Sudden Death f-1

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Sudden Death f-1 Page 25

by Allison Brennan


  “Prick,” Jack said.

  Sitting behind, Hans didn’t respond.

  “What do you think happened in Afghanistan?” Jack asked Hans.

  “I don’t know.”

  “I can tell you that Frank Cardenas doesn’t lie. If he said the reporter jeopardized the mission, then the reporter jeopardized the mission.”

  “Soldiers tend to support each other,” Hans said. “When one speaks out-”

  “They usually have an ax to grind,” Jack interrupted. “We take care of our problems internally. We don’t share them on Oprah.”

  “A lot of good your internal solutions have been.”

  “Your point?”

  “The military is notorious for covering up failed missions. This time, they couldn’t.”

  “You’re not going to get an argument from me on that one,” Jack said, “but failed missions are caused by many things, and leading the failures is bad intelligence, followed by assholes in public office who think they can run a battle from behind a desk and jerks like General Hackett who want to stroke the media and open our missions like a ride at Disneyland.”

  “Hackett’s dead,” Hans said coldly.

  “I’m sorry he’s dead, but that doesn’t mean he was right.”

  “Hans,” Megan interjected from the co-pilot’s seat, not liking the direction the conversation was going, “can we get Rosemont’s medical records? Anything the military has? He must have been debriefed, hospitalized, maybe on medication.”

  “The military isn’t going to share-it’s most likely classified. Rick already put in the request yesterday when we got his name, but doesn’t expect them to be forthcoming. As far as medical records, we need a warrant.”

  “We should be able to get one,” Megan said. “There could be something important there.”

  “I’ll make sure it’s put in. But it’s not going to bring Hackett or the Hoffmans back to life.”

  “What is going on with you?” Megan demanded, turning around in her seat so she could face Hans. They were thousands of feet above the earth; no way he could avoid her this time. “You’re testy and snide and being an asshole.”

  He glared at her, face hard, eyes unreadable. “I don’t have to answer to you, Agent Elliott. The only reason you’re on this plane to Santa Barbara is because Rick Stockton didn’t agree with me that you fucked up. But he’s looking into it so don’t think you’re in the clear yet.”

  Megan turned away from Hans and blinked back the threatening tears. She didn’t know what to say; what could she say? His reaction to her wrong assumption about the victim in Sacramento was over the top. Something else had to have happened, and it was obvious Hans wasn’t going to tell her. Did he tell Rick? Was there something he wasn’t saying?

  Did Hans know about her and Jack? Did he think she’d been unprofessional? Maybe she had been. It wasn’t like she’d planned to have sex with Jack Kincaid. And she didn’t regret it. She hadn’t jeopardized the case, or slept with a witness or suspect. Jack was essentially a civilian consultant. Hans thought she screwed up the case, that was it. But she couldn’t talk to him about it now. He wasn’t open to anything she said.

  She saw her best friendship disintegrating and she couldn’t do a damn thing to stop it.

  Santa Barbara Detective Grant Holden was in his early forties and reminded Meg of the blond cop from the classic show Adam-12. After introductions, he drove them to the hotel and filled them in on the double homicide.

  “The chief of the forensic unit is handling the evidence himself. He’s methodical and in my opinion the best in the state. You’ll want to talk to him when we get there; he can walk you through the crime scene. Frankly, the whole thing is a circus.”

  “A circus?” Megan asked. She was in the back of the car, Hans was in the front. Jack stayed at the airport and said he’d take a cab-he needed to arrange to have Scout’s plane refueled.

  “Media is all over it.”

  “How’d they find out?”

  “Police scanners. Hotel staff and guests. But it’s not that they’re simply on scene reporting a murder at the resort-they know Barry Rosemont is the Hamstring Killer.”

  “That’s not good.”

  “We think the info came from Hackett’s widow, but how can we accuse her right now?”

  “Good point.”

