by Rick Mofina
“The jewelry store clerk they found in the desert?”
“Right.” The reporter dropped her voice, but Layne could hear her say, “They throw down on the car carrying the dealer and his crew and they find a surprise inside.”
“What kind of surprise?”
“Tom Reed.”
“Reed?”
“The way we heard it is, he’s out on his own searching for his wife after he got a lead on the dealer who supplied the gal found in the desert. The dealer freaked and put a gun to Reed’s head.”
“That true?”
“That’s what he told the detectives.”
Layne marched to her truck, cell phone pressed to her ear. She’d punched in Tom Reed’s home number. She wanted an interview with the reporter who was risking his life to find his abducted wife. It was ringing.
Come on, pick up. She had to get this one.
It was worth one hundred thousand dollars.
46
Jed Caverly held a key in his fist when he greeted Sydowski and Turgeon in front of his house.
“Right this way.” He led them to the back. Two uniformed officers joined them, explaining that no one had set foot in the place.
“That’s right,” Caverly said at the garage door, watching the homicide inspectors tug on surgical gloves, then shoe covers. “I recognized this Leroy Driscoll guy from the newspaper. He told me his name was Sean Keeler. I never touched a thing. Never entered. I keep nothing in there and clean it before each tenant. Whatever’s in there is his.”
“We’ll go in alone,” Sydowski said.
Dust particles danced in the shafts of sunlight that lit on a 2003 silver four-door Jetta.
“That’s Ann Reed’s car, Walt.”
Sydowski opened the driver’s door. Her key ring dangled from the ignition. Sydowski didn’t get in. Instead, he reached in and switched the key to accessories. He checked the gas level. Full. Noted the odometer reading. Turgeon opened the rear passenger door, making notes on the condition. Sydowski popped the trunk for her.
“Car’s empty. Looks clean, Walt.”
The garage was immaculate with a polished floor. Spotless. Sydowski went to the workbench near the window. On it were several cardboard boxes of various sizes, a stack of folded maps, ropes, duct tape, clips, a cooler, files of notes, notebooks, text-books on alarm systems, gems, catalogues and keys.
Turgeon and Sydowski were careful. They jotted down inventory and sketched maps in their notebooks before taking some snapshots. At the far end of the garage Sydowski found a folded wheelchair leaning against the wall. A second one? They must’ve practiced. Near it was a small wooden table and four chairs. On the table were wigs, boxes of stage makeup, several plastic trash bags, clips for an Ml6, then boxes with holsters, a .357 Taurus revolver, clothes, a number of out-of-state plates, blank registrations and ownership forms, a few Slim Jims, tools, chains, handcuffs, several M69 training grenades. A file folder with neatly typed notes about Deluxe Jewelry.
“They switched here. This is where they parked their getaway vehicle. They drove her car here and switched,” Sydowski said.
“Looks right.”
Sydowski surveyed the place, allowing himself a measure of satisfaction. This was it. The break they were so desperate for. This was where they’d plotted the robbery. Where they launched it, and, judging from the setup, where they intended to ditch the van and use another vehicle for the long-haul getaway. Sydowski grew anxious for the crime scene guys to get here and get them prints, get them identifications, while he pored through the things they left behind. Now that they had some of the pieces, he could start to put the puzzle together.
“Walt?”
Turgeon had locked her flashlight beam on the floor near the vehicle’s rear.
Sydowski got to his knees to examine the spot.
“Looks like blood,” he said, then turned his head to the garage window at the sound of loud voices outside. “Sounds like Tom Reed’s out there,” Turgeon said.
47
The instant Tom Reed saw Sydowski and Turgeon step from the garage, he knew the meaning of their shoe covers, their gloves, clipboards, sober faces.
“Walt.”
Reed was several yards from him on the other side of the yellow tape, the ever-present line that over the years had separated the two men at countless murders. Reed called it Sydowski’s circle of death. Two uniformed officers stood vigil next to Reed as Sydowski lifted the tape, inviting him to cross the line. But he didn’t move because he couldn’t move. A cloud passed in front of the sun, the emergency lights painted Sydowski’s face red.
“Come on, Tom.”
A big rubber-gloved hand took Reed’s shoulder gently. All of your life you feared a moment like this, a moment when a grim-faced homicide detective lifts the tape and beckons you to step inside. The circle of death.
“Tell me, Walt. Is it Ann?”
Sydowski was conscious of the scores of people watching them.
“Can you just tell me if my wife’s in there? Can you have the decency to—” Reed ran his hand over his face.
“Not here,” Sydowski said. Turgeon took Reed’s other shoulder.
“Tom,” Turgeon said into his ear, “there’s no victim in the garage.”
Reed blinked, trying to comprehend.
“What is it then? Was she there? Did they bring her here?”
“Keep it down,” Turgeon said.
“What the hell for? What’s in there? I have a right to know. No one tells me anything.”
Sydowski saw the TV and newspaper cameras taking pictures of them.
“Take a breath and get ahold of yourself.” Sydowski dropped his tone. “Linda, ask Mr. Caverly if we can take Tom inside his home.” Then to the uniforms he said, “Everyone’s too tight. I want the perimeter of this scene widened by another two houses.”
