The Intruders

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The Intruders Page 23

by Michael Marshall Smith


  He didn’t say anything. Up at the cook’s station, the grill flared suddenly, as a couple more burgers got flipped. Two children down at the far end of the diner were bickering about something, noisily, going at it so hard you almost believed they’d remember what it was tomorrow.

  “Bill,” Fisher said, “I know it’s tough, but—”

  “Oh, you know?” Anderson said. He turned away from us, the action resolute and possibly permanent. “You have absolutely no…”

  His head dropped. He wasn’t going to say any more.

  Fisher made a face. I let a silence settle, allowed Anderson to follow whatever thought was in his head and be left empty when it had gone.

  “My father was murdered,” I said.

  It felt strange to say it, to unearth this fact that lay as a semipermanent coloration in the back of my mind and had for so long that it was hard to believe that everyone didn’t already know. Strange, and also calculating. But if anyone was entitled to use this information, surely it was me.

  Fisher stared at me. “I never knew that.”

  “You wouldn’t. It happened a couple years after we left school. While I was at college.”

  “Who killed him?”

  “I don’t know,” I said, and by now Anderson was looking at me. “We never found out. I was away. My mother was visiting her sister overnight. Somebody broke in to the house. My father came downstairs, found them. He was not a man who was going to back down in that circumstance. They killed him—deliberately, accidentally, I don’t know—and then they took the stuff anyway. An old television and VCR, a handful of jewelry, and around eighty dollars in cash.”

  Fisher looked as if he didn’t know what to say.

  “I’m not equating this with your loss,” I told Anderson. “Point is, I can’t bring him back. You can’t bring your family back either. Somebody came into a place that was not theirs and took these people. They had no right. The question is, what do you do about it?”

  Anderson sat completely still for maybe a minute. Then he turned back to face the table squarely.

  “What can I do? The cops think I did it.”

  “So tell us something that will help them see it differently. Like what this has to do with a check you received for a quarter of a million dollars.”

  His eyes went wide. “How the hell do you know about that?”

  I nodded to Fisher. I wanted a cigarette. Talking to Anderson was making me sad beyond belief, and I didn’t want to do it for much longer.

  “I’m working on Joseph Cranfield’s estate,” Fisher said. “I’m a lawyer. You were one of a very limited number of individual beneficiaries. I couldn’t help noticing that the check was never deposited. Why?”

  “I never met the guy,” Anderson said. “I never even heard of him. Then one morning there’s this ridiculous check. I have no idea what to do with it, why it’s there, nothing. But there’s a letter with it.”

  “I know,” Fisher said. “I wrote it.”

  “Then where the hell do you think you get off?”

  “What?”

  “Sending someone that much money, with conditions like that?”

  “What do you mean? What conditions?”

  “You wrote it, you know.”

  “The letter I wrote just said, ‘Here’s the money, have a ball.’ And where it had come from. Nothing else. There were no conditions stipulated in the will.”

  Anderson kept looking at Fisher, evidently not inclined to believe him. For a moment I wasn’t sure either, but Fisher’s face was just too confused.

  “What was in the letter you received?” I asked.

  There were two small spots of color on Anderson’s cheeks now, livid against the gray. “It said this Cranfield person had bequeathed me the money on the condition that I stop my work. That if I did so, the money was mine. That if I took the money and kept working, there would be consequences. And, between the lines, that I’d better take the money.”

  “What work? Teaching at the university?”

  “No,” Anderson said, and for a flicker of a moment he looked cagey. “A private project.”

  “Private?” Fisher said. “Private from whom?”

  “Everybody.”

  I remembered the way the basement workshop in his house had looked. “So how did Cranfield even know about it?”

  “I have no idea. I was in contact with a couple of people on the Internet. Had a few covert discussions. All I could think is, the information got to him that way.”

  “And you made the decision not to take the money?”

  “Yes.”

  “Did you tell anyone that’s what you were doing?”

  “No. I just didn’t take the check to the bank.”

  “Do you still have it now?”

  “It was in the house.”

  Fisher was looking into the middle distance. I imagined I knew why. He’d thought he was running the Cranfield estate, or at least in charge of his end. But someone had replaced his letter to Anderson, and somebody had been monitoring the account from which the bequest had been drawn. How else would they have known that Anderson had refused to be paid off, setting in motion the visit to his house three weeks earlier?

  “How could they have done that?” I asked. “Replaced the letter?”

  “It was part of a batch of stuff that went via Burnell and Lytton’s office,” Fisher said quietly. “One of them must have done it.”

  “Did you lose everything?” I asked Anderson. “In the fire? Relating to the work, I mean?”

  Anderson nodded. “Everything. I forgot to take my backup with me that night. Only place any of it’s left is in my head.”

  “What was it?” Fisher asked. “What were you working on?”

  “I can’t tell you.”

  “Yes,” Fisher said firmly. “You can. I have to know more.”

  Maybe it was only the harsh morning glare coming at him through the glass, but right then Fisher looked a little strange. The lines at the corner of his eyes were pronounced, his mouth thin.

  “More?” I said. “I didn’t realize that you knew anything at all about this.”

