Chapter Fourteen
We left quickly. I closed the door behind me, but I could still hear Cricket’s sobbing and Jackson’s boom box voice, tamped down but audible.
I patted Trey’s arm. “Thank you for not beating Jackson into pulpburger.”
“I wasn’t going to do that.”
“In that case, thank you for not doing whatever it was you were going to do.”
Trey examined the door frame. I saw more fingerprint powder residue, especially around the deadbolt, but Trey ran his eyes over it, not his fingers.
“You’re welcome,” he said.
The parking lot was three thousand square feet of heat and humidity and thick afternoon light. I tried to remember it dark and crowded with wet bodies, but that memory seemed more like imagination than reality.
Trey stepped back and took in the view of the building. Two stories, but no windows, no other way in or out except the fire exits on the side and the front doors in the main room. He turned around and took in the other perspective—the two dozen empty parking spaces, the cracks where the grass had pushed its way up through the pavement.
I stood next to him. “What did you make of Cricket’s version of events? Was she lying?”
“Not lying so much as not ever telling the entire story. Only once did she slip into generative narrative.”
Generative narrative. Trey talk for making up a story.
“When was that?”
“When you asked if she’d talked to Lex Friday night.”
“I knew it! But what about the rest of it?”
“She told the truth.”
“So she didn’t kill him?”
Trey squinted against the sun, shielding his eyes with his hand. “She didn’t say she didn’t kill him—she said she didn’t want him dead. And that’s a different thing entirely.”
He kept his eyes focused on the ground in front of us. As we cleared the parking lot, he stopped and knelt at the edge of the concrete, examining the pavement bordering the sparse dry grass.
I bent down to look. “What?”
“I think it’s blood.”
He stood and walked forward, very slowly. I followed the line of his finger. Sure enough, a thin brown dribble led from a dark stain on the concrete into the grass.
“The cops didn’t ask me about that.”
“Me either. But it would have been very hard to see at night, over here, away from the main crime scene, especially with so many people milling about.”
I remembered Rico’s story—the threat, the punch, the bloody shoes. I’d filled Trey in on the details, so I knew he was thinking the same thing I was.
I looked over at him. “So what do we do now?”
“We call Cummings.”
I watched him do just that, and for a second, he was a cop again. The routines seemed so imbedded in his programming, like deep code. He appeared utterly comfortable in that role, and not for the first time, I wondered how it must have felt to give up the only piece of his life that made any sense at the time.
I knelt at the edge of the parking lot. Heat shimmered the asphalt into a mirage, a flat pool of illusion. The stain had the illusion of being liquid too, warm, freshly dripped. I knew people could read the lines and whorls of it and make a story—force, trajectory, flow—but I couldn’t. The stains matched Rico’s story, but I could think of other scenarios where the splotches weren’t proof of his innocence. Where they were evidence of his guilt.
I stood as Trey approached. He saw me staring and cocked his head quizzically. I shook my head and turned my back. Whatever emotion was written on my face, I didn’t want to share it.
***
Back at the apartment, I opened a bottle of wine and sat drinking and pondering while Trey fixed dinner. It had been a revelation the first time I’d seen him in the kitchen, the startling domesticity of whisks and measuring cups and cutting boards. And he was an excellent cook, even if his knife skills came from Krav Maga training instead of culinary school.
I topped off my wine. “So what did Cummings say about the blood?”
“He said he’d send a team.” He pulled down a copper-bottomed skillet and put it on the stove eye. “But the sample is certainly compromised.”
“Like the one on Rico’s shoes?”
“Probably worse.”
He got a knife from the block, a big one, and sliced open a red bell pepper in a single deliberate stroke. He had a stack of vegetables that he’d washed—green onions, bok choy, tiny beige mushrooms—and as I watched, he chopped them into matchstick-sized pieces.
He indicated a bottle of olive oil. “Would you put some oil in the pan, please? A tablespoon.”
I did as he asked, stealing a piece of pepper in the process. “So I was right about Cricket and Lex communicating last night?”
“Based on Cricket’s words, yes. But remember—”
“You’re not infallible, I know. But my gut and your frontal lobe agree—Cricket’s hiding something.”
He kept his eyes on his work, on the rhythmic chop-chop-chop. “My overall impression was evasion. Most of the time she told the truth, but not the whole truth.”
