But then I’d have to leave my car, and it might be towed by the time I got back. I pulled out of the lot and idled on the side of the road, watching up ahead for a bus to pass through the intersection. I waited ten minutes for this to happen, and when it did, I quickly put the Camry in drive and pulled out in front of a driver who made sure I knew I’d pissed him off.
The light favored me, and I made a right onto Shepherd just as the bus lumbered away from the stop. Mancuso was not sitting on the bench, and I could only hope she was on that bus and hadn’t decided to do a little shopping at the gas station/convenience store on the corner. Following Metro would be a new challenge—especially for an impatient person like me. But if I had no luck today, I could always come back tomorrow—and I’d wait on Shepherd to make sure she climbed onto the bus.
The bus couldn’t have traveled more than two miles before Mancuso got off. This surprised me. I had it in my mind that she lived in Emma’s neighborhood because of the bus stop visits, but we were more than ten miles away. I followed the bus through the next intersection and merged into the left lane, but I kept her in sight in my rearview, thinking maybe she might wait for another bus.
But no. She’d lit another cigarette and was waiting for the light to cross the street. I made a U-turn as soon as possible. She had already disappeared when I made it back. I turned right and saw her walking down the sidewalk, cigarette smoke in her wake. I drove past her, thinking how Houston can switch from commercial to residential in the blink of an eye. We were in an older neighborhood, the houses small and close together. I parked near the next corner and fumbled in my purse for a mirror and lipstick. As she walked by me, I pretended to be engrossed in applying color to my lips. She didn’t seem to notice.
I watched her walk another two blocks and then turn left at a stop sign. I followed, and when I reached the sign, I looked in the direction she’d gone and saw her standing at the door of a gray house halfway down the block. She took one more drag on her cigarette before putting it out and unlocking the front door. Wow. She’d gone out of her way to make the bus stop visits to Emma if she lived here.
A few seconds later I pulled up to the house, noting the number painted on the curb by the driveway. I slid from behind the wheel, then felt a tiny surge of adrenaline as I walked up the short cement path.
I rapped on the door, reminding myself that this woman wanted anonymity. She would need reassurance, and I hoped I could deliver—if she agreed to talk to me at all.
She didn’t open the door, just called out, “What do you want?”
“I need your help, Loreen,” I said.
A short silence followed; then she said, “Do I know you?”
“We have a mutual friend who sent me here—Angela.” Mentioning Emma’s name first might be the wrong thing to do.
I heard the dead bolt turn and she opened the door a crack. “Angela sent you?”
“Yes.”
“I hardly know her. What’s this about?” Her door was open a little more now.
“My name is Abby. Can I come in and explain?”
“Not until you tell me how you know Angela.”
“She cleaned my house, said you were one of the best employees at Purity.”
“You need my help cleaning? ’Cause we’re not allowed to do private jobs. We had to sign a paper that we wouldn’t.”
Even though she hadn’t shut the door on me, I could tell this wasn’t working.
“Okay, here’s the straight scoop. I work for Emma Lopez, and I think you know her, even if she doesn’t know who you really are. She needs your help.”
Loreen slammed the door so hard I think the house shook. I heard the dead bolt turn.
But I had another idea on how to get her attention, even though I wouldn’t enjoy using this tactic. “Fiona,” I said loud enough for her to hear—and maybe loud enough for the neighbors, too. “I know you don’t want me talking out here about your past for everyone in the neighborhood to hear.”
A few seconds passed; then she opened the door. “Get inside,” she whispered harshly.
I stepped into a tiny foyer, shutting the door behind me. “Sorry I had to do that, but there are things you need to know and things I hope you can help us with.”
“What’d you say your name was?” She crossed thin arms over an ample chest that didn’t match her tiny physique. Were those implants a gift from James the pimp?
“Abby Rose. I’m a private detective, and I know you wrote a letter to a television show about Emma Lopez. I work for her.”
She cocked her head, staring at me. “Work for her how?”
“I’m trying to find out what happened to the baby under the house—you’ve heard about that, right?”
“Who hasn’t?”
“You wrote that letter to Reality Check to help your friend Christine’s children.”
She said, “That’s a lie.” But she was about as convincing as a FEMA official.
“Listen, can we sit down and talk? You’re justifiably concerned about publicity, but I’m helping Emma just like you wanted to help her.”
“Lotta good I did. Her baby sister’s dead.”
“But you did help. The show is building them a new house. I saw it myself.” I wasn’t ready to tell her that the baby in the news wasn’t Emma’s sister. She still seemed on her guard and might not believe me.
“A new house can’t bring back a dead baby,” Loreen said. “I’m done helping.”
“Even if I promise to keep your name out of this?”
“How can you do that when there’s a stupid TV show in town? If they find out who I am, I’ll lose everything. My job, my house ... everything.”
I took a risk and approached her, resting my hand on her shoulder. “I won’t let that happen.”
I felt her tremble under my touch. She said nothing.
“You were very brave to do what you did for Christine’s children, but there are things you need to know.”
“Like what?”
“Like what happened to your friend.”
