by Tami Hoag
A call from Ted Sabin, Hennepin County ’s version of a district attorney and her former boss, expressing his concern for her, having heard about her attack. He promised to bring the full force of his considerable power to bear in the apprehension and prosecution of her attacker.
A call from Kate Quinn, an old friend from her days in the county attorney’s office, calling for the same reason, telling Carey to call her and she would be there ASAP. Kate had worked as a victim/witness advocate. Carey had never imagined she would ever call on her friend in her professional capacity.
Then Chris Logan’s voice was in her ear, anxious, upset, full of bluster, the usual way he reacted to unpleasant news over which he had no control. “Carey, goddammit, I just heard. Are you all right? Are you in the hospital? Why the hell didn’t you take a deputy to the garage with you? Jesus, I should have walked you out, pissed off or not. Call me.”
She deleted the message and put the phone down beside her on the bed. A feeling she couldn’t quite identify rippled through her. A blend of regret, sadness, loss. It would have been nice to have someone strong and protective to turn to now. Someone she trusted. A shoulder to lean on.
But she didn’t have that. After their one brief interlude, she had never called Logan in search of that kind of support. Not that she hadn’t been tempted. After what he’d said to her in her chambers, she would never want to again. She felt betrayed by him for taking the cheap shot about their one night together, and now she wouldn’t trust him.
She had never really quite trusted him, she admitted. Not absolutely. That was why there had been no other nights shared before or since. Logan was a big package of single-minded ambition. He cared about winning, about seeing justice done, no matter the cost to himself or those around him. They had been friends back in their days working together, but Carey knew he had also seen her as a rival, and that had never sat well with her.
Her father would have been there for her, as strong as the Rock of Gibraltar, as he had been all her life. But for all intents and purposes, her father was dead. His body had yet to get the message, but the essence of him was gone. The shell of him sat in a rest home, waiting to shut down.
Feeling alone and adrift, Carey closed her eyes and fell into a shallow sleep disturbed by menacing dreams. Dreams of her attacker, of who he might be. In the dark theater of her mind, she lay on her back on the cold concrete, struggling against a man she couldn’t see. At first, his face was nothing but black, blank space, and then gradually it became clear.
The images flashed in her mind like lightning, a different face in each blinding burst. Karl Dahl. Wayne Haas. Chris Logan. David. Marlene Haas, her face partially decomposed, dead eyes bulging from their sockets.
Carey jerked awake, crying out, trying to sit up. The pain knocked her back, and she rolled to her side as the nausea crashed over her again. She was sweating, shaking, breathing too quickly.
The cell phone beneath her hand rang, startling her. David, she thought, half hoped, though she wasn’t sure whether she wanted him to say he was coming home or that he wasn’t.
“David?”
There was silence on the other end just long enough to raise the hair on the back of her neck.
When the caller spoke, she didn’t recognize his voice. It was a low, hoarse whisper, the words stretched out, strangely distorted.
“I’m coming to get you, bitch” was all he said.
13
KOVAC HAD JUST PULLED up to the curb across the street from Carey Moore’s house when his cell phone rang.
“Kovac.”
“It’s Carey Moore.”
Her voice was quiet, composed, but he could hear an underlying tension.
“I just got a call. A man. He said, ‘I’m coming to get you, bitch.’”
“I’m right across the street from your house. I’ll be right there.”
“Come to the door, but don’t ring the bell. I don’t want to wake Anka and Lucy.”
She hung up. All business. Used to being queen of her domain, even in times of crisis.
Kovac crossed the street to the prowl car parked at the curb with two uniforms inside. The driver ran his window down.
“You guys see anything?” Kovac asked.
“Nope. All’s quiet.”
“You’ve been around the house?”
“Couple of times. The place is locked down.”
“Did the husband show up?”
“Nope.”
It was almost one-thirty in the morning. What the hell kind of business dinner ran until one-thirty in the morning?
Kovac patted a hand absently on the roof of the cruiser.
“You married, Benson?” he asked the officer behind the wheel.
“Twice.”
“What would your wife do if you stayed out until one-thirty in the morning without checking in with her?”
“She’d hang my balls from the chandelier, and I wouldn’t be attached to them.”
“Right.”
Kovac was willing to bet Carey Moore hadn’t even bothered to call her husband to find out where he was or when he was coming home or to tell him she’d been attacked, or anything else.
He went up to the gate and heard the lock release. The judge was looking out at him through one of the sidelights. She opened the front door as he came up onto the landing.
She was still wearing the pants and blouse she’d worn home from the hospital. The pants were torn. The silk blouse was bloodstained and missing a couple of strategically placed buttons. He caught a glimpse of blue lace and a curve most other judges he knew didn’t have. But if she gave a damn that he could see her bra, she didn’t show it.
“You need to sit down, Judge,” he said. “Looks to me like that door is the only thing holding you up.”
“I’m-”
Kovac held up a hand. “Don’t even.”
She closed the door and leaned back against it for a moment, white as paste. Gathering herself and all the strength she could scrape together, she eased away from the door and turned to lead him into a den off the hall.