“Technically true but deliberately evasive.”
“Yes.”
Boy, did I know something about that. I was the queen of Technically True But Deliberately Evasive. Choose the words carefully enough and you could spin facts into a cover-up that would hide all manner of unsavoriness. Trey pegged it every time, but that didn’t mean he could penetrate it. That really would have required psychic abilities and not just a heightened sensitivity to micro-emotive expressions.
I turned the pan on high. “So what about the blood? Chances are good it’s Lex’s, from where Rico punched him. Wouldn’t that support his story?”
Trey turned the heat to medium. “It depends. It provides an explanation for the blood on his shoes, but it could be used to prove that Rico had motive. That if he were angry enough to punch Lex—”
“But Cricket had motive too! We know she talked to him, probably went out back to meet him—you caught that lie. That would make her a prime suspect, wouldn’t it?”
“It’s circumstantial.”
“Oh, come on!”
He tossed the vegetables into the pan, and they hissed in the hot oil. “It’s a valid theory. But you can’t decide it’s fact yet.”
I hated it when he was right. “So we’re back to figuring out who else might have had a motive for killing Lex.”
Trey moved to the refrigerator. “As information comes to your attention, open up new lines of connection. But focus first on what you can factually prove.”
I started to argue, but realized it was pointless. And also—grudgingly—that he was right. Again. Score one for linear thinking. Still, as good as he was at the straight line, I was equally as adept at the periphery.
I got the salt and pepper from the cabinet and lined them up next to the rice wine vinegar and sesame oil. Trey returned to the counter with a piece of salmon, pink and glistening underneath plastic wrap.
“So the APD is collecting the evidence,” I said. “What’s the next thing that happens?”
“Analysis of the blood.” Trey put the pepper back and got down a bottle of red chili oil. “If both samples are indeed blood.”
“Then they do the genetic profile, right? See if it matches any victims or suspects?”
“Correct. But that requires more advanced testing.”
“How long does it take to get those kind of results?”
“Usually five to seven days minimum, although I’ve seen it go longer for compromised samples.”
So Rico had about a week before the damning truth of the blood turned against him. Trey’s knife flashed deftly, slicing the fish into translucent slivers. Knives were elegant tools, singular in their purpose, and yet killing with one required brutality and force. The human body resisted, with bone and muscle and sinew. It did not admit the blade willingly. It fought it every inch.
“Have you ever stabbed anybody?”
Trey shook his head and reached for the diced ginger. “No. But I’ve been stabbed.”
“Really? Where?”
“Right thigh, just below the hip.”
I knew the scar. I’d assumed it was from the accident, like the delicate silver scars on his chin and at his temple, or the four titanium screws in his spine, or the pin in his knee.
“What happened?”
“A nine-year-old boy attacked me with a paring knife.” He stirred the ginger into the vegetables. “I was arresting his mother. Child endangerment plus possession with intent to sell.”
He tapped the spoon on the edge of the pan. The pungent steam curled upwards, and he adjusted the heat, then covered it with the lid.
“Tell me again why you’re…I’m looking for a word.”
“Investigating?”
He nodded.
“Because of Rico.”
“Rico asked you to do this?”
“No.”
He waited. I swirled the wine in my glass. I knew what my brother’s psychologist explanation would be. Eric would look at me seriously through his gold-rims and say, you meddle in other people’s live as a way of exerting order in a chaotic universe, assuming power that you don’t have but that nonetheless provides an illusion of control.
This was the reason I hadn’t called him yet. I could get away with keeping him in the dark longer than usual because he was in Australia for two weeks, at an Industrial and Organizational Psychology Conference. He’d find out eventually, of course, but I planned on putting it off for as long as possible.
“Rico’s my best friend,” I said. “I’ve lost count of the number of times he’s dragged me out of what I wanted into what I needed. I intend to return the favor.”
Trey waited some more.
I sighed. “But I’m involved too. Maybe not as a suspect, but that could change any second now, you know that as well as I do. And I can’t sit quietly and wait for that tide to turn.”
Trey didn’t ask any more questions. If there was one thing on the planet he understood, it was the need to do something that perhaps made no sense to anyone else. He drove a Ferrari and wore Armani and exercised two hours a day. I tampered. We tolerated this about each other.
