by John Lutz
It had been simple and effective, catching the overmuscled bodyguard flatfooted. The one with the buzz cut with the little tuft of gray hair in front?
The newsman held up a plastic vial like the one that had contained a rolled slip of paper with the Justice Killer’s signature red J on it that was tossed from the shooter’s car.
Dudman had dropped instantly. The bodyguard said he at first thought his boss had simply tripped. He’d hurried to help him up, but Dudman didn’t respond. By the time the bodyguard noticed the blood on his hand, and on Dudman, the traffic had moved on. The bodyguard pushed the unconscious Dudman into the limo and instructed the driver to speed to the nearest hospital. Dudman was dead on arrival. None of the stunned witnesses could offer any description of any particular vehicle that was passing at the time of the shot.
The building’s uniformed doorman was being interviewed now by another newscaster, a blond woman who seemed overly concerned with what the breeze was doing with her hair.
Gina continued her route to the kitchen and stood in the doorway until her mother, salting something in a large skillet, noticed her.
“Mom…”
In the living room, both of them stood staring at the TV, crying silently as the story continued to unfold on the screen.
Gina wasn’t sure what exactly was going on in her mother’s mind, but she knew what she was thinking. She was glad Dudman was dead—satisfied, actually—but it was Bradley Aimes who’d killed Genelle. Bradley Aimes who, even more than Dudman, deserved death.
As these thoughts took form in her mind, Gina was somewhat disturbed by the fact that Dudman’s death seemed to have whetted her appetite. For death? For vengeance?
For justice!
That the notion had come unbidden made it seem all the more natural, all the more logical. Yes, Aimes deserved to die for what he did to Genelle. His death would be justice. It would be right.
What didn’t seem right was that someone else, not Gina, had killed Dudman and at least partially avenged Genelle’s death. Executing Dudman had been Gina’s responsibility, but she’d let Genelle down. Failed her. What didn’t seem right was that her gun was in her bedroom, in her purse, in a bureau drawer, unfired except for target practice. It lay unused, cold, heavy, forged for a destiny not yet fulfilled. Her gun.
“Gina,” her mother said beside her, “I’m going to phone your father.”
Her gun…
46
“Dudman was a major player in this town,” da Vinci said to Beam. They were in da Vinci’s office. The blinds were closed and a couple of lamps were on. The atmosphere was almost cozy. Da Vinci had carefully returned the chair the commissioner had sat in to its original location, matching its legs with the depressions in the carpet. Beam sat in the chair now, and in his own way he was as intimidating as the commissioner. Those damned, flat blue eyes. Da Vinci was increasingly fighting the feeling that he was losing control of the investigation. “That’s why I gave you all those uniforms to canvass the neighborhood where Dudman was shot.”
“They’re hard at work,” Beam said. “Nell and Looper are correlating the information.”
“They in charge?”
“In the case of Dudman, right now, yes.”
“You should be in charge and up front,” da Vinci said. “Instead you come here and want to talk. It better be important, because Carl Dudman sure was.”
“It’s because Dudman was important that I’m here. We both know his murder was pretty much a simple and clean operation done by a pro.”
“We thought before that the Justice Killer might be a pro,” da Vinci said. But he seemed interested now. Beam had something in mind.
“And a pro would find it easy to obtain all the information he needed on a rich and semi-famous target like Dudman,” Beam said. “Once he’d done that, all the security in the world wouldn’t have made much difference.”
“You’re saying our killer is a real pro—a hit man, or maybe ex-Special Forces or Delta Force.”
“Maybe. But it’s the victims I think we should be concentrating on now, and not the ones like Dudman. More like Manfred Byrd.”
“The decorator? There are thousands of them in this town. It’s not as if he had his own TV show or wrote a book on how to decorate on a dime. He was a nobody except for the Draco case.”
“Which occurred almost ten years ago. Even Byrd had pretty much put it out of his mind. His friends and acquaintances said he never mentioned it. He wasn’t like Dudman. To find out about Byrd, the killer had to dig deeper. Unlike with Dudman, for instance, he’d have to find Byrd. Simply locating him wouldn’t be all that simple. Then what? Is he married?”
