Good Morning, Killer - April Smith [108]
The young agent straightened up. “I’ve got to get back to the office.”
I put my bag on my shoulder.
“What about Brennan?”
“Brennan is over,” Jason said firmly. “We recovered the victim of the Santa Monica kidnapping,” holding up a hand to stop my protest. “That was our job. We did our job. If the locals want our cooperation, cool, but it’s their homicide. That’s how the brass sees it.”
“How do you see it?”
Jason shrugged. “I feel for you. I feel for the girl. It’s hard.”
“You know, we’re about ten blocks from Brennan’s apartment,” I said after a little while. “I drove through the neighborhood on the way over. Strange mix. You’ve got the old abandoned houses, the apartment buildings … I’d love to talk to Mrs. Santos after this,” nodding toward the oak trees. “See how safe she feels right now for Roxy.”
Jason’s foot thumped, but he did not take the bait. He was changing. I had actually watched him change, that was the amazing thing, like all the new agents who come in looking like Clark Kent until they realize all those other Clark Kents are getting in the way. The ginger-haired little boy had grown up.
“Remember what we talked about? Proving yourself?” I asked. “It’s hard these days, even knowing how. What’s important? What’s political? Are you the good son who’s loyal to the organization, or do you go out on a limb for what you believe? Don’t worry about it, Jason. Either way, you’ve got a great career ahead of you. Two different paths, is all.”
“That’s not at all a fair evaluation,” he called after me.
I walked toward the parking lot, past an empty swimming pool and a brand-new roller-hockey rink. It must have been a youth league tournament because the bleachers were filled with cheering parents on their feet with fervor and excitement; the high protective mesh strung with red, white and blue balloons.
Is this Dr. Arnie, the mad magician of Fullerton? Hi! It’s Ana Grey!”
I was lounging at the white umbrella table in Mike Donnato’s backyard, sipping a mint-flavored mojito, which I had fashioned from a recipe in the LA Times, the morning sun just creeping across the deck.
Hip, all right.
“Ana,” said the lab director, “I’ve been meaning to get back to you.”
“No problemo. I know you’re under it.”
“Hello? Am I talking to the real Ana Grey, or is this a clone? The nice clone, who doesn’t put your testicles in the wringer the minute you don’t have an answer in twenty-four seconds?”
“Am I really that bad?”
“On a good day. On a bad day, you don’t want to know from it.”
“Speak to me of shoe prints.”
“Don’t you love shoe prints?”
“I do,” wondering if they were drinking mojitos over at the crime lab, too. Maybe everybody was. The entire Southland. Starting around breakfast. They contain lime juice, a good source of vitamin C. “Did you recover any shoe prints from the homicide in Mar Vista?”
“Of course we got shoe prints. What do you think, we’re incompetent?”
“What size?”
He clicked computer keys. “Ten.”
“Like Ray Brennan.”
“Your guy, Brennan?”
I could hear the surprise. “Is it a match?”
More anxious clicks. “The problem is, the outsoles are different and we couldn’t get the wear characteristics off the impression on the skin of that first rape victim. It was a herringbone pattern from a tennis shoe we recovered in the park.”
“But the same size?”
“Correct. And, obviously, he asphyxiated her, wasn’t that the ritual?”
“He did? The new victim?”
“Where have you been?”
“Out of town.”
I had called Dr. Arnie on the odds that news of my preliminary hearing situation had not yet reached Fullerton. Propellerheads live in a parallel universe from ours; parallel to most.
“We sent a full report to the Bureau last week.”
“Last week?”
“Sometimes we do our job.”
Jason’s look came back to me, the averted eyes behind the green lenses.
“But you’re not prepared to say it’s Brennan?”
“Not conclusively. Look, I’m sure it’s all up on Rapid Start.”
“I’m not in the office.”
“Want me to fax our report to you?”
“You’re an angel.”
I placed the glass with the spent mint leaves