Flash and Bones - Kathy Reichs [43]
Ellen arrived with our food. For a moment we focused on dressing and condiments.
“Something else bugged me. In my initial canvas, I turned up a guy who claimed he saw Gamble and Lovette at the Speedway the night they disappeared.”
“Grady Winge.”
Galimore shook his head. “Eugene Fries. Fries swore he sold Gamble and Lovette corn dogs at a concession stand around eight p.m.”
“Winge said they left the Speedway at six.”
“Yeah.”
“Did anyone interview Fries?”
“Our FBI brethren said the guy was a crackhead and unreliable.”
“Did you share this with Rinaldi?”
Galimore nodded. “He agreed the contradiction was troublesome.”
“Did either of you follow up?”
“We tried, but by then Fries was in the wind. Then my life started falling apart. I got busted, went to jail, lost my job, my marriage imploded.”
Galimore took a forkful of lettuce, chewed.
“For a long time I was a very bitter man. Hated the cops, the FBI, my slut wife, life in general. The Gamble-Lovette file was like a festering wound. The only way I could move on was to put it behind me.”
“I’m confused. You’re revisiting the case now because your employer wants to know about the landfill John Doe? Or because you think the victim could be Cale Lovette?”
Galimore leaned forward, eyes intense. “Fuck my employer. Those dickwads locked me up so I couldn’t follow through on a case that mattered to me. I want to know why.”
“Did Rinaldi pursue the leads after you left the task force?”
“I don’t know.”
“Is it possible you’re being paranoid?”
“We’re talking the friggin’ FBI. You don’t think, with all their resources, they couldn’t have cracked this case if they wanted to?”
That same thought had occurred to me.
“But it wasn’t just the FBI and the cops.” Galimore pointed his fork at his chest. “I was also part of the problem.”
I let him continue.
“The Gambles were good people caught between bad alternatives. Either their daughter had turned her back on them, or she’d come to harm. Early in the investigation, they phoned me every day. Eventually I stopped picking up. I’m not proud of that.”
“So your interest is twofold and self-serving. You want to clear your conscience and at the same time stick it to the cops.”
“There’s something else. I got a call at my office earlier this week. The voice sounded male, but I can’t be sure. It was muffled by some sort of filter.”
“Uh-huh.”
“I’ll spare you the colorful verbiage. Bottom line, the caller threatened to take me down by exposing my past to the media unless I backed off on the Gamble-Lovette thing.”
“And you said?” I kept my voice neutral to hide my skepticism.
“Nothing. I hung up.”
“Did you trace the number?”
“The call was placed on a throwaway phone.”
“Your explanation?”
“The body in the landfill. The story in the paper.”
Galimore’s eyes again swept the restaurant.
“Someone out there is getting very, very nervous.”
“WHAT DO YOU PROPOSE?”
“I did some checking. Fries was in the wind for a while, reappeared about five years back, and now lives outside of Locust. He’s in his eighties, probably senile.”
Offended by Galimore’s broad-brush dismissal of the elderly, I snatched up the bill. He didn’t fight me.
“You intend to question him?” I asked curtly.
“Can’t hurt.”
While digging for my wallet, I spotted the page of code I’d torn from Slidell’s spiral. I withdrew both.
When Ellen left with my credit card, I unfolded and read Rinaldi’s notations.
“This mean anything to you?” I rotated the paper.
“What is it?”
“It’s from Rinaldi’s notes on the Gamble-Lovette investigation.”
Galimore looked at me. “Rinaldi was a stand-up guy,” he said.
“Yes.”
The emerald eyes held mine a very long moment. When they finally dropped to the paper, my cheeks were burning.
Jesus, Brennan.
“Wi-Fr. That’s probably Winge-Fries. Rinaldi was curious about the contradiction between their statements.”
I felt like an idiot. I should have seen that, but then I’d just learned of Fries.
“OTP. On-time performance?”
“Seriously?”
“Onetime programmable? You know, like with some electronic devices.