The uniforms nodded. One began waving back the press, triggering protests, while the second one grabbed the roll of scene tape, making it whiz as he enlarged the restricted access area around the garage.
Inside, Reed thought Caverly’s house smelled like cheese and Old Spice. They pulled out vinyl-covered chrome chairs from a small table set from the 1950s. A stack of mail was piled in the center ready to teeter on the Niagara Falls souvenir salt and pepper shakers.
Turgeon and Sydowski slapped their clipboards on the white tabletop. Facedown. Offended, Reed shook his head, looked through the window at the garage. Police lights strobing red in his eyes as he watched children running around the satellite news trucks and the intense TV lights. Carnival time.
“So what the hell is in there?”
“Evidence,” Sydowski said.
“From Ann?”
“It’s her car.”
“Her car? Is she—what else did you—”
“Just her car, Tom. They drove here, left it, and switched vehicles.”
“But how?”
“It looks like they rented the garage from the homeowner here, and planned things from here.”
“Is there anything inside her car? A note—something?”
“We don’t know yet.”
“I’d like to have a look. I might recognize something.”
“Can’t let you look, right now.”
“Why not?”
“Because it’s a crime scene, Tom. We have to preserve and protect it so the techs and the lab can do their jobs properly. You know this. We just did a preliminary inventory.”
Reed stared outside. “So what’s in there?”
“Tom, we can’t tell you just yet, because we aren’t sure exactly what it is and we’re holding back.”
Reed looked around, keeping his hands pressed flat on the table to keep them from shaking.
“Why didn’t you call me?”
“I can’t notify you on each step we take.”
“Why not?”
“Tom, you’re not an investigator on this case.”
“You’re right. I’d say my stake
in this was somewhat larger. So why am I getting my information from tabloid reporters again?”
“That’s who called you?” Turgeon said. “Tia Layne from Worldwide!”'
“Does it really matter? You forgot me again.”
“Tom, it’s dangerous for you to get too close, to get involved.”
“I am involved. This is my wife. My life. I am involved.”
“Look what happened last time,” Sydowski said. “You could get hurt, or hamper the investigation. Tom, please go home.”
“And do what? Wait for calls that never come?”
“Tom—”
“Wait for Ann’s call that never comes?”
“Did you listen to those tapes, the enhanced ones?”
“For hours.”
“Anything register? Ring a bell?”
“Nothing. But you keep asking me about any connection to me. Why? Do you know something?”
“No.”
“Something you’re not telling me?”
“No, Tom. We just want to be certain we’ve looked hard at every possibility.”
“I’ve listened to those tapes over and over and I get nothing. It’s so painful because all I hear is—”
Reed stopped. Swallowed.
“All I hear is her voice.”
“You need to sleep,” Sydowski said. Reed was unshaven. His hair was messed. He had been living in the same clothes for days. He was bleary-eyed. “Go home, Tom.”
“I can’t. It’s the not knowing if she’s hurt, locked away. Dead. Until I know, I can’t stop searching for her.”
His fingers trembled as he covered his face, then looked out at the neighborhood, at the laughing children and the crime scene, feeling each splash of strobing red like waves of the abyss rolling closer to him.
48
In Mayberry, Barney reached for his gun, triggering the laugh track.
Zach and his grandmother sat before the TV, still absorbing the last live news bulletin from the garage in Excelsior. When Reed returned home, they switched off the set and released the full weight of their fear to him. Doris stood, placed her hands on Zach’s shoulders, braced for whatever Reed was going to tell them.
“It’s not her.”
“Thank God,” Doris said.
“They found the Jetta, her car, in the garage.”
“Her car? That’s it?”
Reed explained what the detectives had told him. A moment passed before anyone knew what to say.
“We saw you on TV, Dad. You looked mad.”
Reed put his hand on Zach’s head and attempted a smile for him. “I was just worried about what might’ve been in there.”
“Tom.” Doris waited until Reed’s eyes met hers. “What happened last night? You went out late to meet a man who might’ve known something?”
“Yes, I found him.”
“Did he know anything?”
“Not much. The police are talking to him.”
“Did he work at the jewelry store?”
“No, Doris, he was just someone I had to see.”
“Why? What’s his possible connection?”
“He’s a—” Reed glanced at Zach, then at Doris “—he’s from the street.”
“The street.”
“You know the crime stories I do—”
“Of course I do. That’s why this is happening.”
“What? Doris.”
Reed followed her to the kitchen, where they were alone. “Doris, please talk to me.”
She hurled a copy of the Chronicle at him, then the Star. “Doris. Stop it.”
“It’s all about headlines and stories and everything you do. You love getting close to criminals. Ann tried and tried to get you to quit but you ignored her and now look what’s happened.”
“I know but—are you blaming me for this? Doris, please.”
She covered her face with her hands and turned her back to him. Reed said nothing, allowing her time to decide if she was finished unloading her anger.
“This—” she began, “—this street person you saw, did he help you?”
He put a gun to my head and pulled the trigger. Should he tell her that?
“No. It was just—he didn’t know much, Doris, I’m sorry.”
