Justice Denied (J. P. Beaumont Novel)

I sure as hell didn’t want to drive across the water to pick them up. “How about faxing them over to me here in Seattle?” I asked.

 

“Barbara isn’t here,” Harry said with a growl. “Has to take her kid to the dentist. Faxing’ll have to wait until she gets in. That probably won’t be before noon.”

 

The truth is, Harry is one of the world’s greatest technophobes, a guy who has never sent a fax in his life. His ineptitude makes me feel like a telecommunications genius. Besides, right about then, noon didn’t sound half bad.

 

“Fine,” I said. “Whenever.”

 

I put down the phone. It immediately rang again. “This is the doorman,” Jerome Grimes told me. “I have a Mr. Hatcher down here to see you.”

 

The very last thing I wanted right then was an in-house visit from Ross Connors’s pet economist, but he was already there. “All right,” I said. “Tell him to go to the deli next door for some coffee and a bagel. Tell him we’ll see him in fifteen minutes.”

 

Mel groaned. “See who?” she mumbled from under her pillow.

 

“Todd Hatcher,” I told her, giving her a whack on her down-comforter-shrouded hip. “Up and at ’em. The world awaits. Todd’ll be here in fifteen.”

 

He was, too, bringing with him two extra toasted onion bagels with cream cheese—in case we were hungry. We weren’t. I went to the door to let him in. Mel was still in the shower.

 

“You did tell me to come back on Monday, didn’t you?” Hatcher asked uncertainly.

 

“Yes,” I said. “I just didn’t know we’d be out all night working a case, is all. Come on in and get set up. Mel will be out in a minute.”

 

While Todd went about taking over the kitchen counter I muddled around making coffee. Mine isn’t as good as Mel’s, but it’s drinkable, and that’s what was called for that particular Monday morning—gallons and gallons of coffee.

 

Mel emerged from the bedroom fully dressed, made up, and looking far better than she should have under the circumstances.

 

“Didn’t mean to wake you,” Todd Hatcher apologized. To her. I noticed he hadn’t bothered apologizing to me.

 

“It’s okay,” Mel said. “We had to get up anyway. What have you got?”

 

“I spent most of the weekend working on my copies of the abstracts,” he said. “I’ve gone over all but two of them and input most of my observations. If you two could sit down and work on the rest of them this morning…”

 

That seemed unlikely to me. On less than three hours of sleep, I wasn’t going to be in the best condition to go searching for tiny discrepancies in a stack of old dead files. Mel gave me a look, took her stack of paper and her cup of coffee, and settled down in the window seat to go to work. I was saved by a phone call from Detective Lander over in Chelan.

 

“Any word on Donnie Cosgrove?” I asked.

 

“Not since he got to the hospital. I tried checking, but the hospital wouldn’t give me any info.”

 

Welcome to the world of patient privacy.

 

“I have DeAnn’s cell phone number,” I told him. “I’ll try reaching her. When they hauled Donnie away in the ambulance, it didn’t look too promising.”

 

“What do you think about this supposedly suicidal non-confession?” Lander asked. “Do you think he really wasn’t involved in the Lawrence homicides, or was he just trying to throw us off?”

 

I had been in the room and had seen the note Donnie had left behind as the drugs and booze took effect.

 

“I think Donnie Cosgrove really did mean to kill himself,” I responded.

 

“Does that mean he meant the rest of the note as well?” Lander asked.

 

“Maybe,” I said. “He doesn’t claim to have witnessed the actual shooting. He says he saw a vehicle that could have been the killer’s drive away. At this point, even a description of the vehicle would give us a big leg up.”

 

“You’ll check on Cosgrove and let me know if and when I can come talk to him?” Lander asked.

 

“Will do,” I said.

 

“In the meantime, Ross Connors came through like a champ. The phone records we ordered yesterday were on my desk when I showed up this morning. Have you seen yours yet?”

 

The fact that Tim Lander was absolutely focused and on task annoyed the hell out of me. Obviously he hadn’t spent the whole night traipsing back and forth across Lake Washington.

 

“Not yet,” I said.

 

“They’re pretty interesting,” he continued. “They go along in a pretty predictable pattern. Most of the time the Lawrences were calling the same numbers and the same people over and over. That lasted right up until early last week. After that, we’ve got a bunch of calls that haven’t shown up on the records before. Who was that guy you mentioned to me yesterday, the one you’d said you’d left a message for but he hadn’t called you back?”

 

“Dortman,” I said. “Thomas Dortman. Why?”

 

“Because I have a whole series of calls from Jack Lawrence to Thomas Dortman starting first thing on Tuesday morning.”

 

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