Dead Guilty dffi-2

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Dead Guilty dffi-2 Page 30

by Beverly Connor


  property, including the mineral rights. These aren’t cut

  diamonds. They are the way God made them.’’ ‘‘This is Georgia. We don’t have diamonds just lying

  around,’’ said Garnett.

  Diane cleared her throat, and they both looked at her. ‘‘According to Mike, in the 1800s when prospectors

  panned for gold in Georgia, occasionally they’d find

  small diamonds. It sparked a few diamond rushes, but

  no one has been able to find the source.’’

  ‘‘So he could have found these in his backyard,’’

  said Keating.

  ‘‘None has ever been found this large. I believe

  Mike told me the largest ever found was about two

  carats. I think it would be unlikely he’d find three

  significantly larger ones in his backyard.’’

  ‘‘But not impossible,’’ said lawyer Keating. ‘‘Mr. Keating. Why don’t you let us keep them in

  our safe for the time being? You have a good argu

  ment, and all things being equal, it will certainly hold

  up in court. However, Mr. Waller was murdered, and

  Chief Garnett wants to find out who did it. And these

  stones may very well belong to someone else—for in

  stance, Mr. Waller may have been holding them for

  a friend.’’

  ‘‘How would anyone else claim them?’’ asked Keat

  ing. ‘‘All three look alike. How would this hypotheti

  cal friend describe them to a court of law?’’ ‘‘By the internal structure. It’s like a fingerprint.

  Every diamond is unique.’’

  ‘‘All right, then. I certainly don’t want to keep them

  in my office.’’

  ‘‘That’s fine by me,’’ said Garnett. ‘‘And I don’t

  want to take anything that rightfully belongs to his

  heirs.’’ He shook his head. ‘‘This is getting far too

  complicated.’’

  ‘‘What are you complaining about?’’ said Keating.

  ‘‘You don’t have to deal with the twins.’’

  Chapter 38

  Chief Garnett stayed after Russell Keating went back to his office. It was not the first time he’d been in Diane’s museum office, but he hadn’t paid any atten tion to the decor that first time, as Diane recalled. It had been strictly business. He stared at the photo graph of her dangling at the end of a rope from the vertical entrance to a cave.

  ‘‘This is what you do for fun?’’

  ‘‘Yes. It’s very relaxing.’’

  ‘‘If you say so. It doesn’t look relaxing to me.’’ He

  turned his attention to the Escher prints on the other wall—an impossible waterfall, a castle with its equally impossible ascending and descending staircase, and a tessellation of angels and devils. ‘‘I wonder what our profiler would think of all this,’’ he said.

  ‘‘How’s he working out?’’

  ‘‘Actually, I don’t find him very useful. He has to change his profile substantially every time we get a new bit of information. He was the commissioner’s idea,’’ he added.

  ‘‘He’ll have to change the profile again, after this. You realize we have two victims now with diamonds that they shouldn’t have been able to afford.’’

  ‘‘So you don’t buy the backyard deal?’’ said Garnett with a tired smile.

  ‘‘Of course not.’’

  ‘‘Where did they get them?’’ He sat down again across from Diane and crossed his legs.

  ‘‘The choices are: he bought them, he stole them, he found them, they were given to him,’’ said Diane. ‘‘It seems unlikely that he bought them. He may have stolen them, but he didn’t have theft in his background.’’

  ‘‘A lot of money adds up to a lot of temptation.’’

  ‘‘Yes, it does. Perhaps Raymond Waller, Chris Ed wards and Steven Mayberry worked together,’’ said Diane. ‘‘They got hold of the diamonds, had a fallingout and killed each other. Perhaps Steven Mayberry is the last man standing.’’

  ‘‘For the first time, we’re getting somewhere.’’ Garnett unfolded his legs and leaned forward, his fore arms on his knees.

  mind was racing

  another thing Chris

  through possibilities. and Raymond had in

  Diane’s ‘‘There’s common afford—a victims.’’

  ‘‘Coincidence,’’ argument.

  ‘‘Maybe. Let’s were found hanging. That is a very uncommon way to murder someone. They were all dressed alike in clothes that didn’t fit. In fact, all the clothes were the same size—extra-large coveralls.’’

  ‘‘Were they?’’

  ‘‘It was in the report.’’

  ‘‘That’s right.’’

  besides having diamonds they couldn’t direct connection to the Cobber’s Wood

  Garnett offered, as a counter

  look at them for a moment. They ‘‘That could have been to conceal their identities too,’’ said Diane. ‘‘He wanted to get rid of their clothes, but he didn’t want them naked.’’ She shrugged.

