“You think that’s what Lydia did? Get herself killed?” I asked, spacing those last three words and barking them out, for emphasis.
“I mean, I don’t really know. I don’t want to be here, Ms. Cooper,” she said, showing emotion for the first time. Unfortunately, it was about herself. “My boyfriend is already so pissed off that I called the hotline.”
“Why? What you did has helped us enormously. It’s going to prove a huge benefit to Lydia’s family.” I’d save the boyfriend’s problem for a later question.
Jean looked at me quizzically. “Oh, really? Where’s her family?”
“We know she’s a foreign student. We were hoping you could tell us about them. About where Lydia is from.”
“All I know is what she told me, and we didn’t talk that much. I know she’s from Russia.”
“That’s a good start. Do you know what part of Russia?”
Jean flaked off a good-sized piece of nail polish, which landed on the floor next to my sneaker. “I can’t remember that, if I ever knew.”
“We want to call her parents before they see this on the news or on the Internet. We could send the local police to her house, and it would be a much more humane way for them to learn about this tragedy.”
“That’s a good idea. But you’ll have to find her computer to figure out where her parents are. I know she Skyped with them every week or so.”
“Okay. That’s helpful,” I said, even though the laptop and cell phone were not among the trophies the killer seemed to have saved. Pictures of prey—especially attractive young women—were usually what these perps held on to, and the ID card with Lydia’s photograph was evidence of that. “How about her friends? Do you know who she socialized with?”
Jean shrugged again. “We didn’t even go to class on the same campus, Ms. Cooper. All my courses were in Yonkers, and hers were in Peekskill.”
“Did she have a car?” I asked, thinking of another place to look, another way to track Lydia’s movement in the last days of her life.
“No way. She didn’t have much money. Lydia took the bus to school, then she worked after class in a coffee shop, I think it was. Took the bus home. Never brought anybody with her.”
Jean Jansen had gotten most of the blue polish off her nails. Now she was concentrating on expanding the hole in the knee of her denim pants, twisting and pulling at the loose threads.
“Never?”
“Maybe once or twice. But she didn’t like my music, so she usually went into her room and closed the door. And my boyfriend didn’t much like her—I mean, like he thought she was very snobby—so that was fine with us.”
“Your boyfriend, what’s his name?”
Jean paused for several seconds. “I’ve gotta ask him if he wants me to tell you. He doesn’t want to be involved in this, really.”
That’s not a choice he’s going to have. “Then help me with a few other things. Did you think she was snobby?”
Jean looked at me when she answered. “Lydia thought she was smarter than me. High and mighty, a bit. Sometimes I felt it was ’cause this was a second language for her, stuff came out kind of stilted. She usually said what was on her mind, though, which could be kind of annoying.”
“Can you give me an example?”
Jean pursed her lips. “Like she was always on me about my weight. You—you’re skinny like she is, Ms. Cooper. Like she was, I mean. Maybe I don’t want to be that way. Maybe I’m happy with how I look. But she was always telling me I couldn’t keep food that she thought was junk in the apartment. That I ought to join a gym. Sometimes she’d even throw out food that I’d left in the fridge, and when I’d call her out on it, she’d say it had gone bad and smelled. Which wasn’t true, by the way. That kind of thing.”
So far, nothing I’d heard gave rise to a motive to murder.
“I’m sorry she did that, Jean,” I said. “The couple of times she brought people home, do you remember who they were? Men or women? How recently?”
“I know there was another Russian girl who was in one or two of Lydia’s classes. She came over a few times. I could hear them laughing a lot from the other room. They’d been Skyping friends back home. You should find her.”
“Good idea,” I said. “We’ll try to do that. No guys?”
“Lydia has a boyfriend in Russia. You’d better talk to him, too. She wasn’t dating anyone here, as far as we could tell. She brought one or two guys home, but they were just friends. They stayed for an hour or two and then they left. You know what I mean? Nobody spent the night with her.”
“Did you meet them, these guys? How recently were they at your apartment?”
Jean gave the question some thought. “One of them was here about a month ago. Like in the middle of July.”
“So maybe he knows something about her. Do you know how we can find him? Was he also a student?”
“She introduced me to him. I know he doesn’t go to our school, because he told me that himself. Lydia and I were in summer school classes, but he looked a little older, and he told me he didn’t go to college.”
“Was he Russian, too?” I asked.
“How am I supposed to know?”
“Did you hear his name, Jean? Did he speak with any kind of an accent?”
She yanked on another long string and her plump kneecap popped through the gaping hole in the denim. “Just normal is what he sounded. Like from here.”
“Okay.”
“They were fighting. Arguing really. Not fighting.”
Jean was giving this part of the conversation more thought. She stopped playing with her frayed dungarees and looked at me.
“How do you know that?” I think she sensed my heightened interest in her answer.
“Because it was the night of the All-Star Game,” Jean said. “You know what that is?”
“Yes. Yes, I do.” The Midsummer Classic marked the symbolic middle of the Major League Baseball season. It would be easy to put an exact date on the night, if it proved to have any significance in the case. “Could you hear the argument?”
