Close Your Eyes

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Close Your Eyes Page 10

by Iris Johansen


  “Hell, yes,” she replied without hesitation.

  The immediacy of her response surprised Kendra. She had expected her to mull it over. “How so?”

  “The second time, he was much more … intense. It was almost like he was mad at me.”

  “Was he?” Kendra said.

  “No. At least he said he wasn’t.” Her lips twisted. “He apologized to me, but his mood still didn’t change a whole lot after that.”

  Kendra wrinkled her brow. She had seen Jeff at work, and the description didn’t seem at all like him, especially when interviewing a murder victim’s loved one. But it matched the troubled tone she had heard in his voice on the recordings.

  “How did he end the interview?” Kendra asked. “Did he discuss talking to you again?”

  “No. He didn’t say much of anything.” Shawna thought for a moment. “He got a call, so he excused himself and left.”

  “On his cell phone?”

  “Yeah.”

  Kendra shot Lynch a quick glance, and he immediately opened his tablet computer and fingered its touch-screen interface. She turned back to Shawna. “Did you tell Agent Santini about that?”

  Shawna shrugged. “No, I actually didn’t think about it until now. Mr. Stedler didn’t act like it was a big deal or anything. I think he was finished talking to me.”

  “Did you happen to hear any of his telephone conversation?”

  “No.” She shrugged again. “Sorry.”

  Lynch looked up from his tablet. “Excuse me, but can you tell me what kind of phone Agent Stedler was using?”

  “I really didn’t notice.”

  “Was it a BlackBerry?” Kendra asked.

  “I don’t think so,” Shawna said slowly, as if trying to visualize it. “Because that’s what I use. I think I would have remembered that.”

  “Okay, good,” Kendra said. “Thank you. This has been very helpful.”

  “Really?” Shawna said doubtfully.

  “Yes.”

  Lynch gave her his card. “We’d appreciate it if you’d call if you come up with anything else that you think might be of interest.”

  Shawna nodded. “But I don’t think I can help you.” She blinked rapidly. “I know Agent Stedler thought I was weird that I didn’t know more about my fiancé. But I knew that he was a good man and that he loved me. I’m not very smart or pretty, but he thought I was wonderful,” she said unsteadily. “No one has ever loved me like that before he came along. In the end, that’s all that’s important, isn’t it?”

  Kendra nodded. “It comes pretty close,” she said gently. “Do you have family with you now?”

  She shook her head. “We don’t get along. I’m okay. I have a temp clerical job, and I work part-time here. I’ll get through this.”

  But she had lost the one man who had thought her wonderful, Kendra thought. “It’s usually good to keep yourself busy. Maybe do something different.” She said impulsively, “Why not take a couple classes at UC? My mother is a professor, and she could help you out.”

  Shawna gazed at her in surprise. “I told you, I’m not real smart.”

  “I think you may be smarter than you think you are. And you’re a fine pianist.” She handed her one of her own cards. “But you’ll never know unless you try. Call me, and I’ll put you in touch with my mother.” She turned to Lynch. “Let’s go.”

  He nodded, and he and Kendra walked toward the circular, flower-lined driveway outside the lobby. “That was a surprise,” he murmured. “Do you think she’ll call you?”

  Kendra glanced back at the woman at the piano. Shawna was still gazing at the card she’d given her. “Maybe. I’ll give her two days, then I’ll turn my mother loose on her. She’ll shape her up.”

  His eyes were narrowed on her face. “Why are you bothering? She’s nothing to you.”

  “Okay, it was an impulse. She seemed … lost. Besides, my mother needs a project.” She smiled slyly. “And I like serving up challenges to her. She hasn’t had a decent one since the day I moved out. I guarantee that woman will have a new attitude after their first encounter.”

  “Suppose she doesn’t decide to accept this particular challenge?”

  “Then I’ll find another way that doesn’t involve her.”

  “Why? Do you need a project, too? Somehow I don’t get that impression.”

