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Keeping Secrets

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by Penny Mickelbury




  KEEPING SECRETS

  A MIMI PATTERSON/GIANNA MAGLIONE MYSTERY

  By

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Keeping Secrets (The Mimi Patterson/Gianna Maglione Mysteries, #1)

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTHER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

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  Penny Mickelbury

  CHAPTER ONE

  “Aw, hell, not another one!”

  The night security guard responsible for patrolling the exterior grounds and parking lots in the northeast quadrant of the Washington, D.C. public schools had already chased three cars of amorous teens from the dark corners of the mammoth George Washington High School lot. Sometimes he didn’t mind because some of what he saw in the back seats of cars was better than the magazines he brought to keep himself amused between 10:00 p.m. and 3:00 a.m., the magic final hour when some over-paid school system bureaucrat believed all mayhem directed at public school facilities would mysteriously cease. But tonight he’d had enough and that’s just exactly what he’d tell the heavy breathers in that car. He checked his watch, wondering what time it had arrived.

  He’d left this lot at exactly10:20 to make the rounds of the other six schools on his rotation schedule, a busy shift which had included interrupting a drug deal on the steps of Roosevelt Elementary school; chasing—and almost catching—two eleven-year-olds who were spray-painting graffiti on the tennis courts at Carver Junior High; reporting a robbery in progress at the dental lab across the street from Girls High and waiting for the police to arrive; and stopping at the 7-11 for a cup of coffee. Here he was back at 12:30. He drove diagonally across the empty lot, thankful he didn’t have the day shift when fifteen hundred cars and three times that many students would have made the job a misery. He pulled up perpendicular to a brand new white Lincoln Town Car and turned on his high beams. That usually got the kids’ attention. No response. Feeling an odd unease, he grabbed his flashlight and got out.

  He could see a figure sitting upright in the driver’s seat. No teenage hanky-panky here. He sidled up to the car and shone his light inside. The man didn’t move. He couldn’t and would never again. His hands were cupped in his lap, almost gracefully, covering what was left of the genitals that had been blown away by a very large gun. The guard wrote in his log book: Mon. Oct. 21, 91, 12:30am before he turned and threw up his supper. And as he wretched he had the thought that maybe he should have written Tues. Oct. 22nd.

  CHAPTER TWO

  After eighteen years as a cop, the late night and early morning ringing of the telephone was a common if unwelcome occurrence, so the head of the Hate Crimes Unit of the Washington, D.C. police force easily awakened from a deep sleep on the second ring of her phone.

  “Hello,” she said, as clear-voiced as if it were noon.

  “It’s me, Anna. There’s been another one, but you don’t really need to come down here—”

  “Thanks for the call, Eric. I’m on my way,” she said, gently but firmly overriding his protestations.

  She looked at the clock. Not quite one. She wrote down the address Eric gave her and was en route to the shower with the cellular phone when she said to him, “See you in thirty.”

  She stepped into the steaming water with an overwhelming sense of dread. If Eric was right, somebody in the Nation’s capital had murdered four wealthy, professional gay people and no one had the slightest idea who or why. She knew only that the murders served as proof to the doubters that the newly-formed Hate Crimes Unit would pay for itself. The murders also had catapulted her out of her role as the administrator of the Hate Crimes Unit and into the fray as an investigator, a role she quite frankly preferred to and performed better than administrator.

  In the one hundred and fifty seconds it took her to shower, she relived the year of persuading and arguing and arm-twisting required to convince the bureaucracy of the need for a special unit within the Department to investigate only those crimes committed against persons or groups based on their race, color, religion, or sexual preference. She’d lost the fight to include crimes against women in the mission statement, and in this moment, was grateful. She felt overwhelmed by the task before her; a bigger burden would have weighed much too heavily.

