Page 15 of A Tap on the Window


  “They were looking for Claire. They knew I’d given her a lift at Patchett’s. One of them said something about getting picked up on closed-circuit there, but Patchett’s doesn’t actually have any. So my first question is, were they already watching Patchett’s? And the second is, who put them onto looking for Claire in the first place? Her father says he didn’t report her missing.”

  “You talked to him?”

  “Right after you had your little town hall chat. Could someone else have reported her missing? Her mother? Sanders’ ex lives in Toronto, right? But even if it was her, wouldn’t you have gotten a heads-up?”

  Augustus Perry didn’t say anything. If I didn’t know better, I’d have guessed he was thinking.

  I interrupted whatever process was going on in there.

  “It would seem to me, even with my limited understanding of the inner workings of the Griffon police department, that when the daughter of our beloved mayor, your sworn enemy of the moment, is the subject of a police search, somehow you would be in the loop.”

  Augie looked back to where his SUV and the police cruisers were parked. There was another set of lights approaching.

  “Coroner,” he said, and started walking.

  TWENTY-FOUR

  A short black woman in her fifties, wearing a shiny blue down-filled jacket zipped up to her neck, approached. It struck me that she was dressed for much colder weather than we were currently having.

  “Chief,” she said, blowing her nose and stuffing a tissue into one of her jacket pockets. I could see the ends of some surgical gloves sticking out of both of them.

  “You okay, Sue?” Augie asked.

  “Freezin’ to death. It’s this goddamn cold. Been trying to shake it for two weeks.”

  “Sorry you had to get dragged out when you’re sick,” he said.

  Sue shrugged. “Still a hell of a lot better off than that girl down there, I gather.”

  “Cal, you know Dr. Kessler. She’s what passes for a coroner around here.”

  Sue Kessler sniffed, looked at me. “We’ve met before, I think.” She was right. We’d crossed paths once or twice since I’d moved to Griffon. “I won’t shake your hand.”

  I was okay with that.

  “Sue, Cal found the body.”

  “You touch anything?” Kessler asked.

  “No,” I said. “But I got pretty close to her.”

  “Point me,” Kessler said.

  Augie raised an arm, extended a finger. “Down by the creek. Just under the bridge.”

  “Terrific,” she said, pulling the gloves on. “Give me a couple of minutes.”

  She was gone more like ten. Augie talked briefly to some of his officers, then returned to my side, the two of us hugging the railing, leaning over, catching glimpses of Kessler doing her job. We walked to the end of the bridge to meet her as she worked her way back up the hill.

  “I’d say strangled,” she said. “There’s impression marks on her neck, aside from the bite marks from some animals, dogs most likely. Dead at least a day, I’d guess, but I’ll know more later.”

  “Sexually assaulted?” Augie asked.

  Kessler shrugged. “You could presume, given that her pants and underwear are missing. But I won’t know until I’ve had a chance to examine her.”

  “Missing?” I said.

  “If they’re down there,” she said, “I didn’t see them. They’re certainly not close to the body. Your people find any of the vic’s clothes?”

  Augie said he would have to talk to his people.

  Kessler sneezed and said, “I’m gonna go home, drink a gallon of NyQuil, try to get some sleep. I’ll tackle her first thing in the morning.”

  As Kessler walked away, Augustus Perry said to me, “You might as well go home, too, Cal. We’ll take things from here.”

  I wasn’t ready to leave. “It’s bugging you, isn’t it?”

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

  “Someone’s not keeping you informed. That has to worry you.”

  “Cal,” Augie said, bristling, “it may surprise you to know that the chief is not informed of every single thing that goes on within the department. If you get pulled over for speeding, I don’t get a call. If someone smashes a window at Griffon High, I don’t get a call. A cat gets stuck up in a tree, I don’t get a call.”

  “Fire department gets that one, don’t they?”

  “There are any number of reasons why someone in my department might be asking around about Claire Sanders that would not warrant my being brought into the loop, as you put it.”

  I shook my head. I was suddenly very tired, but I knew I wasn’t heading home to bed anytime soon.

  “See you around, Augie,” I said.

  “You going home?”

  “Once I’ve found Claire.”

  I started to walk away, and then something struck me. I stopped and turned. “Of course, the other possibility is, you do know what’s going on. You know everything. Maybe you know something about Claire that Mayor Sanders would prefer didn’t come out. Maybe she’s into something she shouldn’t be. Maybe if you find out what it is, you’ll have some leverage against Sanders, get him to get the hell off your back.”

  “Good thing there are a lot of people around right now,” Augie said. “Otherwise, I’d knock you flat on your ass.”

  I looked around. “Just about all of them are cops,” I said. “I think they’d back up whatever story you wanted to tell. Isn’t that how it works around here? You may have thought you were fooling some of the people at that meeting, Augie, but you didn’t fool me.”

  “You got a lot of nerve,” Augie said. “You think if this had happened anywhere else, where your brother-in-law wasn’t the fucking chief, you wouldn’t be getting your ass hauled in for questioning? You’re the last person who saw this girl alive, Cal. You don’t see me making an issue out of that.”

  “Not yet,” I said.

