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"I guess I'll take the check," I said. "What about all the personal effects that were still in the vehicle?"
"The check will come in the mail," Andy replied. "I can bring everything else by your place, if you like. Just tell me when."
Andy was all business. To him a wrecked car is a wrecked car. He had no idea what saying good-bye to that piece of my life meant to me.
"Whenever," I said, swallowing a lump that had suddenly lodged in my throat. "If I'm not home, you can leave it with the doorman. What about the rented Taurus?"
"The rental is authorized for another week," he told me. "If you keep it beyond that, it'll be on your nickel."
Owning the Porsche had been a permanent way of avoiding buying a new car. Now I'd have to deal with it. The Taurus just wasn't doing it for me. The sooner I was out of it, the better.
I drove back to the office. Mel wasn't anywhere in sight, but I knew she hadn't gone far, since Rush Limbaugh's voice blared from her radio. I slipped into my own office, shut the door, and picked up the telephone.
In the days before easy access to computers, getting a look at someone's telephone records took time. And getting permission to look at them took even longer, especially if you happened to be working for a jurisdiction or on a case that didn't have a lot of impact. I had learned that having Ross Connors for a boss made accessing those numbers far easier, but first I had to work my way through the telephone company's version of voice-mail h.e.l.l. When I finally reached the right person and told her what I was looking for, she said she'd need time to check out my credentials as well as to gather the information. Fair enough.
While I waited for her to get back to me, I let my fingers do the walking to check out cab companies. Wink Winkler had definitely taken a cab to the University District. How had he left? As soon as I tried talking with dispatchers, I ran into a stumbling block. They needed an exact address in order to check their records, but I still didn't know where Wink had been going when he exited the cab. Had he been on his way to see Elvira or had he been headed for the foundation offices instead?
In order to get a handle on that, I called the Washington State Patrol Crime Lab and asked to speak to Wendy Dryer. I had known her from the time she had walked into the crime lab as a lowly evidence clerk. Now she was the state's lead fiber a.n.a.lyst. Wendy sounded genuinely glad to hear from me.
"Hey, Beau," she said. "Long time no see. What are you doing these days?"
"Working for the AG's office."
"The s.h.i.t squad?" she asked with a barely suppressed giggle.
"That's the one, and don't give me any grief about it," I grumbled. "I only work here. I'm not the numbskull who dreamed up the name."
"What do you need?"
"Are you the one who's handling the Elvira Marchbank case?"
"Holding rather than handling," she said. "Captain Kramer told me it's most likely an accidental death with no particular rush."
"Captain Kramer could be wrong about its being an accident," I countered. "And I seem to be working the same case."
Wendy's tone turned serious. "A homicide, then," she said. "What exactly are you looking for?"
"I'm trying to learn who all might have been at the house before Elvira died."
"You should check with latent fingerprints for that."
"I will," I said, "but in the meantime, I'd like you to check for tennis-ball fibers on the carpet."
Wendy laughed outright at that. "Tennis-ball fibers? Are you kidding? The woman was in her eighties. It doesn't seem like she'd be whacking tennis b.a.l.l.s around."
"Humor me," I said. "And let me know if you find any."
"Give me your number, then," she said. "I'll call you when I know something."
An hour after I originally got off the phone with the telephone company rep, Barbara Galvin knocked on my door and handed over a multipage fax. With my reading gla.s.ses plastered on my face, I read down the column of computer-generated records. And there, at 3:45 P.M. on Tuesday-right in the middle of the time when Sister Mary Katherine had said she was there-was the last phone call Elvira Marchbank ever made-a call from Seattle's 206 area code to a 425 number on the east side of Lake Washington.
As soon I saw the number, it looked familiar. I pulled out my notebook and thumbed through it to the last few pages and the things I had jotted down in the course of my conversation with Raelene Landreth. The 425 number was the same one Raelene had given me as her home number in Medina, so I was right. When things started to go bad, Elvira had gone looking for help, all right, but not to Wink Winkler. No, she had gone straight to Tom Landreth, the guy whose first wedding had given Elvira and Albert Marchbank their una.s.sailable alibi for murder.
Phone calls work like daisy chains-one phone number leads to another. If Elvira had called Tom, whom had he called in turn? While I still had the phone company numbers in order, I called back to trace Landreth's recent telephone history. And while that process was under way, it seemed like a good idea to go see the man.
Telephone calls are fine as far as they go, but for getting usable information and real answers to tough questions, there's nothing like an old-fashioned eyeball-to-eyeball visit.
CHAPTER 18.
WHEN YOU HEAR ABOUT "Lone Ranger cops," you're usually hearing about young cops-ambitious ones. By the time cops get to be my age, Lone Ranger cops have either wised up or are dead. There's not much middle ground.
With my unfortunate track record with partners, when I joined s.h.i.t, the ability to work solo had been high on my list of requirements, but working solo is fine only up to a point, and working without backup is downright stupid. Needing to enlist some help, I went prowling through the office.
