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Cornwell, Patricia - Kay Scarpetta 06 - From Potter's Field.txt

Page 15

by From Potter's Field (lit)


  Marino yawned without covering his mouth. He was smoking and drinking Budweiser from the bottle. He had dark circles under his eyes, and though he had yet to divulge intimate details about his relationship with Molly, I recognized the symptoms of someone in lust. There were times when he looked as if he had been up and athletic for weeks on end.

  'Are you all right?' I inquired.

  He set down his bottle and looked around. The Boardroom was busy with new agents and cops drinking beer and eating popcorn while a television blared.

  'I'm beat,' he said, and he seemed very distracted.

  'I appreciate your coming to get me.'

  'Just poke me if I start falling asleep at the wheel,' he said. 'Or you can drive. Those things you're drinking probably don't have any booze in them anyway.'

  'They have enough. I won't be driving, and if you're that tired, perhaps we should stay here.'

  He got up to get another beer. I followed him with my eyes. Marino was going to be difficult tonight. I could sense his storm fronts better than any meteorologist.

  'We got a lab report back from New York that you might find interesting,' he said as he sat back down. 'It's got to do with Gault's hair.'

  'The hair found in the fountain?' I asked with interest.

  'Yeah. And I don't got the sort of scientific detail I know you want, okay? So you'll have to call up there yourself for that. But the bottom line is they found drugs in his hair. They said he had to be drinking and doing coke for this stuff to have shown up in his hair.'

  'They found cocaethylene,' I said.

  'I think that's the name. It was all through his hair, from the roots to the ends, meaning he's been drinking and drugging for a while.'

  'Actually, we can't be certain how long he's been doing it,' I said.

  'The guy I talked to said we're looking at five months of growth,' Marino said.

  'Testing hair for drugs is controversial,'1 explained. 'It's not certain that some positive results for cocaine in hair aren't due to external contamination. Say, smoke in crack houses that gets absorbed by the hair just like cigarette smoke does. It's not always easy to distinguish between what has been absorbed and what has been ingested.'

  'You mean he could be contaminated.' Marino pondered this.

  'Yes, he could be. But that doesn't mean he isn't drinking and drugging, too. In fact, he has to be. Cocaethylene is produced in the liver.'

  Marino thoughtfully lit another cigarette. 'What about him dyeing his hair all the time?'

  'That can affect test results, too,' I said. 'Some oxidizing agents might destroy some of the drug.'

  'Oxidizing?'

  'As in peroxides, for example.'

  'Then it's possible some of this cocaethylene's been destroyed,' Marino reasoned. 'Meaning it's also possible his drug level was really higher than it looks.'

  'It could be.'

  'He has to be getting drugs somewhere.' Marino stared off.

  'In New York that certainly wouldn't be hard,' I said.

  'Hell, it's not hard anywhere.' The expression on his face was getting more tense.

  'What are you thinking?' I asked.

  'I'll tell you what I'm thinking,' he started in. 'This drug connection ain't working out so hot for Jimmy Davila.'

  'Why? Do we know his toxicology results?' I asked.

  'They're negative.' He paused. 'Benny's started singing. He's saying Davila dealt.'

  'I should think people might consider the source on that one,' I said. 'Benny doesn't exactly strike me as a reliable narrator.'

  'I agree with you,' Marino said. 'But some people are trying to paint Davila as a bad cop. There's a rumor they want to pin Jane's murder on him.'

  'That's crazy,' I said, surprised. That makes absolutely no sense.'

  'You remember the stuff on Jane's hand that glowed in the Luma-Lite?'

  'Yes.'

  'Cocaine,' he said.

  'And her toxicology?'

  'Negative. And that's weird.' Marino looked frustrated. 'But the other thing Benny's saying now is that it was Davila who gave the knapsack to him.'

  'Oh come on,' I said with irritation.

  'I'm just telling you.'

  'It wasn't Davila's hair found in the fountain.'

  'We can't prove how long that had been there. And we don't know it's Gault's,' he said.

  'DNA will verify it's Gault's,' I said with conviction. 'And Davila carried a .380 and a .38. Jane was shot with a Clock.'

  'Look' - Marino leaned forward, resting his arms on the table - 'I'm not here to argue with you, Doc. I'm just telling you that things aren't looking good. New York politicians want this case cleared, and a good way to do that is to pin the crime on a dead man. So what do you do? You turn Davila into a dirtbag and nobody feels sorry for him. Nobody cares.'

  'And what about what happened to Davila?'

  'That dumbshit medical examiner who went to the scene still thinks it's possible he committed suicide.'

  I looked at Marino as if he'd lost his mind. 'He kicked himself in the head?' I said. 'Then shot himself between the eyes?'

  'He was standing up when he shot himself with his own gun, and when he fell he hit concrete or something.'