  “You do what you choose to do, what you have to do.” She frowned. “Now stop wasting time trying to probe my motives and get back to business. There were no records of incoming calls to Jeff’s phone at that time, were there?”

  Lynch patted his tablet. “Nope. He made a call just after he left his office on his way to see her, but that’s the end of his phone activity.”

  “For some reason, he was using a second cell phone.”

  “A phone the FBI didn’t know about. It doesn’t appear anywhere in his file. It could have been a disposable model that came with usage minutes. If he paid cash, nobody could trace it to him.”

  “But why?”

  Lynch handed his ticket to the parking attendant, who ran to fetch his car. After a moment’s silence, he turned toward Kendra. “Beats the hell out of me. I was hoping you’d have an answer. Haven’t you come up with some way to put all the pieces together yet? Santini would be very disappointed in you.”

  She wanted to hit him. She was feeling bewildered and frustrated and a little scared. She didn’t need Lynch’s mockery just then. “Go screw yourself.”

  His smile faded. “I was only half joking. I did hope that you might have caught something in what she told us that I didn’t. You’ve been very … productive.”

  “And you wanted to squeeze every bit of whatever usefulness I have in this mess out of me?”

  “Did you expect anything else?”

  “No.” The parking attendant was holding open the passenger door of Lynch’s car, and she moved toward it. “I learned a long time ago that people have their own agendas and those who are willing to compromise what they want are very rare.”

  “But you’ve run across a few of those rare souls?”

  “Yes.” She got into the car. “And you’re not one of them.”

  He chuckled as he started the car. “And are you, Kendra Michaels?”

  “Not often. But I believe in payback.”

  He looked away from her. “So do I.”

  She was once more aware of that glint of hardness that had the texture of a machete blade. “I don’t think we’re talking about the same thing.”

  “No.” He didn’t glance away from the street as he pulled out of the parking lot. “I’m quite sure that we’re not…”

  Miramar Naval Hospital

  4:30 P.M.

  Dr. Myles Denton entered the conference room and pulled off his surgical mask. “I hope you have better news for me this time. Your handling of the details of the transfer has been atrocious.”

  “Hello, Denton.” Charles Schuyler sat down at the head of the long table. “I feel a bit resentful. Once again, Dr. Denton, you’re treating me like your employee, when it is actually the other way around.”

  “Interesting that you think so,” Denton said. “I think it would be more accurate to say that we’re partners. Each of us has his part to play in this little endeavor. And so far, I’ve been better about keeping my end of the bargain. I’ve produced the product. All you have to do is collect the last batch and get it out of the country. I think I should have my money now.”

  “No way. You’ve left me with some nasty ends to tie up. You get nothing until we get the full shipment on that plane and you hand over that disc to me.”

  “The shipment should be enough. It’s your job to get the disc.”

  “You’re incredible. It’s your assistant who brought this mess down on us.”

  “And I informed on her, didn’t I? So now it’s your problem.”

  No use arguing with the asshole. Just lay down the law and change the subject. “No money until the project is safe.” Schuy
ler pointed to the mask. “I was surprised to hear you were in surgery. I thought you were just doing research these days.”

  Denton shrugged. “I’m a good surgeon. One of the best, actually. Research is certainly more fulfilling in the long run, but when you’ve been given such a gift, it would be criminal to waste it.”

  “Modest as ever, Doctor.”

  “Let the mediocre ones wallow in modesty.”

  Schuyler nodded. Arrogant prick. “To answer your question, the news isn’t good. The FBI is investigating the deaths.”

  Denton dropped down in a chair, looking much less confident than he had only seconds before, Schuyler noticed with satisfaction. “They’ve made the connection?”

  “They’ve made a connection. We don’t know what, exactly. We do know this case has the interest of someone at the highest levels of the Justice Department.”

  “Shit.” Denton slammed his fist on the table. “It’s that geriatric imbecile you insist on using. I thought you were going to make the deaths look like accidents. Isn’t that what your guys do?”

