the first to witness a supernova, and there’s no way you’re going to take your eyes off it until it’s finished. The story and writing is that good. Give me more.”
—Sigmund Brouwer, author of Broken Angel
“With exquisite prose and poetic style, Mark Bertrand has captured the surreal world of homicide detectives with a realism and power rarely seen in fiction.”
—Mark Mynheir, homicide detective, author of The Night Watchman
“One of the strengths of this excellent novel is the credibility of this rogue detective’s voice.”
—CBA Retailers and Resources
“Bertrand’s well-plotted and tightly written novel offers glimmers of a world beyond the gritty Houston streets his cop must roam.”
—World
“Back on Murder has the grit and tension of a great crime novel, with true, three-dimensional realism.”
—Tom Morrisey, author of Pirate Hunter
“Detective Roland March leads the reader along the streets of Houston in what is as much a personal rediscovery as it is a page-turning detective tale.”
—Don Hoesel, author of The Alarmists
For my parents,
David and Judy.
So much love, so much support.
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Endorsements
Dedication
PART 1: BYSTANDER
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
PART 2: A MIRROR BLINDING
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Part 3: LET JUSTICE ROLL DOWN
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
About the Author
Back Cover
. . . the shadow was there already.
—Graham Greene, Our Man in Havana
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5 — 10:49 P.M.
A uniform named Nguyen is on the tape tonight. The flashing lights bounce off the reflective strips on his slicker. He cocks his head at my ID and gives me a sideways smile.
“Detective March,” he says, adding my name to his log.
“I know you, don’t I? You worked the Thomson scene last year.”
“That was me.”
“Good work, if I remember. You got a line on this one yet?”
“I haven’t even been inside.” He nods at the house over his shoulder. A faux Tuscan villa on Brompton in West University, just a couple of blocks away from the Rice Village. “Nice, huh? Not the first place I’d expect to be called out to.”
“You think death cares where you live?”
“I guess not. Answer me one thing: why the monkey suit?”
My hand-me-down tux, now speckled with light rain, stretches the definition of plainclothes. “It’s a busy night, Nguyen, so they’re pulling from off duty. They caught me at the wife’s office Christmas gig. That snow yesterday drove the city a little crazy.”
“Snow in Houston. Who woulda thought? But still—”
“I have a feeling the vic’s not gonna mind.”
“It’s not the vic I’m thinking of.”
He lifts the tape and I slip under, traipsing across the wet lawn.
The past ten years or so, deluxe mansions like this have proliferated. Stone and stucco. Tile roofing. Driveways of textured concrete. They’re cropping up in the Heights, too. My neighborhood. At least they were before the market nosedived. Now the only thing proliferating are the foreclosure signs.
I pause inside the wood-and-glass double doors to shake the rain off my jacket, staring out at a sea of travertine newly muddied by a trail of HPD boot prints. All the lights are on. Wrought-iron chandeliers. Antique-looking lamps on side tables tucked in between an island of oversized couches. Through an arched partition I see more furniture and a floor-to-ceiling bookcase packed to the limit. What I don’t see are any police.
“Hello?”
A familiar voice calls: “Come on back, March.”
Passing through nested living rooms and a modern steel-and-marble kitchen, I find a cluster of patrol officers facing a set of sliding glass doors. One of them is my old mentor, Sergeant Nixon, long in the tooth but canny as ever.
“Look who’s here,” he says, motioning me over. “They must’ve run out of detectives and sent us the Phantom of the Opera.”
I glance down at my tux. “That bad?”
“What were you shooting for, dressed like that? James Bond?”
“Now you’re just hurting my feelings, Nix. What’s the situation here? Get me up to speed already.”
He taps the glass door. “Out there’s the scene. Body’s half in the water. We’re still waiting on everything—CSU, ME, you name it—but supposedly they’re on the way. I kept my people inside, figuring you’d be happier that way. And it saves us from getting wet.”
I squint through the rain-streaked pane. A long, narrow swimming pool glows aqua in the darkness, an inky cloud floating near one side, transected by a pair of pale, bare legs. The rest of the body, the part out of the water, is hard to make out.
“I’ll get the lights,” Nix says.
He flips a wall switch, activating a hedge of lamps planted around the edge of the yard. Some Christmas lights draped around a pergola start blinking, too.
I can see her now, facedown on th
e gray slate, her arms stretched out like she’s reaching for something. Her skin shines bone white apart from the pattern of wounds flaying her back.
