Only then did Loogan hear the shot. It startled him awake and he sat up sharply in his bed. He heard his alarm go off, but it was dark outside the window. The clock read 2:09. Then Loogan realized it wasn’t the alarm. His cell phone was ringing; he had left it on the night table.
He answered it and heard Michael Beccanti’s voice. “David, it’s me. Don’t panic.”
He propped a pillow at his back and leaned against the headboard. “I’m not panicking.”
“Were you asleep?” Beccanti said. “I keep forgetting how you sleep.”
“I’m awake now.”
“Good, because I got in through the window again and I’m coming up the stairs. I’m going to switch on the hall light. Don’t let it startle you.”
The light came on. Beccanti appeared in the doorway, folding his cell phone and slipping it into his pocket. He wore blue jeans, a loose black dress shirt with the tails out, a heavy black blazer over all.
“Hello, David,” he said cheerfully.
Loogan closed his phone and turned on the lamp on his night table. He had a T-shirt on, and his boxers, and the blanket pulled up to his waist. He stayed where he was, determined to be unfazed by Beccanti’s sudden appearance.
“Pull up a chair,” he said. “Where have you been?”
There was a straight-back chair by the dresser. Beccanti brought it over to the bed, spun it around, and sat with his arms resting on the back.
“I’m sorry to come so late,” he said. “I lost track of time. I’ve been reading.”
He brought a CD out of a pocket of his blazer and held it up for Loogan to see. It gleamed gold in the lamplight.
“What is it?” Loogan asked.
“It’s what I’ve been reading. I found it in the closet in Tom and Laura’s bedroom. There’s a space in the wall, behind a clever little panel. There was five hundred in cash in there, and this. Well, not this exactly. This is a copy. I burned it on the computer in Tom’s study. I wonder if you can guess what’s on it.”
Loogan reached to take the disc. It was unlabeled. He spun it on the end of his finger.
He said, “It’s Sean Wrentmore’s manuscript. Liars, Thieves, and Innocent Men.”
Beccanti grinned. “That’s a good guess, but not quite right.”
Loogan tapped the edge of the disc against his forehead. “I should have been more specific,” he said. “It’s an edited version of Wrentmore’s manuscript, pared down to something like a hundred thousand words.”
Beccanti’s grin faded, but he recovered quickly. “How did you know that? You’ve been holding out on me, David.”
Loogan handed the disc back to him. “I just found out about it tonight.” Briefly he passed along Laura’s account of Tom’s work on the manuscript and Sean Wrentmore’s death. Beccanti listened silently, his arms resting on the chair-back, his chin resting on his arms.
“Where does that leave us?” he said when Loogan finished.
“I think we’re done,” Loogan said. “I think we’ve learned everything we’re going to learn.”
“We still don’t know who killed Tom.”
Loogan studied the shadows on the ceiling. “I think Tully may have killed Tom.”
“Yeah?”
“I think Tom planned to go to the police,” said Loogan. “It didn’t sit well with him—covering up Wrentmore’s death. He wanted to tell the truth. I think Tully disagreed and they argued and Tom wound up dead.”
“And then what? Tully shot himself? You weren’t ready to believe that before.”
“It could have happened that way.”
“We’re supposed to believe that Tully didn’t mind killing Wrentmore, but killing Tom pushed him over the edge?”
“Why not?”
Beccanti trailed his thumb across his chin. “That would be nice. We wouldn’t have to look for Tom’s killer anymore. Tully’s the killer and Tully’s conveniently dead. It makes for a tidy story. I could almost believe it. But the CD isn’t the only thing I found in Tom and Laura’s house.”
He reached again into the pocket of his blazer and drew out a white envelope. “The desk in Tom’s study had a drawer with a false bottom,” he said, “just like the one in his office at Gray Streets. I found this inside.”
He tossed the envelope on the bed. Tom’s address was on the front, no return address. The top edge had been sliced open. Loogan took out the letter, a single printed page. Dear Mr. Kristoll, it began. I know about Sean Wrentmore.