  “If it was just a couple deaths, and we’d had more time on our hands, yeah, maybe. But you insisted you had to have more than the one or two we agreed on. And that accidental approach isn’t nearly as certain. If we try to make it look like natural causes, that opens up the possibility of a medical investigation, which none of us wants.” He looked him in the eye. “Do we?”

  “Of course not.”

  “The murders we’ve been doing are so obvious it was unlikely that a complete autopsy would be ordered. It’s the best we could do. And, Doctor, you’re the one who insisted on one hundred percent containment.”

  “It’s essential. But why in the hell is the DOJ interested?”

  “We have no idea. Even if the local police know that the deaths were somehow related, this case shouldn’t interest Washington.” He paused. “And we’ve stopped the FBI investigation in its tracks.”

  “Then how could this have happened?”

  “We’re working on finding out. The DOJ has brought in a heavy hitter, an ex–FBI agent by the name of Adam Lynch. He’s working with a woman, Kendra Michaels.”

  “Another agent?”

  “Actually, no. She’s a music therapist.”

  “You’re not serious.”

  “I am. She’s consulted on a few cases before, but details are sparse. She’s freelance, and, apparently, she’s never interested in taking credit, which makes it difficult to know exactly what she’s done for them in the past.” His lips tightened grimly. “But I can tell you that she’s extraordinary.”

  “Is she a threat?”

  “Absolutely.”

  Denton shook his head emphatically. “Then stop her, dammit. This could destroy everything. We’re too close to botch it all now.”

  “We won’t. I’ve taken the problem in hand. We’ve planned for every contingency.”

  “Every contingency?”

  Denton was trying to conceal the fact that he was scared shitless. Good, that increased Schuyler’s control. So much for the brilliant physician’s godlike ego. Screw you, Denton.

  Schuyler stood up and walked to the end of the conference table to stand beside Denton. “It could get a little messy, but you needn’t be concerned with the details. How many times have you told me that you don’t want to be involved?” And, when he had what he needed from Denton, he’d make sure the involvement was severed … permanently. He patted him soothingly on the shoulder. “I just thought you should be informed.” Keep him calm, keep him doing exactly what he wanted him to do. “Another few days, and it will be all over. We’ll both be on easy street. Let me worry about Kendra Michaels.”

  * * *

  THIS IS JUST WHAT SHE needed, Kendra thought as she watched Jimmy playing the drums again. Lynch had tried to force a detour to the medical examiner’s office to join Sienna Deever in her examination of the corpse, but she’d held firm. She wasn’t putting the rest of her life on hold again, not for anyone or any reason.

  The recorded tune ended, but the boy continued playing. “Jimmy, the song’s over,” she said over the sound of his snare.

  He laughed. “But I can still hear it!”

  “Of course you can. But we need to do something else right now.”

  His expression clouded. “No, I love to play!”

  “I know, Jimmy. But now I need you to stop. Will you do that for me?”

  To her surprise, he abruptly stopped.

  Progress. There was a time when it would have been necessary to grab the sticks from Jimmy’s hands to keep him from playing. Now he was making connections between what he heard and what he must do.

  Could she be making a difference? Naturally, it was a collaboration between her, Jimmy’s parents, and his teachers, but she couldn’t help but think that the boy’s interest in music might be helping him form connections that had once eluded him.

  Don’t get carried away, she told herself. As she always told the hopeful parents, it’s a marathon.

  She smiled. “Thank you for stopping when I asked you, Jimmy. We can play some more later, but first we’re going to play some ‘name that tune.’” She picked up her guitar. “You like this game, remember? I’m going to play some songs you know, one note at a time, and you can stop me when you remember it. Okay?”

  He nodded. “I like it. And I’m good at it.”

  “Yes, you are. And getting better all the time. So, we’re going to—”

  A chime sounded, signaling that someone had opened the door of the outer office.

