“How do you deal with the physical evidence? Planted?”
“Right. It’d be easy to read up online about Travis, to follow him, learn about his job at the bagel place, his bicycle, the fact that he plays DQ all the time. The killer could have made one of those masks, stolen the gun from Bob Brigham’s truck, planted the trace evidence at the bagel shop and stolen the knife when the employees weren’t looking. Oh, and something else: the M&M’s? The flecks of wrapper at the crime scene?”
“Right.”
“Had to be planted. Travis wouldn’t eat chocolate. He bought packets for his brother. He was worried about his acne. He had books in his room about what foods to avoid. The real killer didn’t know that. He must’ve seen Travis buy M&M’s at some point and assumed they were a favorite candy, so he left some trace of the wrapper at the scene.”
“And the sweatshirt fibers?”
“There was a posting in The Report about the Brigham family being so poor that they couldn’t afford a washer and dryer. And it mentioned which laundromat they went to. I’m sure the real perp read that and staked the place out.”
O’Neil nodded. “And stole a hooded sweatshirt when the mother was out or wasn’t looking.”
“Yep. And there were some pictures posted in the blog under Travis’s name.” O’Neil hadn’t seen the drawings and she described them briefly, omitting the fact that the last one bore a resemblance to her. Dance continued, “They were crude, what an adult would think of a teenager’s drawing. But I saw some pictures that Travis had done — of surgery. He’s a great artist. Somebody else drew them.”
“It would explain why nobody’s been able to find the real killer, despite the manhunt. He pulls on a hoodie for the attack, then throws it and the bicycle in his trunk and drives off down the street like anybody else. Hell, he could be fifty years old. Or he could be a she, now that I think about it.”
“Exactly.”
The deputy fell silent for a moment. His thoughts had apparently arrived at the exact spot where Dance’s awaited. “He’s dead, isn’t he?” the deputy asked. “Travis?”
Dance sighed at this harsh corollary of her theory. “It’s possible. But I’m hoping not. I like to think he’s just being held somewhere.”
“The poor kid was in the wrong place at the wrong time.” Rocking back and forth. “So, to find where the real perp is, we’ve got to figure out who’s the intended victim. It’s not somebody who posted an attack on Travis; they were just set up to mislead us.”
“My theory?” Dance offered.
O’Neil looked at her with a coy smile. “Whoever the perp is, he’s really after Chilton?”
“Yep. The perp was setting the stage, first going after people who’d criticized Travis, then those friendly with Chilton and finally the blogger himself.”
“Somebody who doesn’t want to be investigated.”
Dance replied, “Or who wants revenge for something he’d posted in the past.”
“Okay, all we need to find out is who wants to kill James Chilton,” Michael O’Neil said.
Dance gave a sour laugh. “The easier question is: Who doesn’t?”
Chapter 33
“ JAMES ?”
There was a pause on the other end of the line. The blogger said, “Agent Dance.” His voice sounded weary. “More bad news?”
“I’ve found some evidence that suggests Travis isn’t leaving the crosses.”
“What?”
“I’m not positive, but the way things are looking, the boy could be a scapegoat and somebody’s making it look like he’s the killer.”
Chilton whispered, “And he was innocent all along?”
“I’m afraid so.” Dance explained what she’d learned — about who was really behind the wheel of the car on June 9 — and about the likelihood of the evidence being planted.
“And I think you’re the ultimate target,” she added.
“Me?”
“You’ve posted some pretty inflammatory stories throughout your career. And you’re writing now about controversial topics. I think some people’d be happy to see you stop. You’ve been threatened before, I assume.”
“Plenty of times.”
“Go back through your blog, find the names of everybody who’s threatened you, who might want to get even for something you’ve said, or who’s concerned that you’re investigating something now they might not want published. Pick the most credible suspects. And go back a few years.”
“Sure. I’ll come up with a list. But you think I’m really at risk?”
“I do, yes.”
He fell silent. “I’m worried about Pat and the boys. Do you think we should leave the area? Maybe go to our vacation house? It’s in Hollister. Or get a hotel room?”
“Probably the hotel’s safer. You’d be on record as owning the other house. I can arrange for you to check into one of the motels we use for witnesses. It’ll be under a pseudonym.”
“Thanks. Give us a few hours. Pat’ll get things packed up, and we’ll leave right after a meeting I have scheduled.”
“Good.”
She was about to hang up when Chilton said, “Wait. Agent Dance, one thing?”
“What?”
“I’ve got an idea — of who might be number one on the list.”
“I’m ready to write.”
“You won’t need a pen and paper,” Chilton replied.
DANCE AND REY Carraneo slowly approached the luxurious house of Arnold Brubaker, the man behind the desalination plant that would, according to James Chilton, destroy the Monterey Peninsula.
It was Brubaker whom Chilton fingered as the number-one choice of suspect. Either the desalination tsar himself, or a person hired by him. And Dance thought this was likely. She was online on the car’s computer, reading the “Desalinate… and Devastate” thread on the June 28 posting.
Http://www.thechiltonreport.com/html/june28.html