Postmortem(50)
My silence was stony.
He took a deep breath. “It’s just we have real things to worry about and we should be working on them together. I’m painting worst-case scenarios so we can be prepared, okay?”
“What exactly do you expect me to do?” I measured each word to keep my voice steady.
“Think five times about everything. Like tennis. When you’re down or psyched you’ve got to play it careful. Concentrate on every shot, don’t take your eye off the ball for a second.”
His tennis analogies got on my nerves sometimes. Right now was a good example. “I always think about what I’m doing,” I said testily. “You don’t need to tell me how to do my job. I’m not known for missing shots.”
“It’s especially important now. Abby Turnbull’s poison. I think she’s setting us up. Both of us. Behind the scenes. Using you or your office computer to get to me. Not giving a damn if she maims justice in the process. The cases get blown out of the water and you and I are both blown out of office. It’s that simple.”
Maybe he was right, but I was having a hard time accepting that Abby Turnbull could be so evil. Surely if she had even a drop of human blood in her veins she would want the killer punished. She wouldn’t use four brutally murdered young women as pawns in her vindictive machinations if she were guilty of vindictive machinations, and I wasn’t convinced she was.
I was about to tell him he was exaggerating, his bad encounter with her had momentarily distorted his reason. But something stopped me.
I didn’t want to talk about this anymore.
I was afraid to.
It was nagging at me. He’d waited until now to say anything. Why? His encounter with her was weeks ago. If she were setting us up, if she were so dangerous to both of us, then why hadn’t he told me this before now?
“I think what you need is a good night’s sleep,” I said quietly. “I think we’d be wise to strike this conversation, at least certain portions of it, go on as if it never happened.”
He pushed back from the table. “You’re right. I’ve had it. So have you. Christ, I didn’t mean for it to go like this,” he said again. “I came over here to cheer you up. I feel terrible . . .”
His apologies continued as we went down the hall. Before I could open the door, he was kissing me and I could taste the wine on his breath and feel his heat. My physical response was always immediate, a frisson of spine-tingling desire and fear running through me like a current. I involuntarily pulled away from him and muttered, “Good night.”
He was a shadow in the darkness heading to his car, his profile briefly illuminated by the interior light as he opened the door and climbed in. I was still standing numbly on the porch long after red taillights had burned along the vacant street and disappeared behind trees.
Chapter 8
THE INSIDE OF MARINO’S SILVER PLYMOUTH RELIANT was as cluttered and slovenly as I would have expected it to be—had I ever given the matter a moment’s thought.
On the floor in back were a chicken-dinner box, crumpled napkins and Burger King bags, and several coffee-stained Styrofoam cups. The ashtray was over-flowing, and dangling from the rearview mirror was an evergreen-scented air freshener shaped like a pine tree and about as effective as a shot of Glade aimed inside a Dumpster. Dust and lint and crumbs were everywhere, and the windshield was practically opaque with smoker’s soot.
“You ever give this thing a bath?” I was fastening my seatbelt.
“Not anymore I don’t. Sure, it’s assigned to me, but it ain’t mine. They don’t let me take it home at night or over the weekend or nothing. So I wax it to a spit shine and use up half a bottle of Armor All on the inside and what happens? Some drone’s going to be in it while I’m off duty. I get it back looking just like this. Never fails. After a while, I started saving everybody the trouble. Started trashing it myself.”
Police traffic quietly crackled as the scanner light blinked from channel to channel. He pulled out of the parking lot behind my building. I hadn’t heard a word from him since he abruptly left the conference room on Monday. It was late Wednesday afternoon now, and he had mystified me moments ago by suddenly appearing in my doorway with the announcement that he wanted to take me on a “little tour.”
The “tour,” it turned out, entailed a retrospective visit to the crime scenes. The purpose, as best I could ascertain, was for me to fix a map of them in my head. I couldn’t argue. The idea was a good one. But it was the last thing I was expecting from him. Since when did he include me in anything unless he absolutely had no choice?