'Ah, I can't.'
'Why not, Janice?' Bill was impatient now.
'I told the school he had the flu.'
'Well, tell David to have a miraculous recovery.'
'Okay, I'll tell him,' she said meekly. 'Are you coming home tonight?'
'Of course I'm coming home. Where else would I go?' He hung up without saying good-bye.
Forty-five
At twelve-thirty Igor Stanislovski, one of the criminalists from CSU, was just finishing his last sketch of the crime scene. The remains of Pee Wee James were bagged and ready to start their journey across town to the Medical Examiner's office for autopsy. More than two dozen uniforms from three precincts were keeping away the curious as April consulted with Charles Ding, a new investigator in the Medical Examiner's office.
Charles was a hail-fellow-well-met type with a wandering eye and distracting tic that got worse when he was nervous. He must have been pretty nervous right then because the whole time his head was bent to examine Pee Wee, his right eye winked steadily at April, giving him the appearance of a lecherous schoolboy. In fact, he was a serious guy.
'Typical drunk. Lots of scars, sores. Eczema on his hands and arms. Poor circulation in his legs. Look at those ankles. I wouldn't be surprised if he had gangrene in that foot. We'll know later, not that it matters. I'm not removing his shoes now. Bottom line, I'd say someone hit him on the side of the head, then attempted to bury him. Maybe he was interrupted. Looks like a pretty disorganized killer,' Charles said.
'Probably the half-assed work of another drunk. He certainly appears to have died right here.' Igor threw his own two cents in. 'You notice there's not much disturbance in the ground. Who knows, maybe it was an accident.'
Igor had some kind of Balkan accent, and a limp that was the result of a hollow-point bullet he'd taken in the calf several years back while attempting to stop a bank robbery one day when he went to deposit his paycheck. By now he'd finished bagging the potato chip bag, the Styrofoam cup, the shoe, three buttons, part of a sock, a crushed Coke can, an Alcoholics Anonymous key chain with its 'God-grant-me-the-courage' credo deeply encrusted with dirt, and several gallons of earth, grass, and leaf samples. The ground had been tromped by the hordes. There were no clear shoe imprints from which to make plaster casts.
Igor was five-four, had the bluest eyes and the biggest head April had ever seen. These days he was wearing his thick blond hair in a ponytail. Of all the Crime Scene people, April thought Igor was the best. She respected his opinions, but he didn't know anything about Maslow's mystery patient. Pee Wee's murder could also be the work of a small female who couldn't possibly bury a body.
Ding's eye wandered over and winked at Igor. 'We'll know more when we open him up.' He removed his rubber gloves, bagged them, replaced them with a fresh pair, then trotted off to examine the soft tissue samples Peachy had found. 'Bye now,' were his parting words.
Igor frowned and circled the air with his finger. April shook her head at him.
'Good to meet you, Charlie. Thanks,' April called after him.
Spanish! April snorted and turned to Igor. Pee Wee was dead and it was all her fault. A Chinese saying fit his life well: 'Loss upon loss until at last comes rest.'
Last night she'd trusted Mike and followed the credo 'By letting go, it all gets done.' Her reward was Pee
Wee's eternal rest. Now she felt beaten by the mischief of unknown devils.
'I help out, don't I?' Pee Wee had said only yesterday.
Not enough, Pee Wee, not enough.
'Make your eyes bright enough from evil to lead you away' was another saying among the thousands April had learned. None of them fit in America 2000. In the thousand department the worst was 'A thousand years is not enough to honor a parent.'
Actually, April thought thirty years of parent honoring was an awful lot. Trying to brighten her eyes from the evil of Pee Wee's death, she turned to Igor with her ten thousand most pressing questions. Her cell phone rang and 'Private' popped up on the screen.
'Sergeant Woo,' she said.
'Yes, hello, April, it's Jason. Is this a better time? I really have to talk to you.'
'Talk away, I have one minute.'
'Have you found Maslow?'
'No, but we found someone else.'
'Really?'
'Yes. It's getting spooky out here, Jason. We've got a head case for sure. Can we meet?'
'Someone's dead?'
'Yes, a homeless man.'
'Oh, this is not my department.'
'Well, that's not the weird thing, Jason. I need your help here. This isn't pick-and-choose time. You brought this situation to me.'
'Did I?'
'Yes, you did.'
Jason groaned. 'You cops, always playing with the truth. I asked you about one of my students, only that. What's the weird thing, April?'
'We have some finds of soft tissue.'
'You got me on that, April. Soft tissue from what?'
'Maybe human, maybe not. Our tracker found it buried, you know, near the body, but in different sites. The tissue didn't come from the homicide victim so it could be a whole other thing. What do you make of it?'
Jason groaned again. 'April, I'm a psychoanalyst. I work with the living. And among the living. Look, it's weirder than you think.'
It was her turn to be surprised. 'Really, how's that?'
'I'd like you to treat this as confidential for the moment if you can. But, I just had a little visit from Maslow's father. He has another family. Maslow has a sister he doesn't know about.'
'He has a sister?' April was excited.
'Yeah, twenty years old.'
'Who's the mother? Where does she live?'
'She's a woman Maslow's father works with, an employee of his. Mother and daughter live in Long Island City. Where the hell is that?'
'In Queens. Jesus!' April was unnerved by the sight of Woody Baum, careening across the grass toward her in Iriarte's Lumina. He was driving the car like an off-road SUV with the lieutenant in the passenger seat and Lieutenant Margaret Mary Joyce, commander of the Detective Squad of the Two-O and April's former boss, in the backseat next to Captain Higgins, the CO of the precinct. From the other direction came the Jeep of Captain Reginald. Shit, what was this, turf war?
'What?' Jason asked.
'Look, Jason, something's come up. I have to go-'
'Wait, I have an address for you,' Jason cried.
April turned the page of her notebook. 'Okay, sure. Give me the address. I'll go see the sister, where does she live?'
Jason gave her the Long Island City address. She wrote it down quickly, then shoved her notebook into her purse, her eyes nervously on the Lumina that seemed to have her targeted for a hit. She stood there trying to be cool, and Woody stopped just short of crashing into her.
Then, still dressed for summer in a butter yellow suit, mango shirt, mint green tie, and straw hat, Lieutenant