There were a few more lines. A demand for fifty thousand dollars in cash, instructions on how to package it and where to send it—to “M. L. Black” at an address in Chicago.
“M. L. Black,” Loogan said aloud.
“I know,” Beccanti said. “It’s cute. I imagine there’s no one named Black at that address. It’s probably a storefront, one of those mailbox rental places.”
Loogan turned the page over, as if there might be something more. He looked at the envelope. It bore a Chicago postmark, dated a week after Sean Wrentmore’s death.
“Let me ask you this,” Beccanti was saying. “Do you think Laura’s telling you everything she knows?”
Loogan waved the letter impatiently. “Let me think for a minute. I’m trying to figure out what this means.”
Beccanti laughed softly, bitterly. “I can tell you what it means, David. It means we’re not done. We haven’t learned everything we’re going to learn. We need to plan our next move.”
He got up from the chair and held out a hand for the letter and the envelope.
“Why don’t you get dressed?” he said. “I’ll wait for you downstairs.”
The man who called himself David Loogan was frequently on the edge of breaking, but he had learned to cover it well. He didn’t like going out at night, but he had gone out to buy a shovel when Tom Kristoll asked him to. He didn’t like high places, or parking garages, but he had gone with Laura Kristoll to the top level of a parking garage to talk with her about Tom.
He didn’t like open doors, because they made him feel vulnerable, but he didn’t like closed doors, because you never knew what might be behind them. He left the door to the bathroom half-open when he went in to wash his face after Michael Beccanti had gone downstairs.
He didn’t like bending over the sink to splash water on his face, because it made him feel out of control. He had visions of being struck on the back of the head, his face slamming into the faucet, blood streaming from his nose.
Nevertheless, he looked in the mirror—he was dressed now in the same shirt and pants he had worn earlier—and told himself he was being ridiculous, and he ran the water and felt the cool of it on his face. He endured the sound of it running, even though the sound of running water can drown out other sounds—can cover the approach of an attacker, for instance. Still, he washed, and no one attacked him, though for a second he thought he heard something other than the sound of the water. He thought he heard someone cry out.
He turned off the faucet and reached for a towel and the cry was not repeated. He took the towel into the hall with him, walking slowly, drying his hands and listening, and when he got to the top of the stairs he called Beccanti’s name.
There was no answer.
Descending the stairs, he had the towel with him still. It was cool at the bottom of the stairs. The living-room window, the one that looked out on the porch, was open wide. The curtains fluttered. No lights on in the living room, only the diffuse light that came down from the hallway above. In the dim, he could see Beccanti sitting on the sofa. He spoke the man’s name again; he could hear him breathing.
Outside on the street, a car engine started. The car drove away.
Loogan turned the switch of the floor lamp. He saw the blood first on the carpet: splotches of it where Beccanti had fallen. He must have dragged himself, pulled himself up onto the sofa. The blood on his shirt was harder to detect; it was a wet sheen on the black fabric. Beccanti’s right hand was pressed against his stomach, slick crimson between
the fingers. The knife lay beside him on the sofa. Loogan recognized the long blade; it was a knife from the kitchen.
He saw the wound on Beccanti’s throat last: a dark line and the blood ran under the collar of his shirt. Loogan had the towel; he rushed forward and pressed it to Beccanti’s throat—too hard and Beccanti gasped. He eased the pressure.
The phone was across the room. With his free hand, Loogan dug Beccanti’s cell phone from his pocket, dialed 911, and got a dispatcher.
“I need an ambulance,” he said. “My father’s having a heart attack.” The lie came to him easily. His voice held the appropriate note of urgency.
“Please give me your name and location, sir.”
“David Loogan,” he said, and gave her the address.
She asked him to hold on and he didn’t know what to expect—maybe music while he waited—but there was only silence and she was back on the line a moment later.
“EMTs are on their way, sir. Is your father alert?”
“I don’t think he’s going to be for long. Ask them to hurry, will you?”
She began to say something more and he closed the phone. Beccanti’s brow, under his dark, tangled hair, was damp and pale. His eyes were unfocused. His mouth worked but it made no words.
