You Think You Know Me Pretty Well

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You Think You Know Me Pretty Well Page 23

by David Kessler


  So he knew it would be perfectly safe to enter the building that way.

  He tried the fire door on the ground floor, but it was locked. The same was true on the first floor and the second. But it was open on the third. That was all he needed.

  21:26 PDT

  Miles away, another, somewhat more professional, burglar was breaking into the small rundown house rented by Nathaniel Anderson.

  But, unlike the man who had entered the lab at Berkeley, Lee Kelly didn’t have any clear idea what he was looking for. His brief was broader than that. He was here to look for anything that might have a bearing on Nat’s origins or past. And anything that might explain his interest in Clayton Burrow or the Finchley Road Medical Centre.

  Normally when he did a burglary he was looking for valuables and he knew exactly where to look. Prior to the introduction of the “three strikes” statute he had, in fact, done some domestic burglaries, but never been caught in the act. He knew that jewelry was stored either in a dresser or the bottom of a wardrobe, sometimes in a box under the bed and occasionally – rarely – in a safe. The procedure for searching drawers was to start with the bottom one and work your way up, not closing them. That way time was kept to a minimum.

  When he came for electronic goods, it was even more straightforward. But on those jobs he brought a pick-up truck for easy loading, not a motorbike for a fast getaway.

  In this case he had to look and make decisions fast. Alex had told him a bit but not much: an employee who was acting suspiciously, the need to check up on his background and whether he had any contact with the press or any prior involvement with the case. Did he grow up in the same town as Dorothy Olsen – the victim of the crime in the case that Alex was working on? Did he know Dorothy or anyone else in her family? Did he know Clayton Burrow?

  But how do you check these things out? Photographs, documents, a diary … It was hard to know where to begin.

  Lee started with the obvious hiding places: shoe boxes, whether in the wardrobe or under the bed. They were the classic hiding places for documents. But that was only if the person was actually trying to hide the documents. If he was not, then they could be in other more practical places, like a desk drawer or writing bureau or a bedside cabinet.

  There were a couple of shoe boxes, but all they contained were an old pair of sandals and a hardly-worn pair of sneakers.

  In the living room, there was a writing bureau – he had passed it on the way in. He flicked through several piles of papers quickly. There were bills, credit card statements and such like. Another contained legal briefs, case notes and things obviously to do with his work.

  Then he felt something hard against his palm, something rigid. He pulled it out from amid the papers. A passport. He opened it to look at the name and when he did he got a jolt of surprise.

  The passport didn’t belong to Nat. It belonged to the dead girl: Dorothy Olsen.

  21:31 PDT

  Gaining access to the building on the third floor had been straightforward enough. But Jonathan still had to get to wherever the computer and the scanning tunneling microscope were located.

  He thought that at this time it would be easy, that there wouldn’t be many people about. But the trouble was there were a few – and that made it even harder. During the day, when lots of people were about, an unfamiliar face wouldn’t attract any attention. But when there were fewer people, it was the exact opposite. And some of the people who were about, were security people. They didn’t just guard the entrances: they patrolled the corridors.

  He had to get to the staircase and down to the ground floor where the microscope was situated.

  And the question was what he did when he got there. How would he get what he had come for without David noticing?

  He started walking down the central staircase. This was relatively safe as any suspicions that anyone might have would be allayed by the fact that he was walking down the stairs and was therefore apparently leaving.

  However, once he got to the foot of the stairs on the ground floor, he turned not toward the exit but toward the lab housing the microscope. On the way he saw two people walking the other way to him in a corridor: a middle-aged woman and a security guard. He was worried that his eyes would give him away so he mumbled something toward the woman and nodded in her direction as he walked past her. He hoped that this would allay the security guard’s suspicions. But, just to make sure, he glanced down at his watch as he got close to the passing point with the security guard.

  When he got to the end of the corridor, he turned left and walked up to the doors of the lab. There were two glass port holes that enabled him to look inside. He saw a man with curly hair working alone there – a man whom he assumed to be David Sedaka.

  But the problem was what to do now.

  Should he go in and challenge him? That would lead to a physical confrontation. Or should he try to lure him out? Or wait for him to leave? He couldn’t just stand here outside watching. He had to act now.

  21:33 PDT

  Lee Kelly was staring at the passport trying to figure out its implications.

  He realized that if Nathaniel had the passport, he had quite likely taken it off Dorothy Olsen. The question was, how … and when? He flicked through the pages and looked for the visa stamps. There was only one. It showed that she arrived at London’s Heathrow Airport on May 25, 1998. Alex had said something about her booking a plane ticket for the 24th- one day earlier. The difference in date was presumably due to the time difference or the length of the flight.

  But the interesting thing was that there was no exit stamp to indicate that she had left England.

  He knew that some countries don’t stamp the passport on exit, only on entry. Was that the policy in England at the time?

