Текст книги "Blood Drive"
Автор книги: Jeanne Stein
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Текущая страница: 4 (всего у книги 17 страниц)
Chapter Nine
Carolyn and Trish live in one of the few less-than-prosperous areas of prosperous La Mesa, about three miles from the school. The neighborhood is low-income, and the address is an apartment building hidden behind a screen of scruffy junipers. The asphalt in the parking lot is cracked and buckled. Only two vehicles occupy spaces, a battered Volkswagen and a rusted Chevy sitting on blocks. Neither one looks capable of going anywhere. I pick my way around bottles and cans littering the walkway to a “security” gate that hangs open on broken hinges. Beyond it is a pool littered with decayed leaves that smell as if they’ve been there since last fall. The place has the forlorn feeling of neglect.
I know nurses are underpaid, but I can’t believe this is the best Carolyn can afford.
I enter through a courtyard strewn with plastic pool chairs yellow with age. I maneuver around them and make my way to a row of mailboxes attached to the wall under a portico of crumbling stucco. Carolyn hadn’t given us the apartment number. In fact, she hadn’t mentioned that she lived in an apartment at all. But I find the name Delaney under a handwritten slot with “2A” printed in a thick-tipped black marker. There are stairs with rusty banisters on either side of the courtyard, but no indication which apartments are to the right or left. I choose left and start up.
I’m rounding the top of the staircase when a door opens and a man with a broad back and stocky shoulders backs out of a doorway and right into me. He slams the door and then turns with a glare.
I’m not sure which of us gets the bigger shock.
It’s No-neck from Beso de la Muerte.
The glare disappears. Like a puppy given an unexpected treat, he wriggles with delight. “Wow, what are you doing here? Did you come to see me?”
But I’m looking past him to the door. “2A.” I narrow my eyes and frown. “Not in your wildest dreams. Do you live here?”
He grins. “Me? Nah. I’m just here collecting rent for the guy who owns this building. Broad inside was late paying up.”
“Then why would you think I’d be here looking for you, Einstein?”
“Don’t have to be a smart ass,” he whines. But the grin changes to a leer and he gives his crotch a tug. “Sure you don’t want a taste? I have plenty left-and you kind of cheated me before.”
I don’t know what makes me angrier. The implication that part of the “rent” he collected from Carolyn was sex or that I owed him something of the same. I grab him by the scruff of the neck and throw him against the wall. “Does Carolyn know what you do in Mexico?”
He tries to pull away, the same stupid smirk on his face. “Come on. What difference does that make? Sex is sex. I just like the added thrill of doing it with vamps. You’re the first one who wouldn’t spread her legs-”
Before he gets another word out, I have him upended over the balcony. I know it’s not the smartest thing I could have done. What if someone catches me dangling a two-hundred pound gorilla by one ankle over a balcony? But sometimes you have to give in to base impulses.
And I now have his full attention.
The smirk is gone. The kid is white with fear, so scared he can’t speak. I yank him back up and again slam him against the wall. Hard. “Does she know about Mexico?” I ask again.
He swallows, Adam’s apple dancing as he tries to find his voice. “Yes. She thinks it’s cool.”
“Does she know about me?”
“How could she? I didn’t know who you were. I still don’t.”
I let my fingers find his windpipe and squeeze ever so gently. “And we’ll keep it that way, won’t we?” He gives a shaky little nod, but I’m not convinced. I exert a little more pressure. “You won’t mention seeing me here. In fact, you won’t come back here. Ever. If you do, I’ll find you. I can do it. Trust me, it won’t be hard. Do you understand?”
It’s amazing how being strangled clarifies thinking, even in the densest individual. He blinks his eyes in rapid-fire succession. At the moment it’s all he can do, I’ve cut off his air supply.
I release my hold and he falls to his knees, clutching his throat and coughing.
“I take that as a ‘yes.’ Now get out of here.”
The dancing puppy has turned into a whipped mongrel and he slinks down the stairs. I watch him go, but not with any feeling of satisfaction. Whipped puppies have teeth and I know his type. He’ll go home, change his shorts and plot revenge. But he may go to Beso de la Muerte to get it. I’ll let Culebra know what happened. I don’t want this idiot kid to take out his anger on an unsuspecting vamp. Culebra will know how to handle him.
From the balcony I watch the kid squeal out of the parking lot in the Volkswagen. I wouldn’t have thought it capable of such speed. I let another minute or so go by just to make sure he doesn’t come back. Then I knock on Carolyn’s door. I hear a rustle from inside, a murmur that sounds something like, “Fucking kid. What’s he want now,” and the door swings open.
