“I’ll be there in five minutes.”

He slipped the phone into his pocket, accelerating through the intersection in spite of the red light. Edward Trisco had murdered Harris Carmichael. He must have seen them together the other night at the cafe. They were sitting at the table by the window. The same table Trisco had used to sit and watch Rosemary work out at her gym. An image surfaced, along with a shiver, and Teddy suddenly remembered where he’d seen Trisco before. On the street as he and Powell had left the cafe. When they stopped at the corner, Trisco had been standing just a few feet behind them. He had a scarf over his mouth, but the zombie look in his eyes was the same. Trisco had followed them to his office that night and found out who he was.

Teddy grimaced as he thought about the violation, Trisco’s invasion of his property and life. The idea that like Carmichael, Teddy or even his mother could have been the next milestone in the misinvestigation of Darlene Lewis’s murder, tagged and bagged and shipped off to the morgue. When he met with Powell, he’d have to control his impatience, reel his anger back a couple of notches, find a way to seize his composure and hold on.

He looked at the speedometer and eased off the gas, keeping an eye out for ice patches and listening to the rock salt beat against the underside of his car. As he made a right onto Spruce Street, he saw the lights three blocks off. Police cars, crime scene techs, the medical examiner’s van. Finding a place to park would be impossible. When he reached a break in the cars and spotted a fire hydrant, he pulled over, grabbed his briefcase, and started hustling toward them on foot.

The press had been pushed up Twenty-fifth Street, the park surrounded by bright yellow crime scene tape. Teddy could see Powell standing with Detectives Vega and Ellwood, watching the medical examiner bag the body. As Teddy dipped beneath the tape and a cop protested, Powell looked up and gave the okay. She was wearing a ski parka over a black skirt and tights. Her blond hair and blue-gray eyes were bright and shiny and more vivid than the moon. But the expression on her face matched the detectives. It wasn’t easy. Just grim and hard.

Teddy’s eyes drifted down to the body bag, already set on the gurney. Vega yanked the zipper open and stretched the plastic apart. When Ellwood hit the corpse with a high-powered flashlight, Teddy tried not to flinch.

Harris Carmichael had been mutilated. Puncture wounds littered every inch of his frozen body. His eyes were open but milky, and looked as if they’d popped out of his head. His mouth and nostrils were pressed shut and unnaturally crooked.

“What’s wrong with his mouth and nose?” Teddy said.

“They’re glued shut,” Vega said. “The rest was just for kicks.”

“Who found the body?”

“A neighborhood dog,” Powell said. “Carmichael was buried in the snow. Now let’s talk.”

He followed them to an unmarked car idling by the curb. Vega and Powell took the front seat with plenty of attitude. Teddy climbed in back with Ellwood, opened his briefcase and pulled out the photograph Jill had printed off the Internet.

“His name’s Edward Trisco, and he comes from money. He’s got a history with the district attorney. The Holmes confession and the evidence you collected at Darlene Lewis’s house is bullshit. Trisco’s the one you’re looking for.”

They traded glances, which Teddy expected but ignored.

“There’s blood on your jacket,” Ellwood said, eyeing him carefully.

The detective switched on his flashlight, following the splatter down the front of Teddy’s coat until he reached the tear just above the pocket. He poked his finger through the hole, examining the shape of the cut while Powell and Vega watched. The material was slashed open and shredded. Trisco’s knife had been sharp.

For the next half hour, Teddy told them everything he knew about Edward Trisco III. Seeing him on the street the night he and Powell spoke with Carmichael at the cafe. The assistant manager’s positive ID of his photograph. Trisco’s history with the model five years ago, along with an off the record summary of what Teddy and Nash had learned from his psychiatrist. Vega spent most of the time drinking coffee from a Styrofoam cup and shaking his head. Ellwood remained silent, leaning against the door for distance and studying Teddy’s demeanor. Powell wanted to see evidence of the money Andrews had received from the Trisco family. When he showed her the papers and pointed out the dates, her eyes sharpened and she passed them over to Ellwood, who switched his flashlight back on.

It was the first time Teddy had gone through the case from beginning to end. Vega and Ellwood were particularly interested in Holmes’s nightmares. Both detectives had been present when Holmes confessed to Andrews, and heard Holmes talk about his dreams in detail. What Teddy had just told them did not discount the physical evidence against Holmes, or even his confession that he murdered Darlene Lewis, Valerie Kram, and ten others. But Teddy could see the troubled look on their faces, the disappointment and worry. There was the chance that they’d made a mistake, the veil suddenly lifted. Everyone knew that with enough work, confessions could be made to happen whether they were true or not. Teddy felt certain that at the very least, he had their attention. When he was through, he dug back into his briefcase and handed Vega the death threat he’d received in the mail, sealed in a plastic bag.

The medical examiner tapped on the driver’s side window. Vega turned and lowered the glass.

“Some asshole’s got a camera on the roof,” the ME said. “I wanna get the body out of here. You got a problem with that?”

They looked out the windshield, scanning the roof lines and spotting the video camera on top of a townhouse on the corner. One of the local TV stations must have paid off the owner in spite of the hour. The camera operator had a bird’s-eye view of the entire crime scene.

Vega nodded at the ME, then raised the window slightly and lit a cigarette. He leaned against the door, examining the letter and envelope Teddy had received from Colt 45 on Somebody Street. After a moment, he passed it over to Powell without showing any emotion. He was mulling it all over, the glint in his eyes moving like the runner lights on a plane sweeping across a midnight sky.

Teddy’s cell phone rang. It was Nash, calling from his office with news from the FBI. When Teddy hung up, he pushed his briefcase aside and sat back in the seat.

“The plate on Trisco’s car was stolen from the long-term parking lot at the airport.”

“So what else is new,” Ellwood said.

Teddy shot a look at Powell and held it.

“The car they found parked beside it,” he said. “It belongs to Rosemary Gibb.”

FIFTY-NINE

As they swept up the long drive, the Trisco estate came into view through the leafless oak and maple trees. It was a large Tudor-styled mansion in Radnor, just a few miles from Teddy’s house, and he remembered reading about the place in the magazine section of the Sunday Inquirer as a boy. It was more of a building than a house, set on fifty acres of undeveloped land in the woods. In spite of all the cars parked before the entrance, the place looked closed.

It was six-thirty in the morning. Vega had picked the time wanting to cause as much disruption as he could. Ellwood had stayed behind at the crime scene, asking for the keys to Teddy’s car. The detective wanted to shepherd the evidence back to the lab at the roundhouse, coordinate their effort to find Trisco with the FBI, and review the evidence against Holmes in light of Teddy’s story. Everything would be done on the QT, and Vega agreed. Apparently both detectives had a thing for Andrews that began with their inherent distrust of Michael Jackson, the detective assigned to the DA’s office. Still, they were a long way off from reaching a conclusion on Alan Andrews, or even thinking about their approach to the problem if what Teddy said was true.

Teddy wasn’t angry that the detectives or even Powell hadn’t bought his story at face value. They were acting on hunches, but grounded in the methodical world of what they could see and touch with their own eyes and hands. And the situation was delicate. Tedious. Edward Trisco had attacked Teddy and was the prime suspect in the disappearance of Rosemary Gibb and the tortured murder of Harris Carmichael. Although there was good reason to believe Trisco was involved in the murders of Darlene Lewis and the others, Teddy hadn’t given them anything tangible to work with. There wasn’t a hard link, a piece of physical evidence, threading its way between Trisco and

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