Jean laughed. “The problem was my boyfriend couldn’t listen to the game because this guy got so loud. He was all like screaming at Lydia.”
“Do you know what he was screaming about?”
The girl turned serious again. “Not really.”
“Tell me, Jean,” I said. “You must have heard something. Some of the words.”
She was slow to respond. “I think the guy was trying to get her to do something with him. Maybe for him, not just with him. He was yelling that she was wasting her time.”
“What time? With school?”
“Not with school, no. They weren’t arguing about school.”
“What, then?”
Jean put her elbows on the desk and her head in her hands. “I am so screwed,” she said. “My boyfriend is going to go ballistic about this.”
“The detectives will explain everything to your boyfriend. Nobody’s going to let you get bothered for talking to us,” I said. “Why were they fighting?”
“Lydia is—well, she was—all into causes and stuff. Belonged to organizations, she told me, back home and then here.”
“Political organizations? Is that it?”
“No. Not like that. She was—what do you call it? An actionist?”
“An activist? Do you mean activist?”
“Yeah. For Lydia, it was all about animals. She couldn’t stand seeing animals suffer.”
“I don’t know who can,” I said.
“Not just cats and dogs, though. Like all kinds of animals. Lydia told me her mother had been arrested once, back home in Russia. Went to jail because she broke into some laboratory and saved the chimpanzees from the scientists. I mean, like lecturing me that I didn’t stand for anything. That’s why she joined this group.”
“Is it a club at your school?”
“Are you kidding? These people aren’t just students.”
“Does the group have a na
me?”
“It must, but I can’t remember it.”
“Was it PETA?” I asked. “People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals?”
“Nope. It wasn’t that. I don’t know, Ms. Cooper. I think it was something with the word ‘liberation’ in its name.”
“Were they planning violent acts, Jean? Is that what you don’t want to say?”
“No way. Lydia was all about nonviolence. It was just saving the creatures. I showed the cops the poster on her wall. It says FREE THE ANIMALS. EXPERIMENT ON ME.”
“Okay. That’s a good start. That gives the detectives something to work with,” I said. “Did Lydia have animals? Did she have any pets?”
“She rescued a couple of dogs in the spring. But we’re not allowed to have any in our apartment, so she got them all to good homes, like with other students.”
“So why was this guy fighting with her if she was doing decent things with her life?”
Jean shook her head, looking as though she hadn’t thought of it that way before. She almost whispered her answer. “I don’t know. I just don’t know.”
“I think you know more than you’re telling me, Jean. I bet you heard what the guy said.”
She took a few more minutes to think, pulling her cell phone out of her pocket to look for messages. “Look, could I go soon? I’ve got to be home in time for dinner.”
“Or what, Jean? What will happen to you?” I said. “Lydia’s dead. You ought to think about what I’m asking you.”
“The guy must have been some kind of nut, Ms. Cooper,” Jean said. “He used to be in this animal group with Lydia. Like they were buddies, saving their monkeys and chimpanzees and baboons back in the spring. Then something switched off in him, like he was crazy.”
“Can you explain what you mean?”
“Only that he was yelling at her that night, during the baseball game. He told her he didn’t care about animals anymore. That it didn’t matter what scientists did to them, if they were cruel or not. That they weren’t people, so what was the difference.”
“But you said he had something else he wanted her to do for him, right?”
“Yeah. He kept saying he had a more important plan.”
“This is really good, Jean. You’re helping us out here,” I said. “And what did he say the plan was?”
“That’s the part I couldn’t hear, ’cause of the television being on and all that. Or maybe he was just being more quiet when he talked to Lydia about it. The walls are sort of paper-thin, so you can hear way more than you want to.”
“You must have picked up part of it, didn’t you?”
She shook her head back and forth, strongly indicating she didn’t.
“But you just called him a nut. You said he switched off like he was crazy.”
“I swear I’m not making this part up, Ms. Cooper. Okay? I’m going to say this to you, and you’re going to have to believe me,” Jean Jansen said. “The only part I heard after that was him saying he knew he was right because he heard voices.”
“Voices? I’m confused. There were other people in the room?”
“No, no. This guy was telling Lydia that she had to do what he told her because he was hearing voices inside his head. That someone was taking control of his mind, and he needed her to do whatever he ordered.”
Whether or not this visitor to the apartment was the killer, there had been a man with serious mental illness in Lydia Tsarlev’s life.
“Now I understand you, Jean. Of course I believe you,” I said. “Did you hear how Lydia responded to him?”
“Can we keep this between us, Ms. Cooper. Just this part?”
“I’d like to tell you yes, Jean. But that wouldn’t be very smart of me. It depends on what you say.”
Jean Jansen took a deep breath, then exhaled before she answered. “I never heard Lydia talking to him at all.”
“Even though the walls were so thin? C’mon, Jean.”
“You didn’t let me finish. She wasn’t speaking by the time he finished screeching at her. She was just crying. That’s exactly what I heard, Lydia crying.”
I gave Jean a few seconds to finish her description, but she seemed to be done.
“Did you—did you do anything then?”