A table lamp cast an amber glow over leather chairs and the hand-waxed pine paneling. The judge slowly lowered herself into one corner of a dark green leather love seat. Kovac sat in the chair adjacent, moving it closer to her until their knees were almost touching.
“What time did the call come?” he asked, pulling his small notebook and a pen out of his pocket.
“One-twenty-two. I looked at the clock.”
“Your house phone or your cell?”
“Cell.”
“Can I see the phone?”
She handed it to him. Her hand was trembling.
Kovac brought up the menu and found his way to the call list. “Same number as the call to the house-the call asking for Marlene.”
“Were you able to trace it?”
“Prepaid cell phone. The modern criminal’s best friend. We might be able to trace it to the manufacturer, maybe to a list of places in the Twin Cities area where that manufacturer distributes. But you know as well as I do, that’s a lot of territory, and the damn things are everywhere. Tracking down this one phone… you’ll die of old age before we find the mutt who bought it.”
She stared into the dark end of the room as if waiting for a sign from another dimension.
“Who are you looking at?” she asked.
“I shouldn’t get into that.”
The judge laughed without humor and shook her head. “Excuse me, Detective, but I’m not your average vic, am I? I’ve been a part of the criminal justice system since I clerked for my father when I was a student. Here’s who I think you’ll look at: Wayne Haas, Bobby Haas, Stan Dempsey-”
“No offense, Judge, but that’s not even the tip of the iceberg of people who hate you right now.”
“You should check on the relatives of the foster children who were murdered.”
“I know my job.”
“I know you do.”
She looked aw
ay again, wrestling with something. She rested her forehead in her hand and sighed. “I’m not very good at being a victim,” she admitted. “I don’t know how to do it. I don’t know what I should feel, what I should think, what I should just try to shut out. I still can’t believe this happened to me.”
A tear rolled over her lashes onto her cheek. She caught it with a scraped knuckle and swept it away. “I only know how to fight. Go on the offensive. Make something happen.”
“There’s nothing wrong with that,” Kovac said. He wondered if part of the reason she wasn’t able to accept she’d been victimized was that she had no one to fall back on, no one to take the offensive for her.
“There isn’t a good time to tell you this, so I’m just going to do it,” Kovac said. “Karl Dahl escaped custody tonight.”
Carey Moore stared at him for so long without saying anything that Kovac began to wonder if she’d understood a word he’d said. Head injuries could have some pretty weird effects on people.
Finally, she said, “Escaped? What do you mean he escaped? How could he escape?”
“There was some kind of fight at the jail. Things got out of hand. Prisoners and jailers had to be taken to the hospital. Someone fucked up royally. Didn’t cuff Dahl to the gurney. He basically just got up and left when nobody was looking.”
“Oh, my God,” she said with the same kind of anger and disgust every cop in town was feeling.
A triple murderer was loose on the streets because some dickhead in a uniform had blown it. Kovac knew from experience it wouldn’t matter who the dickhead was specifically, and it wouldn’t matter which agency he worked for. Every cop, every deputy sheriff in Minneapolis, would take heat for it from the public, from the media, from department brass.
“The public will love it,” Kovac said with his usual sarcasm. “Now they have two branches of the justice system not to trust.”
Carey Moore closed her eyes but didn’t succeed in blocking out anything but the light. “Has someone told Wayne Haas?”
“I had that pleasure.”
“How did he take it?”
“How do you think?”
She didn’t answer him. Both her question and his had been rhetorical.
As they sat there in the Moores ’ beautiful den, it was so quiet in the house that the sound of a key unlocking the front door seemed as loud as a gunshot. Kovac had a direct view of the entry. He rose from his chair, at attention, and waited, feeling a strange mix of curiosity and aggression.
David Moore walked in, his tie askew, shirt collar undone. He was a good-enough-looking guy, Kovac supposed. Medium height, blondish conservative haircut. He might have been the athletic type once, but he was going soft, and his face and neck had a slight doughy quality that suggested indulgence. He wore a rumpled brown suit and a petulant expression.
In other words, in Kovac’s vernacular: asshole.
Kovac took an instant dislike to Carey Moore’s husband before one word came out of his mouth.
“Carey? What’s going on?” the husband demanded, coming into the den. “What happened to you?”
Not said with loving concern, but almost as if he was offended that she looked the way she did.
“I was mugged in the parking ramp.”
“Oh, my God.”
“Your wife was attacked, Mr. Moore,” Kovac said. “We believe it may have been an attempt on her life.”
David Moore just stood there like a moron, looking from his battered wife to Kovac. “Who are you?”
Kovac showed him his badge. “Kovac. I’m a detective with the Homicide division.”
“Homicide?”
“We also handle assaults. Assaults are the homicides of tomorrow,” he said with a hint of sarcasm he knew David Moore wouldn’t get. It was an inside joke. It always seemed like the department was more keen on solving the assaults, because there were more of them, and clearing them kept the violent-crime stats down.
Moore dismissed him, tossed his jacket on a chair, and finally went to his wife.
“Are you all right?”
“Does she look all right?”
Carey Moore gave Kovac the skunk eye.