A glance at the duty roster at midafternoon on this January Friday told me that Mel Soames and I were the only Special Homicide investigators still in the office. Mel wasn't my first choice for this little ride-along, and not because she isn't a good cop. My reluctance had nothing to do with her and everything to do with me.
I'm still carrying a lot of emotional baggage from losing Sue Danielson in her tiny Fremont apartment. Her death may not have been my fault but, in my book, it was still my responsibility. Her ex-husband was the one who actually pulled the trigger. Rationally I know I didn't cause Sue's death. The problem is, I didn't prevent it either. If only I had arrived on the scene a few minutes earlier...If onlyIhad been smart enough to figure out what was going on...An endless supply of woulda, coulda, shoulda litanies plague my late-night hours. I drag out of bed the next morning groggy and sleep-deprived, but the outcome is always the same: I'm alive, and Sue Danielson is dead.
Heading out to interview a possible homicide suspect, I was reluctant to put Mel Soames into a life-or-death situation. What if some blunder on my part put Mel at risk? Still, I didn't have much choice. When I tapped on her door, she turned down her radio. "Come in," she said. "What's up?"
"Care to take a trip?"
"What kind of trip?"
"The bulletproof vest kind," I told her.
"You bet," she said with a grin, and reached for her small-of-back holster, which was hanging on the back of her chair. "Sounds like the best offer I've had all day."
By the time we pulled up in front of Tom and Raelene Landreth's place in Medina, I had briefed Mel on everything I knew.
"So you suspect Elvira's death wasn't accidental after all and you think Landreth may have had something to do with it?"
"That's one possible scenario," I said. "Raelene said Elvira treated Tom like a long-lost son, so maybe he's in line to inherit."
"Sounds possible," Mel agreed. "Even sounds like motive."
"We'll see," I said. "Once we talk to him."
If you live in the Seattle area, the word "Medina" conjures an image of palatial mansions spilling over steep lakeside bluffs and wandering down to the water. It's where many of Seattle's elite meet and greet. It's also where Bill and Melinda Gates have their sprawling family compound.
I may live in a downtown penthouse condo now, but in my heart I'm still a poor kid from the wrong side of the tracks in Ballard. My mother struggled every day to keep things together. She stretched our meager budget by sewing her own clothing and mine as well. All my cla.s.smates' shirts came from places like JCPenney or Monkey Ward. Mine were homemade, a telling difference that made me the b.u.t.t of countless schoolyard jokes. The sense of inadequacy that grew out of those years is still a visible chip on my shoulder.
When I pulled up in front of Raelene and Tom Landreth's place in Medina, I was prepared to be intimidated. The house, a large two-story affair with faded cedar-shingle siding and two separate wings, was set in the middle of a huge hedge-lined lot. A big Dodge Ram Diesel hauling a trailer full of lawn equipment was parked outside. One guy was raking fallen leaves and branches while another gave the hedge a dead-level flattop. A third was blowing debris off the front porch and sidewalk. He nodded in acknowledgment as Mel and I stepped onto the porch and rang the bell.
Although the yard swarmed with landscape workers, the house itself seemed almost deserted. Drapes were still drawn and no interior lights were visible. For a long time after the bell sounded, no one answered. Mel and I were about to leave when I heard a muttering from inside.
"I'm coming. I'm coming. Hold your horses." Seconds later the door was flung open by an unkempt man wearing a frayed woolen bathrobe and a pair of worn Romeos. "Who are you?" he demanded. "Whatever you're selling, I don't want any."
I produced my wallet and ID and handed it over. "I'm J. P. Beaumont," I explained as he peered at it through bleary, bloodshot eyes. "This is my a.s.sociate, Melissa Soames. We're with the attorney general's Special Homicide Investigation Team. We're looking for Tom Landreth."
"That's me," he mumbled. "Did you say homicide? Whaddya want?"
I had known Tom Landreth was about three years older than his first wife, but compared with the quiet-spoken, dignified Faye, this guy appeared to be a loudmouthed, doddering old man. He was also a drunk.
They say it takes one to know one. I knew Tom Landreth was a drunk the moment he opened the door. I knew it even before I saw the beaker-sized gla.s.s of scotch-scotch with no ice-that he held in one hand. There was booze in his hand, booze on his breath, and booze leaking out of his pores. When people in AA meetings talk about "drinking and stinking," they aren't kidding. Poor Tom Landreth was a textbook case.
"We'd like to talk to you about Madeline Marchbank," I said.
Tom staggered back on his heels. He might have fallen over backward if Mel hadn't reached out, grabbed his elbow, and steadied him. Once he regained his balance he shook off her hand and then glowered at me.
"Madeline? Whaddya want to know about her for?" he asked. "Been dead a long d.a.m.ned time. Who cares anymore?"
"That's what we were wondering," I said. "Who does care? Someone must. Mind if we come in?"
Reluctantly, Tom stepped aside and allowed us into what should have been a gracious living room. It wasn't. The place was a wreck. A disorderly jumble of old newspapers, stacks of magazines, loose mail, and dirty dishes covered every flat surface. The dirty carpet was mostly invisible beneath heaps and mounds of unwashed clothing. Someone was willing to pay to maintain the outside appearance of the place and make it look as though it still belonged in this neighborhood. Inside, they didn't bother to keep up the pretense.