  Det. Eric Ashby leaned wearily against the police cruiser thinking that his boss would screech into the school parking lot, lights and sirens at full bore, inside twenty minutes, which meant he’d better work on getting the security guard composed. The poor man was shaking and trembling and on the verge of collapse and he kept repeating, “I thought it was kids! I thought it was those damn kids again!” And then he’d try to say what he’d seen but the words wouldn’t come. “They shot off his...Jesus Christ, somebody shot off his...”

  Truth be told, that had been Eric’s reaction, too, but duty dictated that he control his horror. After all, what good was a scared cop to a scared public? Especially a cop who’d done such a piss poor job of working a case that his boss had to leave the office and come out into the field to rescue his sorry ass. Eric allowed himself to wallow fully in his self-pity before dragging himself out of the pit. Anna had explained fully to him—and he trusted and believed her—that they needed to manage carefully a dangerously volatile situation before it blew up in their faces. Three—and now it looked like four—rich and in-the-closet gay people dead and their high-profile unit didn’t have the first clue. He walked back toward the Lincoln, not really needing to see inside again to tell him what was there: Forty-four year old Phillip Tancil, executive vice-president of the Federal Bank of Washington and a resident of Fairfax County, Virginia. The rich part of what was America’s richest County. Too bad the license plates of Tancil’s car and the DMV computer couldn’t ID the killer, too. He stroked the chin that he hadn’t had time to shave and thought he should be grateful to Anna for shouldering the burden.

  Eric heard the siren and checked his watch: twenty-six minutes. He grinned despite his fatigue as the white unmarked Chevy screeched to a halt on the periphery of the other emergency vehicles, and his grin widened as she stepped from the car as if from the pages of a fashion magazine: chocolate-brown wool slacks and matching sweater topped with a camel hair blazer. She spoke to every cop and ambulance attendant she passed, and lifted a hand in greeting to those out of speaking range. She always did that. Acknowledging the existence of colleagues was a seemingly small thing, but one often ignored by officers of her rank once they’d made it to the top. But she’d always been different. She didn’t kowtow to top brass and she didn’t shit on the underlings. She treated everybody the same and for that reason everybody liked her. But like is one thing and respect is another and they all respected her because she was a topnotch investigator, some said among the best. She’d earned her Lieutenant’s bars and if anybody wondered why a Lieutenant was out working a crime scene in the middle of the night, none of them showed it. She approached Eric and they shared a brief, private look, homage to their long friendship, before she assumed her professional stance.

  “You sure it’s the same M.O.?” Her low, controlled voice was somehow always soothing, an extension of her presence.

  “Exactly like the others, Anna. Guy sitting in his car with his nuts blown all to hell.”

  Eric’s tone was bitter, angry, and she knew it was more than mere macho sympathizing. She peered inside the Lincoln, her eyes taking in all the details. Not that she doubted Eric; she had just prayed for him to be wrong. The she gestured with her eyes toward the security
guard seated on the curb with his head in his hands and immediately and correctly summed up who he was: Black man, early fifties, retired government employee who worked the night shift for a private security firm to supplement his pension, probably to put a kid or two through college. She felt sorry for him. He was a guard, not a cop. He wasn’t supposed to see things like this.

  “He found the victim?”

  Eric nodded assent. “Name’s Edward Coleman and he’s a pure mess. Can’t stop shaking.”

  She nodded at Eric then crossed the several steps to where the guard sat and stooped low to speak to him, placing a hand on his shoulder.

  The man raised his head and looked into calm, clear, hazel eyes and stopped his trembling and shaking almost immediately, which was a good thing, because it would be long past dawn before Ed Coleman saw the last of the Hate Crimes Unit of the Metropolitan Police Department.

  CHAPTHER THREE

  Mimi Patterson squinted at the computer screen. It stared boldly back at her: the same ten sentences comprising the same two paragraphs she’d been looking at for the last twelve minutes. She was having a hard time writing the story on the city council debate on the proposed new junk food tax primarily because she firmly believed that anybody who ate that shit should pay tax on it—not exactly a sterling example of reportorial objectivity. For the one zillionth time in her fifteen-year career she was thankful that the people she covered didn’t know what she thought.