  Fisher looked away, and I knew he’d been lying to me.

  “What Gary means,” I said, turning to Anderson, “is that it would assist us if you could give an indication of what led to the events that occurred in your house. To help the cops look at this differently, we need to build a credible case toward an alternative perpetrator.”

  “How do I know you’re not one of them? Or that he isn’t?”

  “You don’t,” I said. “Neither of us has a badge saying ‘Certified Good Guy.’ If that’s what you need, you’re going to have to wait until you get to heaven.”

  “I’ll tell you,” he said, looking at me.

  The implication was clear. I turned breezily to Fisher. “Gary. Wonder if you might want to get some more coffee for Bill? I could use a refill, while you’re at it.”

  Fisher kept his face composed. “Whatever you say.”

  He got up stiffly, walked toward the counter. Anderson looked around the restaurant for the hundredth time, eyes darting in every direction.

  “Going to give you a tip,” I said. “Don’t be looking around the place like that the whole time. If you want to be invisible, then you have to look like you’re heading from A to B and you have the right to pass through all points in between. If a cop with time on his hands catches you doing the shadows-in-every-corner thing, he’ll check you out just on the off chance.”

  “How do you know?”

  “Because I used to be one.”

  “You’re a cop?”

  “Listen to all the words, Bill: used to be. Not anymore. Not on their side necessarily. Though I know they’re not all assholes either. You would be the main suspect for this case in any town in the U.S.A., trust me. Cops learn to break situations down according to the way they usually shake out. It saves time. It can save their lives. You’ve fallen on the wrong side of that process,
but it doesn’t mean that the police are the axis of evil. Your best-case scenario right now is to get yourself to the point where you can go to them instead of hiding.”

  Anderson shook his head. “How can I—”

  “Tell me what this is about.” I said. “I get that it’s private. Something even Peter Chen doesn’t know about. It’s not my business, and I don’t even really care. But right now you’re running out of options, and this secret has already gotten people killed.”

  “You’re not going to believe what I tell you.”

  “Somebody evidently does,” I said. “So try me.”

  He hesitated for a long time. I glanced toward the counter to signal to Fisher that I might be getting somewhere, but he wasn’t there. In the restroom, I guessed, or maybe he’d stomped outside. He was in a very spiky place this morning, especially for someone who’d found what he was supposed to be looking for.

  When Anderson finally spoke, I knew it was not just in the hope that I might be able to help him but also because it was something he’d kept to himself for a long time. It’s not true that everyone wants to confess a crime, but most people do want to tell something of their story, to stop hiding for just a while.

  “My field is wave dynamics,” he said. “Specifically those relating to sound. At college I just cover the physics of it, basically. But a couple years ago, I started to get interested in broader issues. How sound affects us in other ways.”

  “Like how?” I said. After only a few sentences, I was finding it hard to believe that this was going to relate to anything of importance in my world.

  Anderson’s response showed he’d read something of this in my face. “Sound is underestimated,” he said earnestly. “We all go on about seeing things, but sound is a lot more important than people realize. It gets taken for granted. Everybody knows we played heavy rock at Noriega to flush him out. Some people know that music was used when the FBI stormed Waco. But there’s a lot more to it than bombarding people with tunes they don’t like. You go to a restaurant where there’s loud music, and see how much less you enjoy eating. You can’t concentrate on the food—you almost can’t even taste it. Part of the brain switches off. Or you hear a piece of music, some song, for the first time in years, and it takes you right back to the time you associate with it. You’ll feel the same, even remember smells, tastes, relive other sensory data from this other time. You know this, right?”

  “I guess. Yes, I do.”

  Talking through something he cared about seemed to have momentarily helped Anderson forget the rest of his world. “Or you’re alone at night, in a place you don’t know—and all at once you hear a noise. It doesn’t matter that you can’t see anything wrong—suddenly sight doesn’t rule the roost anymore. You don’t need to see anything to be scared out of your wits. Your brain and body understand that sound matters a whole lot.”

  “Okay,” I said. I knew I had to let him talk, but for some reason I felt unsettled, uncomfortable. I still couldn’t see Fisher, and this was beginning to stretch the length of a viable trip to the john. “I’ll take your word for this, Bill. You’re the science guy. But what’s your point? What were you working on specifically?”

  “Infrasound,” he said. “Very-low-frequency sounds. Most people have been looking at eighteen hertz, but I went to nineteen hertz. It has…effects. Your eyes may water or blur when you’re exposed to it. You can get odd sensations in your ears, hyperventilation, muscle tension—a physicist called Vladimir Gavreau actually claimed that infrasound is a key component in urban anxiety. More simply, it just makes you feel like you’re afraid. And if you hit the resonant frequency of the human eye, which is right around this point, you can start thinking you’re seeing odd things, too. Everyone’s been assuming this is physiological, just a side effect of the physics of the eye, but it’s…not. It’s more complicated. Infrasound does strange things to us. Very strange things. It enables us to glimpse things we can’t normally see.”