“Yeah. I mean, my boyfriend listened to the whole thing, too,” Jean said sheepishly. “This is the part I don’t want everybody to know, ’cause like my boyfriend gets wild when he’s angry.”
“Let me hear it.”
Jean looked at me for reassurance but I could give her none. “Okay. He got up from the sofa and he went into Lydia’s bedroom. I mean, it wasn’t locked or anything. He just opened the door and went in.”
“So far so good, Jean. I don’t blame him.”
“I was right behind him, like trying to stop him. I could see Lydia all balled up on her bed, just sobbing like a baby.”
“Then what happened?”
“The guy kind of freaked out when he saw my boyfriend. He’s like six feet tall, much bigger than Lydia’s friend.”
“What did your boyfriend do?”
“He—um—he told the guy to get out. Told him to stop screaming at Lyd. The trouble started when the other guy said he never yelled at her. That it wasn’t him we’d heard.”
“Was that possible?”
“Oh, no. He was the one, all right. He told us—I was in the room trying to help Lydia get out of there and into the bathroom, so we could lock the door—he told us that there was another person inside him who was doing the yelling. I mean, how freaky is that?”
“Did he leave then?”
“Nope. He didn’t want to leave until he saw Lydia again, till he made sure she wasn’t going to bad-mouth him to us. That’s when it got physical.”
“How?”
“My boyfriend started pushing him out of the room. I could hear the commotion from inside the bathroom. They’re kind of scuffling, although the guy was too wiry, too small to put up much of a fight. He was almost out the door, I think, when my boyfriend told him that if he ever comes anywhere near my apartment again, he’d be a dead man.”
“That’s when he left?” I asked. “That’s the line you didn’t want me to tell anyone?”
“Part of it. I mean, it doesn’t look good now that Lydia’s been killed.”
“Did the guy ever come back?”
“Not that I know of. And she never mentioned him again.”
I smiled at Jean Jansen. “Then maybe your boyfriend did a good thing. Maybe that encounter has nothing to do with her murder.”
“But you can’t talk to my boyfriend about it, Ms. Cooper. You absolutely can’t.”
“Why not? He might know the name of Lydia’s friend or have some other detail.”
Jean looked me in the eye. “Because he’s already on probation.”
“For—?”
“You can’t draw him into a criminal investigation. The judge will have him violated.”
“What did he do, Jean?”
She didn’t answer me.
“Please tell me what your boyfriend did.” I said it more firmly this time.
“He assaulted me, Ms. Cooper. Three months ago, he got mad at me one night and beat me so bad my jaw had to be wired.”
I reached across the table to take her hand, but she pulled away. “I’m so sorry, Jean.”
“He’s got a criminal record longer than your arm. I’m not the first woman he’s attacked, either,” Jean said. “And he had a real thing about Lydia.”
“What kind of thing?”
“He came on to her one night, just a few weeks ago, before I got home. She told me about it the next day, which I thought was a bitchy thing for her to do. After that, he really was furious at her—for what she said to me. He had it in for her, that’s one thing I’m sure of. My boyfriend had no use for Lydia Tsarlev.”
THIRTY-TWO
“Get a policewoman in there to sit with her as soon as possible,” I said. Now it was my turn to pace in the co
nfined area of Don Ledger’s office. I was talking to Rocco, Pug, Mike, and Mercer. “Find someone who’s had some DV experience and let her or him talk to Jean.”
There were officers in the SVU and in every precinct who’d been trained on the issues that make domestic violence such a sensitive category of crime. There was no sense in sending Jean home to face the fury of her dangerous boyfriend.
“And they need to monitor her calls. Mercer, maybe you can go back in and get the boyfriend’s name and run a rap sheet. She keeps checking her phone, expecting a call from him. I doubt he wanted her to open her mouth about this, but she took the leap. I don’t want him to get to her till we figure this out.”
“I can’t let her go home?” Rocco asked. “The guys promised her a ride back before they brought her in.”
“Call Safe Horizon,” I said, referring to the city’s best victim advocacy group. “They can put her up in Parrish House for a few nights. I don’t think it will take much doing to convince her she’ll be safer there than at home.”
The DV shelters the organization ran were state-of-the-art, meant to be actual apartments with civilized living space and amenities, and their locations were never disclosed.
“You get any sense from her he could have hurt Lydia?” Mike asked.
“I can’t rule it out, but there’s no thread to the other cases—to Corinne and to the mole. We’ll know more after we’ve eyeballed his sheet,” I said. “Who’s left to send to the Peekskill campus, Rocco? We’re more likely to find people there who knew her, had classes with her.”
“Checking on it, Alex. I assume more calls have come in since her photograph was in this morning’s papers. Somebody back at the office is on it.”
Mercer stood up from Ledger’s desk, where he’d gone online as soon as I came back into the room spouting commands. “The group you’re looking for is ALF—the Animal Liberation Front.”
“Never heard of it,” I said. “Anyone?”
No one had. He handed me a printout of a news story.
“It’s been around since the sixties. And it is international. Operates in more than forty countries abroad,” Mercer said. “So it makes sense that Lydia’s mother got involved in Russia.”
Terminal City Page 24