  “Patterson, you miss deadline and I’ll put your butt back on night police!” City Editor Tyler Carson yelled at her across the deadline-tense newsroom.

  “Go play in traffic, Tyler,” she yelled back, without the slightest enthusiasm or rancor and without removing her eyes from the blue screen with its blinking white cursor. Reporters expected abuse from city editors, and they graciously obliged. And though it was technically within Tyler’s power to relegate her to the menial task of prowling around police headquarters on the graveyard shift, it was such an unlikely possibility that Mimi smiled before she could stop herself. She was part of the elite investigative unit and she was riding high after a series of stories detailing scandal at the highest levels of city government that in all likelihood would result in the indictment of a deputy mayor, the head of the city contracting department, and two big construction company honchos. But she well remembered her obligatory three-month stint on night police: she had seen her first murder victim, her first suicide, her first rape victim, her first murderer, her first rapist. And she had learned that unless any of the victims or perps were important people, their stories were not news. They didn’t make the paper. But it was necessary to have reporters on that shift because, every now and then, events capable of shaping the course of history occurred in the middle of the night: inept crooks bungle a break-in at the Democratic Party offices and a president is forced to resign; or a congressman’s lady-friend goes for a swim in the pond around the corner from the White House, and all of a sudden the whole world’s watching. Necessity aside, she would not want to work that shift again; nor would she ever again welcome assignment to the City Desk, to be hassled unmercifully at the same time every day for a story of remarkable sameness to the one of the day before, of the week before, of the month before. And so, as she struggled to make sense of the convoluted candy tax, she silently cursed the filthy flu virus that had felled half the City Desk reporting staff, making her, at this moment, Tyler Carson’s victim of choice.

  “Patterson, you finished yet?”

  “In a minute, Tyler! Keep your shirt on!”

  “You’ve been staring at that screen for hours. What are you looking for, the Holy Grail?”

  “Nuance, Tyler, nuance. But you wouldn’t understand.”

  “Well, you’ve got ten minutes to find it.”

  Somebody started singing, “Looking for nuance in all the wrong places,” a couple of other people joined in and in the moment, Mimi had what she needed to finish her story.

  A little levity makes the world go ‘round, she thought, as her fingers tapped a rapid rhythm on the keyboard, the sweetest sound to the ears of the writer. She also thought, briefly, how odd such a situation would seem to someone who required a calm environment in which to formulate thoughts. An unsuspecting being from another planet materializing here, she thought, would suffer a trauma more serious than culture shock. There was no way to explain a newsroom at deadline to the uninitiated: the sound of three hundred keyboards tapping at breakneck speed; that many phones ringing; that many voices muttering, voices yelling, voices laughing. And the phenomenal accumulation of paper. She remembered the days before computers, the days when news stories were typed on six-ply paper and yet, now that reporters didn’t need paper, there seemed to be more of it.

  Because of the frantic energy of the newsroom, she now knew surely, instinctively, what needed reporting about the junk food tax: it was an issue of economics and health. Kids and poor people were the largest consumers of the sugar-salt-fat-laden category of pre-packaged items called “snack food,” and the people least able to afford the higher prices. Yet, the cash-strapped city government desperately needed the extra revenue. So, once again, the budget would be balanced on the backs of the poor.

  Mimi looked up at the row of clocks on the wall that told the time for Los Angeles, Chicago, Rome, London, Moscow, Honolulu, Sydney— and Washington— and saw that she had made deadline with several seconds to spare. Then she looked at her desk. At what she could see of it after fourteen weeks of fourteen-hour days spent on the city hall corruption scandal: piles of unopened mail, unanswered telephone messages, unfollowed leads and tips, and the indecipherable to anyone but her jumble of files that had helped her build the case against yet another crooked politician. It would take the rest of the week to plow through the mess—maybe longer if she got assigned to stay with the junk food tax debate. She permitted herself a brief moment of agitation and irritation, speculating how long it takes to recover from the flu, before she stood, stretched, and gazed across the cavernous newsroom toward Tyler’s desk.