“Hardly,” da Vinci said.
“The killer wouldn’t have known. And he wouldn’t have known what Byrd did for a living, where he did his shopping, drank, dated. Did he go to movies? What kind? Was he an early riser? Maybe a jogger? How old was he? When was his birthday? What was his credit rating? Did he have a car? Did he take cabs or subways or both? Did he drink to excess? Do drugs? Have a steady lover? Own a gun? Use the library? The Internet? Have a safety deposit box? All the kinds of things a pro would want to know in order to have a full picture.”
“All or most of it, easy enough to find out,” da Vinci said.
“Much easier with Dudman than with Byrd, because Byrd required more digging into public records. Court records, deeds, newspaper items, credit records.”
“We talked about this,” da Vinci reminded Beam. “We start digging to find out who’s seen people’s personal records, medical, the kinds of books they read, their Internet habits, employment history, what have you, and the civil libertarians are all over our asses.”
“That isn’t going to change,” Beam said. “What is legal is to set up surveillance cameras in or outside libraries, newspaper morgues, courthouses, wherever public records are stored. We might just capture an image, then be able to capture the real thing.”
Da Vinci sat back in his desk chair, thinking about it. He rubbed his chin as he’d seen the commissioner do. “It’d sure as hell save department hours. Manpower. Womanpower.”
“It’d be legal, too,” Beam said. “People can’t claim the expectation of privacy in public places. I don’t think the ACLU would object.”
“Some of those places already have taping systems. Part of Homeland Security.”
“True,” Beam said, “but I’m talking about even more cameras, more angles, more coverage. I’d rather have cops poring over those kinds of tapes, trying to spot something to grab onto, than using their time covering ground we know from experience with this killer probably isn’t going to give us anything.”
Da Vinci was quiet, pondering, then he sat forward and grinned widely. “Okay. Makes sense. I’ll see that more cameras are installed wherever pubic records are kept. We got people who can sit and view security tapes, maybe spot somebody doing nothing suspicious, but doing it where the records of more than one victim were stored. That kinda thing.” In the still, warm office, he rubbed his hands together as if he were cold and trying to warm up. “This is the sorta suggestion I expected you to come up with, Beam. I’ll notify the chief what we have in mind; I’m sure he’ll approve it.”
“Tell him it’s your idea, if you want,” Beam said. “I’m retired anyway, or will be again soon, I hope.”
Da Vinci flashed his Tony Curtis grin. “That’s awful generous of you, Beam.”
“I don’t mind seeing you get ahead.”
Da Vinci understood. “We’re the same kind of cop. That’s why I brought you back for this investigation.”
“That’s why I came back,” Beam said. “That, and I was having trouble being someone I wasn’t.”
Da Vinci stood up behind his desk. Busy man. Lots to do. “Anything else, Beam?”
“Adelaide Starr,” Beam said.
Da Vinci made a face like a kid who’d expected chocolate and gotten broccoli. “Hey, I’m open to any ideas on that one.”
/> “Send her another jury summons. Make her serve. She says she wants you to change your mind, so change it.”
“We’ve been there,” da Vinci said.
“I bet she doesn’t want to go back,” Beam said.
“She won’t serve.”
“Then arrest her. Put her in custody. Make an example of her. She’s been shooting off her mouth on talk shows, asking for equal treatment. So give it to her. It’s exactly what she doesn’t want.”
Da Vinci did his chin rubbing thing again. “I’m not saying it wouldn’t be fun.”
“That’s not what we’re talking about.”
“I like it, Beam. I tell you what, I’ll run it past the chief.” Or the commissioner.
“Fine,” Beam said, but didn’t leave. “That one gonna be your idea, too?”
“Depends on the reaction.”
Beam had to smile. “You’re an honest man.”
“Honest cop, anyway.”
“One more thing,” Beam said.
Da Vinci had started to sit, but straightened up. “My, my, we are fruitful.”