  'His vital reaction to his injuries shows he received the blow to his head first,' I said, getting angrier. 'And please explain how his revolver ended up so neatly on his chest.'

  'It's not your case, Doc.' Marino looked me in the eye. 'That's the bottom line. You and me are both guests. We got invited.'

  'Davila did not commit suicide,' I said. 'And Dr. Horowitz is not going to allow such a thing to come out of his office.'

  'Maybe he won't. Maybe they'll just say that Davila was a dirtbag who got whacked by another drug dealer. Jane ends up in a pine box in Potter's Field. End of story. Central Park and the subway are safe again.'

  I thought of Commander Penn and felt uneasy. I asked Marino about her.

  'I don't know what she's got to do with any of this,' he said. 'I've just been talking to some of the guys. But she's jammed. On the one hand, she wouldn't want anyone to think she had a bad cop. On the other, she don't want the public to think there's a crazed serial killer running through the subway.'

  'I see,' I said as I thought of the enormous pressure she must be under, for it was her department's mandate to take the subway back from the criminals. New York City had allocated the Transit Police tens of millions of dollars to do that.

  'Plus,' he added, 'it was a friggin' reporter who found Jane's body in Central Park. And this guy's relentless as a jackhammer from what I've heard. He wants to win a Nobel Prize.'

  'Not likely,' I said irritably.

  'You never know,' said Marino, who often made predictions about who would win a Nobel Prize. By now, according to him, I had won several.

  'I wish we knew whether Gault is still in New York,' I said.

  Marino drained his second beer and looked at his watch. 'Where's Lucy?' he asked.

  'Looking for Janet, last I heard.'

  'What's she like?'

  I knew what he was wondering. 'She's a lovely young woman,' I said. 'Bright but very quiet.'

  He was silent.

  'Marino, they've put my niece on the security floor.'

  He turned toward the counter as if he were thinking about another beer. 'Who did? Benton?'

  'Yes.'

  'Because of the computer mess?'

  'Yes.'

  'You want another Zima?'

  'No, thank you. And you shouldn't have another beer, since you're driving. In fact, you're probably driving a police car and shouldn't have had the first one.'

  I've got my truck tonight.'

  I was not at all happy to hear that, and he could tell.

  'Look, so it don't have a damn air bag. I'm sorry, okay? But a taxi or limo service wouldn't have had an air bag, either.'

  'Marino

  'I'm just going to buy you this huge air bag. And you can drag it around with you everywhere you go
like your own personal hot-air balloon.'

  'A file was stolen from Lucy's desk when ERF was broken into last fall,' I said.

  'What sort of file?' he asked.

  'A manilla envelope containing personal correspondence,' I told him about Prodigy and how Lucy and Carrie had met.

  'They knew each other before Quantico?' he said.

  'Yes. And I think Lucy believes it was Carrie who went into her desk drawer.'

  Marino glanced around as he restlessly moved his empty beer bottle in small circles on the table.

  'She seems obsessed with Carrie and can't see anything else,' I went on. 'I'm worried.'

  'Where is Carrie these days?' he asked.

  'I have no earthly idea,' I said.

  Because it could not be proven that she had broken into ERF or had stolen Bureau property, she had been fired but not prosecuted. Carrie had never been locked up, not even for a day.

  Marino thought for a moment. 'Well, that bitch isn't what Lucy should be worried about. It's him.'

  'Certainly, I am more concerned about him.'

  'You think he's got her envelope?'

  'That's what I'm afraid of.' I felt a hand on my shoulder and turned around.

  'We sitting here or moving on?' Lucy asked, and she had changed into khaki slacks and a denim shirt with the FBI logo embroidered on it. She wore hiking boots and a sturdy leather belt. All that was missing was a cap and a gun.

  Marino was more interested in Janet, who could fill a polo shirt in a manner that was riveting. 'So, let's talk about what was in this envelope,' he said to me, unable to shift his eyes from Janet's chest.

  'Let's don't do it here,' I said.

  Marino's truck was a big blue Ford he kept much cleaner than his police car. His truck had a CB radio and a gun rack, and other than cigarette butts filling the ashtray, there was no trash to be seen. I sat in front, where air fresheners suspended from the rearview mirror gave the darkness a potent scent of pine.

  'Tell me exactly what was in the envelope,' Marino said to Lucy, who was in back with her friend.

  'I can't tell you exactly,' Lucy said, scooting forward and resting a hand on top of my seat.

  Marino crept past the guard booth, then shifted gears as his truck loudly got interested in being alive.

  'Think.' He raised his voice.

  Janet quietly spoke to Lucy, and for a moment they conversed in murmurs. The narrow road was black, firing ranges unusually still. I had never ridden in Marino's truck, and it struck me as a bold symbol of his male pride.

  Lucy started talking. 'I had some letters from Grans, Aunt Kay, and E-mail from Prodigy.'

  'From Carrie, you mean,' Marino said.