“I’m gonna take a look.”
I deposit my battered leather briefcase on the kitchen island, then slide the door open to slip outside. Nixon follows me.
“Watch where you step.”
He sighs. “Will do.”
From inside, she looked naked, but as we edge closer I make out a pair of white shorts soaked through and tinted pink with blood. The waistband tepees out at the small of her back. Puncture wounds, long and thin, run up and down her spine and across the shoulders, too many to count. The kind a kitchen knife might make. Neat, too. In and out. Inflicted postmortem, probably, or they wouldn’t be so uniform.
We crouch a few feet away.
Her brown hair is still damp, the tangled locks arranged to leave her face clear. One cheek pressed to the slate, the other waxy and pearlescent with rain. Her eyelids gently shut like they might blink open at any time. Like she might notice us suddenly and cover herself in embarrassment.
“She’s young,” I say.
“Twenty-four. Her name is Simone Walker. She was sort of a live-in houseguest here, helped out with the rent. The owner called in the body. Says she came home and found the girl like this. I’ve got her upstairs waiting to talk with you.”
“Do me a favor, Nix. Cut the Christmas lights.”
The swimming pool is special, not the square slab of chlorinated blue you see out in the suburbs. This one’s long and thin, hedged with gray slate, concealed from the neighbors by the height of the house and a perimeter of tall fences lined with taller vegetation. At the back of the yard, a door leads into a cottage-sized garage. This isn’t a crime scene. It’s the cover of an architectural magazine. Like Nguyen said, not the kind of place you expect to be called to. Maybe death doesn’t care where you live, but murder does. A lot.
I bend down, breaking the surface of the water with my fingertips. It’s forty degrees outside in Houston, just a day after our unprecedented, seemingly impossible snowfall. But the water is warm to the touch. Of course it is. A heated pool.
Something under the water catches my eye. Beneath the ripple of light rain, at the shimmering bottom of the pool, one of the chairs from the set under the pergola lies on its side. An expensive sort of chair, metal framed with hardwood slats, the kind my wife would buy in a heartbeat if her old-money ancestors hadn’t also passed down the miserly gene.
The Christmas lights cut off and Nix returns.
“What do you make of that?” I ask, pointing into the pool.
“Got me. Don’t they tell people to put the lawn furniture in the pool when a hurricane’s coming? To keep it from flying around or something.”
“You think they were expecting a hurricane?”
He shrugs. “You’re the detective.”
The glass doors slide open and a uniform sticks his head out. “Crime scene van just rolled up, Sarge.”
“I’m coming.”
“Listen, Nix,” I say, touching his arm. “It’s bad enough I’ve got an outdoor scene, and rain on top of that. But people are gonna start showing up, and they’ll all want a look at the body—”
“Say no more. Necessary personnel only.”
He goes inside, leaving me alone. The glass door closes and for a moment the world is quiet. I glance around. As far as I can tell, everything looks right. The body’s been posed, the scene has been arranged, but even that isn’t so unusual. Apart from the chair, it’s all what I’d expect to see. But it doesn’t feel right and I don’t know why.
Upstairs a female officer baby-sits the homeowner, a tall, thin woman in her mid-fifties dressed in a clingy black sweater and dark jeans. She stands at the window in the corner of a paper-strewn home office, peering down at the street outside, arms crossed, a pair of glasses dangling from one hand. The uniform looks relieved at my presence.
“Dr. Hill,” she says, “this is the detective.”
The woman turns, inspecting me through narrow eyes. Her lined face is scrubbed of makeup and framed by a severe black bob, the sharp fringe cutting across her eyebrows.
“I’m Roland March.”
I hand her one of my cards, pausing to write my mobile number on the back. A ritual of introduction, performed by rote a dozen times a day. She studies the writing, then motions me into a nearby chair currently occupied by a tower of reference books.
“You can move those,” she says.
I get the books sorted and prop my briefcase against the chair leg, its worn sides drooping miserably, the leather spotted with dried water. A gift from my wife years ago. The key long since missing, the lock broken, the flap held down by wraparound straps. Digging inside, I retrieve my equally battered Filofax, another of Charlotte’s gifts.
“Do people still use these things?” the woman says. She reaches forward and snatches it away. “It was such a Yuppie affectation.” She thumbs the snap open to look inside. “I thought everything was digital these days.”
“Excuse me, ma’am.” I hold my hand out politely.
