Page 16 of Cross Justice


  “Meet you at the car,” I said.

  I went over to Coach Greene, asked her. She hesitated.

  “She’s innocent until proven guilty, Coach.”

  “You’re right and I’m sorry, Dr. Cross,” she said. “In all my years coaching, I’ve never had anything like this happen. Unless those tests say different, Jannie can come run with us on Saturday and any other day she wants.”

  I turned to leave, started toward the tunnel beneath the stands.

  But Marvin Bell and his adopted son, Finn Davis, blocked the way.

  “For such a big-time cop, you don’t listen so well,” Marvin Bell said.

  “Yeah?” I said. “What did I miss?”

  “Your niece brought up my name in court today,” Bell said.

  “Your niece was testifying in court today,” I said.

  “That’s bullshit,” said Finn Davis.

  “It’s bullshit that she was testifying or that she’s Mr. Bell’s niece?”

  Bell smiled sourly. “I warned you about besmirching my name in court.”

  “Besmirching?”

  “Slandering, whatever you want to call it,” Bell said.

  “It’s only slander or besmirching if it’s not true,” I said.

  Davis said, “Listen, Detective Asshole. That poor girl was raped by that sick fuck Stefan Tate. It took guts for her to go on that stand and face her rapist.”

  “No argument there,” I said.

  “Then quit trying to tear her down,” Bell said. “You go on and think anything you want about me, but you leave Sharon out of it. She is a victim in all of this, and I won’t have her made into a punching bag.”

  “And I won’t have someone try to frame my daughter in retaliation.”

  “What the hell are you talking about?”

  “Someone just put a vial of white powder in her gym bag,” I said. “That’s a sheriff’s detective out there investigating. I figure Sharon for the job.”

  “Horseshit,” Bell said.

  I took a step, got right in their faces, said, “No, gentlemen, horseshit is you trying to kill me and strong-arm my family. You’re on notice. I am officially declaring war on the two of you.”

  Chapter

  53

  Bree didn’t say much on the ride home after we’d taken Jannie to the sheriff’s office, where she’d provided blood and urine for analysis. I asked for and received samples from the same specimens, a precaution.

  When we got home and went inside, I put the samples in a brown bag in the fridge. Jannie started telling Nana Mama about everything that had happened. Ali lay on the couch, watching another episode of Uncharted with Jim Shockey.

  “Where is he now?” I asked. Shockey had traded his cowboy hat for a bandanna and was wading in murky water in a jungle.

  “Like, the Congo?”

  “That Jim Shockey gets around,” I said. “Bree come in?”

  “I’m out here,” she called from the porch.

  I went out, found her sitting in a rocker, looking out through the screen. She wasn’t happy.

  “We okay?” I asked.

  “Not really,” she said quietly.

  “Why?”

  “Did you have to say that to Bell and Davis? That you were declaring war on them?”

  “I was speaking from the heart.”

  “I get that, Alex. But now you’re more of a target than you were before.”

  “Good,” I said. “We draw them out, and we shut them down.”

  She looked up angrily. “Why do you always put yourself in harm’s way?”

  My chin retreated. “Bree, you of all people should know that it’s part of—”

  “The job?” she asked. “I don’t think so. I don’t put myself in harm’s way intentionally, and you do all the time. Did you ever stop for a second and think that it’s a pretty goddamn selfish habit?”

  “Selfish?” I said, bewildered.

  “Yes, selfish,” Bree said. “You have a family that needs you. You have a wife that needs you. And yet, at the drop of a hat, you’re ready to risk our happiness and well-being.”

  I was speechless for several moments. I’d never heard Bree talk like this before. My late wife and Ali’s mother, yes. But Bree, no.

  I hung my head and said, “What should I have done?”

  “Defuse the situation,” she said. “Make them think you’re no threat until you’ve got damning evidence against them. But it’s too late, you escalated the threat, Alex, and—”

  “Bree,” I said, holding up my hands. “I get it, and I’m sorry. In my own defense, because Jannie was being used, I got a little hot under the collar. It won’t happen again.”

