Page 30 of Roadside Crosses


  "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.

  https://www.thechiltonreport.com/html/june28.html

  From Chilton's reporting and the posts, Dance deduced that the blogger had found out about the man's Las Vegas connections, which suggested organized crime, and the man's private real estate dealings, which hinted at secrets he might not want exposed.

  "Ready?" Dance asked Carraneo as she logged off.

  The young agent nodded, and they climbed from the car.

  She knocked on the door.

  Finally the red-faced entrepreneur--flushed from the sun, not booze, Dance deduced--answered the knock. He was surprised to see visitors. He blinked and said nothing for a moment. "From the hospital. You're . . . ?"

  "Agent Dance. This is Agent Carraneo."

  His eyes zipped behind her.

  Looking for backup? she wondered.

  And if so, for her backup? Or Brubaker's own?

  She felt a trickle of fear. People who kill for money were the most ruthless, in her estimation.

  "We're following up on that incident with Mr. Chilton. You mind if I ask you a few questions?"

  "What? That prick filed charges after all? I thought we--"

  "No, no charges. Can we come in?"

  The man remained suspicious. His eyes avoiding Dance's, he nodded them inside and blurted, "He's crazy, you know. I mean, I think he's certifiable."

  Dance gave a noncommittal smile.

  With another glance outside, Brubaker closed the door. He locked it.

  They walked through the house, impersonal, many rooms empty of furniture. Dance believed she heard a creak from nearby. Then another from a different room.

  Was the house settling, or did Brubaker have assistants here?

  Assistants, or muscle?

  They walked into an office filled with papers, blueprints, pictures, photographs, legal documents. A carefully constructed scale model of the desalination plant took up one of the tables.

  Brubaker lifted several huge bound reports off chairs and gestured them to sit. He did too, behind a large desk.

  Dance noticed certificates on the wall. There were also pictures of Brubaker with powerful-looking men in suits--politicians or other businesspeople. Interrogators love office walls; they reveal much about people. From these particular pictures she deduced that Brubaker was smart (degrees and professional course completions) and savvy politically (honors and keys from cities and counties). And tough; his company apparently had built desalination plants in Mexico and Colombia. Photos showed him surrounded by sunglassed, vigilant men--security guards. The men were the same in all of the pictures, which meant they were Brubaker's personal minders, not provided by the local government. One held a machine gun.

  Were they the source of the creaks nearby--which she'd heard again, closer, it seemed?

  Dance asked about the desalination project, and he launched into a lengthy sales pitch about the latest technology the plant would use. She caught words like "filtration," "membranes," "freshwater holding tanks." Brubaker gave them a short lecture on the reduced costs of new systems that was making desalination economically feasible.

  She took in little information, but instead feigned interest and soaked up his baseline behavior.

  Her first impression was that Brubaker didn't seem troubled at their presence, though High Machs were rarely moved by any human connections--whether romantic, social or professional. They even approached confrontation with equanimity. It was one aspect that made them so efficient. And potentially dangerous.

  Dance would have liked more time to gather baseline information, but she felt a sense of urgency so she stopped his spiel and asked, "Mr. Brubaker, where were you at one p.m. yesterday and eleven a.m. today?"

  The times of Lyndon Strickland's and Mark Watson's deaths.

  "Well, why?" A smile. But Dance had no idea what was behind it.

  "We're looking into certain threats against Mr. Chilton."

  True, though not, of course, the whole story.

  "Oh, he libels me, and now I'm accused?"

  "We're not accusing you, Mr. Brubaker. But could you answer my question, please?"

  "I don't have to. I can ask you to leave right now."

  This was true. "You can refuse to cooperate. But we're hoping you won't."

  "You can hope all you want," he snapped. The smile now grew triumphant. "I see what's going on here. Could it be that you got it all wrong, Agent Dance? That maybe it isn't some psychotic teenager who's been gutting people like in some bad horror film. But somebody who's been using the kid, setting him up to take the fall for killing James Chilton?"

  That was pretty good, Dance thought. But did it mean that he was threatening them? If he was the "somebody" he referred to, then, yes, he was.

  Carraneo stole a brief glance at her.

  "Which means you've pretty much had the wool pulled over your eyes."

  There were too many important rules in interviewing and interrogation for any of them to be number one, but high at the top was: Never let the personal insults affect you.

  Dance said reasonably, "There's been a series of very serious crimes, Mr. Brubaker. We're looking into all possibilities. You have a grudge against James Chilton, and you've assaulted him once already."

  "And, really," he said in a dismissive tone, "do you think it'd be the smartest thing in the world to get into a public brawl with a man I'm secretly trying to kill?"

  Either very stupid or very smart, Dance responded silently. She then asked, "Where were you at the times I mentioned? You can tell us, or you can refuse and we'll keep investigating."

  "You're as much of a prick as Chilton is. Actually, Agent Dance, you're worse. You hide behind your shield."