“I want a court order,” Beam said. “Soon as possible.”
“For what?”
“We need to exhume a body.”
Beam double-parked the Lincoln beside the unmarked, across the street from where Carl Dudman had been shot. He climbed out of the cool air from the dashboard vents into heat, humidity, exhaust fumes, and traffic noise.
A cable TV truck was parked down the block. Closer to Dudman’s building, a guy in a sharp suit was standing in front of a shoulder-held TV camera, taping a spot for one of the local news programs.
When there was a break in traffic, Beam jogged across the street. The leg that had been shot ached with every other stride, but only slightly. Old man can still run.
The area in front of Dudman’s building was guarded by a single uniform, standing with his back against the wall to one side of the entrance. He was a paunchy, graying guy, but he had the kind of heavy-lidded pale eyes that seemed to notice everything. Where Dudman had fallen, a small square of new looking sidewalk and curb was cordoned off with yellow crime scene tape. It looked more like a Con Ed work site than a murder scene.
Beam flashed his shield at the uniform, who nodded but didn’t move other than raising one arm a few inches to the side and rapping his nightstick on the glass door. The door immediately opened and was held for Beam by a uniformed doorman who’d been invisible behind the dark, reflecting tinting. It seemed to be a routine the cop and doorman had down pat.
Nell and Looper were waiting for Beam where they’d said they’d be, seated in a grouping of furniture near the center of the cool, spacious lobby. Light poured in from high windows and reflected off rich paneling and gray marble flooring. The marble had a brownish vein running through it that matched exactly the color of the leather chairs and a long sofa arranged around a rectangular glass coffee table. Magazines and newspapers were neatly fanned out on the table like an oversized hand of cards.
The two detectives stood up when they saw Beam. After hellos, all three sat down, Nell and Looper in chairs, Beam in a corner of the brown leather sofa. In the hushed lobby, the furniture hissed like punctured tires beneath their settling weight.
“Got anything?” Beam asked, not expecting much.
Looper gave a low chuckle. “About what you’d expect from witnesses to any drive-by shooting.”
“The killer kept it simple,” Nell said, “but I doubt if it was haphazard. More like the result of careful planning. We went over Dudman’s daily routine with his security. Those few seconds outside the building, when he was getting into his limo, represented about the only time in his busy days when he was vulnerable.”
“Witnesses giving up anything at all?” Beam asked.
“What you’d expect,” Nell said. “They saw a red car, a white van, a blue car, a cab, drive past about the time Dudman was shot by a blond man, a bald man, a dark-haired man with a Jesus cut. They heard a shot, two shots, no shots. Heard a shout, heard a laugh, heard a car backfire. The other witnesses saw and heard nothing.”
“Those are the ones telling the truth,” Nell said. “Being factual, anyway.”
“Guy was a pro,” Looper said. “He left us zilch. Dudman was alive. Killer drove past. Dudman was dead. We got a corpse, a thirty-two slug, and a slip of paper with a letter on it. That’s all, and that’s what it adds up to—nada.”
There was a tone of admiration in his voice that annoyed Beam. “You starting to see the killer as a hero, Loop?”
“You know better,” Looper said. He glanced around, licking his lips. “I wish it was legal to smoke in this expensive mausoleum.”
“You quit,” Nell reminded him..
“I wasn’t thinking just of myself, Nell.”
“What we all need to be thinking about,” Beam said, “is running this sick freak to ground and bringing him in.”
“We’ll do that,” Looper said. “It’ll be the bullet or the needle. His choice.”
Not ours, Beam thought. We don’t get to choose. Not unless it’s close.
He told them about what had happened at the antique shop with Nola, then about his meeting with da Vinci.
“So we’re soon gonna be spending our time studying security tapes?
Nell asked.
“Eventually, maybe. If we can get camcorders set up where we want them.”
She’d been studying him as he’d told them about his day so far. “Mind if I ask a question, Beam?”
“Probably.”
“This woman, Nola Lima, do you and her have a history?”
“I told you about our history, how her husband was one of my snitches and got killed.”
