Hangman

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Hangman Page 12

by Faye Kellerman


  “What are you going to do about his schooling? He’s not Jewish.”

  “I have to talk to the school. I’d rather him go to Hannah’s school than send him to public school. More quality control. He’s obviously not going to attend the religious classes, but I don’t think it would be a big deal to let him finish up the year in his secular studies.”

  Decker didn’t say anything.

  “What are your thoughts?” Rina asked him.

  “I’m still thinking long run, Rina. I was looking forward to retirement, grandchildren, and travel once Hannah left for college.”

  “I’m sure his aunt would take him whenever we were away. And how much are you going to want to be away with a grandchild coming?”

  “That’s not the point. If he wants to stay with us, it’s three more years of child rearing. It’s taking in a troubled adolescent. You’re young, but I’m not.”

  “Whither you go, I go, buster. We have to be a solid front on this decision because it’s a big one. However, it’s one that we don’t have to make right now. So let’s just tell him that he can stay here until things settle down. He needs to feel that he has some stability. The rest we’ll figure out later.”

  “Do we include Hannah in this decision?”

  “Her life will be disrupted, but I think the decision is ours alone.” Rina kissed his forehead. “How about the morning paper?”

  “As if I’m not depressed enough.” But he took the paper anyway, reading about a world far less organized than his own life. Five minutes later, Gabe came back into the kitchen.

  “Hi there,” Rina said. “That was quick.”

  “I’m a little antsy.”

  “Understandable. How about some toast?”

  “Do you have any more coffee?”

  “I do. Sit down. Maybe you can cheer up the lieutenant. He looks a little bothered this morning.”

  “You gave me the paper,” Decker muttered behind the broadsheet. “How am I supposed to feel after reading all this depressing news?”

  “You take things too much to heart,” Rina told him. “Sit down, Gabe. Take some cereal.” She plunked a bowl of Cheerios in front of him. “Eat.”

  A few minutes later, Hannah came into the room, sleepy-eyed and half dressed in her school uniform. She had on the blue skirt but was still wearing her pajama top. She regarded Gabe. “You’re still here.” A statement, not a question.

  “Sorry about that.”

  Hannah sat down. “What happened?”

  “My dad didn’t show up,” Gabe said. “Big shock.”

  “You can stay here if you want.” She looked at her parents. “I mean that’s okay, right?”

  “We’ll talk about that one a little later,” Gabe said.

  “You can stay here, Gabe,” Rina said. “The lieutenant and I have already talked about it. We’ll enroll you in Hannah’s school in the meantime.”

  “Poor you,” Hannah said. “Going to my school and you’re not even Jewish.”

  “No pressure to stay, Gabe,” Decker said. “It’s your decision. We’re here to accommodate. Think about it and tell us what works for you.”

  “I’m okay here.” Gabe took off his glasses and rubbed his bloodshot emerald eyes. “I like it. Thank you very, very much.”

  Decker got up from the table. “See you all tonight, providing that the good people of my district behave themselves.”

  “Bye, Abba. I love you.”

  “Love you, too, Pumpkin.” He kissed her flaming hair. “Drive carefully. Oh, and you might want to change your top.”

  “Ha ha.”

  “I need to sort through a few things on my computer before I go to work.” Rina kissed her daughter. “I’ll see you both later at school. Drive safely.”

  “Bye.” When her parents were gone, Hannah turned to the boy. “Are you okay?”

  “Tired, but I’m okay.”

  “A bummer about your dad.”

  “Honestly, it’s better. I’ve known your dad for two days and I like him a hell of a lot better than my own dad.”

  “He’s a good guy—my dad.”

  “You’re really lucky, having a normal mom and dad and brothers and a sister and a regular dinner and all those kinds of normal things.”

  “I am lucky. I love my family. But we’re not normal, Gabe, because there’s no such thing as a normal family.”

  She pulled her chair closer to him so she could drop her voice without her mother hearing.