The husband sat down on the love seat. “My God, Carey. Why didn’t you call me?”
“Why don’t you check your messages?” she said with an edge in her voice. “I did call you. I called you from the emergency room six hours ago.”
Moore had the sense to look guilty. “Oh, shit. My battery must be dead.”
“Or something,” Kovac muttered.
The husband looked at him. “Excuse me?”
“I have to ask you some questions, Mr. Moore. It’s just routine. Where were you between the hours of six and seven o’clock tonight?”
The judge glared at him. “Detective, this isn’t necessary.”
David Moore stood up, outraged. “Are you implying I might have attacked my own wife?”
“I’m not implying anything,” Kovac said calmly. “I’m asking you a question. Do you have some problem with giving me a straight answer?”
“I don’t like your attitude, Detective.”
“Nobody does. Lucky for me, I don’t give a rat’s ass.”
Moore flushed an unhealthy shade of red. He jammed his hands at his waist. “My wife is a respected member of the bar-”
“I know who your wife is, Mr. Moore,” Kovac said. “Who are you? That’s what I need to know. And so far, just from observation, I’m not coming up with a lot of flattering adjectives here.”
Moore drew breath for another diatribe of indignation. His wife cut him off.
“David, stop it. For God’s sake, just answer the man’s questions. He’s doing his job.”
The husband clearly didn’t like being chastened. He went a darker shade of red with embarrassment or anger, or both.
“Carey, he’s not being respectful of you.”
She looked away from him and shook her head with an I’m so sick of you sigh.
“I’m not trying to be a hard-ass here, Mr. Moore,” Kovac lied. “But it’s going on two o’clock in the morning. Your wife has been beaten, and she’s received two threatening phone calls since. I don’t have the patience to tiptoe around your ego.
“So let’s try this again. Where have you been this evening?”
Moore clearly wanted to turn on his heel and storm out of the room. The big, dramatic exit for the put-upon hero of his own story.
The bruising and swelling was coming out in his wife’s face. She was beginning to look like something that might live under a bridge in a horror movie. One eye was nearly swollen shut. The lump on her forehead looked like a horrible deformity. Her lower lip was twice its normal size. The stitches had pulled, and the split was beginning to bleed again.
David Moore hadn’t so much as offered her a reassuring touch. He’d asked for no details of her attack, had made no comment on Kovac’s suggestion it might have been an attempt on her life. He hadn’t even inquired if she might have been raped.
“I had a business dinner,” Moore said.
“Where?”
“That new place in the IDS Tower next to the Marquette Hotel, Buffalo Grill.”
“What time was your reservation?”
“Seven-thirty, but we met for drinks first.”
“When was that, and where?”
Moore looked away. “Why don’t I just give the name of the business associate I was meeting? You’ll want that anyway, won’t you?”
Kovac gave him the flat cop eyes. “Why don’t you just answer the question I asked you?”
“Gentlemen?” the judge said abruptly. “I’m not feeling well. I’d really like to go lie down now. Feel free to continue without me.”
She started to get off the love seat under her own steam. The husband finally moved to help her, taking hold of one elbow to steady her.
“I’ll help you upstairs.”
She didn’t thank him.
Kovac watched them go, trying to read their
body language. The judge was stiff and limping, but forcing her back as straight as she could. She kept her chin up, and she didn’t lean on her husband, even though he was now trying to appear as solicitous as possible.
Kovac would have loved to hear the conversation between them as they went up the stairs, but they kept their voices to themselves. Instead, he took the opportunity to prowl around the den, looking for hints of who these people were, but there were more signs of who their decorator was than what made the Moore family tick.
The room seemed to belong predominantly to the husband. A lot of electronic toys-big plasma screen TV on the wall above the fireplace, stereo equipment, satellite radio setup. A couple of framed award certificates with Moore ’s name on them.
Kovac found the lack of family photographs and incidental personal touches telling. No one was in the middle of reading a novel or knitting a sweater. There were no toys or storybooks that would have belonged to Princess Lucy. A pricey, large flat-screen computer monitor sat in the middle of an immaculate desk. The bookcase behind the desk held books about the film industry, biographies of people Kovac had heard of and more he had not. A lot of videotape cases.
“They should have kept her in the hospital,” David Moore complained as he came back into the room.
“She wouldn’t stay,” Kovac said, pulling a videotape off a shelf and pretending to study its title. “She wanted to come home, be with her family, except for you, of course.”
“What the hell-?”
“She knew you weren’t here,” Kovac went on. “And she didn’t want us tracking you down. Why do you think that is?”
“I don’t think I told her where the dinner was,” Moore said. “We’re both very busy people. The details sometimes get lost.”
“What are you so busy with, Mr. Moore? These business associates you were with-what kind of business are they in?”
“I’m a documentary filmmaker. The people I was with are potential financial backers for a film I want to make juxtaposing the gangsters of the thirties with street gangs of today.”
“And why didn’t you want to talk about these people in front of your wife?” Kovac asked, ambling closer to Carey Moore’s husband. “Why didn’t she want to stick around for the rest of this conversation?”