“It’s not bad,” Loogan said to him. Idiotic. “Sometimes it’s not as bad as it looks.”
Beccanti’s eyes squeezed shut and Loogan swore under his breath, but after a few seconds Beccanti’s eyes fluttered open again.
Blood was coming through the towel. Loogan doubled it over. He was bending over Beccanti, one knee on the sofa cushion. He could see the stomach wound, blood trickling over the back of Beccanti’s fingers. The stomach wound might be the worst of it, he thought.
He swore again and tucked the ends of the towel behind Beccanti’s shoulders. “Back in a second,” he said.
His shoes were at the bottom of the stairs. He stepped into them and dashed into the kitchen, turned on the overhead light, the porch light, unbolted the front door and threw it open wide. He grabbed dish towels from a drawer, grabbed his coat, back in the living room, tossed the coat halfway up the stairs. At the sofa again, bowing over Beccanti, he peeled the man’s hand away from his stomach, gingerly, and pressed dish towels to the wound. He unclasped Beccanti’s belt, tugged it free, threaded it behind the man’s back—this brought a gasp—and fastened it tight over the towels.
Light pressure on the neck, pressure on the stomach, Loogan kept watch over Michael Beccanti. Beccanti’s eyes had closed, his breathing was shallow as a sleeping child’s.
The flashing lights showed up on the wall behind the sofa. Loogan hadn’t measured the time, but it hadn’t been long. He looked over his shoulder and saw the ambulance through the front window. Lights, no sirens. No police yet, no patrol car. He didn’t think they would send a car for a heart attack.
Doors slamming outside. Voices. Loogan said good-bye to Michael Beccanti. Laid his palm on the tangle of dark hair.
He took his coat, careful to grasp it by the inner lining, and vanished up the stairs. He hit the switch of the hallway light.
Bathroom first, water over his hands, pink as it spun down the drain. Blood on his shirt, and on the knee of his pants. The pants weren’t bad. Into his bedroom. He got a fresh shirt.
Voices from below, a man’s and a woman’s. They had found their way to Beccanti. Loogan listened in as he stuffed clothes into a duffel bag from the closet.
A bit of gallows humor first. “That’s no heart attack,” the man said. The woman called for a patrol car, on what must have been a handheld radio. She got a reply; a unit was on its way.
“Can you hear me, sir? What’s your name?”
“I don’t think he can hear you,” the woman said.
They got down to work, talking quietly to each other. From the bedroom Loogan heard snatches.
“Pulse is weak.”
“Got an airway, but I don’t like it much.”
They remarked on Loogan’s work with the towels and the belt.
“Who do you suppose did this?”
“And are they still here?”
“Not sure I want to find out.”
Quiet, and then one of them must have run out to the ambulance. Loogan heard the clatter of a gurney rolling in over the kitchen floor, subdued when it hit the carpet of the living room.
Moving Beccanti must have posed a tricky problem. They strategized it first, then counted three.
Sounds of effort. The gurney creaked under the weight of the body.
“Start an I.V.?” the man’s voice said.
“Do it in the rig. We’ve got to move him now.”
Rapid steps, wheels running again over the kitchen tiles. Loogan zipped the duffel bag. He got his checkbook from the top dresser drawer. He took a hurried inventory: wallet, keys, wristwatch, cell phone. A briefcase in the bottom of the closet held all his important papers—his birth certificate, financial records, the title to his car.
Into his coat and down the stairs with the briefcase and the duffel. He killed the lights in the kitchen, pulled the door shut behind him. The ambulance drove away as he descended the steps of the porch. Across the street, lights were on. He saw silhouettes in windows. Down the block, a white-haired woman stood on the sidewalk, a down jacket over her nightgown. She called out and started walking toward him.
Long strides to the curb with his head down. Loogan’s breath was surprisingly even, his heartbeat not too rapid. He expected sirens at any moment, blue and red lights.
He stowed the briefcase and the duffel in the backseat of the car, walked around to the driver’s side. The white-haired woman was closer. “What’s going on?” she said.
He told her he had to go to the hospital. His father had suffered a heart attack.