Seemingly unaffected by the filth, Tom led us through the debris. He halfheartedly swiped some of the mess off a grimy couch, clearing a place for us to sit. I couldn't help thinking about Faye Landreth in her tiny but immaculate downtown condo. And I thought about Raelene Landreth wearing her designer outfit and sitting behind her polished desk in the Marchbank Foundation office. There was nothing in the mess that looked as if it belonged to Raelene, making me wonder if she didn't hole up in some other part of the house, as far away from her drunken husband as she could get.
Faye Landreth may have thought she had gotten the short end of the stick when Raelene moved in on her marriage, but right then-sitting on a dirty couch in that filthy living room-I knew that, no matter what the financial arrangements, Faye was better off than she would have been had she stuck it out.
Tom Landreth cleared off a nearby chair and dropped heavily onto it. Despite his inebriation, he managed this maneuver without spilling any of his scotch. Not only was he a drunk, he was a practiced drunk.
"Sorry about that-the mess, I mean," he said after taking a long drink. "Cleaning lady quit, you know. Wife can't seem to find another." He slurred his words despite an obvious effort on his part to enunciate clearly. "What was it you want again?"
"To talk about Madeline Marchbank," I said.
"That's right, that's right," he muttered. "My father's partner's sister. Died young. Murdered. Tragic loss-tragic." He took another drink. He tapped his foot. "Never solved, either," he added.
"You're right," I agreed. "It was never solved."
"So why're you talking to me about it?"
"I believe the murder took place on your wedding day-the day you married your first wife."
"Yes," he said, nodding. "I guess it did."
"Two people involved in that case, Albert and Elvira Marchbank, were dropped from the list of suspects because detectives were told they had been in Canada attending your wedding."
Tom Landreth frowned in wary concentration, the way drunks do when they know the conversation has gone too far but they're too smashed to do anything but answer. "Right," he said at last. "They were there all right, Albert and Elvira."
"Who else was there?"
He stared at me dumbly.
"At the wedding," I prodded. "Who else attended?"
"Well, Faye, of course," he said. "And her parents."
The bride and her parents. I gave the man credit for going for the obvious. "What about your grandparents?" I asked. "The Crosbys. Were they there?"
"My mother's parents?" He looked puzzled. "I don't remember. It was a long time ago, for chrissakes. More than fifty years."
"You can't remember if your grandparents were there, but you're sure Albert and Elvira Marchbank were?"
Landreth stood up, swayed slightly, got his bearings, then lurched across the room. On the far side of the living room was a wet bar, the granite countertop littered with countless dead-soldier Dewar's bottles standing at attention. He refilled his gla.s.s, took a drink, and then stared at me belligerently.
"They were there," he declared. "That I do remember!"
"Good," I said rea.s.suringly. "Fine. I'm glad to hear it. Now, about Wednesday."
"What about Wednesday?"
"Did you hear from Elvira that day?"
He blinked once before he answered as if sensing a trap. "No," he said then. "Of course not."
"Why 'of course not'?" I asked. "You and Elvira were close, weren't you? You're sure she didn't call you on Wednesday afternoon to tell you about her unexpected visitor?"
"No," he repeated. "I don't know anything about a visitor. No idea what you're talking about."
Had it been up to me, I probably would have left right then, but that was when Mel turned on the charm and went into action.
"Come on, Mr. Landreth," she said. "You see, we already know about the phone call. We know that an eyewitness from that old case came to visit Elvira. I'm guessing she called to tell you-to warn you-that she had decided to do the right thing and turn herself in."
Landreth stared at Mel. His mouth dropped open. "You've got no right to tap my phone. I've done nothing wrong."
In his effort to be cagey, Landreth had tripped himself up. We had the phone records, but he had made the a.s.sumption that we had somehow heard what Elvira had said to him.
"So that is what she said?" Mel probed.
"I couldn't believe she'd do such a thing," Tom declared. "I asked her that-why after all these years? And do you know what she said? That she was going to dissolve the Marchbank Foundation and sell off all the a.s.sets-just like that. After all the work Raelene and I have done. Elvira said there was no point. That once people heard about what happened to Madeline, it would all be over anyway. We wouldn't be able to raise another dime."
"How would she go about doing that?" Mel asked. "Dissolving the foundation, I mean."
"The board of directors would have to agree."
"And they are?"
"Elvira, of course, myself, and a longtime friend of the family."
"This longtime friend wouldn't happen to be named William Winkler, would he?" I asked.
Tom looked at me balefully. "As a matter of fact, yes," he said. "But no one calls him William. Dad always called him Wink. My father didn't mind when the Marchbank name was the one that went on the foundation. Even though he and Albert were partners, that was the name of the company as well-Marchbank Broadcasting. But Dad was the one who insisted that Wink be on the board of directors. He said it was important to have someone impartial on it, someone who wasn't directly involved."