  “Because it leaked out, we decided to use it to our advantage. We’ve released a photograph of Rosemont to the media and have asked anyone who believes they have seen him in the last forty-eight hours to contact my office. We’re hoping if a witness comes forward he or she can describe Rosemont’s accomplice.”

  Megan said, “Good. Let us know how we can help get the word out.”

  “I do have more information than I had earlier this morning when I spoke with you, Agent Vigo,” Holden said. “Apparently, Hackett was getting chummy with a woman last night in the bar.”

  Both Megan and Hans turned to Holden. “A woman?” they said simultaneously. Megan added, “Brunette?”

  “Blond. Attractive, late thirties to late forties. Not a registered guest.”

  “Name?”

  “The bartender who worked last night is on his way to meet us at the resort. He’s the only one who talked to her.”

  “What about the crime scene?” Hans asked. “You said the room was registered to Ethan Rose, but the manager identified Barry Rosemont as the individual who reserved the room and paid.”

  “Correct.”

  “And he came in alone?”

  “Yes. We’ve been looking at the security footage and have seen Rosemont on tape only briefly-when he registered he entered through the main entrance. Yesterday early afternoon, one thirty-seven p.m. Alone. Asked specifically for a cabin on the beach. They weren’t going to rent it to him because they were booked for the weekend, but he wanted it only one night. Said he was passing through.”

  “Driver’s license?”

  “Ethan Rose. We found his false identification. Quality fake. He also had an expired New York driver’s license under the name Barry Ethan Rosemont, which we’ve learned is his real name. His prints came back as Barry Ethan Rosemont. Criminal record. He’d been arrested while a student at Berkeley, eighteen years ago.”

  “For what?”

  “Breaking and entering. He was working for the student newspaper and broke into the security office to pull reports of rape that had been filed by students. He was doing an expose of the administration covering up on-campus assaults. Charges were dropped.”

  “Did he run the story?” Megan asked, curious.

  “Not that we know.”

  Hans said, “Any leads on Rosemont’s partner?”

  Holden shook his head. “Nothing so far. We’ve dusted the entire room, printed the staff, and are going through every guest methodically. So far, nothing. But there’s a lot to process. Extensive blood, spatter, angles. We’re still not exactly sure what happened. Ian, our chief forensics guru, can walk you through the evidence when we get there.”

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

  He turned the sedan into the resort. He wasn’t kidding-the place was crawling with media. Every major and minor California television and radio station insignia was visible, plus two national news stations.

  “Nobody’s talking to them, right?” Hans asked.

  “Just our PIO, completely scripted,” Holden assured him. “I’ve threatened everyone else with bodily injury or working the next ten major holidays.”

  “And the needles?” Hans asked. “You said you found a black bag with a couple hundred acupuncture needles.”

  “Yes. I have no idea what Rosemont had planned. There were also two knives, but neither one had been used on Hackett.”

  “How did the killer escape?” Megan asked. “He killed his partner and ran? Doesn’t the hotel have security?”

  “Three minutes and forty seconds passed between the first report of gunfire until the head of security arrived at the crime scene. The report of a gunshot w
as probably a minute or two delayed. It wasn’t until after the final gunshot that someone called in. Plenty of time to escape.”

  “Someone had to see something,” Megan said. “It’s a hotel.”

  “Resort,” Holden corrected as he stopped the car. “One hotel with two hundred rooms and forty individual cabins along the beach. All the cabins have sliding glass doors, and the unit in question has doors that open right onto the beach. They were unlocked, and a few drops of blood were found on the small patio. The killer most certainly escaped that way.”

  “With all the blood in the room, the killer would have stepped in it,” Megan said. “Any footprints?”

  “Possibly-you should talk to Ian Clark about that.” He opened the door. “Ready?”

  While the Cessna Caravan was being fueled, Jack called Padre. He didn’t want his friend to hear about General Hackett or Barry Rosemont from the media or anyone else. He was also concerned about Megan. He didn’t want her to have professional trouble because she’d adhered to an agreement she wasn’t even party to. She could have arrested Price and turned him over to local police. She could have had the local FBI pick him up at the bar or called CID with his last-known whereabouts. That she had done none of those things because she promised she wouldn’t, even when facing intense pressure from Hans Vigo, told Jack that she had a backbone of steel and an inherent sense of loyalty to match any among Jack’s team of soldiers.

