Part 13 (1/2)
”When Jenny and I went out, you didn't want me to go. Why?”
”It had nothing to do with Jenny,” I tell her.
”Maybe yes, maybe no,” she says. ”But you didn't want me to go out and it wasn't because you wanted me to stay home and visit. I want the truth.”
I turn my palms up and begin to launch an expression of denial. ”What-”
”Don't you dare treat me like a child. I want to know what's going on and I want to know now.”
”It had nothing to do with Jenny.”
”What had nothing to do with Jenny?” She reads me like a book, and snaps it closed before I can turn the page. ”So there is something?”
The same question has been plaguing me ever since Sarah's phone call to the office telling me that Jenny was dead. My own private nightmare, the thought that Herman and I may have screwed up and missed something when we followed them. It's a selfish notion, one I can't help but harbor. If it must be that Jenny is gone, I hope and pray that the cops have a clear suspect or at least an evident motive for why she was killed, something unrelated to me or my daughter. Call it guilt.
”What is it that you're not telling me?” says Sarah. ”I want to know.”
”It's nothing.”
”If you don't tell me, I'll get it out of Uncle Harry. You know I will. Harry can't keep a secret. Not from me.”
”I was just worried because of everything that's happened. That's it. That's all.”
She looks at me askance. ”Then you won't mind if I go out this weekend,” she says. ”On a date.”
I hesitate for only a second as I think about this. ”Sure. No problem.” I call her bluff.
”Sure, because you know I won't. Like I'm going to go out dancing on Jenny's grave. I want you to tell me what's going on. Tell me or you won't be able to leave this house.”
”What are you going to do, ground me?” I laugh.
”No. But if you leave, I won't be here when you get back,” she says.
I take a long, hard look at her. Sarah has me in a box and she knows it. ”I was just worried that, well...that what happened out at the base might not have been entirely over.”
”What do you mean?”
I'm saved by the front doorbell, followed by a sharp rap on the door.
”That'll be Herman.” I can see him through the gla.s.s sidelight in the entryway. I head toward the door.
”Don't think for a moment that you're off the hook,” she says.
I open the door and Herman steps inside, all six foot six of him. He's wearing a nervous smile and whispers, ”You guys all right?”
”Why wouldn't we be?”
When he hears her voice, Herman looks toward the front room and sees Sarah standing there.
”h.e.l.lo, Herman.”
”There's my girl. How you doin'?” One look at her and he knows the answer. ”Stupid question,” he says. ”Sorry to hear about your friend.”
He turns back to me. ”I stopped by out there like you said, and made a couple of phone calls.” He glances toward Sarah. ”Maybe you and I should talk privately.”
”You can talk right here,” she says. ”Dad was just about to tell me what's going on when you rang the bell.”
Herman gives me one of those uncomfortable looks reserved for an untimely entry into a family feud.
”What did you find out?” I ask.
”The house is cordoned off. Cops all over the place. Homicide d.i.c.ks, one of 'em I recognized.”
”Was he helpful?” I ask.
Herman shakes his head. ”Not that friendly. Brant Detrick.”
Herman and I went toe-to-toe with Detrick on a case two years ago. He is not likely to help us out. If Herman started posing questions, Detrick would a.s.sume that we already had a princ.i.p.al suspect lined up as a client.
”Told you he wouldn't get anything,” says Sarah.
”Had to go a different way,” says Herman.
”How's that?”
”Paramedics,” he says.
”I would have thought they'd be long gone,” I tell him.
”They woulda been, except two of 'em were held over to do shoe impressions for forensics,” says Herman.
I raise an eyebrow. ”Was she alive when they got there?”
”Nuh-uh. They got a call, so they had to respond. Tramped through the crime scene before they realized she was dead.”
”You think the cops have a shoe impression from the perpetrator?” I ask.
”I don't know.”
”Go on.”
”So I talked to the paramedics,” says Herman. ”Both pretty friendly. According to them, the landlord found the body. He was called by somebody who didn't identify himself. This unidentified voice told the landlord the victim didn't show up for work and they were worried about her. So the landlord called the vic's cell phone. When he got no answer, he figured he'd check the house with a pa.s.skey.”
”So the door was locked,” I say.
”Uh-huh. If whoever did it came in that way, they either had a key or picked the lock,” says Herman.