“All right,” Hardy said. “That was your assumption. That the cleaver was the murder weapon, is that true?”
“Yes.”
“All right. Accepting that hypothesis for the moment, were there any other clues that indicated to you, a trained investigator, how the murder had actually taken place?”
“I’m not sure what you mean. The deceased was hit from behind with the cleaver.”
“Yes, but just before that. The deceased was seated at the table when he was struck, granted. But was there not a water ring on the table?”
“Oh, that. Yes.”
“And what did you assume from that?”
“That Defendant was sitting—”
“Excuse me.” Hardy, playing with her rhythm, interrupted and looked up at the judge expectantly. “Your Honor, move to strike that last phrase.”
“Granted.” Braun frowned down at Schiff, who was all of a sudden aware that Hardy had tricked her—she really should have known better. He’d lulled her with these mundane questions and caught her off guard. She would have to be more careful or risk losing her credibility. “Sergeant,” the judge intoned at her most sanctimonious, “the jury will decide whether this defendant or someone else entirely was sitting with Mr. Preslee. Just stick to what you observed.”
Hardy was graciousness itself. A quick, warm smile, a barely perceptible nod. “Thank you, Your Honor. Now, Sergeant, again . . .”
She wanted to punch him.
“We were talking about a water ring on the table, Sergeant, and your theory of the murder.”
Schiff tossed another look at Stier, who’d developed a frown, and then at the jury. “It appeared that the assailant, Mr. Preslee’s murderer, had been sitting across the table from him, perhaps just talking, having a glass of water, and possibly smoking marijuana. At some point the assailant got up—maybe on the pretext of refilling the glass—got behind Mr. Preslee, grabbed the cleaver, and hit him.”
Hardy stood relaxed in front of her. “Very succinct, Sergeant, and I believe supported by the evidence.”
Herself confused by Hardy’s comment, Schiff could only manage a small nod. “Thank you,” she murmured, and realized that this interrogation had somehow gotten away from her.
Hardy was moving ahead. “Sergeant, what was the approximate distance between where the deceased was hit and the kitchen sink right behind it?”
He was off on another apparent tangent. Schiff didn’t see the point of any of these questions, and yet Stier was allowing them. Why wasn’t he objecting to something? Her sense of dread increased, and she felt a drop of perspiration fall out of her hairline. She brushed it away and tried to narrow her focus. Just relax and stay with the facts, she told herself. And then, aloud, “Not far. Maybe eighteen inches.”
“And did the blood on the floor cover any of this eighteen-inch area?”
“You can see from the pictures—”
“Yes, but I’m asking you to calibrate it for us.”
“About half of it.”
“So, according to your theory of the case, the assailant killed Mr. Preslee, then stood behind him cleaning up the murder weapon in the sink?”
“Yes.”
“And the glass?”
“Yes.”
“While blood dripped off the table just behind?”
“Yes.”
“Did you find any shoeprints in the blood itself?”
“No.”
“Or tracks or any traces of blood except directly at the scene?”
“No.”
“So according to your theory, Sergeant, the assailant stood directly behind the deceased, with blood dripping onto the floor from the table, into an area only eighteen inches wide. And stood there long enough to wash both the cleaver and the glass. Is that correct?”
“Yes.”
Her eyes flitted between the jury box and Stier. I’ve got no idea where he’s going with this. The thought unnerved her.
“Sergeant, did you and your partner obtain a warrant to search the Townshends’ house?”
“Yes, we did.”
Hardy, in no hurry, took another walk back to his table, picked up a piece of paper, then turned again and walked all the way back to her, handing her the exhibit. “Sergeant, do you recognize this?”
“Yes, of course. It’s the search warrant we served on Defendant the day after Levon Preslee’s murder.”
“Wasn’t it first thing in the morning, just at seven o’clock, that you served this warrant?”
“Yes.”
“Would you please read for the jury, Sergeant, from the affidavit section, what you were searching for with this warrant?”
Schiff looked down at the paper and, suddenly aware of where this must be going, read in a mechanical voice. “Computer disks and downloads, business and banking records, shoes and clothes that might contain blood spatter—”
“Thank you, Sergeant, that’s enough. So you were looking for blood spatter, true?”
“Yes.”
“And why was that?”
In the witness box Schiff lifted a hand, then cleared her throat. “We thought there might be blood spatter on her clothes and shoes.”
“And why is that?”
Schiff drew a breath and made herself sit up straight and face the jury. She would brazen it out. “Because we figured the blood dripping on the floor right behind her would have some spatter, even if microscopic.”
“Were you looking for spatter anywhere else?”
“We thought it possible there would be some on material covering the upper body.”
“Why did you think that?” Hardy now had Schiff firmly assuming the role she didn’t want and wasn’t qualified for, that of crime-scene reconstruction expert. But if Stier wasn’t objecting, she couldn’t very well refuse to answer the question.
“We thought . . . after the first blow . . . the assailant would have to lift the cleaver, which now had blood on it, and swing it hard down again. Some blood might have come off in the swinging or from the second impact.”