I watched him slide the fish into the pan, the fragrance of ginger mingling now with the sizzling vegetables. It felt unreal, like a bubble that might burst if I poked it. Who was I, this woman drinking 2010 Syrah from real crystal, watching this man with multiple scars fix her dinner? I thought again of Lex, of the carefully engineered persona that was his entirety. And I thought again of the GQ magazine in Trey’s desk. And I thought of the red silk bra underneath my tee-shirt. And I thought of Rico, who was keeping a secret. And I thought of knives.
And then I poured more wine and decided not to think for the rest of the evening.
***
Three-fourths into the bottle, I fell asleep on the sofa. Trey left me there and went to bed. I eventually woke up and stumbled in with him, tripping over my tote bag in the process. And maybe it was that tumble, combined with the lingering buzz, that jarred the memory loose.
What were CDs doing in the hallway Friday night?
Adam had been complaining that there weren’t any at the merch table. But when I’d been running to the bathroom in all the smoke and water, I’d tripped over a box of the things, a box that hadn’t been there when I’d made my first trip to the bathroom.
Somebody not on my bubble map had come in the back that night. Somebody who came, dropped CDs, and left. Without being seen, without being reported, without being interviewed by the cops at all.
I curled up next to Trey, my brain buzzing. Come morning, he had a trip to the gym scheduled. I had a different plan, one that included a visit to the man most likely to know who might have been coming and going so secretly. And luckily for me, he’d invited me over himself.
Darker Than Any Shadow
Tina Whittle's books
- A Brand New Ending
- A Cast of Killers
- A Change of Heart
- A Christmas Bride
- A Constellation of Vital Phenomena
- A Cruel Bird Came to the Nest and Looked
- A Delicate Truth A Novel
- A Different Blue
- A Firing Offense
- A Killing in China Basin
- A Killing in the Hills
- A Matter of Trust
- A Murder at Rosamund's Gate
- A Nearly Perfect Copy
- A Novel Way to Die
- A Perfect Christmas
- A Perfect Square
- A Pound of Flesh
- A Red Sun Also Rises
- A Rural Affair
- A Spear of Summer Grass
- A Story of God and All of Us
- A Summer to Remember
- A Thousand Pardons
- A Time to Heal
- A Toast to the Good Times
- A Touch Mortal
- A Trick I Learned from Dead Men
- A Vision of Loveliness
- A Whisper of Peace
- A Winter Dream
- Abdication A Novel
- Abigail's New Hope
- Above World
- Accidents Happen A Novel
- Ad Nauseam
- Adrenaline
- Aerogrammes and Other Stories
- Aftershock
- Against the Edge (The Raines of Wind Can)
- All in Good Time (The Gilded Legacy)
- All the Things You Never Knew
- All You Could Ask For A Novel
- Almost Never A Novel
- Already Gone
- American Elsewhere
- American Tropic
- An Order of Coffee and Tears
- Ancient Echoes
- Angels at the Table_ A Shirley, Goodness
- Alien Cradle
- All That Is
- Angora Alibi A Seaside Knitters Mystery
- Arcadia's Gift
- Are You Mine
- Armageddon
- As Sweet as Honey
- As the Pig Turns
- Ascendants of Ancients Sovereign
- Ash Return of the Beast
- Away
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- Back to Blood
- Back To U
- Bad Games
- Balancing Act
- Bare It All
- Beach Lane
- Because of You
- Before I Met You
- Before the Scarlet Dawn
- Before You Go
- Being Henry David
- Bella Summer Takes a Chance
- Beneath a Midnight Moon
- Beside Two Rivers
- Best Kept Secret
- Betrayal of the Dove
- Betrayed
- Between Friends
- Between the Land and the Sea
- Binding Agreement
- Bite Me, Your Grace
- Black Flagged Apex
- Black Flagged Redux
- Black Oil, Red Blood
- Blackberry Winter
- Blackjack
- Blackmail Earth
- Blackmailed by the Italian Billionaire
- Blackout
- Blind Man's Bluff
- Blindside
- Blood & Beauty The Borgias
- Blood Gorgons
- Blood of the Assassin
- Blood Prophecy
- Blood Twist (The Erris Coven Series)
- Blood, Ash, and Bone
- Bolted (Promise Harbor Wedding)