“Sorry,” she says, closing the binder and snapping it shut. “That’s a bad idea, isn’t it? Grabbing things from the police. But it’s not like I took your gun or anything.”
She speaks in a low, gravelly tone I’ve always found strangely attractive, one of those scotch-and-cigarettes voices, minus the foreign accent.
“It’s okay,” I say, opening the Filofax flat on my lap, turning to a fresh page. I take my digital recorder out, too, proving I’m not such a dinosaur. Frankly the Filofax is an affectation, something I found in an old box and decided to put back into service, handier than the usual notepads when it comes to arranging and rearranging pages. Unlike the recorder, it never needs recharging, either.
“Just have a seat for me, ma’am. I need to ask you some questions about the victim.”
“I don’t think I can sit. I can’t stop moving. I’ve been pacing a hole in the carpet. I’ll go crazy if you make me sit still.”
“Suit yourself.”
She eyes the female officer with uncertainty, then lets out a long breath. “I’m sorry, Detective. I’m making a mess of this. Can we start over, please? I don’t want you to get the wrong idea. I’m Joy Hill.”
She extends her hand, then pulls it back, uncertain of the etiquette where policemen are concerned.
“What’s the wrong idea you don’t want me to get?”
“I’m making the wrong impression, that’s all I mean. You’re thinking I should be distraught and instead here I am running at the mouth. I can’t help it. I was raised not to show people how I feel. I keep it bottled up until—is it all right if I smoke?”
“If it’ll help.”
She retrieves a pack of Dunhills from the desk, along with a glass ashtray, bringing both to a chair just across from me, finally sitting. She flicks a fresh filter half out of the pack, then pulls it free with her teeth. The lighter’s in the ashtray. A metallic ping, a flash of fire, and then she exhales a column of smoke. A smile comes to her lips.
“What’s funny?”
“I don’t let anyone smoke in the house,” she says.
And yet she keeps a pack handy all the same. “All right, let’s get started. It’s Dr. Joy Hill, right? And you’re a doctor of what?”
“Literature.”
“Hence all the books. You teach where?”
“At UH,” she says. Then, catching my reaction: “It’s a good school, Detective. A good department. People think we’re handing out fast-food diplomas to a commuter population, but it’s not like that at all.”
“You don’t have to convince me. I went there.”
“And studied what? Criminal Justice.”
“Worse,” I say. “History. The victim, Simone Walker, she rented a room from you?”
“Rooms,” she says. “Basically, we drew a line down the middle of the upstairs. I kept the master and my office, and gave he
r the other bathroom and the guest bedrooms. You probably know about my husband already. No? He met his soul mate a year ago and started fathering her children, but he left me the house.”
“So you knew Ms. Walker from where?”
She glances at the ceiling. “A friend introduced us, I think. This was maybe seven or eight months ago. I was looking for a roommate and Simone wanted to move out on her own. She had marriage trouble, too.”
“Divorced?”
“Not as far as I know. She pretty much operated like a single girl, though, if that’s what you’re wondering. I assume they were legally separated, but it’s not something we ever talked about.”
“What’s her husband’s name?” I ask, my pen poised.
Again she looks at the ceiling. “Jason Young. Walker was her maiden name. She moved her things in around the end of last semester—during finals, actually.”
“Where did she work?”
“Ah,” she says, templing her fingers. “That’s a good question. Simone changed jobs pretty frequently, and for the last month or two I don’t think she had one. I suspected something was going on, but then she confirmed it by asking for money. The whole point of having her here was to make money, not hand it out. Anyway, I said I couldn’t help her. She found other sources eventually.”
“We’ll come back to that,” I say, glancing at my watch. “But I need to know what happened today, the events leading up to your discovery of the body.”
She pauses to think. “I saw her this morning around ten. I was leaving and she’d just rolled out of bed. She told me she was having lunch with a girlfriend, then spending the rest of the day in the pool. I said she was crazy. I mean, it was snowing yesterday. But she’s, like, so what? The pool’s heated.”
“Did she say who she was meeting?”
Dr. Hill stubs her cigarette out, then sets the ashtray on the floor. “She didn’t say, and I didn’t ask. I had an appointment on campus, so I was a bit rushed. Anyway, this was her crash pad, Detective. She liked to play music, she liked to watch TV, and she liked to swim. When she went shopping—which she did a lot—this is where she’d dump her stuff. But mostly she went out. I told her she could have friends over, but she didn’t. I don’t know why.”