  It was before 9/11, so it might have been that they didn’t stamp the passport on exit. The United States didn’t, even now. Did that mean that she had come back to the USA? Either way, the question was when and how did Nat get her passport? Had he stolen it from her? Had he killed her? Had he gone to England and killed her there and then stolen her passport so that she would not be identified? Could that be why they never found a body? Because she had been killed in England and it had been classified as a death of an unknown person? Could he have killed her, taken her passport and then also planted false documents on her so that she had been wrongly identified in England? That would further reduce the likelihood of the body being identified as that of Dorothy Olsen.

  But then again, why assume that she was dead? If her passport was here was there not a more obvious answer?

  He was hiding her! She was staying here at his place in hiding, unable to go out.

  But then why wasn’t she here now? Had she heard him breaking in and run away, thinking he was the police? There was no sign of any open windows, other than the one he had prized open in order to get in. Was she hiding in the house? It was hard to imagine where. He had looked round in all the places large enough.

  Or had she been in hiding here until recently until it got too hot for her to hang round? And had she now run away altogether or merely found somewhere else to hide?

  Whatever the explanation, one thing was sure: the visa stamp in her passport offered documentary proof that Dorothy Olsen had arrived in London on or about the time she had disappeared. And that was what Alex Sedaka wanted. Lee closed the passport and was about to put it in his pocket when he noticed that something had fallen out.

  It was a piece of thin white cardboard.

  21:35 PDT

  Jonathan made his way to the basement and sought out the closet where the electricity supply was controlled. It was locked, but with nothing more than a cheap padlock. He didn’t know much about picking locks, but he’d brought a large screwdriver with him. Instead of going for the lock itself, he looked at the flimsy plate on the closet door. Without much difficulty – and with surprisingly little noise – he prized it open.

  He found himself presented with a dazzling and
somewhat confusing array of circuit breakers. Eventually he found one marked “main lab.” He was about to throw the switch when he realized that this wasn’t enough. Throwing the switch might cause David Sedaka to leave the lab in consternation, but he would still be hovering about outside, leaving Jonathan no way to get in undetected.

  He looked at the top and bottom of the cupboard, eventually finding three large switches at the top. These evidently controlled the main flow. The lab presumably had three-phase wiring and each of these master circuit breakers controlled one phase. To black out the lab entirely he would have to throw all three switches.

  But then he realized that even that wouldn’t work. The emergency battery would kick in and the temporary lighting would come on. This wouldn’t be enough to operate the lab equipment, but it would be enough to supply lighting which, again, would render untenable any effort to sneak into the lab.

  He struggled to come up with an idea. What could he do that would get David out of the lab and give him free access to the lab? A phone call telling him that something untoward had happened to his father? Forget it! David would simply call his father’s office to verify it.

  A fire? That would be a very serious thing to –

  Of course! That was it!

  Not a real fire, of course, just a fire alarm. The button was there staring him in the face by the basement exit to the parking lot. It couldn’t be simpler.

  All it took was a lighter held to the fire and smoke detector and in an instant the klaxon rang out.

  He heard voices, questions, puzzlement and heard scurrying footsteps. The footsteps were retreating. No one was coming down to the basement. At some point, they could probably check where the alarm had been set off. But they hadn’t done so yet. He still had time.

  He waited a few seconds longer and then started running up the stairs. But he felt self-conscious about the lights being on and so he ran back down and threw the three circuit breakers, plunging the building into darkness. It felt surprisingly long before the emergency lighting came on – although he realized in retrospect that it was barely more than a second.

  Again he ran up the stairs to the ground floor, but this time he did not stop. He raced straight into the lab where he had seen David Sedaka working. He saw the computer, but he realized that he didn’t need it. David Sedaka had opened up the casing and taken out the hard drive and dismantled it. It was the platters from the hard disk drive that he needed and they were right there by the computer that David had been using. But that other computer wasn’t Dorothy’s computer. It was a laptop and it was connected up to the scanning tunneling microscope, presumably to control the operations.

  Jonathan scooped up the platters in one hand and ran. As he ran out, he felt a hand push against his chest. He felt himself being hurled back and when he had regained his bearings he looked up to see a curly-haired man standing there.

  “What are you doing here?” asked the man.

  “Nothing.”

  “What have you got in your hand?”

  Jonathan looked down. The platters seemed so small and fragile, it was hard to believe that anyone could even notice them, especially in this light. But when he looked up he noticed that David Sedaka’s eyes were still on the platters. And he knew what he had to do.

  Quick as a flash, his free hand formed a fist and shot out, flooring David Sedaka with a single punch.

  21:37 PDT

  Lee Kelly picked up the small rectangular piece of white cardboard that had fallen from the passport and flipped it over. It was a photograph of a young woman in her twenties looking at the camera with a bright, sunny smile on her face.