If I thought Carolyn Delaney looked bad the first time I saw her, the way she looks now is a hundred times worse. She’s wearing a worn terry robe so stained and tattered I can’t be sure if the color is dirty brown or faded gray. The robe gaps open at the waist, breasts spilling out of a lacy bra that looks like she might have had it since her college days. Only now there’s way too much breast and not enough bra and the effect is not pretty. Her hair is unwashed and uncombed, her face splotchy. She smells of sex, musk and tobacco.
The expression of horror when she recognizes me is no doubt mirrored on my own face at seeing her like this.
She pulls the robe closed, runs a hand through her hair, and stands blocking the door. “I didn’t expect to see you here,” she says. “How did you find me?”
“You gave us your address. Last night. Remember?”
“I gave you my telephone number, too,” she grumbles. “I expected you would call if you had any news.”
Her attitude is beginning to annoy me. “Carolyn, are you going to let me in or not?”
But as I say it, I move toward her and she has no choice but to step back, waving a hand in a reluctant invitation to come inside.
Cautiously, I do. The idea of being in a closed room with this woman is about as appealing as having sex with No-neck. But there is a reason I’m here-Trish-and I force myself to swallow back the revulsion.
And as if it finally dawns on Carolyn that maybe I’m here for some important reason, like the whereabouts of her daughter, and she should show a little maternal concern, she says, “Do you have any news about Trish?”
But I’m looking around the apartment and wondering how a nurse could live in such squalor. There are dirty dishes on every conceivable surface, including the couch and tattered chairs scattered around the room. Empty beer and soda cans litter the floor. An ashtray, whose first life was a jam jar, is so full of butts and ashes the contents spill over onto the grease-stained pizza box it’s perched upon. Makes me wonder what her work area at the hospital is like, or how often she washes her hands.
When my gaze sweeps back to Carolyn, I make no attempt to hide my disgust. “This is where you and Trish live?” I almost add, “No wonder she ran away,” but I don’t, though I dearly want to.
She responds with self-righteous anger. “We don’t all live in big houses on Mt.Helix,” she says. “Or in beach houses. Some of us have to struggle to get by.”
But I’m stuck on the “beach houses” part of her tirade. “How do you know where I live?”
“You told me. Last night. Remember?” She throws my words back at me, hands on hips and head cocked to one side.
Echoing my own words doesn’t distract me, though. It only ratchets my dislike of this woman up another notch. “No, I didn’t tell you that last night. And I do remember. So, I’ll ask you again. How do you know where I live?”
“What does it matter?” she snaps right back. “Aren’t you here because of Trish?”
She’s right, but she seems to know more about me than I like. I want to pursue it, but there’s a more important reason I’m standing in this dump. “Yes, I’m here about Trish. But no, I don’t have any news. What I have are questions. Like why you didn’t tell us last night about your trouble with the law? And that Trish has run away-twice? Those are pretty important details to have left out.”
Her face reddens. “Maybe I didn’t tell you because I knew you’d have the same contemptuous look on your face that you do right now.”
When I don’t respond, she continues with a huffy sigh. “Yes. Trish has run away before. But there was a reason. I was involved with someone she didn’t get along with.”
I flash on No-neck. “The guy I just saw leaving?”
“No, not him. I live here alone now. I mean, alone with Trish. That’s why I’m so worried about her. Something really bad must have happened to make her leave like this. I may not be the best mother, but I always provided a home for Trish. Made sure she had food and clothes and a roof over her head.”
“And supplied her with drugs?”
Carolyn looks genuinely taken aback. “Why on Earth would you ask that?”
“Come on, Carolyn,” I snap. “Did you think I wouldn’t find out that you’ve been busted for possession?”
“I wasn’t charged,” she says. “And the drugs weren’t mine. They belonged to that guy I told you about. The one Trish didn’t like. I kicked him out right after that. For Christ sake, I didn’t know I was carrying drugs. He’d slipped them into my purse.”
It’s not lost on me that she’s changing her story. She kicked the guy out because he got her in trouble, not because of Trish. There’s enough conviction in her reply, however, that I grudgingly concede her that point, especially since David confirmed the case was dropped. “What about the DUI’s?”
I can see the wheels turning as she decides whether to confirm or deny. I make the decision for her.
“Tell me the truth. A case may not get to court, but there’s always a paper trail. I’ll find out one way or the other.”
She shrugs. “I used to have a drinking problem.”
“Used to?”
“I got help. Through the hospital. I completed a rehab program and my record was expunged.” She shoots me a resentful look. “Or at least it was supposed to be.”
“How have you managed to keep your nursing job through all this?”
Her eyes skitter away and then slide back. “I’m a good worker,” she says.
Another glance around the room and my skin starts to crawl at the thought that this woman renders care to the sick. I shake the disgust away and pull my thoughts back. “I’d like to see Trish’s room.”