  “My sister is from my father’s first marriage, my brothers are from my mother’s first marriage. My mom and her first husband got married when my mother was only eighteen. Then he died of a brain tumor when my brothers were real little. My father adopted them. Actually, my father is adopted. My grandparents from his side are like really religious Baptists who probably think I’m going to hell because I’m Jewish. But they love me and I love them and Grandma Ida makes the best pies in the entire world. My father’s brother, my uncle Randy, has been married like three or four times. My mother’s parents are Holocaust survivors, so there’s always that ghost in the background. My mother’s brother lives in Israel and is a religious fanatic. Her other brother is a doctor and he and my aunt are nice folk. Their first two kids are doctors as well, but the youngest one has been in and out of rehab since he was sixteen. If I dug deeper, I could probably even pull up more pathology.”

  She shrugged.

  “Sorry to disillusion you, but as far as our family goes, you’ll fit right in.”

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  HOPING TO FIND some quiet time to read Adrianna’s diary cover to cover, Decker had arrived at his desk by seven-fifteen and began sorting through pink message phone slips, most of which could wait but a few needed to be dealt with. There was a call from the coroner regarding Adrianna Blanc, two calls from Kathy Blanc wondering when the body was going to be released, two calls from Melissa McLaughlin, Terry’s half sister, and one call from West L.A. regarding Terry McLaughlin.

  He made the LAPD call first, to Detective Eliza Slaughter in Missing Persons, who was handling the case. At this hour, he was lucky to find her at work.

  “No body, no car, nothing,” she said. “Where can I get hold of her husband? I’d love to talk with him, and the number I have for him doesn’t work.”

  “Do you have a few minutes?” Decker said. “I need to bring you up to speed and give you an idea on what and who you’re working with.”

  With questions and answers, the few minutes took twenty.

  “Oh my, my,” Eliza said. “That’s a story and a half. This guy is really a hit man?”

  “So I’ve been told.”

  “So why hasn’t he been caught?”

  “He’s excellent at what he does.”

  “And you talk to him on a regular basis?”

  “Not on regular basis, but we’ve communicated on and off over the years. Like I told you, he was supposed to come in last night and pick up the kid. I don’t know where he is, but somewhere in the future, he’ll contact me or his son or both.”

  “This is a little much for me to absorb this early in the morning. You say he owns brothels?”

  “He owns some legit ones in Elko, Nevada. He used to have others scattered throughout the States that were illegal. Maybe he’s cashed those in for the legal ones. I haven’t kept track of his business ventures.”

  “How’d he get a license to run legit brothels if he’s a felon?”

  “It’s all in his wife’s name: one of the reasons why they got married.”

  “Should I call up Elko PD?”

  “You know, I’ve been thinking about that. If Donatti thinks he’s going to be cornered, he’s gone. My feeling is the best thing to do is wait him out. But it’s your call.”

  “What if he killed his wife? Why would he stick around for you to wait him out?”

  “He could have killed her, but the fact that he called me back says maybe he didn’t. Did you get a chance to talk to the staff yesterday a
t the hotel?”

  “I talked to the desk clerk and the concierge…hold on, lemme get my file.” It took a few moments. “Harvey Dulapp and Sara Littlejohn. They both knew Terry pretty well since she’s been there for a while.”

  Decker took out a notebook. “When was the last time they saw her?”

  “Neither one remembers seeing her Sunday. She’s paid up for the month. Any time you want to go back in the room and look around, that’s not a problem.”

  “Did you talk to anyone in the parking lot? Maybe someone remembers seeing her leave…”

  “Didn’t get a chance to speak to the valets on duty. There’s also a self-parking area that has an attendant. That’s probably where she left her car. I’d like to go back today and see if anyone remembers her leaving after the kid spoke to her. Wanna meet up at the hotel?”

  “I have a big whodunit on my desk. I can make time in the afternoon.”

  “That would work. I’m trying to get a time line for Donatti on Sunday. What time did you leave the hotel?”

