“The killer created a larder.” I was thinking out loud. “Hair. Blood. Saliva.”
“Probably kept the stuff in a freezer.”
“But why go to all that trouble?”
“To deflect suspicion away from himself? In case he got caught?”
“Maybe. Or maybe it was part of the game.”
“Which he continued to play after stuffing Pomerleau into a barrel. That happened when?”
“Probably 2009,” I said.
“When the action moved here.”
An incoming text landed on my phone. “I’ve got to go.”
“Can you tell Slidell?”
“I’m with him now.”
I heard a catch in Larabee’s breathing. Then, “You’re saying killer. Not Ajax. Is that Slidell’s thinking?”
I pressed the phone hard to my ear, guilt already gripping my gut. “Yes.”
“I thought he’d take my face off this morning when I gave him the news. He didn’t. Just sat there.”
“He already had doubts.”
“Son of a biscuit.”
“Something like that.”
The text was from Mama. A link to a YouTube video. Seeing Slidell stomping my way, I decided it could wait.
As we drove to Saranella’s condo in South End, I relayed Larabee’s news. Slidell listened. Shook his head once.
Saranella wasn’t home. His roommate, Grinder, had bad hair plugs and a fuck-you demeanor. After some attitude-adjustment tips from Slidell, Grinder shared that Arnie was in Hilton Head and would return the following Monday.
Back in the Taurus, I checked the time: 3:10.
Slidell was growing surly. So was I. We were accomplishing nothing. And the sense of guilt about Ajax was building inside me. Plus, I was starving.
I asked Slidell to drop me back at the MCME.
After easing free of Mrs. Flowers, I got a yogurt from my stash in the refrigerator and a granola bar from the drawer in my desk. Washed the feast down with a Diet Coke. All the food groups.
Then I called Ryan. Got voicemail.
Rodas. He answered. I told him about the DNA reports, the ticket, Ajax’s babysitter’s arrest record. He responded with more animation than Slidell. A lot more.
When I’d finished, he said, “I’ve been going over the Gower scene photos.”
“At the Hardwick quarry.”
“Yeah. Thought if Ajax was there, it would lock in one more piece.”
“And?”
“Lots of gawkers but no doc.”
“Back to square one?”
“Could be.”
I disconnected, impressed. Umpie Rodas would never give up on Nellie Gower.
Ryan called as I was dropping the next-to-last report in my outbox. I briefed him. Then we wove through a maze of speculation similar to the one I’d traveled with Larabee. If not Ajax, who? How did the guy hook up with Pomerleau? Why? Why shift to Charlotte?
“Why plant Pomerleau’s DNA on the victims?” Ryan asked after we’d both wound down. “Why not his own? They were a tag team until he killed her.”
“Until someone killed her.”
“Do you think Pomerleau was a willing donor?”
“I don’t know.”
“Or did the bastard keep her captive to harvest her body fluids?”
I couldn’t answer. The thought was too appalling. Even for a monster like Pomerleau.
“Was it simply because he had access to her?” Ryan was throwing theories at the wall to see if one stuck. “Or was Pomerleau specific to his pathology?”
“Not just any donor but Pomerleau personally?”
“Yes.”
“In which case she could still be the key. The piece we’re failing to understand.”
“It’s just an idea.”
Another pause.
“Is Salter reopening the files?” Ryan asked.
“Slidell’s buying himself time.” Diplomatic.
“He hasn’t told her.”
“No.”
“What’s he doing?”
“Talking to people who knew Ajax. To Oklahoma. Taking a hard look at this nurse’s assistant Ellis Yoder.”
“Why?”
“Yoder was working on the dates Leal and Donovan went through the ER.”
“What do you think?”
“He’s got nothing else.”
“Gonna be a lot of red faces at the CMPD.”
“A lot,” I agreed.