A defensive look creeps into her eyes. “Why?”
“Because I might be able to find something that would give us a clue as to where she’s gone. Or why.”
“There’s nothing to find,” she says sharply. “I’ve looked.”
“Yeah, well I want to look, too.” I don’t give her a chance to argue, but turn toward the short hall that leads from the living room, assuming it’s the way to the bedrooms.
She’s right on my heels. I put a hand on the first door and she stops me. “That’s my room,” she snaps.
I don’t tell her how happy I am that I don’t have to see the horror that must be her bedroom. I step instead to the next door. The knob has been removed from the door, leaving only a large, round hole. “What happened here?”
She rolls her shoulders. “Trish leaves her room locked. When she disappeared, I had to get inside. That was the only way I could think of to do it.”
I open the door. There are also two deadbolts that lock from the inside. Trish felt she needed to deadbolt her bedroom? I know teenagers value their privacy, but most don’t resort to deadbolts. I wonder who she was trying to keep out.
I push the door back and move inside. Carolyn doesn’t follow me, a flush creeping into her cheeks. When I look around, I understand why. She should be embarrassed. This room belongs in another house. The bed is made, the furniture clutter and dirt free. Schoolbooks are stacked with neat precision. There is a bulletin board with a few pictures, but only of Trish and whom I must assume are school friends, no family photos. The things in her dresser drawers are folded. The closet yields shoes lined up in a row, clothes clean and pressed and hung up by category: shirts, skirts, pants, coats.
Hardly the room of a teenaged doper. Her wardrobe is meager, and somehow that makes me sadder than anything else I’ve seen so far.
But I don’t find anything that gives me a clue as to where she might have gone. No diary. No notebooks with scrawled notes on the covers.
I close the door respectfully behind me and turn again to Carolyn. “When Trish ran away before, where did she go?”
Carolyn’s shoulders hunch a little. “What does that matter?”
“You’re kidding right?”
She frowns and purses her lips. “Where she went before doesn’t matter. She’s not there now. I checked.”
“Not where, Carolyn? I want an answer.”
She strikes a defensive pose. “She went to my parents, okay? But she’s not there now.”
I feel my jaw muscles clench. “I thought you said last night your parents didn’t want anything to do with you or Trish?” But the truth strikes me as I say it. “It’s not Trish they don’t want anything to do with, is it? It’s you.”
Carolyn glares at me with reproachful eyes. “What do you want me to say? That my mom and step dad are disappointed in me? That my life didn’t turn out the way any of us had hoped? Okay. I’ve said it. Now what are you doing to find Trish?”
“You’re sure she’s not with them?”
Reproach veers to anger. “Yes. I called them. Now they have something else to blame me for. My mother is on her way here right now to make sure I don’t screw anything else up.”
“On her way from where?”
Rancor colors her face and words. “Where she lives with her rich husband,” she replies. “Boston.”
“Did you know that’s where Daniel Frey is from? And the Franco’s as well?”
She flicks at a wisp of hair. “Should I? Boston is a big place. There are lots of people from Boston. It’s a coincidence.”
Maybe.
Maybe not.
Chapter Ten
That’s the last thing Carolyn says to me before she shuts down. When she reaches for a pack of cigarettes, it’s my signal to leave. I don’t see any point in our getting together again this evening. I tell her on my way out that I’ll make her excuses to my folks. I wonder just how much I’ll tell them about the mother of their only grandchild.
Probably not much.
On the way back to school I mull over the recurring theme-the Franco’s, Daniel Frey, and Carolyn’s parents-all from Boston. Carolyn says it’s a coincidence. She may be right. David found no connection between them. Nevertheless, I’ve never put much stock in coincidences.
It’s a little after twelve when I pull in at the school. Mom is holding a press conference on the steps in front of her office. Chief Williams is beside her. A crowd of students gather to the side, some weeping and some talking in low voices. The TV news cameras swarm in to catch it all.
I drive around back and park in the same lot as this morning. Most of the teachers must have left for the day because there are far fewer cars. When I get to Daniel Frey’s classroom, however, he is there with a half dozen students. He detects my presence immediately. He wraps up his conversation and the students drift out. No one pays the least bit of attention to me, though they make their way around me like a wake around the bow of a ship.
He joins me at the doorway. “I need a ride home. Why don’t you take me.” He doesn’t ask it like a question.
I raise an eyebrow. “And why would I want to take you home?”
An impatient frown tugs at the corners of his mouth. “Look, we both know you plan to follow me. I let my driver go. Will you take me or not?”
“Fine. I’ll take you home. But I want to stop by the office first.”
Frey has his coat over his arm, and with his free hand, he pulls the door to his classroom closed and locks it. “I need to check messages. Let’s go.”
