“Understood.”
When she hung up, Novak reappeared and she filled him in on her conversation with Andrews.
All traces of the amiable, steady man who’d been talking to the teenagers vanished. “Going forward, you and Andrews will both keep me in the loop. If Shield Security gives you new data on the Hangman or Rita Gallagher, call me. You meet with Shield Security, I’m along for the ride.”
The order stoked her temper before she reminded herself she was working in his jurisdiction now. “Sure. What I know, you’ll know.” She slid her phone in her back pocket.
“Dr. McGowan said they’ve scheduled the autopsy for the day after tomorrow.”
“I want to attend,” Julia said.
Novak shook his head, the corners of his eyes creasing. “We’ll finish this together.”
“Famous last words.”
“We need to talk to Ken.”
“He’s likely asleep by now. Besides, evenings aren’t good for him.”
“Early in the morning. I’ll pick you up.”
Novak was a part of her case, and that she didn’t mind. But he was now weaving into her life. She was depending on him. Looking forward to seeing him. None of that was good, because when it ended, she knew it would hurt like hell. “I’ll be ready.”
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Thursday, November 2, 8:00 a.m.
When Novak and Julia arrived at the Thompson house, the sun had burned off the last of the morning fog. The air was crisp, and most of the trees had peaked with fall colors.
Julia got out of the car. Her heeled boots clicked on the sidewalk. Unhurried, Novak easily caught up to her.
He knocked on the door, and Wendy greeted them moments later with a smile.
“Come on inside,” she said. “Ken is doing well this morning. I think working again has raised his spirits.”
Julia moved through the house and found Ken in the sunporch. The room was lit with morning oranges and yellows. He sat at a desk, leaning over a computer that looked to be at least a decade old. Any kind of change had never been easy for Ken, but now it was impossible.
“Ken,” Julia said. “Look who I have with me. It’s Detective Novak.” Ken remembered long-term facts well, but new acquaintances were harder for him to retain. She and Ken could still pretend that he remembered, but the encouragement might spark a recollection.
Ken looked up from the computer and pulled off his glasses. He smiled, but his eyes searched for a connection. “Novak, how are you? It’s been a while.”
Novak didn’t point out that they’d seen each other three days ago. “Doing well. You look good.”
Ken patted his fat belly. “Wendy is feeding me too much. I’m getting fat.”
“Sounds like she’s taking good care of you,” he said.
“She’s great.” He pointed toward the floral couch flanked by a couple of matching chairs. “Have a seat.”
Ken got up and took the chair on the right as he always did. Julia chose to sit close to him on the edge of the couch, and Novak took the opposite chair.
Ken sat back. “So, what can I do for you two?”
Julia smiled. “We want to ask you a few more questions about the Hangman case.”
“Right, sure,” Ken said. “Of course. What do you want to know?”
Novak leaned forward. “We’ve been talking to some of the former witnesses and family members of the victims.”
“Good start,” Ken said.
“According to Rene’s husband, Gene, Jim hung out in Stella’s bar when he used to work undercover.”
“Makes sense,” Ken said. “He was all over the area during those years.”
“Gene believed that Rene knew Jim,” Julia said.
“He might have,” Ken said. “He knew everyone who worked in Shockoe Bottom.”
“Rene was last seen with a woman by the name of Rita, but there’s no mention in your notes about Rita,” Julia said.
“There isn’t?” Ken frowned.
“You said before you don’t remember Rita. Are you sure about that?”
Ken shook his head. “I said that?”
“Yes.”
“That’s not right. Jim knew Rita, and he told me he’d trail her. When I asked him about her days later, he said Rita was a dead end.”
“And you believed him?” Julia asked.
“Sure, why not.”
“Maybe you saw her,” Novak pushed. He opened his phone and produced the image from her driver’s license. “Early twenties with red hair. Pretty. Attractive build, according to witnesses.”
“A lot of ’em were pretty,” Ken said. He studied the picture, his frown lines creasing.
“I know Jim wasn’t a Boy Scout,” Julia said. “I heard Mom and Cindy talk when I was growing up.” Cindy had been furious with her mother for grieving for Jim, a man who’d loved his wife but couldn’t be faithful. How many times had Cindy said that love wasn’t enough? “So if you remember Rita, tell us.”
Ken shoved out a breath and sat back. He looked at Julia a long moment. “Yeah, I remember the redhead,” he said. “He met her at Billy’s. Jim called her Red Hot Rita. She was sexy and had a crush on Jim. He was working homicide by then, but I could tell he was restless. Missed the excitement and adrenaline of working narcotics undercover. It bugged the hell out of him that the past wouldn’t let him go.”
“Did they sleep together?” Julia asked.
Ken nodded. “Yes, they slept together several times that fall. I think she’s the reason Amy left him. When your mother left with you, Jim finally snapped out of whatever funk he’d been in and realized he needed to dump Rita. And he told me he did. He wanted to make it work with your mother. I know he loved Amy and he wanted his family back. After Jim died, Rita vanished. I never saw her again. What happened to her?”
“She was killed right around the time Jim died,” Novak said. “We found her body a few days ago.”
“She’s dead?” Ken asked. “How?”
“Blunt force trauma,” Novak said. “And it looks like she might have been pregnant.”
Ken rose, running his hand through his thick white hair. “A baby?”
“About twenty weeks along,” Julia said. She’d been an only child and more than once dreamed of having a brother or sister. To think, she almost might have had one.
“Was the baby Jim’s?” Novak asked.
Ken tensed, glanced between Julia and Novak. “He never mentioned a baby to me.”
“A pregnancy would explain why Mom left,” Julia said. It must have shattered her mother to discover her husband had gotten another woman pregnant.
“But who killed her? Do you think she’s connected to the Hangman?” Ken asked.
“She’s a new piece to the puzzle,” Novak said.
“Makes sense,” Ken said, more to himself.
Novak leaned in toward Ken. “Sometimes cops have theories that they don’t put into the paperwork. Maybe it’s a gut feeling, or perhaps someone has a lot of political juice, but either way the details don’t make the report.”
Ken shook his head. “I was never one to leave information out. I put every detail in my notes. Jim was different. He was a little more selective.”