  “Around two-thirty. Chris and I walked together to the lot. I saw him pull out. He was driving a black 2009 Lexus, either a GS 10 or an ES 10. Like an idiot, I didn’t get the license.”

  “And he didn’t come back?”

  “If he did, Terry didn’t call me up and tell me. But maybe after meeting him and having things go her way, she felt secure enough to meet with him alone.”

  “We really need to talk to him, Lieutenant.”

  “First we need to find him. He’s a big, big fish, Detective. If we try to reel him in too fast, he’ll break the line and get away. You’ve got to tire him out.”

  “Okay, Lieutenant, you’ve not only got the rank, you’ve got the history. I’ll take your word on this one. When would you like to meet at the hotel?”

  “How does two in the afternoon sound?”

  “It sounds doable. I’ll meet you in the parking lot. I’ll also keep a need-to-locate on Terry’s car. You know, if this guy is the asshole you say he is, maybe she decided to cut out.”

  “It’s possible, but I can’t see her leaving her son.” Decker paused. “She definitely wouldn’t leave him in Chris’s possession. I could see her leaving Gabe with me.”

  “That may be why you have him now. I’ll see you at two.”

  She cut the line and Decker rubbed his temples. Next on tap was Melissa McLaughlin. She picked up after two rings. “It’s Lieutenant Decker, Melissa. How are you?”

  “Nothing about my sister?”

  “If I had information, I’d call you right away. She’s still missing.”

  “He killed her! I just know it! The bastard finally did it!”

  The bastard who has been supporting his sister-in-law for the last four years since Melissa has been living on her own. Decker could hear her pacing in the background. “Have you heard from Chris?”

  “What do you mean?”

  “Has he called you?”

  “Why would he call me?”

  Go slow. “Melissa, there is a very definite possibility that he killed her. There is also a possibility that he didn’t do it and is looking for her. He might call you for information.”

  “What kind of information?”

  “Have-you-heard-from-Terry kind of information.”

  “Why would I hear from her if he killed her?”

  Decker sighed to himself. “Maybe he didn’t kill her. Maybe she disappeared on her own.”

  “She would never leave Gabe. She was constantly afraid of what Chris might do to him.”

  “Did he abuse Gabe?”

  “Not that she told me, but Chris is capable of anything.”

  Approach the subject from a different angle. Decker said, “Melissa, if Terry were to run away—and I’m not saying she did—but if she were to escape, any idea where she might go? Did she have a favorite place where she liked to vacation?”

  “Vacation! Hah! The guy wouldn’t let her out of his sight. She had no freedom. Her one stab at freedom was moving out here after he beat the shit out of her. And now she’s gone.”

  “So you don’t know of any place or country where she might have escaped to.”

  “You’re not hearing me. She wouldn’t leave Gabe…could you excuse me? I’ve got a call on the other line.”

  “Sure.” Decker rolled his eyes. Patience. She was just a kid herself.

  She came back on a minute later. “Hi. I’ve got to go. Just find the bastard, okay?”

  “Okay. If the bastard happens to contact you, can you let me know?”

  “If he comes anywhere near my door, I’m calling 911.”

  “Probably a good idea. If Terry happens to contact you, let me know as well.”

  “If she contacts me, it’ll be during a séance. ’Cause the way I see it, the only way she’s gonna talk to me is from the grave.” She hung up.

  Kathy Blanc was next in Decker’s long line of obligations.

  “When can we give her a proper burial?” the grieving mother asked.

  “I have a call in to the pathologist,” Decker said. “I’ll call you as soon as the release comes through.”

  “And when will that be?”

  “Not too long. Probably by the end of the week at most.”

  “That’s a very long time.”

  “I’ll try to speed things up. Thanks for being patient.”

  “Do I have a choice?” When Decker didn’t answer, she said, “How is my daughter’s case coming along?”

  “We’re going through her friends and acquaintances.”

  “What if it wasn’t one of her friends or acquaintances?”