“Wanna tell us more?”
“No. You know enough.”
Nobody spoke for a few minutes. They all watched a woman in a fur boa, despite the heat, enter the lobby, cross to the elevators, and ascend.
“When do you think we’ll get the court order for the exhumation?” Nell asked.
“I hope tomorrow. Da Vinci’s working on rushing it through. He’s got some judges by the balls. Meantime, you keep everything going here, talking to people who don’t know anything, looking good for the media.”
“It’s bullshit,” Nell said.
“It’s part of the job.”
“Still bullshit.”
“I didn’t say it wasn’t.”
“I wish to Christ I had a cigarette,” Looper said.
Nell said, “You might as well go ahead and smoke one as die sooner at my hands for continuing to harp on it.”
“The bullet, the needle, or the filter tip,” Beam said, and stood up and left them.
Outside, as the tinted glass door swung closed, he caught sight of the reflection of a man standing across the street staring at him. Beam wouldn’t have noticed him except that he jogged his memory. He was sure he’d seen the man somewhere before, and recently. Not necessarily his face, which he couldn’t make out, but his proportions and posture, the set of his head, neck, and shoulders.
When he turned around, the man wasn’t there.
No matter. Silhouette and profile registered strongly in an old cop’s mind.
Beam was sure he was being followed.
Terry Adams reached over from where he lay on his back on Nell’s bed, felt around, then found his cold can of Budweiser and took a swig. It was difficult to drink lying down, and he felt a trickle of cold beer run down his cheek and neck toward the pillow. “So they’re gonna dig up this guy’s grave and see if he’s still wearing his ring?”
“That’s the idea,” Nell said. She knew she probably shouldn’t be talking to Terry about this, but it wasn’t exactly an integral part of the Justice Killer case. That was what kind of bothered her. Beam seemed to want it to be part of the case. She wondered why. What was there between Beam and this woman, Nola?
“Sounds like something out of a play,” Terry said. “Maybe a movie. Make a great scene.”<
br />
Nell laughed. “You ready to play a cop again?”
“If I could get the part, sure. The real job—yours—no way. Just portraying a cop, getting inside his skin, was enough.”
“You must have done it well.”
“There was talk of a Tony.”
Nell propped her head on her elbow. “Really?”
“Well…most of the talk was by me.”
Nell laughed and let her head fall back on her wadded pillow. It was pleasant, the way the room was cooling down but still smelled like sex, the way the breeze from the ceiling fan played over her bare right leg that was extended from beneath the white sheet. Terry was an insightful and wonderful lover. He could sense when she didn’t want him to be so gentle, and he accommodated, but always she was in control. And he was tireless. His sexual drive, his energy, captivated her.
Then why was she thinking about Jack Selig? This wasn’t some sexual contest the three of them were engaged in. And if it were, the considerate and subtle Selig would finish a close second to Terry.
Nell admonished herself, feeling ashamed. These were not the sorts of comparisons that led to wise decisions.
What decisions? Hadn’t she already made up her mind?
“You’re pensive,” Terry said. “What’re you thinking about?”
“Would you believe baseball?”
“No. I don’t think you’re that big a fan.”
“The Mets are playing the Cardinals tonight on TV.”
“You’re a Mets fan?”
“Just a baseball fan. Isn’t it legal for women to be baseball fans?”
“Sure,” Terry said. “He set his beer can back on the magazine on the bedside table, then turned toward her. He kissed her on the ear, flicking with his tongue. “I’ll show you what’s illegal,” he whispered. “At least in certain states.”
Nell forgot about baseball.
She forgot about Jack Selig.
The exhumation order was in da Vinci’s hands the next day, but they waited for nightfall before executing it. That was da Vinci’s decision. It wasn’t that he wanted to heighten the mood. Harry Lima was buried toward the center of a century-old cemetery that covered acres bordering a New Jersey highway, so lights and activity wouldn’t be noticeable from outside the premises. At night, when the cemetery was closed, there would be no one unauthorized inside the fenced and gated grounds to witness or disturb the exhumation.