  Kendra checked the screen of her phone, but the office webcam feed was a white blur. Malfunction or … She stared at it for a long moment.

  “What’s wrong?” Jimmy said.

  She swiped her finger across the phone’s touch screen to pull up the parking-lot webcam feed. Jimmy’s mother, Tina, had left to pick up her daughter from school, but she wouldn’t be back for another twenty minutes or so. And there was no trace of her gold van in the almost empty lot.

  Jimmy leaned over and peered at her phone. “Two-HXW-100,” he whispered.

  “What?”

  Her office’s outer door splintered open!

  A heavyset, gray-haired man in a tan sports jacket stared at her through the window of her inner studio door.

  Kendra bolted toward the entrance. The man, obviously surprised to see her rushing in his direction, stepped back and raised a silver revolver.

  Gotta make this count …

  She threw herself forward and punched the knob lock.

  The man aimed at her head and squeezed the trigger. Two shots rang out.

  Jimmy jumped toward her. “Kendra!”

  A spiderweb of cracks spread across the glass pane’s surface, but the window held. The man stared at it for a moment, then barreled into it with his right shoulder. The cracks multiplied.

  Kendra grabbed Jimmy’s hand and ran for the other door, which would take them into the observation area behind the one-way glass. “This way, Jimmy. Hurry!”

  “Two-HXW-100,” he said again.

  What in the hell?

  No time for analysis. She pulled him into the observation room and slammed the door shut. Her first instinct was to run through the other door to the corridor, but then it would be all too easy to intercept them. No, there was only one way out.

  Up.

  She jumped onto a chair, grabbed another by its plastic back, and raised it above her head to push up a suspended ceiling panel. She craned her neck to see up into the ceiling. This could work …

  Jimmy spun toward the one-way glass, watching as the man repeatedly hurled himself at the door on the other side of the studio. “He’s getting through!”

  Mustn’t panic. Stay calm for Jimmy. She dropped the chair and reached down for him. “Come here. I’m going to give you a boost. We’re going up there.”

  He looked uncertainly through the dark opening in the ceiling.

  “Now, Jimmy. Come here.”


  He snapped to attention and gave her his hands. She pulled him up to the chair and lifted him up to the opening. “See that metal beam, Jimmy? Grab on to that and pull yourself up.”

  “I can’t!”

  “You can. And I’ll be right behind you. Up you go!”

  She wrapped her arms around his waist and lifted him into the ceiling. He grabbed the beam and worked his way on top of it.

  Thank goodness.

  Jimmy wasn’t the most coordinated kid. Now if he could just keep going without falling and crashing through the ceiling …

  Glass shattered behind her. The man was in her studio.

  Kendra jumped off the chair, opened the door to the hallway, then turned back around and lifted herself up.

  She grabbed the beam and pushed the ceiling tile back over the opening. No time to line it up perfectly …

  The man kicked open the door. Silence. Kendra held her breath.

  Take the bait, asshole …

  His footsteps pounded in the hallway.

  He was gone. But how long did they have before he realized what happened and came back?

  Fifteen seconds, maybe thirty?

  “Move, Jimmy,” she whispered. “We need to get to the next office.”

  “I can’t see!”

  “Shhh. Crawl forward, and be careful.”

  He hesitated, then moved down the beam that would take them toward the sports-medicine practice next door.

  She hoped.

  If there was a firewall between suites that jutted to the roofline, their journey would come to an abrupt halt. She looked ahead, trying to see in the darkness. “Hurry, Jimmy.”

  “I can’t go any faster!”

  Those footsteps again. Coming back toward her.

  Shit.

  “Be still, Jimmy! Be quiet.”

  He stopped, but she could now hear him whimpering.

  After another few seconds, the footsteps stopped.

  Silence.

  What in the hell was he doing? If only she could steal a glance through the gap in the ceiling tile behind her …

  Not an option.

  She was depending on her vision. Stop it, she told herself.

  Close your eyes.

  Put yourself down in the room.

 

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