Now Hardy turned and faced the jury, impassive. Without looking at Schiff he asked, “Sergeant, did you in fact search for blood on the clothes you took from Maya’s home early in the morning after the murder of Mr. Preslee?”
“Yes, we did.”
“Isn’t it true, Sergeant, that you removed all the clothing from the house, including her husband’s and children’s? And removed for testing the contents of the hampers and laundry room? Everything, in fact, except for what they were wearing?”
“Yes.”
“And were there clothes in the washing machine or dryer or anywhere else in the house?”
“No.”
“So you got them all?”
“Yes.”
She hated this. She knew it was coming across to the jury as some form of police harassment. Even if she didn’t have the specific evidence. She knew that it wasn’t particularly difficult to be in a room or an apartment, even for a substantial period of time, and leave no physical sign of it, especially if you knew you were going in to commit a crime. She knew that Maya had been at Levon’s, and if not to kill him, then why? She didn’t know what the damned Townshend woman had done with her clothes and her shoes in the time she’d had to get rid of them. And if she hadn’t gotten rid of them, Schiff didn’t know how she’d avoided the blood spatter. But none of that made any difference to her core belief that this defendant was a crafty and dangerous killer. “We were just trying to be thorough.”
“Indeed,” Hardy said, “thoroughness is commendable. And you were careful when you seized this clothing to package it appropriately for later testing for blood by the crime lab, were you not?”
“Yes.”
“But with all their sophisticated testing, the crime lab found no evidence whatsoever of blood on anything you seized from Maya Townshend’s house, did they?”
Stier finally came alive. “Objection. Hearsay.”
“Sustained.”
“Okay, let me ask it this way, then, Inspector. I want you to assume that lab personnel will testify that they found no blood. That’s not consistent with your theory of how this crime was committed, is it?”
Now Stier compounded his error. He should have let Schiff say that maybe the defendant had gotten rid of her clothes, or maybe there just wasn’t enough blood to find, but instead he objected. “Speculation, Your Honor. Irrelevant. Inspector Schiff’s theories are not evidence.”
Hardy couldn’t believe his luck. “Well, gosh, Your Honor,” he said. “My point exactly. Since the prosecution concedes that Inspector Schiff’s theories aren’t evidence, and since the prosecution doesn’t seem to have anything besides her theories, I have no further questions.”
Braun banged her gavel and chastised Hardy for making speeches, but he didn’t care.
For the rest of the afternoon Hardy continued to hammer the same point through the other lab witnesses.
“You’re a fingerprint expert, right? Did you find fingerprints inside Mr. Preslee’s home?”
“Yes. Lots of them.”
“Were any of those Maya Townshend’s fingerprints?”
“No.”
“In fact, there are several fingerprints that belong to people whom you’ve never identified, isn’t that right?”
“Yes.”
“Fingerprints at the table where the victim was seated?”
“Yes.”
“Fingerprints at the sink where the cleaver was allegedly washed?”
“Yes.”
“Fingerprints on the interior door handle of the apartment?”
“Yes.”
“And none of these are Maya’s, and some of them are unidentified, right?”
“Correct.”
Hardy did the same with the DNA—some recovered, some unidentified, none belonging to Maya. When he was finally done with his last cross-examination at quarter to five, Hardy took a long beat and threw a look at Stier, wilting at his own table. The prosecutor had taken a beating today on the Preslee evidence, and he knew it.
But next up, he would be talking about motive. And motive evidence, Hardy knew, was going to be brutal.
27
The apartment door opened and Wyatt Hunt stood looking at his young associate. “What is this bullshit, Craig?”
“What bullshit?”
“ ‘What bullshit?’ he asks. Calling in sick when you look about as sick as I do, except for a little red around the eyes. Are you stoned?”
“Slightly.”
“And what do you hope to accomplish by that?”
“Nothing. I’m not trying to accomplish anything. Except figure out how I’m going to get back with Tam.”
“You think better when you’re loaded?”
“I don’t know. Probably not.”
“And yet here you are.”
“I just thought I’d take a day off and think about things.”
“This is thinking about things?”
“No. I felt bad about Tam and was trying to cheer myself up about it.”
“Yeah, you’re just the picture of good cheer.”
“What do you want me to say?”
“There’s nothing you can say, Craig. You know the rules. You want a day off, call in and ask for a day off. If I’m not mistaken, you’ve done that before and it’s never been a problem. But you don’t call in sick when you’re not sick.”
“I’m sorry.”
“Yeah, well . . .” Hunt hated this, hated Craig at this moment. “You want to get back with Tamara, it’s not rocket science. She wants you to stop with this dope shit.”
“She send you here?”
“Nope. I wanted to see how bad it was.”
Chiurco blew into the air between them. “It’s not as bad as it looks.”
“That’s great. I’m glad to hear it. Because to tell you the truth, it doesn’t look too good right now.”
“You going to fire me?”
“I’m thinking about it. I feel a little betrayed, if you want to know.”
“Not by me?”
“Yep, by you.”
“Wyatt, come on. This is the first time for anything like this in like—what?—five years. We’re not exactly in the busiest time we’ve ever had. I just made a bad decision.”
“Couple of ’em. Notice any connection between the dope and the bad decisions?”
