The Kept Woman (Will Trent 8)

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The Kept Woman (Will Trent 8) Page 37

by Karin Slaughter


  He said, ‘I don’t think I can talk about any of this right now.’

  She squeezed his hand. ‘Then we won’t.’

  Tuesday

  TEN

  Faith paged through her notebook as Amanda drove them to Reuben Figaroa’s house. Her columns were hardly worth reviewing. Will had been right when he’d told her there wasn’t a case to be built. Faith saw what he had seen: a bunch of arrows, a bunch of unanswered questions. Nothing added up, even when you threw in the name Josephine Figaroa. The dead woman was just another arrow that indirectly led back to Marcus Rippy.

  Maybe she should try to link them to Angie.

  Her eyes started to blur. She looked up, blinking to clear her vision. The streets of Buckhead were deserted. It was almost one in the morning. Faith had been dead asleep in front of the television when Amanda had called her to the funeral home. She could barely recall dropping Emma off at her mother’s house. She was so exhausted that her brain hurt, but this was the job. There was no such thing as a reasonable hour to notify a man that his wife was dead.

  Not that Faith was absolutely certain that the woman at the funeral home was Jo Figaroa. She certainly could be the woman in the driver’s license photo, but Angie’s involvement skewed everything. Faith’s policy toward liars was to always discount everything they said, no matter how much sense their story made. It wasn’t easy. The human brain had an annoying need to give people the benefit of the doubt. Especially people you cared about.

  For instance, Faith was trusting Will when he said that Angie hadn’t told him anything else important, even though he had spent a hell of a lot of time on the phone with her just to be told a victim’s name.

  Amanda said, ‘Your mother used to pin her notes up on the wall so that we could see all the moving pieces.’

  Faith smiled. The pinholes were still there. ‘Do you think that Jo Figaroa is Angie’s daughter?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Who’s the father?’ She didn’t get an answer, so she suggested the obvious one. ‘Will?’

  ‘I’m not so sure about that.’ Amanda slowed the car. She pulled over to the side of the road. She put the gear in park. She turned to Faith. ‘Tell me what you know about Denny.’

  ‘Denny?’ Faith shook her head. ‘Who’s Denny?’

  ‘Short for Holden,’ Amanda explained. ‘Though Denny is two syllables. Holden is two syllables. I suppose that means it’s not short, just less pretentious.’

  Faith was too tired for semantics. ‘Let’s just stick with Collier.’

  ‘Start from the beginning. What did he do? How did he present himself?’

  Faith had to pause for a moment so that she could put together her day. It seemed like an eternity had passed since she’d picked up Will at the animal clinic this morning, which was technically yesterday morning because it was past midnight.

  She told Amanda about the first meeting with Collier and Ng outside Rippy’s club, the interminable amount of time she’d spent with him at Dale Harding’s, the texts that told her nothing, the tedious observations about his personal life, the constant sexual innuendo, the reluctance to carry on an adult conversation about the case.

  ‘I don’t trust him,’ Faith admitted. ‘He keeps pushing this Mexican heroin cartel angle. He didn’t tell me about finding Delilah’s car, but he told me about every useless whore he talked to in Lakewood.’

  Amanda confirmed, ‘Ng said that they were handling a domestic call when they got routed to the nightclub?’

  Faith strained to recall his exact words. ‘He said it was pretty violent, which means they were probably at the hospital. Grady is close to Rippy’s club, about a ten-minute drive at that time of morning. It would make sense for them to take the call.’

  ‘The nine-one-one came in at five AM,’ Amanda reminded her. ‘Would you volunteer to investigate a dead body at a warehouse at the end of your shift?’

  Faith shrugged. ‘Dead cop. The unis recognized Harding. You’d push your shift for a cop.’

  ‘True,’ Amanda agreed. ‘What else is bothering you about him?’

  Faith struggled to articulate her gut feeling. ‘He keeps showing up. He was with Will when he found the Jane Doe in the office building. He drove him home. He was there tonight at the funeral home. What was he doing there?’

  ‘Collier and Ng are our APD liaisons. They’re working parts of the case. It makes sense that he’d get the call about the car.’

  ‘I guess.’ Faith tried to pluck out the obvious answer. ‘Maybe Collier’s just an idiot who keeps falling up. His dad was on the job. He’s obviously got some juice.’

