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"She says she loves him," I said.
"That ain't what she spends her time talking about," Hawk said.
"It's a white thing," I said.
In the fifth envelope I picked up, tucked neatly inside the folded stationery, was a Polaroid picture.
"Jeanette Ronan," I said and held the picture up for Hawk to see. Jeanette was naked, standing smiling in front of a canopied bed.
"All of Jeanette Ronan," he said. "Guess life going to be easier for once."
"I wonder who took the picture?" I said.
"Say in the letter?" Hawk asked.
I read the letter. It alluded to the picture and was very detailed in what the naked woman pictured had in mind for the recipient. But it didn't tell me who took it.
"No," I said and handed the letter to Hawk.
He read it carefully. "You know, I never thought of doing that," he said.
"Hang around," I said. "You learn."
"Maybe 'My darling' took the picture," Hawk said.
"It's a Polaroid. If he took it, then why did she mail it to him?"
"So you think somebody else taking nudies of her?" Hawk said. "And she mailing them to 'My darling'?"
"That may be the definition of depravity," I said.
"Or thrift," Hawk said. "Two for one."
"Sometimes your cynicism achieves Shakespearean resonance," I said.
"Coming from you," Hawk said, "that a real compliment."
We continued through the letters. We found three more photographs of Jeanette Ronan nude. No useful explanation in the letters, though the pictures were mentioned. When we got through, we put everything back the way it was and closed up the s...o...b..x. I put the s...o...b..x in the gym bag.
"Look like s.e.xual hara.s.sment to you?" Hawk said.
"Maybe she's hara.s.sing him," I said.
"How many straight single guys you know feel hara.s.sed by getting nude pictures of good-looking women in the mail?" Hawk said.
"Just a thought," I said.
There was a phone on the top of the bureau with an answering machine beside it. I went over and pushed the all-message play b.u.t.ton. The first message began without preamble.
"Brad you sonovab.i.t.c.h," a woman's voice said. "You either send the G.o.dd.a.m.ned support payment or I swear to Christ I'll have you back in court."
"Reach out and touch somebody," Hawk said.
"Hi Brad," another woman's voice. "It's Lisa. I'm feeling neglected. Call me."
We listened to all thirteen calls, the mechanical machine voice announcing time and day of call after each one. The calls spanned at least a week. Two were from the Brighton branch of DePaul Federal Savings asking him to please call. One was from an outfit called Import Credit Company in regard to his car lease payment, please call. There was a call from the Cask and Carafe Wine Shop saying that his check had been returned and asking when he could come in and settle his account. Another angry call about money. Another call from Lisa, this one more urgently wondering why he hadn't called. "I don't want to think I'm just another notch on your gun," she said. Five other calls from women following up on a recent evening, or looking forward to one in the offing.
I wrote down all the names.
"Brad seems to have mixed success with women," I said.
"But not from lack of trying," Hawk said.
"And he's living in one room in Brighton," I said, "and not paying his bills."
"So, unless he very thrifty," Hawk said, "the story he told Susan is right."
"Sounds near dissolution to me," I said.
"You find an address book anywhere?" Hawk said.
"No."
"Checkbook?"
"Nope."
"Maybe his office," Hawk said.
I reached in my coat pocket and took out the keys and found the one marked office.
"Maybe," I said.
chapter twenty-one.
THE FIRST THING we noticed when we went into Sterling's office was the smell. Hawk and I looked at each other. We both knew what it was. I closed the office door behind us and fumbled for the light switch, and found it to the right of the door, and turned on the lights. There was nothing unusual in the outer office. The door to Sterling's private office was closed. As I opened it I was already dreading what I'd find, and dreading telling Susan about it. I turned on the lights. The body was there, facedown on the rug in front of Sterling's desk, a wide black soak of blood showing on the rug under him, the head turned at an angle only death permitted. I turned on the light. The smell was bad. The body had begun to bloat. I didn't want to look. I held my breath and went and squatted on my heels and looked at the face. It wasn't much of a face anymore. It wasn't much of anything anymore. But it wasn't Sterling. I stood and breathed again, trying not to breathe through my nose.
"Not Sterling," I said.
"Anybody we know."
"I don't know him."
Hawk bent over and stared at the corpse for a moment.
"Nope," he said and walked to the desk and turned on the lamp.
"We're going to have to toss the place," I said.
"I know."
"I'll take this office," I said. "You do the outer."
"You know what you're looking for?" Hawk said.
"Clues."