  Garnett pulled up his chair and leaned on Diane’s desk. ‘‘And the tips of their fingers were cut off. That was either to thwart identification, or to collect a trophy.’’

  ‘‘I can see why the profiler thinks it’s a serial killer,’’ said Diane. ‘‘That’s what it looks like. The guy who was calling me certainly sounded

  would peg him as a candidate for

  like a nutcase. I a serial killer—I

  mean, the flowers, then attacking me.’’

  ‘‘But he also suggested he was angry about some in bullying—he talked justice. What was it—gossip,

  about?’’

  ‘‘Yes, he did. Let’s look at

  way,’’ said Diane. ‘‘He said he is not a murderer. He

  seems obsessed with justice—and injustice. If he com

  mitted the Cobber’s Wood murders, perhaps he

  hanged them for their real or imagined crimes, what

  ever they might have been. He dressed them up like

  prisoners. Perhaps he really believes himself to be

  their executioner for just cause, not their murderer.

  Their fingers were cut off to avoid them being identi

  fied if they were found.’’

  ‘‘What if they’d been found before their faces rot

  ted? They could have been identified that way.’’ Diane frowned for a moment. ‘‘Maybe there is a

  reason the fingerprints are a greater threat to identifi

  cation than their faces or their teeth.’’

  ‘‘How’s that?’’ asked Garnett.

  ‘‘They grew up in the northeast, not here. Maybe

  that’s where they lived, and he thought being far away

  from home would delay identification.’’

  the killings another ‘‘They grew up in the northeast? How do you

  know that?’’

  ‘‘We got back the chemical analysis on the bones.

  Different regions of the world have different chemi

  cals in their soil and different kinds of air pollutions.

  These chemical combinations show up in bones. I sent

  the report to your office.’’

  ‘‘I haven’t seen it. You’re thinking that he thought

  they might not be recognized down here, far away

  from home?’’

  ‘‘Yes. But he might have realized we’d put their

  fingerprints through a database and get a hit, so he

  cut their fingers off.’’

  ‘‘Speaking of fingerprints,’’ said Garnett. ‘‘David hasn’t gotten a hit off any of the fingerprints

  we’ve found and he’s been through all the databases

  we have access to.’’

  Diane realized that she hadn’t yet told Garnett<
br />
  about the tasks she’d assigned to Jin and Neva. She

  explained her idea about the plastic surgery discussion

  boards and Neva’s idea about the tattoo discussion

  boards.

  ‘‘It’s a long shot,’’ she said.

  ‘‘But that was a good idea. What did we do before

  the Internet?’’

  Diane ignored his comment and continued. ‘‘The

  DNA results on the shed hair may take a while, or it

  might not work. I haven’t heard from Jin.’’ Garnett stood up. ‘‘I feel like we made some prog

  ress. It was good to talk it out.’’ He sounded surprised

  as he said it, as if he hadn’t really expected he could

  talk to Diane and get anywhere.

  Diane’s door swung open and Star peeked in. ‘‘Star,’’ said Frank. ‘‘Ever heard of knocking first?’’ He came in behind Star and put his hands on her

  shoulders.

  ‘‘It’s all right. We’re finished,’’ said Diane. Frank and Garnett shook hands. Star stood staring.

  She suddenly held out her hand to shake Garnett’s. ‘‘Hello, I know who you are. I’m the girl who didn’t

  kill her family.’’

  ‘‘Star!’’ said Frank and Diane together.

  Garnett had a pained look on his face, muttered

  something about being sorry for her loss, said good

  bye to Diane and hurried out.

  ‘‘Well,’’ said Star when he was gone. ‘‘When you

  use bad judgment, there are consequences. Isn’t that

  what you are always telling me, Uncle Frank? So, can

  I see the mummy and the Victorian pickle jar?’’ Frank and Diane looked at each other and sighed. ‘‘The mummy’s upstairs.’’

  She took them up to the conservation lab and

  showed them the amulets and the mummy. Star was

  fascinated with both, but disappointed that the object

  in the pickle jar had been used to get blood and tissue

  samples. Frank was more interested in the baseball

  collection that Korey showed him. Afterward, they

  had dinner in the museum restaurant and Diane fol

  lowed them home in her rental SUV.

  Diane curled up on the couch with Frank and a

  glass of wine, hoping that there wouldn’t be any mur

  ders tonight.

  ‘‘This has been a nice evening,’’ she said. ‘‘We had a good time. Loved that baseball col

  lection.’’

  ‘‘I needed to slow down. Too much has been hap

  pening.’’