  Amanda said, ‘Milton Collier was on the job for two years. He took a fifty-one off a twenty-four, lost two fingers before he could call a sixty-three.’

  Faith accessed her arcane knowledge of ten-codes from Amanda’s soup-can-and-string days. Collier’s dad had been stabbed by a crazy person and lost some fingers before backup arrived. She asked Amanda, ‘And?’

  ‘Milton clocked out on a medical disability. The wife was a schoolteacher. They made ends meet by taking in foster kids. Dozens at a time. Collier was one of them. Eventually they adopted him.’

  ‘Huh,’ Faith said, because Collier had overshared just about everything, down to his twisted nut sack in high school, but he hadn’t mentioned that he’d been in the system the same as Delilah Palmer.

  The same as Angie, too.

  Faith asked, ‘Were Collier and Angie ever in the same home together, like when she was sixteen years old and pregnant?’

  ‘That’s an interesting question, isn’t it?’ Amanda didn’t give the answer, but Faith knew she would find out. Amanda asked, ‘What else did Angie say on the phone call with Will?’

  ‘It was brief,’ she lied, because the call had lasted just under three minutes. ‘I’m sure she spent some time taunting him.’

  ‘Why is that, do you think?’

  ‘Because she’s a terrible human being.’

  Amanda gave her a sharp look. ‘She’s cunning is what she is. Look at our day. Angie had us running around in circles. East Atlanta. Lakewood. North Atlanta. Will was all over midtown. You were stuck at Harding’s. I was at Kilpatrick’s. What’s more, Angie has knocked Will out of the equation, which shows brilliant strategy. Will knows her intimately. He could be our best ally in helping us figure out what Angie is really up to, but she has rendered him completely useless. You saw how he was in the basement.’

  Faith had seen how broken Will had been, and what’s more, she hadn’t been able to take it. He had been making a weird whooping sound, like he couldn’t catch his breath. Faith ran from the room so that he wouldn’t see her crying.

  She asked Amanda, ‘You think Angie’s fucking with him so that he won’t figure out what she’s really up to?’

  ‘If I were teaching a class on mind games, that play would be part of my curriculum.’

  God knew Amanda could play some mind games. ‘Okay, Angie’s screwing with him. To what end?’

  ‘She’s buying time.’

  ‘For what?’

  ‘That’s the sixty-four-thousand-dollar question, isn’t it? What exactly is Angie Polaski up to?’

  Faith didn’t think she would ever find the answer. She was so tired and so stressed out that she doubted she could tie her own shoes right now, let alone figure out why Angie Polaski did the awful things she did.

  Amanda said, ‘Walk me through it.’

  Reluctantly, Faith looked down at her notes again. ‘Harding is murdered Sunday night. Angie stages the scene to make it look like she, Angie, was murdered, but it’s actually Jo Figaroa, who probably shares her mother, Angie’s, rare blood type, B-negative.’

  ‘Hm.’ For once, Amanda hadn’t been ahead of her. ‘Do you think Angie murdered Jo?’

  Faith wasn’t sure. ‘She’s a monster, but I can’t see her killing her own child.’

  ‘Neither can I, but Harding could have killed Jo, then Angie killed Harding. Or tried to, with
the doorknob.’ Amanda asked, ‘What happened next?’

  ‘Angie takes the body out of the club. She torches Dale’s car, which sounds like something Angie would do if she was pissed off, and she’d be pissed off if Dale killed her kid.’ Faith couldn’t even contemplate a real-life scenario with her own children. There would be salt in the ground for a thousand years. ‘The nine-one-one comes in Monday morning at five. Then Monday night, Angie hands us Jo’s body at the funeral home and calls Will to torture him.’

  ‘Sara puts Josephine’s time of death around noon to one.’

  ‘That’s un-Sara-like specificity.’ Faith scribbled the time in the margins. She realized, ‘If Josephine died between noon and one, that means Angie had her in the trunk of her car until she left the body at the funeral home just before eight thirty PM.’

  ‘There was a lot of blood in the back seat, all type B-negative, and a little blood in the trunk that Sara says could have been left post mortem from the chest wound.’

  Faith shivered at the coldness it would take to drive around with your own child bleeding to death in the back of your car.