I took two pairs of disposable latex gloves from the Nike bag and gave one pair to Hawk. We put them on. There was a computer on Sterling's desk. I turned it on. It was a Mac, like Susan's. I clicked open the hard drive. There were twenty-six items on the hard drive including a folder marked "Addresses." I opened the drawers in Sterling's desk and found some blank disks. I put one in the computer and copied the hard disk onto it. I put the copy on the desk and shut off the computer. I went through Sterling's desk. I concentrated on breathing through my mouth, and on avoiding eye contact with the corpse. I found no checkbook. The bottom right drawer had a lock. I found a key for it among the ones I'd taken from Sterling's apartment. In the drawer was a narrow case made of gray translucent plastic. In the case were a dozen disks. I took the case out of the drawer and left the drawer unlocked. I added the copy of the hard disk I had made and put the whole thing in the Nike bag on the desktop. I got on my hands and knees and looked under the desk. I turned the desk chair upside down and looked at the underside of it. I rummaged through the wastebasket. I ran my hand over the door frame and felt under the edges of the rug. Feeling under the rug got me closer to the corpse than I wanted to be. I stood up and went and checked the windows. They didn't open. I paused in a corner of the office away from the corpse and surveyed the room. It was a suspended ceiling and a thorough search would include looking behind it, and in the ventilation ducts. But that was too much time invested for what it was likely to earn me. I wanted to see what I had on the disks and I didn't want any cops showing up and taking them away from me. I went to the desk and got the Nike bag and detoured around the corpse into the outer office.
"Anything?" I said.
Hawk was sitting on Patti's desk, still wearing the sanitary gloves.
"Usual stuff," Hawk said. "Invoices, receipts, letters, promotional material. Only thing interesting is what I didn't find."
"Which is?"
"Civil Streets," Hawk said. "There is nothing with their name on it. No file, no letters, no bills, nothing. You find his checkbook?"
"No."
"So wherever he went, he took it with him."
"Yep, and we know he's got one because one of those phone messages was about a bounced check."
"How you feeling?" Hawk said.
"I haven't thrown up yet," I said.
"Good to work with a pro."
"Even better to work out here where the smell isn't as strong," I said.
"Okay. There's that," Hawk said. "You want to wipe down the door k.n.o.bs and the light switches."
"No. It's reasonable that my fingerprints would be there."
"You calling the cops?"
"Yes."
"Law abiding," Hawk said.
I took off the gloves and dropped them into the Nike bag. I put the spare keys in there too, except the one for the office.
"Hang onto these," I said.
"Law abiding, but not crazy," Hawk said.
"I'll be in touch," I said. "When the cops get through yelling at me."
Hawk smiled, took the Nike bag, and went out the office door, leaving it open behind him. I waited five minutes for him to clear the building, then I dialed up Martin Quirk.
chapter twenty-two.
I SAT IN Patti's chair in the outer office for maybe an hour and a half waiting for Quirk to get to me. Quirk hadn't changed much since he made captain. He still showed up at most crime scenes. He spent too much time investigating and too little time managing the department, which was why it took him so long to make captain in the first place, and why a lot of the hierarchy wanted to replace him. And I knew that he cleared more cases than any commander in the department, which was why the hierarchy couldn't replace him. If Quirk knew any of this, he paid no attention to it.
Finally it was my turn.
"You know how to give a statement," Quirk said. "Christ knows you've done enough of them."
He and I were sitting together in the outer office, Quirk on the corner of Patti's desk, me still in her chair, which was too small. Quirk's employees had photographed the corpse and now were dusting for fingerprints, and measuring, and sampling, and poking, and studying. A team from the coroner's office finished getting the remains into a body bag and onto a gurney. They trundled it past us as we sat, leaving behind only the blood-stained rug, a chalk outline, and the strong smell.
"Well," I said. "First of all you'll find my fingerprints on the door and the light switches and the phone."
"I sort of guessed that," Quirk said. "And I'm also guessing that we won't find them anywhere else."
"Of course not," I said.
"Which will not mean that you didn't touch anything else."
"Boy, have you gotten cynical," I said, "since you made captain."
Quirk rarely smiled, and he didn't this time, but his gaze, which was always steady, rested on me a little more lightly than it sometimes did.
"Go on," he said. "Tell me your story."
So I did, as best as I could, since I didn't understand it too well myself. I left out any mention of searching Sterling's apartment. Quirk listened without expression. His thick hands rested quietly on his thighs. He always dressed well. Tonight he had on a blue tweed jacket and a white b.u.t.ton-down shirt with a blue knit tie and gray slacks. He never needed a haircut. He always looked clean-shaven. His shirts were always freshly laundered. His plain toe cordovan shoes were always shined. When I got through explaining myself, Quirk was silent for a time.
Then he said, "Susan's ex-husband?"
"Yes."
He was silent again for a time. Then he shook his head slowly. I shrugged.
"And this is his office," Quirk said after a while. "To which he gave you a key."