Reed’s body ached. He went to his study. Two of the FBI agents assigned to the house for any call nodded to him from their equipment table as he walked through the front room. One was working on a laptop, the older one was playing solitaire.
“Hang in there, Tom,” the older one said.
Reed entered his study and closed the door. He went to his computer to search the news wires for updates from Arizona or San Bernardino. He got as far as entering his password before raising his hands to his face, examining the cuts and bruises on them from his encounter with Caesar. Images of Ann’s abduction swirled with the others: the corpse unearthed in the desert, the garage, the gun against his head. He was shaking. Coming apart. He rubbed his dried lips.
One. Just one drink. No. Get a grip. Just one. No.
He took stock of his office. Something had changed. The poster. The ancient San Francisco Star poster promoting his special series on unsolved murders. It had been in Zach’s room. Now it stood in a corner of Reed’s office next to a stack of binders and boxes of his old news clippings, as if someone were looking for something. He didn’t do that, did he?
His door opened, Zach entered with a sandwich and a glass of milk.
“Grandma made this for you. She went outside to the garden.”
“Did you do that?” Reed accepted the chicken sandwich, nodding to the poster and binders and boxes of his old stories.
“Yes.”
“What are you looking for?”
“Dad, don’t get mad.”
“I’m not mad, buddy. Just curious why you got out my old stories.”
“I was listening.”
“To what?”
“The tapes. Everything, you know. When the police were here and when you’re on the phone and stuff, I was listening to you.”
“You were?”
“Dad, I heard them tell you to think of anyone who you might have done a story on, to listen to the tapes, in case you recognized one of the guys.”
“Zach.” Reed set his plate aside. “Come here.”
“Don’t get mad.”
“I’m not mad. I understand. But how could you possibly know, or recognize anyone? I wrote some of those stories when you were in diapers. There are dozens, hundreds even. I can’t remember most of them. Besides, I really think—” Reed stopped himself from saying he was convinced Sydowski had given him the task of going over the tapes and searching his memory for anyone recognizable as a pacifier, a futile diversion to keep him out of the way. But he couldn’t say that to Zach. His eyes held hope. Unconditional, unyielding hope. In them, he saw Ann and felt something rising inside.
“You all right, Dad?”
Reed nodded. Zach went to the binders, kneeling on the floor.
“Look, Dad, I’m just flipping through the old articles. The computer doesn’t go back this far. I’m searching for old stories on robberies that have guys that look sorta like the guys in Mom’s case. Some even have pictures with the article. I’ve put a yellow sticker on them, and I’ve written down their names, or stuff if it’s there. Come here, Dad. See?”
Reed couldn’t see. His eyes were blurry. He patted Zach’s head.
“You’re doing a good job, son. Keep it up. I have to see Grandma.”
Reed went to the small garden at the side of the house where Doris was tending Ann’s roses. Bordered by a thick hedge, it was an oasis of privacy where Ann enjoyed nurturing her flowers. They bloomed in clusters of white, pink, yellow, and red.
“Doris, thank you for the sandwich.”
She nodded, not looking at him. “Her Caribbeans are such a lovely orange,” she said.
Reed inhaled gently. Ann always smelled so good after working here.
“You know, she wanted to
join the rose society,” Doris said, then froze at her use of the past tense. “Wants, I mean she wants to join. Dear Lord.”
“It’s all right.” He put his arm around her, then told her how Zach was coping.
“I know. He’s so much like Ann,” she said. “Refusing to quit no matter what.”
Reed gazed up at the clear sky, feeling guilty for not doing more to find her, to bring her home.
“She’s a fighter,” Doris said. “I remember the time when she was five years old and I almost lost her in an accident.”
“She told me. She fell off her bike, banged her head pretty bad.”
“She had just learned to ride her new two-wheeler on the sidewalk. I was talking to the postman in front of our house and heard a scream and crash. She’d fallen and hit her head. This was in the days before helmets. I remember running, the letters and magazines flying, how she wasn’t moving, just lying there, her eyes wide open, not answering me, not moving, feeling cold. Blood dripped from inside her ear.”
“It was a bad concussion, wasn’t it?”
“I rode in the ambulance. The postman came with me. Her father rushed from his office and met us at the hospital. It was a traumatic head injury. Fractured her skull and she had fallen into a coma.”
Reed nodded.
“Nothing could be done. What you do is pray. I held her and stayed with her the entire time, telling her I would never let go, that I needed her, that’s what you do. And you make deals with God.”
Tears rolled down her face as she worked on her daughter’s roses.
“That’s what I did. I said, ‘God, you can do anything to me, but just don’t take my little girl before you take me. Please.’” Doris paused. “Ann woke up after thirty hours and everything was fine.”
“A miracle.”
“A deal with God.”
Reed blinked.
“Two years later, my husband died of a heart attack. I realized that was the deal, that God could do anything if he spared Ann. God exacted his price from me.” Doris touched her lips with the back of her hand, holding her shears, and stared at peach roses. “So, I don’t think it would be right if he took her now, because—” Her chin crumpled as she struggled to push the words out. “Because I already paid the price. God and I have a deal, you know.”