  I found myself looking around the restaurant, just as I’d told Anderson not to do. I saw nothing to explain what I was feeling, a sensation I didn’t even know how to describe. I looked out through the open door into the crowds. Just people, moving back and forth.

  “What kinds of things, Bill? What are you actually talking about here? What was it that you did?”

  I pulled my eyes back to him. He was looking down at his hands. When he spoke, his voice was very quiet.

  “I made a ghost machine,” he said.

  But that’s when I saw a tall figure heading toward the diner through the crowds, walking quickly. He was dressed in a dark coat and looking not left or right but straight at Anderson.

  “Get down,” I said quickly.

  Anderson blinked at me, confused. I tried to stand, pushing him to one side as I rose, but I got caught under the table. I saw Fisher coming around the side of the center station, coffee cups in hand, just as the man in the coat pushed his way into the restaurant and removed one hand from an inside pocket.

  I finally got clear of the table and shoved Anderson harder, shouting, “Bill, get out of the—”

  It was too late. The man fired three times, measured, unhurried shots from a silenced handgun.

  He’d disappeared back into the crowd before I even realized that none of the bullets had hit me. The shots had been quiet, but the sight of Anderson’s blood as it sprayed across the window was not—and everybody started running and shouting at once. When I bent over Anderson’s body and tried to find where he’d been shot, I couldn’t hear what he tried to say to me through the noise and the blood welling up out of his mouth, but I saw it open and close and knew it would be for the last time.

  chapter

  TWENTY-SEVEN

  “He’s dead.”

  I looked up to see Blanchard standing over me. It was two hours since Anderson had been shot, and I was sitting in a plastic chair in a corridor of a hospital I didn’t know the name of. A crowd of cops were standing down the far end. I’d been interviewed by two of them.

  “So where does that leave us?”

  “No idea,” he said. “And there is no ‘us.’ Be clear on that. I’m only here because I used to partner one of the lead detectives. You’re here as a courtesy and because witnesses are very firm on how you reacted when the gunman came in. Where’s your buddy? Fisher?”

  “Getting some air.”

  Blanchard sat down heavily in the chair beside me. “What the fuck happened? Really?”

  “What I told you. We got a message to Anderson through one of his colleagues. He came to talk to us.”

  “Why? That’s what I don’t get. Why you?”

  “Maybe because our pitch was that we knew he didn’t kill his family. We arranged to meet at the diner, at Anderson’s suggestion. How the guy with the gun found him, I have absolutely no idea.”

  “What did you get out of Anderson?”

  “He’d barely started to open up before it happened. He received the check I told you about but didn’t do anything with it because it came with conditions he wasn’t prepared to meet.”

  “Which were?”

  “That he stop work on some private project.”

  “Which was?”

  “We were getting into that when the ceiling fell in.”

  Blanchard turned to look at me but didn’t say anything.

  I shrugged. “Believe what you like. I was helping Gary out. Now that Anderson’s been found, it’s over. It’s up to your guys to sort out the mess.”

  “Mess?”

  “This makes Anderson a strikingly less credible suspect for the double homicide, don’t you think?”

  “Doesn’t have to be any link between the two events.”

  “Yeah, right. I’ll just bet everyone in SPD is telling themselves that. Better than admitting they spent a month looking for an innocent man and not finding him before someone came from nowhere and blew him away.”

  “Anderson fucked himself. He should have turned himself
in. Gotten in contact, at least.”

  “That what you would have done under the circumstances?”

  “Yes.”

  I nodded slowly. Truth was that I still didn’t really get why Anderson had done as he had. I’d only intercepted when Fisher had pushed him on it because I knew that increasing Anderson’s feelings of guilt was not the way to get him to talk. Coupled with the caginess of his response when talking about his work, however, plus Chen and others’ view that he’d been on edge before the murders took place, I believed that Anderson had felt himself to be in a dangerous position even before the events of that night. The covering letter with the bequest had carried ominous weight. Was that enough to explain his running from the scene? Or was it something inherent to the work he’d been doing? Was he already spooked?

  “Yeah,” I said. “Me, too.”

  I got up. There was nothing more for me to do here. “I appreciate the way you’ve dealt with this.”

  “You’re welcome. Just don’t make me regret it.”

  “What do you mean by that?”

  He looked down at his cupped hands. “I know a little more about the circumstances under which you left the LAPD,” he said. “We wouldn’t want anything like that happening here.”

  “Whatever you think you know isn’t what really happened.”

  “I know there were some dead guys involved. And you.”

  “Am I in jail right now?”

  “No. But what I just said still holds.”

  “Gotcha.” I started walking away.

  “Jack,” he said when I’d gotten about ten feet. “How deeply are you tied in to Fisher’s universe?”

  I stopped, turned back. “Not at all. Why?”

  “Keep it that way. I also talked to someone in Fisher’s firm. Why do you think he’s here?”

  “He’s tying up loose ends for them.”

  “Wrong. He’s on enforced leave. ‘Personal reasons.’ The colleague I spoke with was very discreet. But I got the sense they were distancing themselves. If I were you, I’d do the same. I think there’s stuff going on in that guy’s head you don’t know anything about.”

 

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