“She split. That’s what happened. Left those kids to fend for themselves. I was so pissed at that stupid woman I promised one day I’d make things right.” She paused. “And now I’ve screwed that up, too.”
“You’ve got it wrong, Loreen. Let me tell you what I’ve learned, okay?”
“So I can feel more guilty? Okay. Bring it on, ’cause I’m an expert at guilt.”
She turned and walked down the hall. I followed, thinking how she’d escaped a miserable existence and now had this little house and a steady job where no knew about her former profession. Heck, she might even have a husband or a boyfriend. My showing up probably felt no different to her than if I’d broken in like a kick burglar holding a gun.
She led me into a living room with old-fashioned dark paneling. Between the paneling and the double window covered by heavy drapes, I felt claustrophobic. But the carpet seemed new and freshly vacuumed, and if there was a speck of dust anywhere, I couldn’t have found it. The house didn’t smell of tobacco, so she probably smoked only outside.
I chose an armchair with a clean towel tucked carefully over the floral cushion, and she sat on the edge of a mismatched plaid sofa, her hands clenched in her lap.
“There’s no easy way to tell you, so I’ll start with what you thought you knew. Christine didn’t leave town. She was murdered.”
Loreen gasped, covering her mouth with her hand. “She ... she’s dead?”
“They found her body in 1997, but she remained unidentified until the TV show came to Houston and Emma asked me to investigate what happened to her baby sister and her mother. I discovered a cold-case death, and the victim turned out to be Christine.”
“I didn’t hear nothing about that on the news,” Loreen said.
“You will soon enough. Anyway, I’m hoping you can help me learn why she was murdered. I’m not sure if it’s connected to the baby’s death, but I suspect so. And here’s another important piec
e of information that hasn’t been reported in the press. That baby they found last week wasn’t Christine’s.”
Loreen shook her head vigorously. “You’re talking crazy now. I went through all nine months with her. Even knew the guy she was sleeping with when she got pregnant.”
“Who was the father?”
“A teenager who lived across the street from her—kid who had to be ten years younger. He liked to drink, and she was happy to supply the booze and drink with him. One night he drove drunk smack into a hill full of bluebonnets off Highway 6. Christy and me went there and left flowers by this white cross his parents put where he died. I was the one who cried. She didn’t.”
I swallowed. I already knew Christine O’Meara had led a life filled with mistakes and tragedy, and here was more of the same. “Emma was present when her mother gave birth, but the infant found under the house belonged to someone else. That’s what I need help with.”
“Maybe it was there when Christy moved in. Maybe it’s just chance that—”
“There are no coincidences when it comes to murder, Loreen. Somehow Christine’s baby was switched for the one found under the house. I truly believe that’s why Christine was killed—because she made a deal with someone. Could she have been in contact with a trafficker in black-market babies?”
“I don’t know. She told me she gave the baby to CPS, and that’s why I mentioned the kid in the letter. I thought Emma should know she had a sister out there somewhere.”
“She never mentioned a baby broker, and she didn’t give you the story about the husband who beat her and ran off with the child?”
“That?” Loreen laughed scornfully. “The beating story was only for the people we hung with at the bar we used to go to. She wanted everyone to feel sorry for her ’cause then they’d buy her drinks. But us two were close, and I thought she was telling me this big secret about CPS because we were friends. That’s what friends do, right? Tell each other important shit?”
I nodded, thinking, But friends do not share that they have buried a baby under their house.
Loreen went on, saying, “Christy talked all the time about not wanting the kid, how she couldn’t handle the ones she already had, how they got in the way and how Emma always needed money for some crap at school. Those were her words, ‘some crap at school.’ But she never said she’d sell the baby. That’s what you’re saying, right? She sold her?”
“Maybe. I’m not sure. But you stayed friends with Christine for years afterward?”
Loreen hung her head, twisting a silver ring on her pinkie finger. “I was only seventeen when we met, and she let me work with her cleaning houses. I was trying to save enough money to get by without Jimmy selling me every night to whatever slobbering jerk walked down the street. Course, I never got away from him until he went to jail.”
“Bet that was a relief.” She’d been abused, treated like a slave, probably most of her life.
“Yeah, but this isn’t about me. I still don’t understand why you think Christy was killed because of the baby thing,” Loreen said. “She disappeared five years after the baby came and went.”
“That bothers me, too. Did she have extra cash after the baby was born? Or a new TV? New clothes? Anything?”
Loreen sat in thought for probably a full minute. “A few times Christy had money to throw around—nothing big, a couple hundred bucks, maybe. Once when I asked where she got it, she said Emma’s family. But the father was supposed to be dead, so I didn’t get it, you know? Did she lie about him, too? Is he still around?”
“No, he died before Emma was born.” But I knew Xavier Lopez’s widow sent money for Emma. Maybe she also sent Christine money in exchange for her silence. “Were there any other times you remember she had cash to burn?”
“Only that time she went to Vegas to make her million—that’s what she said, make her million. She wanted me to go with her, said she’d pay my way, but I couldn’t. Jimmy would have killed me.”