  “That’s good to hear,” she said, getting up from the rocker and going inside. “But you remain a target.”

  I stood there a moment feeling a weight that hadn’t been there ten minutes before. She was right. I’d pushed when I should have been smarter and laid off.

  In the kitchen, Jannie was finishing up a dinner of country-style ribs with Nana Mama.

  My grandmother studied me, said, “You in hot water?”

  “Trying to get out,” I said, heaping rice on my plate and then helping myself to the ribs, which were falling off the bone and smelled incredible.

  “Thank you, Nana,” Jannie said, clearing her plate. “That was great.”

  “Easy recipe,” she said, waving off the compliment. “Orange juice and barbecue sauce. Then slow cook them at two fifty for four hours.”

  “Still great,” I said after taking a bite.

  Sitting down, I ate and watched Jannie for any sign that she was anxious about the events of the past couple of hours. But she seemed confident when she left the kitchen.

  “Jannie told me,” Nana Mama said.

  “We took care of it,” I said.

  “What was bothering you this morning?”

  Part of me wanted to tell her what my cousin had said, that her son had survived the fall from the bridge and the trip through the gorge and went on to live two years on the run before committing suicide.

  Instead, I said, “Just a rough night.”

  “Uh-huh,” my grandmother said, unconvinced, and left me to my dinner, which was remarkably good even by Nana Mama’s high standards.

  When I was done cleaning my plate, I went to our bedroom and found the door shut. I knocked, and Bree said, “It’s open.”

  I went in, shut the door. Bree sat on the bed, studying her laptop.

  In a low voice, I said, “I am sorry.”

  She looked up and gave me a halfhearted smile. “I know you are.”

  “There’s dinner waiting for you. Outstanding country ribs.”

  “I’ll go eat in a minute,” she said.

  “I can’t tell Nana Mama what Pinkie told me,” I said quietly.

  “Why not?” she asked.

  “I don’t…” I began and then rubbed at my temples. “I guess I don’t want her to hear any of it unless I can prove it’s all true.”

  “Your uncle Cliff is in no position to corroborate the story,” Bree said.

  “I know,” I said, and then saw how to solve two problems at once. “So I’m getting up early, driving to Raleigh, and catching a plane to Palm Beach.”

  “Okay,” she said, confused. “Why?”

  “It’s the closest airport to where my father killed himself,” I explained. “And it gets me out of Starksville for a day or two, which eliminates me as a target.”

  “But what about Stefan? Despite what I said at the track practice, he could have been framed. Maybe by Bell.”

  “Or Finn Davis,” I said. “Which is why you’re going to be careful while I’m gone, hang to the outside, and learn everything you can from the public record about the two of them.”

  Bree thought about that, and then nodded. “That I can do.”

  Chapter

  54

  Palm Beach, Florida

  Driven by a hot wind, the flames roared and belched b
lack smoke into the late-morning sky. White egrets circled in the smoke, feasting on clouds of bugs fleeing the fire.

  They were harvesting and burning sugarcane on both sides of Florida Route 441 as I headed west toward Lake Okeechobee, and twice I had to slow to a crawl, the smoke was so thick.

  Finally I got upwind of the fire and the smoke was gone. I saw the sign welcoming me to Belle Glade. It was where my father had killed himself and as hard luck a place as I’d ever seen. I’d heard about the city, of course. Who in law enforcement hadn’t? As a municipality, Belle Glade used to have a murder rate the equivalent of a big metro area like DC or Chicago. After five minutes in Belle Glade, I could see some of the reasons why.

  But I wasn’t there to diagnose and solve social ills, so I ignored the empty buildings and storefronts pocked with bullet holes and relied on Google Maps to lead me to the various churches around town. I wanted to find out how my father came to kill himself behind one of them.

