'The guy he bumped into?'
'No.' Pakula shook his head, biting down on the word
'Oh, sure.' And the pages started flipping again. 'It's Scott… ' Kasab squinted, trying to read his own notes. 'Linquist. I've got his work phone, home phone, cell phone and home address.' He tapped the page, smiling, eager to please.
'Happen to have a description?'
'Of Linquist?'
'No, damn it. Of the supposed killer.'
Kasab's face looked crushed, and he flipped more pages as he mumbled, 'Of course I do.'
Now Pakula felt like the asshole. It was a little like stepping on a puppy. He rubbed his hand over his face, trying to get rid of the exhaustion and his impatience. Overdosing on caffeine only made him cranky.
'Linquist said he looked young, was shorter than him. I figured Linquist at about five-ten. He said he had on jeans and a baseball cap. Said the kid bumped into him, you know, in a hurry, on his way out of the bathroom just as Linquist came in. In fact, Linquist said he saw the body and the blood, turned around and raced back out to get help and the kid was nowhere in sight.'
'How young a kid?' Pakula doubted this was the killer. Probably a kid in shock, not knowing what to do or not wanting to get involved. Maybe even afraid he'd get blamed for it.
'He couldn't say,' Kasab said, but he continued to check his notes. 'Oh, here it is. He said he never got a look at the kid's face.'
'Then how'd he know he was a kid?'
Kasab looked up at him as if checking to see if the question was a test. 'I guess by his demeanor or maybe his stature.'
Great, Pakula thought. Now the rookie was guessing. Brilliant police work. Pakula wanted to groan, but instead turned and glanced back at Terese Medina who had meticulously made her way to the corpse. Pakula watched Medina pick at the back of the stiff's polo shirt with her forceps. Maybe they'd get lucky and there'd be some interesting transfer debris. Now,
'This is weird,' she said, turning it around for a more thorough inspection. To Pakula it looked like a piece of white fuzz, no bigger than a dime.
'What is it?' Pakula came closer while she slipped it into a plastic bag and was picking another off the monsignor's polo shirt.
'I could be really off base,' she said, holding it up to her nose this time, 'but it looks like crumbs.'
'Crumbs?'
'Yeah, bread crumbs.'
Before Pakula could respond, his cell phone started tinkling, the sound of a million tiny little bells. He should never have let his daughter Angie _ the techno nerd __ program the damn thing. He had no idea how to change the tone and instead he resorted to ripping the phone off of his hip, breaking his record at two rings.
'Pakula.' All he got was static. 'Hold on.' He turned his back and walked down the hallway, hoping for a stronger signal. 'Yeah, go ahead.'
'Pakula, it's Carmichael.'
'Where the hell are you, Carmichael? I could use your butt down here at the airport.'
'I'm still at the station.'
'I've a got a sliced-up priest on the bathroom floor with idiots walking around him to take a piss and maybe even eat a sandwich over his dead body.'
'What?'
'Never mind.'
'Well, that all sounds like a lot of fun, but I thought you might be interested in the phone call I just got. A Brother Sebastian from the Omaha Archdiocese's office wants to know the condition of Monsignor William O'Sullivan's body.'
'You've gotta be kidding. How the hell did he already find out? We just ID'd the padre less than an hour ago.'
'Said he received an anonymous phone call.'
'Really?'
Pakula could hear Detective Kim Carmichael crunching, a nervous habit that added to her waistline. Then the rest of them would pay, having to listen to her complain in a burst of choppy Korean expletives. But he'd trade Kasab for her, too.
'Here's the thing, Pakula, actually two items I think you'll find interesting. Brother Sebastian seemed awfully concerned about the monsignor's personal effects, particularly one leather portfolio. Second, he wanted us to know that Archbishop Armstrong would help us, so it certainly wouldn't be necessary to bring in the FBI.'
'The FBI?' Pakula laughed. 'Okay, Carmichael. Very funny. But it's been a long day, and I'm really not in the mood for __ '
'I'm not kidding, Tommy. That's what he said. I even wrote it down.'
'Why the hell would we call in the FBI for a local homicide?'
'He tried to sound nonchalant about it when he said it,' Carmichael replied, 'but I could hear something, you know. He was nervous and careful with his words, and yet, trying to be all like it's no big deal.'
Pakula stopped, leaned against the wall, keeping out of earshot of the coffee and doughnut counter. He couldn't remember seeing a leather portfolio. From the beginning he thought this was a random hit, maybe a robbery gone badly despite the padre's wallet left behind filled with euros. Euros were worthless to a local petty thief. But what if the killer hadn't been looking for quick cash? What if he knew exactly who he had followed into the men's bathroom? Was it possible someone intended to kill the good monsignor? That made it a whole different case.
'Hey, Pakula, you fall asleep on me?'
'Do me a favor, Carmichael. Give Bob Weston a call and fill him in on the details.' '
'You sure you wanna do that?'
'The archbishop says he doesn't want us to bring in the FBI. Yeah, maybe I might check with the FBI to see why that is.'
CHAPTER 7
Maggie had just gotten home when her cell phone began to ring. She and Harvey were in the middle of their 'welcome home' routine even though she had seen him several hours ago. Ever since she had rescued the beautiful white Lab, he treated each of her arrivals as if it was a pleasant surprise, those sad brown eyes so grateful she hadn't abandoned him like his previous owner. Rather than cut short his slobberfest, she sat down in the foyer and pulled out her phone.
'Maggie O'Dell,' she answered, trying to convince Harvey to keep his licks confined to her other hand. Now on the floor with her face within his reach, Harvey decided it, too, was fair game.
'O'Dell, it's Racine. Did I catch you at a bad time?'
Maggie wondered if Racine could hear the sloppy kisses and was referring to the sound or the time of night.
'I just got home. What's up?'
'I know it's late. You sure this isn't a bad time?'
Maggie smiled. No doubt Racine could hear the wet licks. She patted Harvey's head rather than push him away. Maybe
'No, this is fine. Go ahead.'