She looked unconvinced—maybe she had seen them load Beccanti into the ambulance. But she hung back from Loogan and he paid her no further attention.
The engine turned over; the car had always been reliable. Seat belt on, headlights, he drove south to the end of the block. Stopped for the sign. As he rolled through the intersection he looked right and left, saw the twinkle of a patrol car approaching from the east, still some blocks away. He drove sedately on. David Loogan, nerves of steel. He took the first right he came to. No traffic to speak of. Rows of dark houses, citizens asleep.
For a fevered moment he thought he would drive to Elizabeth Waishkey’s house. Tap on her door. He imagined her coming out to the porch in a robe, sleepy, raven hair tousled, bare feet. She would brighten at the sight of him, and then she would be appropriately grave as she listened to him explain. He would tell her that it wasn’t him: he hadn’t stabbed Michael Beccanti.
Eventually he brought the car around, pointed it east toward Main Street. Then south on Main to the interstate, I-94 eastbound. He got behind a semi and stayed there for five miles. Exited onto Route 23, heading for Ohio.
Chapter 23
ELIZABETH WAISHKEY HAD NEVER BEFORE BEEN INVOLVED IN THREE homicide investigations at the same time. And as she stood in the living room of David Loogan’s rented house on Tuesday afternoon, it occurred to her that she had never felt a personal connection to a crime scene before. Yet she had been here, in this room, little more than a week ago. She had sat on the sofa where Michael Beccanti’s blood had run out of him.
She was alone in the house now. It had seen a swarm of detectives overnight. Beccanti had died in the ambulance, two minutes out from University Hospital. Elizabeth heard the news from Carter Shan a little before three A.M. When she got to Loogan’s house, Shan was already there, along with Harvey Mitchum and Ron Wintergreen. Kim Reyes arrived a short time later. Then Owen McCaleb, in a dark blue tracksuit and white running shoes.
They had spoken right away to some of the neighbors, and McCaleb was quietly furious when he learned how casually Loogan had escaped the scene. He directed his anger at the two patrolmen who had responded, too slowly, to the 911 call. Elizabeth witnessed
their encounter only from a distance—they were three dark figures on the lawn, beneath a barren elm tree. She couldn’t hear what McCaleb said, but the patrolmen sulked off afterward and went to linger timidly by their car, as if they didn’t know whether they should stay or leave.
Mitchum and Wintergreen had been the first detectives to arrive. McCaleb put them in charge of the crime scene. He sent Elizabeth and Shan to University Hospital to secure Beccanti’s personal effects and interview the EMTs who had answered the call at Loogan’s house. They spoke to the pair in the ER waiting room. Neither of the EMTs had seen Loogan in the house, but the woman said she had the feeling that someone might have been lurking upstairs. She went on to describe the efforts someone had made to stanch Beccanti’s wounds. “Do you suppose that was him?” she asked.
Afterward, Elizabeth and Shan learned that no one had contacted Michael Beccanti’s next of kin. They drove down to Saline to talk to Beccanti’s girlfriend, Karen Fenton. The woman’s expression darkened as soon as she saw them. She refused to sit, took the news standing in the doorway of her trailer in sweatpants and a long T-shirt, her arms crossed above her bulging stomach. When Elizabeth tried to take her arm, she jerked it away, staggered, then dropped to her knees and wailed. Shan was able to coax her into a chair, where she sat weeping, the heels of her hands pressed to her eyes. They did their best to console her until one of her neighbors appeared, an older woman who wore a woolen coat over a pale blue nightgown. The woman’s arrival seemed to calm her. They whispered to each other. The woman put water on for tea and shooed Elizabeth and Shan away.
By sunrise they were back on Loogan’s street. They checked in with Harvey Mitchum and the other detectives who had been working the crime scene. There was no news on Loogan. A bulletin had gone out on his car, but there were no leads on where he might have gone.
Elizabeth’s morning was taken up with meetings and paperwork. She managed to grab a late breakfast, a shower, and two hours’ sleep. In the afternoon she returned to Loogan’s house. Mitchum and the others were gone by then; she had the place to herself.
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