  Carraneo stirred but said nothing.

  She too was silent. Either he was going to tell them or he was going to throw them out.

  Wrong, Dance realized. There was a third option, one that had been percolating since she'd been listening to the eerie creaks in the seemingly deserted house.

  Brubaker was going for a weapon.

  "I've had enough of this," he whispered, and, eyes wide in anger, yanked open the top desk drawer. His hand shot inside.

  Dance flashed on her children's faces, then her husband's and then Michael O'Neil's.

  Please, she thought, praying for speed. . . .

  "Rey, behind us! Cover!"

  And when B
rubaker looked up he was staring into the muzzle of her Glock pistol, while Carraneo was facing the opposite way, aiming at the door to the office.

  Both agents were crouching.

  "Jesus, take it easy!" he cried.

  "Clear so far," Carraneo said.

  "Check it out," she ordered.

  The young man eased to the door and, standing to the side, pushed it open with his foot. "Clear."

  He spun around to cover Brubaker.

  "Lift your hands slowly," Dance said, her Glock steady enough. "If you have a weapon in your hand, drop it immediately. Don't lift it or lower it. Just drop it. If you don't--now--we will shoot. Understand?"

  Arnold Brubaker gasped. "I don't have a gun."

  She didn't hear a weapon hit the expensive floor, but he was lifting his hands very slowly.

  Unlike Dance's, they weren't shaking at all.

  In the developer's ruddy fingers was a business card, which he flicked toward her contemptuously. The agents holstered their weapons. They sat.

  Dance looked at the card, reflecting that a situation that couldn't get any more awkward just had. On the card was the gold-embossed seal of the Department of Justice--the eagle and the fine print. She knew FBI agents' cards very well. She still had a large box of them at home: her husband's.

  "At the time you mentioned, yesterday, I was meeting with Amy Grabe." Special agent in charge of the San Francisco office of the Bureau. "We were meeting here and at the site. From about eleven a.m. to three p.m."

  Oh.

  Brubaker said, "Desalination and water-based infrastructure projects are terrorist targets. I've been working with Homeland Security and the FBI to make sure that if the project gets under way, there'll be adequate security." He looked at her calmly and with contempt. The tip of his tongue touched a lip. "I'm hoping it will be federal officers involved. I'm losing confidence in the local constabulary."

  Kathryn Dance wasn't about to apologize. She'd check with SAC Amy Grabe, whom she knew and, despite differences of opinion, respected. And even though an alibi wouldn't absolve him from hiring a thug to commit the actual crimes, it was hard for Dance to believe that a man working closely with the FBI and DHS would risk murder. Besides, everything about Brubaker's demeanor suggested he was telling the truth.

  "All right, Mr. Brubaker. We'll check out what you're telling us."

  "I hope you do."

  "I appreciate your time."

  "You can find your own way out," he snapped.

  Carraneo cast a sheepish glance her way. Dance rolled her eyes.

  When they were at the door, Brubaker said, "Wait. Hold on." The agents turned. "Well, was I right?"

  "Right?"

  "That you think somebody killed the boy and set him up to be the fall guy in some plot to kill Chilton?"

  A pause. Then she thought: Why not? She answered, "We think it's possible, yes."

  "Here." Brubaker jotted something on a slip of paper and offered it. "He's somebody you ought to be looking at. He'd love for the blog--and the blogger--to disappear."

  Dance glanced at the note.

  Wondering why she hadn't thought of the suspect herself.

  Chapter 34

  PARKED ON A dusty street near the small town of Marina, five miles north of Monterey, Dance was alone in her Crown Vic, on the phone with TJ.

  "Brubaker?" she asked.

  "No criminal record," he told her. And his work--and the alibi--with the FBI was confirmed.

  He still might've hired somebody for the job, but this information did ease him out of the hot seat.

  Attention was now on the man whose name Brubaker had given her. The name on the slip of paper was Clint Avery and she was presently gazing at him from about one hundred yards away, through a chain-link fence--topped with razor wire--that surrounded his massive construction company.

  The name Avery had never come up as someone involved in the case. For very good reason: The builder had never posted on the blog and Chilton had never written about him in The Report.

  Not by name, that is. The "Yellow Brick Road" thread didn't mention Avery specifically. But questioned the government's decision to build the highway and the bidding process, by implication also criticizing the contractor--which Dance should have known was Avery Construction, since she'd been flagged down by a company team at the site of the highway work when she'd been on her way to Caitlin Gardner's summer school two days ago. She hadn't put the two pieces together.

  TJ Scanlon now told her, "Seems that Clint Avery was connected with a company investigated for using substandard materials about five years ago. Investigation got dropped real fast. Maybe Chilton's reporting might get the case reopened."

  A good motive to kill the blogger, Dance agreed. "Thanks, TJ. That's good. . . . And Chilton's got you the list of other suspects?"

  "Yep."

  "Any others stand out?"