  Augie smiled.

  TWENTY-FIVE

  On the way to my car, I stopped to check in on Sean, interrupting an interrogation by Kate Ramsey and Marvin Quinn.

  Quinn said, “Excuse me, mister, but we’re working here.”

  “It’s okay, Marv. This is a friend of mine, the one I was just telling you about,” Kate said. “How you doin’, Cal?”

  “I’ve been better, Kate.”

  “I was telling my partner that was you I saw earlier tonight, out front of Patchett’s when we were talking to our biker friends.”

  I didn’t know I’d been spotted sitting in the car. Kate was good. “Yeah, that was me.”

  She grinned slyly at her partner. “Didn’t I tell you that was Donna’s husband keepin’ an eye on me?”

  “I had a feeling it was you,” I said. “There’s only two women working uniform in Griffon, right?”

  “Just me right now. Carla’s been on mat leave for six months.”

  I thought of the kid working that convenience store, the one who’d said he’d had his tonsils spray-painted by a woman cop. Kind of narrowed it down for this neck of the woods.

  “You stake out Patchett’s much?” I asked.

  Quinn, who’d said little up to now, said, “We’d been watching those two ridin’ in on their hogs and were waiting for them to come out, have a word with them.”

  Kate nodded. “Plenty of places for them to hoist a few and play pool back where they come from.”

  Sean was watching with glazed eyes, like he didn’t even know where he was anymore.

  “Were you watching Patchett’s last night?” I asked them. “Around ten?”

  Kate didn’t hesitate. “Nope. We were both finishing up with a fender bender south of town around then, weren’t we, Marv?”

  Officer Quinn nodded.

  “Why?” Kate asked.
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  “Doesn’t matter,” I said, and turned my focus to Sean. “You gonna be okay?” He shrugged. “You called your parents?”

  “These guys are still asking me questions.”

  “Call your parents,” I said. “And don’t say another word to these nice officers until they get here and hire you a lawyer.”

  Kate Ramsey got her back up. “Cal, what the hell—”

  Quinn stared at me. “Butt out, pal.”

  I gave the two cops a smile. “Have a nice evening. And you take care, Sean.”

  As I was rounding the corner to head back to where my car was parked, I glanced back and saw Haines and Brindle up on the bridge again.

  Brindle was looking at me. When our eyes met, he turned away.

  * * *

  While Ramsey and Quinn might not have been watching Patchett’s last night, it was possible some other Griffon cops had been posted outside. And not necessarily Haines and Brindle. If some cop was watching the place for potential troublemakers like those bikers, and noticed a teenage girl getting into a car with a strange man, he might have made a note of my license plate. That could have been what led Haines and Brindle to have a word with me.

  It still didn’t explain why they were looking for Claire if no one had reported her missing. I wondered if I’d been onto something when I accused Augie of trying to get some dirt on her to strengthen his position in his fight with Sanders.

  Sanders.

  I wanted to talk to him again. Much had changed since we’d spoken a couple of hours ago.

  A girl was dead.

  His daughter’s best friend.

  He might not have wanted to talk to me before, but I didn’t see where he had much choice now.

  So I pointed the car in the direction of his house. But en route, I noticed Iggy’s up ahead. It was on my mental list of places to stop, too. I figured I might as well go on and get it out of the way, especially considering it would probably be closing soon.

  As I was heading toward it, I noticed a small car in my rearview mirror that seemed to be taking every turn I did. When I slowed, it slowed. When I sped up, it did the same.

  I wondered whether it would follow me into the Iggy’s lot, but it didn’t. As it kept on going down Danbury, I managed to get a quick look at it. A silver Hyundai. I didn’t have a hope of reading even one number on the plate as it sped off.

  I locked the car and went into the restaurant. A tall, thin man in his late twenties looked at me expectantly from behind the counter as I approached.

  “Is Iggy around?” I asked. Always start at the top.

  “Iggy?” asked the man, who had a name tag that said .

  “That’s right.”

  “There is no Iggy. At least, not anymore. Iggy—that’d be Ignatius Powell—opened his restaurant on this site in 1961, rebuilt it a couple of times, and then sold it ten years ago to my father. Last year, he died. Iggy, I mean. Not my dad. I manage this place for him in the evenings. Is there a problem with your burger?”

  “Nothing like that, Sal,” I said. I showed him my license and told him I was trying to track down a girl who’d been here about this time last night.

  “I’m pretty sure she slipped out your back door, and may have met someone in the parking lot,” I said. “I notice you’ve got cameras.”

  “Oh yeah, you have to,” Sal said. “Especially at the drive-through window. Go on YouTube, you’ll see a bunch of videos of McDonald’s customers going berserk there. We had this one lady, she said she wanted a Whopper, and Gillian—she was the one on the window—told her we don’t sell Whoppers, that’s Burger King, but she wouldn’t take no for an answer, kept screaming that she wanted a Whopper. Finally, she gets out of her truck and tries to grab Gillian through the window. We had to call the cops.”

  “I’m hoping a look at last night’s recordings will show me who might have given this girl a ride,” I said.