  ‘‘I’ve planned for your relaxation,’’ he said. ‘‘The doors and windows are locked and barred. Star is stay ing in tonight, so all is well. Oh, and I caught two of my identity thieves today. Two seventeen-year-olds from upper-middle-class families. They would have just gotten a slap on the wrist, but one of the people whose identity they stole has a brother who is a state

  senator, so their butts are in trouble.’’

  ‘‘Do you believe in coincidences?’’

  ‘‘They happen, but as a rule, no.’’

  ‘‘As a rule, I don’t either. And that’s what is nag

  ging at me. There doesn’t appear to be any logic to

  the connections that Edwards, Mayberry and Waller

  had with the hanging victims. We can’t figure out if it

  means anything. But the odds seem so much against

  pure coincidence.’’

  ‘‘Don’t think about it. Just let it relax in your brain

  and the answer will come to you.’’

  ‘‘You’re right. I’ll just enjoy you and my wine.’’ Star came into the living room and sat cross-legged

  in a chair opposite them.

  ‘‘I get to pick out the clothes, don’t I? I mean, I

  know you’re paying for them and all.’’

  ‘‘You get to pick them out. Does this mean you are

  going to give college a try?’’

  ‘‘Jennifer’s going to Bartram. Stephanie’s going to

  the University of Georgia. If they can do it, I suppose

  I can give it a try. It’s just a year, isn’t it? I can do

  anything for a year—even prison time.’’ She settled

  back in the chair. ‘‘I have a question.’’

  ‘‘What’s that?’’ asked Diane.

  ‘‘Is it a whole year, like, I mean, most schools let

  out in the summer. Does a year mean I have to go to

  summer school too?’’

  ‘‘Star,’’ began Frank. ‘‘It sounds like you’re trying

  to figure out how to do as little as possible.’’ ‘‘No, I’m just trying to get the rules straight so I

  know what I have to do.’’

  ‘‘One academic year. You don’t have to go to sum

  mer school. But you do have to have a two point

  seven GPA.’’

  ‘‘What if I work real hard and only have a two

  point six?’’

  ‘‘That would be tragic,’’ said Diane.

  ‘‘Okay.’’ She unfolded herself and bounded out of

  the room.

  ‘‘You know,’’ said Frank, ‘‘family life can be nice.’’ Diane nodded, but the talk of family life always

  made her feel the sharp pain of Ariel’s absence.

  Chapter 39

  Jin bopped into Diane’s crime lab office and slammed a folder down on her desk.

  ‘‘We did it, Boss. It’s in there.’’ He did a little dance and spun around.

  ‘‘You’re going to have to be a little more specific. We’ve got so many things working.’’

  ‘‘The hair. The hair. They matched the hair,’’ he sang.

  ‘‘The shed hair protocol worked?’’

  ‘‘GBI came through. They’re all very excited. It matched with the blood in your apartment perfectly— I’m talking nuclear DNA. This is exciting.’’

  ‘‘Jin, you’ve earned your pay. Would you like to take a copy of the report to Garnett?’’

  Jin grinned. ‘‘Sure. I’d love showing him the kind of magic we can perform, and wipe some of those smirks off those guys downtown. Of course, most of them won’t even realize what a feat it was to get read able nuclear DNA from shed hair.’’

  ‘‘Do you get those smirks too? I thought it was just me,’’ said Diane.

  ‘‘No. We all get them. It’s especially bad for Neva, since she used to be down there. They see us as geeks, I guess. However, there’s more. The DNA was the cake, but I have some more evidence that lights the candles.’’

  ‘‘I see you’re on a roll. What’s the other evidence?’’

  ‘‘Cheap orange carpet fibers.’’

  ‘‘In Kacie’s apartment?’’

  ‘‘No. Yours. I went over before I came here and did a sweep of your apartment.’’ He stopped. ‘‘I hope you don’t mind.’’

  ‘‘No, of course not. I hope you vacuumed the whole place.’’

  ‘‘By the way, you have some strange neighbors across the hall.’’

  ‘‘Tell me about it. You don’t know how strange.’’

  ‘‘They asked me if I was moving in, did I have a cat. I told them no, that I was from the crime lab, and they asked me if I knew anything about the best fu neral homes. What’s that about?’’

  ‘‘It’s their hobby. They love funerals. They go to funerals for people they don’t even know.’’

  Jin stood gawking at her. Apparently left speechless.

  ‘‘The landlady told me they had seven children,’’ said Diane. ‘‘All of whom died. They showed her pho tographs of their funerals.’’

 

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