  He couldn’t tell when or where the picture was taken. There were people in the background, but the woman filled the foreground and the people in the background were too small to glean any information from. It looked like it was taken at a party. It had that sort of look and feel to it. But it was impossible to be sure.

  For a second or two he thought that it was a picture of Dorothy. But looking back at the passport picture he had second thoughts. The eyes were similar, but the bone structure was different.

  But the question was, why was it inside Dorothy’s passport? Just having the passport was suspicious enough, but why the picture? Putting it inside the passport suggested that it was there for safe-keeping – an important picture inside an important document.

  But why? Why was it so important?

  And who was the woman?

  21:41 PDT

  Alex was driving to Jonathan’s place. Juanita had convinced him that he couldn’t just give up on Burrow, but the problem was where to go from here. Jonathan seemed like a potential weak link. Esther had told Alex that she had heard Dorothy and Jonathan talking just a few days before Dorothy vanished – indeed, a few days before Edgar Olsen had committed suicide.

  That couldn’t have just been about the rape. The rape was six weeks earlier. So they must have been talking about the pregnancy, rather than the rape itself. But if it was about the pregnancy, then it would probably also have been about the abortion, or at least the question of whether or not to have one.

  Jonathan could therefore not have been ignorant of Dorothy’s plans to go to England.

  And if he knew, then Alex had to find a way to break him and get him to admit the truth. Clayton Burrow’s life depended on it.

  The cell phone rang in the hands-free kit. Alex looked at the display.

  “Hi, David.”

  “Hi, Dad, listen, you’re not going to believe what’s happened!”

  “What?” asked Alex, excitedly.

  “Someone broke into the lab and stole the platters from the hard disk!”

  “What?”

  “We had a little bit of a confrontation.”

  “Who?”

  “Me and the guy who did it. The fire alarm went off and as I was leaving the building I noticed something out of the corner of my eye. I looked round and saw this guy running toward the lab instead of toward the exit.”

  “What did he look like?”

  “By the time I looked round he was walking away from me so I only saw his back.”

  “Did you tell anyone?”

  “Not exactly. I went back myself to see what he was up to.”

  “Wasn’t that a bit risky?”

  “Well he went in and I couldn’t see what he did, but he came out of the lab like three seconds later holding something in his hand. So I challenged him.”

  “That was dangerous.”

  “Not really. I mean, he wasn’t so big.”

  Alex was surprised that his son was being so blasé about it. He wasn’t exactly noted for being the world’s best action hero. Debbie had always been the athletic one. David was the nerd with his nose in a book half the time.

  “So what did he say?”

  “He said he wasn’t doing anything, but I could see he was holding something in his hand. I wasn’t too sure what it was, but it was clear that it was something he wanted to hold on to.”

  “So why did you let him go?”

  “I didn’t exactly let him. While I was looking down at whatever it was he had in his hand he caught me with a sucker punch.”

  “Holy shit!”

  “Don’t worry, I’m okay. I think he just broke my nose.”

  “Good God, hadn’t you better get to a doctor?”

  “It’s not the first time I’ve broken my nose, Dad. Remember the baseball game?”

  “Now you’re not still going on about that, David! You know she didn’t mean it.”

  “I’m not blaming her, Dad. All I’m saying if I could take a broken nose as a child from Debbie’s Little League baseball bat, then I can take one as an adult from some punk who manages to catch me with a sucker punch.”

  “Okay. Well just take care of yourself.”

  “I will, don’t worry.”

  A motorbike sped past Alex’s car, just as he was about to pull out to overtake.

  “Asshole!” he muttered
.

  “What?”

  “Just some guy on a Suzuki.”

  “You okay?”

  “Sure I’m okay. It’s you I’m worried about.”

  “Don’t be.”

  “All right. Just one thing, David. Do you think there was anything more to be gleaned from those hard disk platters?”

  “I don’t know, but there’s still one left.”

  Alex was surprised.

  “I don’t understand.”

  “There was one left in the microscope. He missed it.”

  21:44 PDT

  Nat was worried. Things were getting out of hand. He had made several calls but wasn’t getting an answer. Every time he called the landline, it rang for several moments and then went to voicemail. With the cell phone it went straight to voicemail. That meant that the cell phone was switched off. And that troubled Nat.

  He was glad that he had been vague with Alex and Juanita about where he was going. Because that gave him a window of opportunity to stay out of the office for longer than just a few minutes. He wasn’t sure that his trip was worthwhile. But he wanted to make sure.

  However, he felt hot and sweaty in his clothes. It had been a long day. So he decided to take a small detour and drive to his own home first for a change of clothes.

  He pulled up in the street, not bothering to pull onto the driveway. He would only be a few minutes. Also he was tired. So tired that he didn’t notice the faint glow of the flashlight inside the living room.

  It was only when he had unlocked the door and pushed it open that he sensed something was wrong. He noticed a faint light go out just as he opened the door. A trick of the light, he thought as he stepped inside and switched on the living room light before closing the door behind him.

 

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