  There were a lot of churches in Belle Glade. At the first two, one for Baptists and another for Adventists, I got no helpful information. At St. Christopher’s Catholic Church, I talked with a priest painting the rectory door. Father Richard Lane was in his fifties and had only recently been transferred to Belle Glade.

  “Thirty-three years ago?” he said, squinting at me. “I don’t know how you’re going to find someone just on a name.”

  “I believe in miracles, Father,” I said.

  “Well, I can check and see if a funeral Mass was said for Mr. Brown here, but if the old records are as poorly maintained as the newer ones are, I can’t offer you much hope, Detective Cross.”

  I gave the priest my business card, told him to call if he found anything.

  Over the next two hours, I knocked on the doors of every other place of worship in town. Someone answered at every church, but no one knew of a Paul Brown committing suicide there years before.

  One evangelical minister recommended I try the churches in nearby towns to the north. Another advised me to do a county records search for death certificates. Both were good ideas, and as I left the second minister, I tried to figure out what to do next and how best to do it.

  It was beastly hot and humid, and I was eager to climb into my rental car and cool off in the air-conditioning. But then I noticed a Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office van parked up and across the street next to one of those shabby apartment complexes with two floors and exterior stairs.

  I wandered over, looked into the complex, and saw a small crowd of people watching the upper floor where yellow crime tape had been strung up around the door of one of the apartments. A criminalist, a young guy, came down the stairs and started to walk past me.

  I held up my badge and identified myself before asking where I’d need to go to get someone with the sheriff’s department to pull some documents for me as a professional courtesy.

  “I honestly don’t know,” the tech said. “Sergeant Drummond might.”

  “Where’s Sergeant Drummond?” I asked.

  “That’s him,” the criminalist said, gesturing to two men dressed in suits exiting the apartment. “The one with the face scar.”

  One of the men was big, African American, older, sixties. The other was in his thirties, dark good looks and, judging from his physique, a power lifter. My bet was on the lifter for the face scar, though I can’t tell you why. But when the older detective turned to climb down the stairs, I saw the large patch of ragged skin that began beneath his right eye, ran down seven inches, and then looped back above the jaw toward his ear.

  “Sergeant Drummond,” I said, holding up my badge. “Detective Alex Cross, with the Washington, DC, Metropolitan Police, homicide division.”

  Drummond’s face was flat as he examined my credentials. “Okay?”

  The younger detective grinned and stuck out his hand. “Detective Richard S. Johnson. I know who you are, Dr. Cross. You used to be FBI, right? I saw one of your Quantico lectures on tape. Sergeant? Haven’t you heard of Alex Cross?”

  Drummond handed me back my badge and said, “I hope it doesn’t crush your ego that I haven’t.”

  “Unlikely, Sergeant,” I said, smiling. “I have a pretty bombproof ego.”

  “So how can we help?” Detective Johnson said. “You down here tracking some serial killer or something?”

  “No, nothing like that,” I said, and I explained that I was looking for a long-lost relative who’d supposedly died in Belle Glade years before.

  “We can do a search for you back at the office,” Johnson offered.

  “Can we, now?” Sergeant Drummond asked. “Or do we need to figure out who killed Francie Letourneau and two Palm Beach socialites?”

  “I don’t want to mess up your investigation,” I said. “Just point me in the right direction. I’ll do the legwork.”

  Drummond shrugged. “Follow us back to the office; we’ll see what we can do.”

  “And maybe you’d want to take a look at our case?” Johnson said.

  “Detective,” Drummond growled.

  “What, Sarge?” his junior partner shot back. “This guy’s the expert’s expert. He trains FBI agents, for Christ’s sake.”

  “Used to,” I said. “And I’d be glad to help. But if it would crush your ego…”

  The sergeant actually smiled, said, “What the hell, Dr. Cross. Maybe you can teach an old dog new tricks.”

  Chapter

  55

  I followed them back to their offices in West Palm, a typical bullpen with cubicles surrounded by other cubicles that had windows and doors. Those were for the commanding officers, including Drummond.