I pick through his thoughts, looking for some hint of duplicity but find none. I feel him doing the same to me, so I send him this message: You're either being honest with me about your innocence or you are the most accomplished liar I’ve ever met.
He smiles, not warmly, and slips his keys into the pocket of his coat. I could say the same about you-being an accomplished liar, I mean.
I haven’t lied to you. In fact, I’ve told you a lot more than I should have, considering the circumstances.
Or maybe you felt you didn’t have a choice. He twirls a finger at his head. Because of this.
We approach the office just as the press conference is coming to a close. Frey goes to the receptionist to check for messages and I wait for Mom in her office. Williams is at her side when she comes in.
He closes the door behind him. “I got a call from the Medical Examiner’s office,” he says. “Barbara died from strangulation. A belt was used, with a metal buckle that left a clear imprint. And a distinctive one. We found marks on her body where she had been hit with it. There was skin under her fingernails. She fought back. And semen on her clothes. Multiple donors. We have DNA samples that we will run through our databases. If we don’t get a hit, we have more than enough to make a match when we catch them.”
Williams’s tone is detached, professional. I’m used to it, but I can see how it’s affecting my mother. She’s thinking of Trish and her shoulders are rigid with tension. Williams can read the signs and will if I don’t distract him. His sharp eyes are watching her.
Barbara went down fighting.
His eyes shift to me. Yes, she did. But there are other things, too. We need to meet privately.
He’s not letting any of those “other things” into his thoughts . I know what you’re doing. It won’t work. Barbara died from human hands. You want to meet about Avery, not Barbara. I can’t do it now.
Because you want to concentrate on finding Trish.
Yes.
In the instant it takes for this to pass between us, my mother presses her fingertips gently against her eyelids and draws a deep breath. “What can we do, Chief Williams?” she asks.
Without hesitation, he switches mental gears. “I’ll have detectives on campus this afternoon and tomorrow. But if you hear anything, or if a student goes to a counselor or teacher because he feels more comfortable talking to someone familiar, let us know immediately. In cases like this, what we learn in the first forty-eight hours often determines whether or not we catch the killer.”
Mom nods and extends her hand. “Thank you for your help today,” she says.
He shakes her hand, offers his to me, and leaves with no parting shots.
Several teachers and parents have gathered outside Mom’s office door. I take just a minute to let her know we won’t be meeting with Carolyn tonight but that I will call her later, after I’ve checked in at the office. I don’t add that I’ll be taking Daniel Frey home for the same reason I don’t tell her what I learned about Carolyn. Mom has enough on her plate right now without adding to her anxiety.
Frey is waiting for me at the back door to the office. We are at the edge of the parking lot when I realize David told me only that Frey lives in Mission Valley. Big valley and a lot of condos. Where're we going?
He gives me a sideways glance. So, you know I live in Mission Valley. You’ve already checked up on me. I guess I shouldn’t find that surprising.
He directs me to the freeway and then to take the off-ramp at Friar’s Road. During the twenty or so minutes it takes to get there, we don’t exchange a word, orally or mentally. I can’t tell if Frey is in my head, so I keep my thoughts carefully neutral. When we pull into his condo complex, he hands me a magnetic card that I slip into a reader, allowing us to enter the gated community.
It’s a very upscale community, perched above Qualcomm Stadium, with a view that extends over the shopping complexes that make up Mission and Fashion Valley and to the city. He directs me with a terse, turn right, then turn left, pull in here. “Here” is a numbered space that I presume is his. Empty, of course, since he doesn’t have a driver’s license.
So, you know that too, huh? You have been busy.
The look he gives me is a mixture of anger, contempt and disgust. The vibe he’s sending off, though, is tinged with something odd. Disappointment. Like I’ve let him down in some subtle way.
I shake my head and smile at that. You’ve been hanging around teenage girls way too long. The “I’m disappointed in you” shtick doesn’t work on me. I plan to find out everything I can about you. Now if you have nothing to hide, as you keep insisting, why not invite me in? You can answer some questions and make my job that much easier.
His fingers are wrapped around the door handle but he pauses and half-turns to face me. You have questions? Is that all?His smile is brittle. Sure. Why not? That way you can search the place, too, and you’ll know I’m not holding Trish captive in a broom closet.
Sarcasm comes through, even in telepathic communication. He realizes instantly that Trish’s disappearance doesn’t merit ridicule. He backs off with an apologetic shrug. I’m sorry. I will do everything I can to help you find Trish. She’s a good kid and I don’t want anything to happen to her.
I cut the engine and grab my purse to follow him. I believe him when he says he wants her to be safe. But that doesn’t mean I’m convinced he didn’t play a part in her disappearance.
Or that I trust him.