  "Not yet, boss. But I'm glad I don't have as many enemies as he does."

  She gave a brief laugh and they disconnected.

  From the distance, Dance continued to study Clint Avery. She'd seen pictures of him a dozen times--on the news and in the papers. He was hard to miss. Though he would certainly have been a millionaire many times over, he was dressed the same as any other worker: a blue shirt sprouting pens in the breast pocket, tan work slacks, boots. The sleeves were rolled up and she spotted a tattoo on his leathery forearm. In his hand was a yellow hard hat. A big walkie-talkie sat on his hip. She wouldn't have been surprised to see a six-shooter; his broad, mustachioed face looked like a gunslinger's.

  She started the engine and drove through the gates. Avery noticed her car. He squinted slightly and seemed to recognize hers immediately as a government car. He concluded his discussion with a leather-jacketed man, who walked away. Quickly.

  She parked. Avery Construction was a no-nonsense company, devoted to one purpose: building things. Huge stores of construction materials, bulldozers, Cats, backhoes, trucks and jeeps. There was a concrete plant on the premises and what appeared to be metal-and wood-working shops, large diesel tanks for feeding the vehicles, Quonset huts and storage sheds. The main office was made up of a number of large, functional buildings, all low. No graphic designer or landscaper had been involved in the creation of Avery Construction.

  Dance identified herself. The head of the company was cordial and shook hands, his eyes crinkling lines into the tanned face as he glanced at her ID.

  "Mr. Avery, we're hoping you can help us. You're familiar with the crimes that have been occurring around the Peninsula?"

  "The Mask Killer, that boy, sure. I heard someone else was killed today. Terrible. How can I help you?"

  "The killer's leaving roadside memorials as a warning that he's going to commit more crimes."

  He nodded. "I've seen that on the news."

  "Well, we've noticed something curious. Several of the crosses have been left near sites of your construction projects."

  "They have?" Now a frown, his brow creasing significantly. Was it out of proportion to the news? Dance couldn't tell. Avery started to turn his head, then stopped. Had he instinctively been looking toward his leather-jacketed associate?

  "How can I help?"

  "We want to talk to some of your employees to see if they've noticed anything out of the ordinary."

  "Such as?"

  "Passersby behaving suspiciously, unusual objects, maybe footprints or bicycle tire tread marks in areas that were roped off for construction. Here's a list of locations." She'd written down several earlier in the car.

  Concern on his face, he looked over the list then slipped the sheet into his shirt pocket and crossed his arms. This in itself meant little kinesically, since she hadn't had time to get a baseline reading. But arm and leg crossing are defensive gestures and can signify discomfort. "You want me to give you a list of employees who've worked around there? Since the killings began, I assume."

  "Exactly. It would be a big help."

  "I assume
you'd like this sooner rather than later."

  "As soon as possible."

  "I'll do what I can."

  She thanked him and walked back to the car, then drove out of the parking lot and up the road. Dance pulled up beside a dark blue Honda Accord nearby. She was pointed the opposite way, so her open window was two feet from Rey Carraneo's. He sat in the driver's seat of the Honda in shirtsleeves, without a tie. She'd seen him dressed this casually only twice before: at a Bureau picnic and one very bizarre barbecue at Charles Overby's house.

  "He's got the bait," Dance said. "I have no idea if he'll bite."

  "How did he react?"

  "Hard to call. I didn't have time to take a baseline. But my sense was that he was struggling to seem calm and cooperative. He was more nervous than he let on. I'm also not so sure about one of his helpers." She described the man in the leather jacket. "Either one of them leaves, stay close."

  "Yes, ma'am."

  PATRIZIA CHILTON OPENED the door and nodded to Greg Ashton, the man her husband called an Uber Blogger--in that cute but slightly obnoxious way of Jim's.

  "Hi, Pat," Ashton said. They shook hands. The slim man, in expensive tan slacks and a nice sports coat, nodded toward the squad car sitting in the road. "That deputy? He wouldn't give anything away. But he's here because of those killings, right?"

  "They're just taking precautions."

  "I've been following the story. You must be pretty upset."

  She gave a stoic smile. "That's putting it mildly. It's been a nightmare." She liked being able to admit to how she felt. She couldn't always do that with Jim. She believed she had to be supportive. In fact, she was sometimes furious at his role as a relentless investigative journalist. It was important, she understood, but sometimes she just plain hated the blog.

  And now . . . endangering the family and forcing them to move to a hotel? This morning she'd had to ask her brother, a big man who'd been a bouncer in college, to escort the boys to their day camp, stay there and bring them back.

  She bolted the door behind them. "Can I get you anything?" Patrizia asked Ashton.

  "No, no, I'm fine, thanks."

  Patrizia walked him to the door of her husband's office, her eyes taking in the backyard through a large window in the hallway.

  A tap of concern in her chest.

  Had she seen something in the bushes behind the house? Was it a person?