  ‘It’s a timing issue,’ Amanda said. ‘Angie is dragging out the clock. That’s why she waited so long to get rid of the body.’

  ‘Or something changed in her plan,’ Faith guessed, but she really had no idea. She saw Amanda’s earlier logic, because Will was the one person who could probably figure out what Angie was thinking. He knew her motivations. He knew what she was capable of. But it wasn’t just Will she was fucking with. ‘Angie’s worked murder cases before. She knows what it’s like. All the blood and violence freaks you out no matter how many times you’ve seen it. You’re panicked you’re going to miss something. You can’t turn off your brain. You can’t sleep, even when there’s time. Throw in the emotional angle and she’s basically put us in Gitmo.’

  Amanda said, ‘I’ll say what I said this morning: we’re missing something big.’

  ‘Maybe Reuben Figaroa can offer an explanation.’ She closed her notebook. All of the sense was gone. Her notes looked like one of Emma’s coloring projects. ‘I’ll never get back to sleep after this. I could use one of your Xanax.’ She looked up at Amanda. ‘What are you doing carrying around Xanax, anyway?’

  ‘Just a little trick from the old days.’ Amanda turned back to the steering wheel. ‘You have a suspect who’s too jumpy to talk, you crush half a pill into his coffee. He gets a little loosey-goosey and you have him sign on the dotted line.’

  ‘I can think of sixteen different ways that’s illegal.’

  ‘Only sixteen?’ Amanda chuckled as she pulled back onto the road. ‘Talk to your mother. She’s the one who came up with it.’

  Faith could see her mother doing this in the seventies, but she couldn’t see Amanda doing it now, which meant that she’d dodged another question. Pressing her was not a mountain Faith was prepared to climb. ‘How are we going to approach Reuben? Is this a death notification or an interrogation? His wife has been missing since at least Sunday night. He hasn’t filed a report.’

  ‘We should handle this just as we would handle any suspicious death of a spouse.’ Amanda reminded her, ‘The husband is the first suspect. More women are murdered by their intimate partners than by any other group.’

  ‘Why do you think I stopped dating?’

  The comment was meant as a joke, but Amanda cut her a side-look. ‘Don’t let this job turn you off men, Faith.’

  Faith studied Amanda. This was the second time in as many days that she had tried to give her dating advice. ‘Where is this coming from?’

  ‘Experience,’ Amanda said. ‘Take it from a woman who has been doing this job for a very long time. It’s simple statistics. Men commit the most violent crimes. Everyone knows that, but not everyone sees it played out in the real world every single day like you and I do. Remind yourself that Will is a good man. At least when he’s not being pig-headed. Charlie Reed is exceptional—not that you should repeat that. Your thing with Emma’s father didn’t work out, but he’s still a good guy. Your father was a saint. Your brother can be an ass, but he would do anything for you. Jeremy is perfect in every way. Your Uncle Kenny is—’

  ‘A cheater and a womanizer?’

  ‘Don’t miss the forest for the trees, Faith. Kenny adores you. He’s still a good person. It just didn’t work out for us. But there’s someone out there who could work out for you. Don’t let the job tell you otherwise.’ She tapped her foot on the brake. ‘What was the street number?’

  Faith hadn’t realized they were already on Cherokee Drive. She pointed to a large stone mailbox a few houses down from the country club. ‘There.’

  Amanda turned into the driveway. An enormous black gate blocked her progress. She pressed the button on the security keypad. She waved at the security camera discreetly mounted in the tall bushes that blocked the view of the house from the road.

  The Figaroas obviously valued their privacy. Faith guessed there was enough front yard for a football field. Still, she could make out the glimmer of lights on the bottom floor. ‘They’re already awake. Do you think the press got wind of this?’

  ‘If they did, we have a small pool of suspects who could’ve leaked the news.’

  Collier again. He was the proverbial bad penny. If he knew Angie, did that mean he knew Dale Harding? And if Harding and Angie were the types of cops that Holden Collier kept company with, what did that say about Collier?

  Faith was a big believer in guilt by association.

  She asked Amanda, ‘Have you ever heard of a woman named Virginia Souza?’

  Amanda shook her head.