  As in a stranger murder. “We’re exploring everything including the possibility that the crime was done by someone she didn’t know. I’m sending a team out to canvass her apartment complex. Had Adrianna ever complained about someone bothering her…maybe stalking her?”

  “Like someone who lived in her complex?”

  “Someone who lived in her complex, someone at work, anything like that.”

  There was a moment of silence. “I don’t recall her ever mentioning a stalker. But she was a very friendly person. It’s possible that someone mistook her sociability for something deeper.”

  “Of course,” Decker said. “Would you happen to know any of her favorite hangouts?”

  “She loved movies.”

  “How about restaurants?” More like restaurants with bars, but Decker didn’t amend the statement.

  “Her friend Crystal worked at Garage downtown. She’d go there sometimes. Also, I know she liked the Marina.”

  “How about restaurants closer to work? I know her friend Sela Graydon sometimes goes to Ice.”

  “I really don’t know, Lieutenant. We were mother and daughter, not drinking buddies.”

  “That’s fine, Mrs. Blanc. I just need to ask. Is there anything else that I can help you with right now?”

  “Just find out…when we can pick her up.”

  “I will. Call me if you need anything else.”

  “I need a lot of things, Lieutenant, but I doubt you can help with any of that.”

  MARGE KNOCKED ON the frame and walked into the open door. She was dressed for summer even though spring had just begun—ecru linen pants, a white blouse, and white sneakers. She plunked a cup of hot coffee on his desk. “For you.”

  Decker picked up the mug and sipped without looking up. “Good stuff.” He raked his fingers through his hair and smoothed his mustache and then smiled at his favorite sergeant. “Thanks for the brew.”

  “You’re welcome. You look exhausted and it’s only ten in the morning.”

  “Catching up on my phone calls.” He pointed to a chair and Marge sat down. “Adrianna died from asphyxiation. But there was nothing on her body other than the ligature marks from the cable wire: no bruises, no scratches, nothing under her fingernails. My opinion? She was drugged or strangled before she was hanged—or both. The cable wire around her neck could have obliterated manual ma
rks.”

  “What about the stomach contents?”

  “At the time she died, she didn’t have much undigested food. We did test the blood for alcohol and that was negative. There didn’t appear to be any cocaine or pot in her system either. For the more exotic drugs, we’ll have to wait until the lab work comes back.”

  “Any evidence of sexual assault?”

  “No semen found, but these days our psychos are getting very clever about leaving evidence behind. He could have worn a rubber.”

  “Any indication of sexual activity?”

  “Nothing forced.”

  Marge said, “I have Lee Wang going through old cold cases to see if we have any unsolved hangings. There isn’t anything that pops up.”

  “It’s a weird way to die unless it’s suicide or erotic hanging and that’s usually more a guy thing than women. And usually with rope, not with cable wire. Did you find a stool or a box that she could have stood on?”

  “Nope,” Marge said. “But there were piles of lumber around her feet. I tell you what I did find. The cable company called back. They claim that no one was in the area yesterday.”

  “That’s sucks. Where are we on locating Aaron Otis?”

  “Funny you should ask.”

  Decker sat up. “You found him?”

  “He finally decided to clear his mailbox. I just got off the phone with him.”

  “So what’s going on?”

  “Aaron actually talked to Adrianna on the phone and—according to Aaron—this is what she told him.” Marge turned to her notes. “He said that Adrianna told him—Aaron—to give Garth a message. The message was—and I quote—that he could fuck himself. Adrianna then went on to say that she was tired of giving him money that he spent on vacations without her. She also said that Garth shouldn’t bother calling her back now or ever. She would just hang up on him. When Aaron offered to give the phone to Garth, she did hang up. The conversation, according to him, lasted about two minutes. According to the records, it was two minutes fifty-two seconds.”

  Decker thought a moment. “If she wanted to break up with Garth, why not call Garth?”

  “I don’t know, Pete. Aaron felt that maybe she was using him as a messenger of bad news.”

 

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