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Gun Games - Faye Kellerman [15]

By Root 893 0
for me was when a nurse who was working late was knocked over the head and had to go to the hospital. She turned out to be all right, but I was shaken up. My husband suggested I get a gun because I often work late.”

Oliver said, “So how long did you have the gun before it was stolen?”

“Not too long at all. I’d like to say around six months.”

“Did you get another gun?”

“I did not.” She took another bite of her sandwich. “After the theft, I felt that I didn’t want to contribute to the vast arsenal of black market weapons. I figured I was better off with a baseball bat. But luckily, it never came to anything. The burglaries stopped, and we figured the thief went on to greener pastures.”

“Did you realize right away that your gun had been stolen?” Marge asked.

“Good question. I kept it in a lockbox in my bottom drawer and I didn’t open up the box very often. It could have been stolen months before I discovered it.”

“Who knew you had a gun?” Oliver asked.

“No one besides my family. I never did tell my employees. I didn’t want to frighten anyone.”

“What about your children?”

“My sons are thirty-nine and forty-four. They’ve been out of the house for years. I certainly wouldn’t have told them about a gun. They would have worried about me. We’re not a gun family. It’s just at that time, I felt vulnerable.”

Oliver said, “Is it possible that one of your employees might have stolen it?” When she looked skeptical, he said, “Did you have any problems with someone who worked for you?”

She shook her head no. “I’ve had the same people for years. I think the last time I actually had to let go of someone was a decade ago. It wasn’t someone I knew. It was a stranger. I’m sure of it.”

Marge said, “I would say that was probably true if the gun had been part of a larger burglary. But how would it be that a thief found the weapon, but took nothing else?”

She didn’t answer and finished her sandwich. “What are you going to do with the gun?”

“Right now, it’s regarded as evidence.”

“You can keep it. I don’t want it anymore, especially after what you just told me.” She munched a carrot and looked at the clock. “I have to make a few phone calls before the office reopens. I hope you don’t mind.”

The two detectives stood up. Marge said, “Thanks for making the time. I must say, Dr. Garden, that your skin is beautiful. Do you have a special secret?”

“I won’t tell you my guarded secrets.” The woman smiled broadly. “But I’ll give you a hint to one of my secret weapons. It starts with B and ends with X. And if you can’t figure that out, you’re probably a Luddite.”

“She said she bought the gun for protection and six months later found it had been stolen,” Marge said. She and Oliver were in Decker’s office. It was around four in the afternoon. “She’s positive that no one else knew about the weapon other than her family.”

Oliver asked, “Did Lee hear back from ballistics?”

“If he has, he hasn’t called me with anything,” Decker answered.

“I can’t believe a stolen gun would have been floating around for six years without it being used for something criminal.”

Marge said, “The bigger question is, how did it get into Gregory Hesse’s hands?”

“And we’re no closer to a solution on that one. Mrs. Stanger hasn’t called back. I don’t know if she will. She seemed reluctant to talk.” Oliver regarded Decker. “Maybe if someone with more authority called, she’d relent.”

“How close were her son and Gregory?”

“Don’t know,” Marge said.

“But we do know that Gregory and Joey Reinhart were best friends. Maybe we concentrate on him.”

Marge said, “We left messages on the house machine and Joey’s cell. No call back.”

“When did you leave a message?”

“About two hours ago.”

“Give me his address.” Decker stood up. “It’ll stop by on my way home.”

Decker always had reservations about working on Friday night. And with this case, there was no immediate urgency—just a desire to help out a distraught woman. There was no real justification to be parked across the street from Joey Reinhart’s house when he should be home inaugurating the Sabbath. He rationalized it by

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