  She hesitated. 'Yes.'

  'What else?'

  'Birthday cards.'

  'From who?' Marino asked.

  'The same people.'

  'What about your mother?'

  'No.'

  'What about your dad?'

  'I don't have anything from him.'

  'Her father died when she was very small,' I reminded Marino.

  'When you wrote Lucy did you use a return address?' he asked me.

  'Yes. My stationery would have that.'

  'A post office box?'

  'No. My personal mail is delivered to my house. Everything else goes to the office.' 'What are you trying to find out?' Lucy said with a trace of resentment.

  'Okay,' Marino said as he drove through dark countryside, 'let me tell you what your thief knows so far. He knows where you go to school, where your aunt Kay lives in Richmond, where your grandmother in Florida lives. He knows what you look like and when you were born.

  'Plus he knows about your friendship with Carrie because of the E-mail thing.' He glanced into the rearview mirror. 'And that's just the minimum of what this toad knows about you. I haven't read the letters and notes to see what else he's found out.'

  'She knew most of all that anyway,' Lucy said angrily.

  'She?' Marino pointedly asked.

  Lucy was silent.

  It was Janet who gently spoke. 'Lucy, you've got to get over it. You've got to give it up.'

  'What else?' Marino asked my niece. 'Try to remember the smallest thing. What else was in the envelope?'

  'A few autographs and a few old coins. Just things from when I was a kid. Things that would have no value to anyone but me. Like a shell from the beach I picked up when I was with Aunt Kay one time when I was little.'

  She thought for a moment. 'My passport. And there were a few papers I did in high school.'

  The pain in her voice tugged at my heart, and I wanted to hug her. But when Lucy was sad she pushed everyone away. She fought.

  'Why did you keep them in the envelope?' Marino was asking.

  'I had to keep them somewhere,' she snapped. 'It was my damn stuff, okay? And if I'd left it in Miami my mother probably would have thrown it in the trash.'

  'The papers you did in high school,' I said. 'What were they about, Lucy?'

  The truck got quiet, filled with no voice but its own. The sound of its engine rose and fell with acceleration and the shifting of gears as Marino drove into the tiny town of Triangle. Roadside diners were lit up, and I suspected many of the cars out were driven by marines.

  Lucy said, 'Well, it's sort of ironical now. One of the papers I did back then was a practical tutorial on UNIX security. My focus was basically passwords, you know, what could happen if users chose poor passwords. So I talked about the encryption subroutine in C libraries that-'

  'What was the other paper about?' Marino interrupted her. 'Brain surgery?'

  'How did you guess?' she said just as snootily.

  'What was it on?' I asked.

  'Wordsworth,' she said.

  We ate at the Globe and Laurel, and as I looked around at Highland plaid, police patches and beer steins hanging over the bar, I thought of my life. Mark and I used to eat here, and then in London a bomb detonated as he walked past. Wesley and I once came here often. Then we began knowing each other too well, and we no longer went out in public much.

  Everyone had French onion soup and tenderloin. Janet was typically quiet, and Marino would not stop staring at her and making provocative comments. Lucy was getting increasingly infuriated with him, and I was surprised at his behavior. He was no fool. He knew what he was doing.

  'Aunt Kay,' Lucy said, 'I want to spend the weekend with you.'

  'In Richmond?' I asked.

  'That's where you still live, isn't it?' She did not smile.

  I hesitated. 'I think you need to stay where you are right now.'

  'I'm not in prison. I can do what I want.'

  'Of course you're not in prison,' I said quietly. 'Let me talk to Benton, all right?'

  She was silent.

  'So tell me what you think of the Sig-nine,' Marino was saying to Janet's bosom.

  She boldly looked him in the eye and said, 'I'd rather have a Colt Python with a six-inch barrel. Wouldn't you?'

  Dinner continued to deteriorate, and the ride back to the Academy was tensely silent except for Marino's unrelenting attempts to engage Janet in a dialogue. After we let her and Lucy out of the truck, I turned to him and boiled over.

  'For God's sake,' I exploded. 'What has gotten into you?'

  'I don't know what you're talking about.'

  'You were obnoxious. Absolutely obnoxious, and you know exactly what I'm talking about.'

  He sped through the darkness along J. Edgar Hoover Road, heading toward the interstate as he fumbled for a cigarette.

  'Janet will probably never want to be around you again,'I went on. 'I wouldn't blame Lucy for avoiding you, either. And that's a shame. The two of you had become friends.'

  'Just because I've given her shooting lessons don't mean we're friends,' he said. 'As far as I'm concerned she's a spoiled brat just like she's always been, and a smart-ass. Not to mention, I don't like her type and I sure as hell don't understand why you let her do the things she does.'
/>   'What things!' I said, getting more put out with him.

  'Has she ever dated a guy?' He glanced over at me. 'I mean, even once?'

 

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