  ‘Collier mentioned her before.’ Faith found her phone in her pocket. She read back through his texts, looking for the woman’s name. ‘Virginia Souza. Collier tracked her down because she worked Delilah’s corner, so they probably had the same pimp. Family said she OD’d six months ago, but that’s from Collier, and I don’t trust Collier because he’s a lying liar.’

  ‘You sound so much like your mother sometimes.’

  ‘I wish I could tell whether or not that was a compliment.’ Faith searched the state database for Virginia Souza’s rap sheet. ‘Here we go. Fifty-seven years old, which is a bit long in the tooth for a whore. Prostitution times a thousand, going back to the late seventies. Child endangerment. Child neglect. Accessory to the exploitation of a child. None of which Collier mentioned.’ Faith felt a cramp in her thumb as she paged through the woman’s sordid criminal history. ‘Several drunk and disorderlies. Shoplifting. No drug violations, which is odd since the family said she OD’d six months ago. Or Collier said the family said she OD’d six months ago. Two assaults, both on minors—Collier told me about those. Suspect in the kidnapping of a minor. Suspect in another exploitation. She really has a thing for kids. Known aliases: Souz, Souzie, Ginny, Gin, Mama.’

  ‘Mama in charge,’ Amanda said, using the colloquialism for a pimp’s right-hand woman. ‘She’s a bottom girl.’

  ‘Makes sense, considering her age and her sheet. All these assaults on kids, that could be her doing the pimp’s job, keeping the stable in line.’

  ‘What is taking these people so long?’ Amanda pressed the buzzer on the gate a second time, keeping her finger down long enough to make it clear she wasn’t going to go away. ‘Do you have a phone number?’

  Faith was about to look when the gates started to open.

  ‘Finally,’ Amanda said.

  The driveway curved to the left, leading them toward a detached six-car garage at the rear corner of the house. Amanda pulled into the motorcourt, parking beside a Tesla SUV. Striping had turned the pavement into a miniature basketball court with a goal set low enough to indicate Reuben Figaroa had built out the space for his six-year-old son.

  ‘Kip Kilpatrick,’ Amanda said.

  Faith saw the agent standing in an open doorway. His suit was so shiny that it caught the security lights. He had a bottle of bright red sports drink in his hands that he to
ssed back and forth as he watched the car pull up. Will had underestimated the man’s doucheness. Faith could smell it coming off him like damp in a basement.

  Amanda said, ‘Here we go.’

  They both got out of the car. Amanda walked toward Kilpatrick. Faith glanced through the windows in the garage doors. Two Ferraris, a Porsche, and in the last bay a charcoal-gray Range Rover, the same type of vehicle that was leased to Jo Figaroa.

  Amanda said, ‘Mr Kilpatrick, what a pleasure to see you twice in the same day.’

  He looked at his watch. ‘It’s technically two days. Any particular reason you’re out this late visiting another client of mine?’

  ‘Why don’t we discuss that inside with Mr Figaroa?’

  ‘Why don’t we discuss that outside with me?’

  ‘I find it odd that you’re even here, Mr Kilpatrick. Are you making a late house call?’

  ‘You’ve got five seconds to either explain why you’re here or to get off Mr Figaroa’s property.’

  Amanda paused a moment to let some of the power shift. ‘I’m looking for Josephine Figaroa, actually. She seems to be missing.’

  ‘She’s in rehab,’ he said. ‘Left this morning. Packed her into the car myself.’

  ‘Can you tell me the name of the facility?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Can you tell me when she’ll return?’

  ‘Nope.’

  Amanda seldom hit walls, but Faith could see that she had found herself flat against Kilpatrick’s denials. She finally laid down the truth. ‘Two hours ago, a body was found that was identified as Josephine Figaroa.’

  Kilpatrick dropped the bottle, which exploded against the pavement. Red liquid splashed all over the ground, his feet, his pants. He didn’t move. He barely registered the mess. He was genuinely astonished.

  Amanda said, ‘We need Mr Figaroa to positively ID the body.’

  ‘What?’ Kilpatrick started shaking his head. ‘How did . . . What?’

  ‘Do you need a minute?’

  He looked at the ground, noticed the spilled drink. ‘Are you sure?’ He shook his head, and Faith could practically hear him coaching himself into putting his lawyer face back on. ‘I can do the ID. Where should I meet you?’

 

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