10th Anniversary - James Patterson [45]
I closed my notebook and thanked St. John for his time. As I left his apartment, I thought about Phil Hoffman telling me that what he knew about Ellen Lafferty could cause the charges against Candace Martin to be dismissed.
Candace had speculated that her husband had been sleeping with Ellen Lafferty, and now Bernard St. John had confirmed that part of her theory.
Had Lafferty gotten jealous, as Candace had suggested?
Was Ellen Lafferty the so-called intruder who killed Dennis Martin?
Chapter 56
I THOUGHT PAUL Chi might still be steamed at me for questioning the slam-dunk first-degree murder charge against Candace Martin. If he wasn’t fuming now, he would be after I told him I was still turning over stones on his case, that I still wasn’t prepared to let it go.
It was about 5 p.m. when I brought him a latte and sat down across from him at his very tidy desk in the squad room.
Chi looked at me, his expression absolutely blank, and said, “You still trying to pry open my closed case?”
I nodded. “You just have to let me get this out of my system,” I said. “If you were me, you’d do the same.”
“You’re the boss.”
“You remember Bernard St. John?” I asked him.
“The piano teacher. How could I forget that guy?”
“I just spoke with him.”
“I’m not pissed off, Lindsay. I just want to understand you better. Fifty homicides a year come through here. We solve only half of them. And that’s in a good year. So, here we got one that we actually close. Why has this case gotten to you?”
“I can’t explain it.”
“Can’t explain an insult to me, McNeill, Brady, the SFPD as a whole, and the DA’s entire office? You think this is going to score us any points with the DA?”
“I’ve got to do this, Paul. If Candace Martin is guilty, my poking around isn’t going to change that.”
“But you don’t think she is guilty, do you?”
“I don’t know.”
Chi grinned. A rare occurrence. Like a blue moon in June.
“What’s funny?” I asked him.
“I like this about you, Lindsay. You never give up. But you know, Brady doesn’t have a sense of humor.”
“I’ll deal with him when I have to.”
Chi shrugged and said, “So what did Bernard St. John tell you?”
“That Dennis Martin was sleeping with Ellen Lafferty. Lafferty confided in him.”
“Whoa-ho. Well, there’s your motive, Sergeant. You’re making the case against Dr. Martin even stronger. Candace found out her husband was sleeping with the nanny, so she shot him. Motive as old as the history of mankind.”
“Or — what if it was the other way around?”
“You think Lafferty was the shooter?”
“It’s not so crazy, Paul. I want to talk to you about that contract killer. Gregor Guzman.”
Chi just shook his head and sighed.
“Doggedness suits you, Lindsay. Okay, what do you want to know about Gregor Guzman?”
“Tell me everything you’ve got.”
Chapter 57
AS CHI TAPPED on the computer keyboard, he told me, “Eleven hits are attributed to Guzman — that’s eleven unsolved that match his MO.”
I scooted the chair so close to Chi’s desk, I could see my reflection in the monitor.
“It’s a very elegant MO,” Chi was saying. “First, he’s stealthy. He’s never seen and he leaves no evidence. Two, he always uses a twenty-two and his kill shots are head shots. His first shot does the job. His second shot is almost on top of the first. I’d say that second shot is just for insurance. He’s a hell of a marksman.”
“Dennis Martin took two shots to the chest.”
“That’s correct.”
Chi hit some keys on his computer and brought up a series of photos of the elusive hit man. The first was a grainy black-and-white still shot that had been lifted from a video of a man leaving Circus Circus, the famous casino in Vegas.
The next photo was of a balding man in a car, taken by a tollbooth surveillance cam outside of Bogotá.
The third picture was of possibly the same man in a dark suit, standing beside an advertising kiosk, watching the crowd enter a public building. The picture was titled, “Lincoln Center, New York.”
The last picture was the money shot.
It