  Padre got on the phone. “Did you meet up with Price?”

  “Yeah. He gave us what we needed. But I wasn’t calling you about him.”

  “You sound grim.”

  “The reporter, Barry Rosemont, killed General Hackett last night.”

  “I know.” Padre’s voice was flat.

  “You know?”

  “It’s all over the morning news. I’m surprised you didn’t see it.”

  “I’m still at the airport fueling. So you know Rose-mont is dead?”

  “And there’s a chance that another unidentified killer is on the loose. Yeah, I know all about it.”

  “And you’re okay?”

  Padre said nothing for a long minute, then, “It’s hard.”

  Jack didn’t have to ask Padre what he meant. Priests had to act like forgiveness was a given. And sometimes it wasn’t. Even for men of God.

  “Why didn’t he kill me?”

  Jack almost didn’t hear him, Padre spoke so quietly.

  “I don’t know,” Jack said, also quietly. “Maybe you did something five years ago that made him not blame you.”

  “I was a different man then, Jack.”

  “Not as different as you think.”

  “If anyone should have been spared, based on how he treated Rosemont, it would have been Duane Johnson. He was the only one who stood up for the kid. Not me. I told him he was our albatross.”

  The regret in Padre’s voice was thick.

  “It was Rosemont’s choice to kill,” Jack said. “Maybe he felt it was too risky to go after you so soon after what he did to Scout. Maybe he had another insane reason for killing Hackett next. But it’s over.”

  “What about his partner? Any leads?”

  “Not that I know of, but I’m heading over to the hotel in a few minutes and I’ll find out. Be careful, Padre. I need you alive and well when I return to Hidalgo. If Rosemont’s partner is going to finish this twisted game, you may be next. What about the sketch? Did the Rangers send over a sketch artist?”

  “She arrived an hour ago, but I have a funeral Mass at one-in fact, I need to prepare, the family will be here in a few minutes.”

  “As soon as you’re done, send it to both me and Megan. And watch your back. Both Tim and Mike are there, right?”

  “Yes. We’re fine.”

  “I’ll feel better when I’m back there.”

  “When is that? There have been inquiries about your services. One of the major charities in Belize wants escorts when they take a Habitat for Humanity group out to a remote village next month.”

  Jack had put his business on hold this week, but he hadn’t had a choice. Now he did. Rosemont was dead; he could go back to Hidalgo right now if he wanted. Nothing was holding him here-except Megan and Rosemont’s murderous partner.

  He’d become a glorified chauffeur-flying the feds around instead of driving them. While they might have needed him at first to help with the military angle, it was clear now that his expertise wasn’t in demand.

  While Megan had proven she could take care of herself, she was facing an enemy capable of taking down Delta-trained soldiers. Rosemont was dead; his killer was even more ruthless. Jack was concerned about Megan’s safety.

  “You still there, Jack?”

  “Tim can take any job he wants as long as he brings in an appropriate team,” Jack said, “but I’m taking a week.” Jack would take as much time as Megan needed.

  “A week?”

  “I’ll keep in touch. Watch your back, Padre. We don’t know what’s going on here.” He hung up.

  Megan hadn’t asked him to protect her, and she’d probably tell him she didn’t need a bodyguard. Maybe she didn’t. But Jack wasn’t taking any chances. She was part of his life now, and he took care of what was his.

  Dr. Ian Clark was a short, cerebral-looking middle-aged forensic expert with little hair and Coke-bottle glasses that doubled the size of his blue eyes, which Megan found disconcerting.

  “Put on booties and gloves,” he demanded. “We’re not done.”