“Maybe. A little.”
“Maybe a little, yeah. And in the meanwhile Dismas Hardy comes by my place last night and gives us a shitload of work and I’m thinking you and me are going to be humping round the clock on this Townshend case for at least the next few days, maybe a week. Except you call in sick when you’re not actually sick at all, and Tam’s all messed up back at the office, can barely answer the phone, and I’ve got no goddamn backup.”
“I didn’t know that. I couldn’t have known that.”
“No, I know. Which is why one of the rules is you show up at work when somebody’s paying you, so that if there’s work to do, you’re there to do it.”
Chiurco hung his head; his shoulders rose and fell. “Again, I’m sorry.”
Hunt waited until Craig’s head came back up, then looked him square in the eyes. “Shit,” he said. “This is no way to run an airline. Didn’t we already have a discussion about this once? How am I supposed to write a reference letter if this is going on? How about, if this is your chosen field, maybe you want to avoid things that threaten it?”
“I don’t usually smoke during the day.”
“You shouldn’t be usually smoking at all, Craig. You might lose your job over it—hell, your whole profession. Worse, you’re losing Tam, and you already know that.”
“I know. You think I don’t know that? That’s what I’ve been trying to figure out all day.”
“What’s to figure out?”
No answer.
“And beyond that, Craig, while we’re on the topic, being high isn’t going to help you figure anything out. Especially this. Isn’t that pretty goddamn obvious?”
“It should be, yes.”
“So?”
“So”—a sigh—“so I’m gonna stop. I mean it. Starting now, Wyatt. I swear to God.”
Hunt just stared at him, this discussion already far beyond his tolerance level. “So what do you think I ought to do about this now? About you?”
“You could fire me if you want.”
“I know I could. Maybe I should. If this wasn’t the first time you screwed up like this, I sure as hell would.”
A trace of hope showed itself on Chiurco’s face. “I swear to God, Wyatt, it’s over. You can tell Tam it’s over.”
“You can tell Tam it’s over, Craig. I’ve got other work to do.”
“I could—”
“No, you can’t.” He pointed a finger at Craig’s chest. “Tomorrow you can if you’re straight by then. And this is the one and only warning. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, fuck you. Clear?”
“It is. I hear you.”
“I hope so,” Wyatt said. Then, “Get some sleep and be on time tomorrow.” He turned on his heel and stalked off down the hallway.
Bay Beans West was open again, business at least back to slow but steady.
Wyatt Hunt, the embers of his anger still smoldering in his gut, stood across Haight Street on this cool and overcast Tuesday lunch hour and watched people come and go for about twenty minutes. The clientele couldn’t be more diverse, and Hunt reflected that if we were what we eat and drink, then we human beings were really mostly the same; nothing should really separate us at all, since apparently every ethnic group in the world, both sexes, and people at every economic level drank coffee and lots of it.
Hunt entered at last and got his place, fifth in the ordering line. Getting up to the counter, he ordered a regular with a couple of shots of espresso. Leaning over, he then quickly showed his business card and mentioned that he was an investigator—he specifically did not say police investigator. Alt
hough quite often that’s what people heard, and he usually didn’t correct them. Could he please, he inquired, have a few words with the manager? It was about the Maya Townshend case.
Before he’d had his order filled, a flamboyantly dressed, pony-tailed young man with a diamond in his ear appeared at Hunt’s side and introduced himself as the manager, Eugenio Ruiz. Thanking him for coming over, Hunt again flashed his business card and this time identified himself as a private investigator working with the defense on the Townshend case.
“Okay, what can I do for you?”
“We’re trying to get a little specific,” Hunt said, “about the way Dylan Vogler ran the marijuana out of here. Did you know anything about that?”
Ruiz had quick, dark brown eyes, and they flashed over to the register and then back to Hunt. “Dylan pretty much handled all of that himself, I think.”
“Really?”
“Pretty much, yeah.”
At the counter they called Hunt’s coffee, and he turned and smiled. “That’s me, be right back. You mind we go sit someplace for just a minute?”
“A minute. Sure.”
Hunt got his coffee, turned, and found Ruiz again at his elbow. “There’s some chairs in my office,” he said. “After me.” And led the way.
The room was small and narrow, maybe six or seven by ten feet. A cluttered desk sat along the left-hand wall, and Hunt took one of the two chairs at the far end of it. The walls were papered with posters of coffee-growing locations—Costa Rica, Hawaii, Kenya, Indonesia. Ruiz closed the door behind them, then pulled over a small wooden barrel and sat on it. “I’ve only got a couple of minutes,” he began. “We’re getting into a rush out there.”
“Seems like you’ve always got a rush.”
“That’s pretty much true.” A hopeful smile came and just as quickly disappeared.
Hunt took a small sip of his hot coffee. “Really delicious,” he said.
“Yes.”
“Well,” Hunt said, “I guess the big question is how Dylan distributed the money to the workers here. Was it only the assistant managers, or did everybody get a slice?”
Ruiz, to Hunt’s gratification caught completely off-guard, opened and closed his mouth a couple of times. “Um, no.”
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