“Jimmy is James Caldwell?” It wouldn’t hurt to remind her I pretty much knew her whole life story.
“That’s right.” She crossed her legs and one foot began to bob.
“When was this trip?”
“You know, I think it was the same year she had the baby—yeah, it had to be, because I remember her saying she wanted to get rid of the leftover baby weight before she took the trip.”
“Did she leave town often?”
Loreen sat back. “That’s the only time I remember.”
“How did she get to Las Vegas? Did someone take her?”
“Who would do that? It’s not like there was all these rich dudes hanging around the bar.” Loreen squinted, seemed to be thinking. “She was only gone for a couple days, if I remember right, and when she came back she went on this giant binge, told me she lost almost every penny playing the slots.”
“But she’d had enough cash for a plane ticket and a vacation before she gambled away most of her money. Think hard. Are there any other times you recall her having extra cash?”
“She always had money for booze, even if it was just beer, but I thought that was because she was working more, spending less time at Rhoda’s—that was the place we drank together. Christy could clean a house like nobody’s business when she wasn’t on a binge.”
“And you’d been helping her with the cleaning? Maybe took up the slack when she was too drunk?”
“Yeah, but she wasn’t as much of a drunk that year before she disappeared, and you probably think this is weird, but Christy and I? We worked good together. Drunks and whores can do some things right. We were a team.”
“Such a good team you decided to go into business together?”
Loreen tilted her head. “How did you find out all this stuff?”
“I’ll explain later. What about your business plans?”
“I thought she was serious, but then she split ... sorry. That’s not right, is it? She got herself killed.”
“How did you plan on getting the money to start up? You’d need more than the flyers Emma made that you stuck on telephone poles.”
For the first time since I’d arrived, Loreen smiled. “Emma made those? Christy always said Emma was the real mom in the family. That’s why I called CPS when Christy didn’t come back.”
“You called CPS? I thought they showed up because Emma was missing school.”
“She was. I went to Christy’s house to see if she was sick or something, ’cause she hadn’t been around. This kid answers the door and she’s covered in chicken pox. I asked where her mother was, and she said she’d been gone a long time. She said her big sister, Emma, went to get milk but she’d be right back. So I left and called CPS. It’s anonymous, you know. You can call and no one checks on you or anything.”
I nodded. “How did you find Emma again after CPS took custody?”
“I was still living around there when the kids moved back into the old house. People talk. I heard. I watched them, sorta looked out for them, you know? I’d found out I could never have kids. Too many infections. Anyway, Emma took this one bus all the time, so I went to the stop. Talked to her. Got to know her. Christy was such an idiot to miss out on Emma and the other kids.” She smiled again, but it quickly disappeared when Loreen’s attention switched to the window. “Did you hear that?”
“Hear what?”
“That sound. Someone’s out there.” She hurried to the window and peeked through a crack in the drapes. “Did anyone come with you?” she whispered.
“No.” But I got this sick feeling inside and thought, No one that I know about, anyway. “Do you see anyone?”
She carefully pushed open the drapes a tiny bit wider. “Maybe it was a bird or a squirrel in the bushes.” She returned to the sofa but didn’t take her eyes off the window.
“There’s something else you need to know,” I said. “Christine had a friend named Jerry Joe Billings.”
“Him? A friend? Pure scum, drunk or sober. When I’d come into R
hoda’s and sit next to Christy he’d always say, ‘The whore is here. Let the party begin.’ ”
“Mr. Billings was murdered last Friday—killed after he promised to give me information about Christine. I think he knew something about her murder, and—”
“What?” Loreen closed her eyes for a second, then wrapped her arms around herself and began to rock. “If he got killed because he knew something, that means ... you know what that means.”
“I can protect you, Loreen.”
“Did you promise to protect Jerry Joe, too?”
I took a deep breath. “I had no idea that if I talked to him, he’d ...”
“End up dead? But you have an idea about me, right? You figured out I know a whole lot more about Christy than he ever did.”
“And there may be other things you know that are important and—”
“Important enough to get me killed. Why in hell did I ever let you in here?”
“We have to catch this killer, Loreen. That’s the only way you’ll ever be safe. And you may need protection for another reason. James Caldwell was just paroled. The police asked him questions about you.”
Her face paled. “Oh, God, no.” She stood and started pacing in front of the sofa. “That’s who was outside. He found me just like you did. I gotta get out of here.”
She started to leave the room, but I went after her, gripped her shoulders and turned her to face me. “Don’t you want to stop hiding?”
She struggled a little, but she couldn’t weigh more than a hundred pounds, and I had no trouble hanging on to her.
“I have to get away. I have to—”
“Listen to me, Loreen.” We were practically nose-to-nose, and I could smell the tobacco on her breath. “I’ll help you if you let me—but first I need more information.”
“I’ve told you everything I know.” But she didn’t shrug me off. She kept staring over my shoulder at the window, looking as frightened as a rabbit in a trap.
I shouldn’t have told her about Billings, at least not until I’d probed for more information about the possible baby switch. I released my hold on her. “You want me to see if anyone’s out there?”
Shoot from the Lip Page 22