  Megan slipped on the protective gear and surveyed the room. The bodies hadn’t been removed, but Dr. Clark was bagging the second victim. Two technicians were collecting trace evidence. Another tech came out of the bathroom with two paper bags, one in each hand, and passed by Megan without acknowledgment. A fourth tech was outside studying the sliding glass door.

  The resort beachfront cabin was one large room, comfortably sized, with a king-sized bed, desk, and sitting area with two love seats. A refrigerator was under the desk, and a small bathroom and closet were to the right of the entrance.

  The first thing that struck Megan was the amount of blood. She looked around the room, saw blood soaked into the neutral beige carpet, spreading several feet across. Blood spatter radiated across the floor, indicating that someone had been shot while laying on the carpet. She said as much.

  “Correct,” Dr. Clark said. “General Hackett was attacked three feet from the door-hamstrung. You can see the spatter on the bathroom door. He fell to the ground, and it appears he pulled himself toward the doors at the rear of the room. He moved six feet before he was shot-twice, a head shot and once to his back. From the amount of blood, a bullet pierced a major artery. There’s also brain matter and bone embedded in the carpet. We’ll be cutting out the carpet for further blood analysis.”

  “Where was Rosemont found?” Hans asked.

  Dr. Clark stood in the center of the room. “He was close to Hackett’s body and fell across his legs. He was shot in the chest twice.”

  “Detective Holden said there was no knife found.”

  “Correct. We’ve broadened the search, but so far nothing. We’ve also received a limited warrant to search every hotel room, occupied and unoccupied, in the resort.”

  Holden said, “My officers are in the middle of that search. So far, nothing.”

  Clark continued. “Though I will need confirmation from the autopsy, it appears that Rosemont attacked Hackett as soon as the door closed. I inspected Rosemont’s hands and he was wearing gloves. The gloves had small nicks in them, consistent with brushing against a sharp blade. We also found a medical-type bag with restraint materials and more than two hundred acupuncture needles. The needles tested positive for blood and there is multiple biological matter on them. He may have rinsed them off, but he never sterilized them.”

  “Prints?” Megan asked.

  Clark shook his head. “Far too slender to retain enough fingerprint information for a possible I.D.”

  “What about prints in
the room?” she clarified.

  “We found several of Rosemont’s prints on the main door and the sliding glass door, in the bathroom, and on the desk. There are several sets and the hotel is providing us with prints of all its employees to compare to. But the only recent prints belong to Rosemont and Hackett. Hackett touched the doorjamb, the knob, and he had a key for this room in his pocket.”

  “But I thought the room was registered to Rosemont under the name Ethan Rose,” Hans said.

  “Correct. But Hackett had a key.”

  Meg turned to Holden. “You said that Hackett was seen with a woman in the bar.”

  “Yes.”

  “Rosemont’s partner.”

  Hans turned to her. “We don’t know that.”

  “Why else would Hackett have a key to this room? Females are great lures.”

  Holden said, “One of the housekeeping staff said she saw Rosemont and a woman on the beach earlier yesterday, but she couldn’t provide a description, only a blond Caucasian.” His phone beeped and he excused himself.

  Megan looked at the two body bags, then at the door. “Did Rosemont shoot Hackett or was it Rosemont’s partner?” she asked, almost to herself. “What I don’t get is why such a public place. The general must have caused a raucous when he was hamstrung. He wasn’t gagged, correct?”

  “No.”

  Hans said, “Test his blood for all barbiturates. If he was drugged before he came in, he may not have been able to call for help.”

  “And the killer escaped through the back door,” Megan said as she crossed over to the sliding glass doors. The beach spread out in front of her, the ocean rolling up only a hundred feet beyond.

  “Look here.” Clark led them to the door. “See those prints?”

  “Prints?”

  “Shoe impressions.”

  Megan squatted and looked carefully at a triangle pattern. “These are shoes?”

  “High heels. There are no identifying marks, but we can see the impression of the spikes in a couple places- mostly by the main door. I think the killer tried to run on her toes and not put the spike part of the heel down, but sometimes she couldn’t avoid it.”

 

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