  It made sense that someone other than Sean was waiting here to drive Claire somewhere, or that she’d arranged to have a car left here for her.

  “I guess I can show you, you being licensed and all,” Sal said. “I mean, I’ve already showed the police, so—”

  “The police have already been here?”

  “Yeah, like, a few hours ago.”

  I nodded, like I’d expected this, which, in fact, I had. “Would that have been Officers Haines and Brindle? We’re all working toward the same goal. We just want to find Claire.”

  “So you know those guys?”

  “We were discussing the case earlier in the evening,” I said.

  Sal called over a pimply-faced girl working the counter alongside him who couldn’t have been twenty. “I’ll be back in a bit,” he told her. “You hold the fort.” He motioned for me to follow him to a door at the end of the counter and led me through the kitchen, where one person was working.

  I followed him into an office with two monitors, each showing four views of the property. There were live shots of the drive-through, the front counter, the kitchen, another office where the safe was kept, and four of the parking lot.

  “We had another nutcase one day,” Sal said. “Came up to the counter wearing nothing but a pair of ratty shorts and flip-flops, a .38 in his hand.”

  “You’re kidding.”

  “Yeah. Hair all sticking out, total whack job. Waved the gun around and said he’d start shooting if we didn’t hand over the recipe for the special dressing we put on our burgers, which is really just mayo with some relish and a couple other things mixed into it.”

  “Not exactly the formula for rocket fuel,” I said as Sal sat down in front of the monitors, started moving a mouse around.

  “Yeah, right,” he said. “So I wrote it on a napkin for him. Mayo, relish, a pinch of cayenne, like that, you know? And I hand it to him, and he says, ‘No, put down what’s really in it,’ so I said, ‘Okay,’ and just started making shit up. Like dimorixalin diphosphate, and positronic marzipan, even calista flockhart.”

  “Good one,” I said.

  “I might even have written down plutonium. Anyway, I give him that, and he looks at it and says, ‘Okay, good.’ And I hand him another napkin and the pen and tell him he needs to sign his name. ‘Whenever we give out the special mayo recipe, the person has to sign for it,’ I say.”

  “He didn’t.”

  “He did. Didn’t take long for the cops to find him. Okay, here we go,” he said, pointing to the screen. It was a shot of the door on the side of the restaurant, near the back, where the restrooms were located. The camera was mounted outside and offered a broad view of the parking lot. But it was also night, so the view wasn’t terrific. The date and time were superimposed across the bottom of the screen.

  “So this is 9:54 p.m. yesterday,” Sal said. “This is about where the cops had me start it from.” He froze the image. There were two vehicles visible in the lot from this vantage point. A light-colored or white Subaru Impreza and, partially hidden behind it, what looked like a silver or gray Volvo station wagon, although I couldn’t be sure.

  “The Soob is mine,” he said.

  “Can you fast-forward that until we see some activity?” I asked.

  “Sure.” He fiddled with the mouse. At 10:07:43 a black Dodge Challenger, the new model designed to look like one from the seventies, pulled up close to the door. A heavyset man got out, went inside. Three minutes later he was seen leaving, a brown Iggy’s bag in hand. He got into this car, the lights came on, and he was gone.

  At 10:14:33 a man appeared from the right side of the screen, limping. He looked like he was in his twenties, but he moved like a much older person. Rail thin, about five five, wearing a jeans jacket.

  “That’s Timmy,” Sal said.

  “Timmy?”

  “I don’t know his last name. He lives just up the street a bit, in that four-s
tory square apartment building? I think, anyway. Works a shift somewhere, gets home about this time, comes by here every night on his way home for a double-patty cheeseburger, large fries, and a chocolate shake.”

  “Every night?” I said.

  “Yeah,” Sal said.

  “He’s, like, a hundred and thirty pounds. Tops.”

  Sal shrugged. “Some people handle fast food really well.”

  “Every single night?” I asked again.

  Sal glanced at me. “You got any idea how many people eat here daily? Look, you’re not gonna catch me knocking our food, but I couldn’t eat this stuff every day of the month.”

  “Hang on there for a second,” I said. I raised a finger to the monitor. “Isn’t that exhaust?”

  It was coming from the Volvo station wagon parked behind Sal’s Subaru. “That car’s been running the whole time,” I said.

  “Yeah, I know,” Sal said. “I was waiting to see if you noticed. I didn’t want to ruin it for you.”

  “It’s not a movie, Sal. I’m okay with spoilers.”

  “Okay. The cops—well, one of them—noticed the exhaust, too.”

  “So you’ve already seen all of this? You know what’s coming?”

  “Sure,” he said.

  At 10:16:13 the door of the ladies’ room opens. It’s Hanna. She darts out the side door. This would have been just before she got into my car. I was probably coming into the restaurant about this time. Seconds later, there I am, holding the bathroom door open, calling inside, then going in.

  “Isn’t that you?” Sal asks.

  “That’s me.”

  “You’re not supposed to go into the women’s restroom, you know.”

  “Just keep it running.”

  I watched myself come back out of the restroom and head for the front of the restaurant.

  The next person to appear is Timmy with the limp, at 10:23:51. He pushes his way out the door, presumably on his way home.