  She waited, watching while Tyler talked on two phone lines at once, read one story on the computer screen and the wire copy in his hand. He was, she thought, one of the best editors at the paper, one of the best in the business, the kind of authentic editor who’d worked his way up through the reporting ranks. He knew the ins and outs of every story assigned to every reporter who answered to him, and was as good a writer as any of them. Tyler’s shortcoming was an absence of personality, which annoyed Mimi. She wanted him to look and act like a dynamic newspaper editor. Instead, he reminded her of her brother-in-law: medium height and medium build with medium brown hair. He wore khaki pants and white shirts and brown knit ties and loafers. Every day. Behind his tortoise shell glasses lived the only sign of life within Tyler: intelligent, intense light green eyes that saw everything. Tyler hung up the phones, eyes riveted to the screen.

  “Not a bad story, Patterson, but I wish you wouldn’t reduce every issue to the problem of race and class.”

  “I call ‘em like I see ‘em, Tyler. Besides. I said it was a matter of economics and health.”

  “It means the same thing to you, Patterson. You gotta get over this being Black business.”

  “Tyler, don’t say things like that, even in jest.” Mimi spoke calmly and without anger because she had known Tyler long enough and well enough to believe that his comment didn’t warrant it. Still, it wasn’t the kind of thing to let go without notice.

  “Sorry.” He hadn’t taken his eyes from the computer screen the entire time—no one remembered ever talking to Tyler’s eyes. “So, whaddya think? Will they pass this tax?” he asked the computer screen.

  “Yeah. It’s not an election year and the city needs the money. Besides, remember who eats that crap, you’ll realize it’s not the most reliable block of voters.” Mimi shrugged and shook her head at the truth of her words.

  “You make cynics look like Mary Poppins.”

  “Yeah.
Do I have to do this again tomorrow?”

  “Nah. I’ll have two of the germ carriers back on duty. Take a casual clothes day. Come in late, clean up your desk, get caught up.” Tyler waved her away.

  Mimi sighed her thanks, looked up at the clocks again, and tried to remember the last time she’d left the paper at seven o’clock in the evening. More than once during the last month, when the corruption investigation was heating up, she had left work at dawn. Several of her best sources would only speak with her, meet with her, deliver the documents crucial to her investigation, in the small hours of the morning.

  She switched off the computer and the reading lamp, locked the desk drawer, gathered up her purse and briefcase, still musing that there would actually be people and cars on the street when she left tonight. And it was only Tuesday. There was hope for this week.

  Mimi walked out of the building and into the deliciously chilly fall air with a couple of the other reporters, declining their invitation for pizza and beer. After more than a three-month absence, she needed the gym. She’d raised her arm and hailed a taxi before she remembered her car was in the garage. She waved an embarrassed “sorry” to the cabbie who’d swerved across three lanes of traffic to reach her and who shrugged a graceful acceptance of the loss of fare, and walked back into the building, back through the lobby to the rear door, and down the back steps crossing to the farthest corner of the garage where she’d arrogantly angle-parked her red 1969 Karmann Ghia convertible, taking up two spaces.

  The car and her 486k turbo computer were the two material possessions about which she cared, that gave her true pleasure. She’d bought her house because her father and her accountant brother-in-law insisted. They’d talked a lot about tax shelters and increasing market value, but she knew they really meant that home ownership was an important safety net for a hard-headed, stubborn, unmarried Black woman of her advanced age. She put the top down, knowing the evening was too chilly but not caring, and backed out of the lot. She popped in a Tina Turner tape and turned up the volume, ready to boogie with the “Private Dancer.” She eased the little car into the heavy flow of rush hour traffic, enjoying the current of air that swirled around her and the bombardment of white and red head and taillights, looking forward to the beauty of nighttime Washington on her cross town trek.

 

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