  “Johnson, help him find what he’s looking for,” Drummond said. “Sorry I can’t give you the royal treatment you seem to deserve, Cross, but duty calls. I’ve got to make some phone calls, and I’ll get those murder books for you.”

  “Thank you, Sergeant,” I said. He disappeared into his office and shut the door behind him.

  While Johnson went to get us coffee, I sat there listening to the familiar sounds of a homicide unit, detectives on the phone, others in discussion. I hadn’t been gone a week and already I missed it.

  Johnson returned with two cups of decent coffee. “I can’t believe Alex Cross is sitting at my desk.”

  I stood up. “Sorry.”

  “What? No, sit down. It’s an honor. Now, what or who are we looking for?”

  “Male. African American. Died roughly thirty-three years ago.”

  Johnson turned all business, got another chair, and retrieved his laptop computer. “Name?”

  “Paul Brown. Supposedly killed himself behind a church in Belle Glade.”

  “I’ll look at county death records and see if he had a sheet with us.”

  “You have digital back that far?”

  “For all of Florida,” Johnson said as he typed. “State paid for it. Prescient, you ask me.”

  I liked the young detective. He was sharp and full of energy. I didn’t know exactly what to think of Drummond other than that he had a dry wit.

  “So what’s with Drummond’s scar?” I asked.

  Johnson looked up. “First Gulf War. An oil well he was securing blew. Killed two of his men. Shrapnel laid his cheek open like a flap, burned and chewed it all up. Extensive nerve damage. It’s why he hardly ever has any expression. His face just sort of hangs there, right?”

  “You like him?”

  Johnson smiled. “Like? I don’t know yet. But I admire him. Drummond’s the real deal in my book.”

  “Good enough for me,” I said.

  “Paul Brown?”

  “Correct.”

  “And thirty-three years ago,” Johnson said, studying his screen and typing. “We’ll go plus or minus a year just to be safe. We have a date of birth?”

  I told him my father’s birthday.

  Johnson hit Enter. Almost immediately, he shook his head. “No match.”

  “Leave the birthday blank,” I said, figuring that
my father must have been smart enough to leave everything about his old identity behind.

  The detective played with it and hit Enter again. “There you go. Three of them.”

  “Three?” I said, getting out of my chair to look at the screen.

  Sure enough, three men named Paul Brown had died in Florida around thirty-three years ago.

  “Can you pull up the death certificates?” I asked.

  Just then, Sergeant Drummond exited his office carrying several large black binders. “Any luck?”

  “We got three Paul Browns,” Johnson said. “Is there a way to access the death certificates from vital statistics, Sarge?”

  “Miami, what are you, thirty years younger than me? You’re supposed to be the technologically advanced part of the team.”

  The detective shook his head. “I don’t—”

  “Try clicking on the name,” Drummond said.

  “Oh,” Johnson said, and he clicked the first one.

  The screen jumped to a PDF image of a death certificate for Paul L. Brown of Pensacola, age twenty-two. Cause of death: blunt-force trauma.

  “Too young,” I said. “Try the next one.”

  Johnson clicked on it. A new death certificate popped up for Paul Brown of Fort Lauderdale, age seventy-nine. Cause of death: stroke.

  “Too old,” I said, now desperately wanting to find the answer behind door number three.

  The third certificate fit the profile. Paul Brown, of Pahokee, Florida, age thirty-two, indigent. Cause of death: self-inflicted gunshot wound.

  “That’s him,” I said, with a sinking feeling. “Where’s Pahokee?”

  Drummond said, “Fifteen miles north of Belle Glade.”

  “It’s got to be him, then,” I said, studying the certificate, oddly detached. “Which means the church is probably there. Says here the body was released to Belcher Brothers Funeral Home for interment.”

  “Interment?” Johnson said. “Most indigents are cremated in Florida.”

  “Not this time, apparently,” I said.