registered to a man named Patrick Connolly. He is Detective Byrne's cousin. Connolly stated that he lent this vehicle to Detective Byrne last week.'

Jessica looked closely. It was clearly the Sedona minivan. She looked closely at the whole image. 'I believe Kevin already acknowledged that he was there that night. This is not new information.'

Diaz hit play. The image scrolled by in slow motion this time. He freeze-framed it as the first man walked into the frame. 'This is Eduardo Robles.' He hit play again. Robles disappears off frame, walking down the alley, the alley in which his body was found. The second man enters the frame. Diaz froze the image again.

'Do you recognize this person, detective?' he asked.

Jessica noted that she had gone from Jess to detective. To another person it might have gone unnoticed. Not to anyone in law enforcement. 'No. Sorry. It could be anyone.'

'Not exactly.' Diaz hit a few keys, zoomed in. It increased the size of the pixels, but some things were obvious. Like the man's left hand. 'It can only be a white male, so it can't be 'just anyone'.' He pointed to something next to the figure. 'We took measurements on this stand- pipe. This person is over six feet tall. He is wearing a dark overcoat and a dark watch cap.' Diaz reached onto a shelf. He produced a photograph of Kevin Byrne, a picture that Jessica recognized instantly.

It had been taken a year ago at a benefit in the Poconos. It was of Kevin and her standing with a bunch of kids. Kevin wore a dark overcoat and navy blue watch cap.

Jessica said nothing.

Diaz directed her gaze to the body on the ground across the cemetery from where they stood. 'Everyone was well aware of the friction between Detective Byrne and Detective Stansfield. Add to that the incident between them at the Roundhouse and you can see what I'm faced with, right?' Diaz closed the laptop, squared himself in front of her. 'I now have a dead cop, and Kevin Byrne is missing again.'

Diaz opened a second laptop. There on the screen were two microscope photographs of hair shafts. Diaz pointed to the one on the left. 'This is a sample taken from a brush belonging to Sharon Beckman.' He pointed to the example on the right. Jessica was far from an expert, but to her eye the samples were identical. 'This was found on the driver's seat of Kevin Byrne's van. They match.'

Jessica recalled the hair on Byrne's shoulder.

'Did you get a haircut?'

'Yeah. I popped in and got a trim.'

Jessica began to feel nauseated. She remained silent, which was just as well because she had no idea what to say. Diaz closed the side door of the van, signaled to his two men. They approached, stopped a few feet away.

'Look, Jess. If you were looking at this from the outside, you would see why we need to talk to Detective Byrne.'

Jessica knew that Diaz was right. In her career she had brought people in for questioning based on far less.

'I don't know where he is, Russ. I've left five voicemails for him in the past half-hour.'

'When was the last time you called?'

'Five minutes ago.'

'Want to try again?'

Jessica took out her phone. She put it on speaker, hit Byrne's speed- dial number. It rang twice, and his voicemail greeting came on. There was no point leaving a sixth message. Jessica closed her phone.

Diaz nodded. 'Detective Byrne carries a 17?'

He was referring to a Glock 17, the standard-issue service weapon for PPD detectives. 'Yeah.'

'Does he carry a second piece?'

My God, Jessica thought, her heart in free fall. She was betraying one of the most important people in her life. She wondered how Kevin would handle the same situation if someone was asking these questions about her. 'Sometimes.'

'Today?'

Jessica told the truth. 'I don't know.'

'Does he pack anything else?'

Diaz meant knives, spray, knuckles, batons. 'No.'

Diaz processed it all. He looked out over the burgeoning mass of people, then back at Jessica. 'You know him better than anyone. I know you are close. I know this has to be hard for you.'

Jessica said nothing.

Diaz handed her a card. 'That's my cell on the back. If you talk to Kevin, have him call me.'

Jessica took the card, said nothing.

'You know this is going to move forward, right?'

'I know.'

'It's better for everyone if he walks in the front door.'

Diaz hesitated a few moments, then turned and walked away.

Jessica looked out over the cemetery. In all, there were probably thirty or forty people on scene. Jessica knew most of them by name, yet she had never felt so completely alone in her life.

A few minutes later Josh Bontrager emerged from the crowd.

'You okay, Josh?'

'No,' he said. 'I am not.'

'What's wrong?'

Bontrager bowed his head for moment. 'He was my partner, and now he's dead.'

'Josh, he wasn't really your partner. You were paired with him for one case.'

'Doesn't matter. Today he was my partner. Today I let him down.'

Jessica knew what he meant. She had certainly let Kevin Byrne down today.

'And I didn't even like the guy.'

Jessica left Josh to his thoughts for a few moments. She then filled him in on everything that Diaz had said.

'That's ridiculous,' Bontrager said.

'I know.'

'What are we going to do?'

'I'm going to try to find him before they do.'

'I'll go with you.'

'No, Josh. I can't ask you to do that.'

'Well, with all due respect, I don't remember you asking. It's something I'm volunteering for. Okay?'

Jessica lowered her voice as a pair of CSU officers walked by. 'Josh, there's a good chance I'm going off the reservation here. There's a very good chance I'm going to lose my job tonight. Maybe worse.'

Bontrager took a few steps away, looked out over the scene. The medical examiner's blue and white van came rolling up slowly. They would soon be loading Dennis Stansfield's body into the back for transport. Bontrager turned back. 'Remember my first days on the job?'

Jessica remembered them well. They'd been investigating a case that eventually took them up the Schuylkill River into Berks County. Josh Bontrager had been on temporary assignment. 'I remember.'

'Kevin wasn't too crazy about me at first, you know.'

'It just takes a little time for him to warm up to people.'

Bontrager looked at her, offered a smile. 'Bechtelsville, Pennsylvania may not be a hotbed of intellectuals, but we do know people,' he said. 'I knew right away what a closed group this is. I was the new guy, and a really inexperienced guy at that.'

Jessica just listened. She had gone through a brutal initiation period herself.

'In those first few months I made a lot of mistakes.'

'You did fine, Josh.'

'No, it only looked that way. I can't tell you how many times Kevin took me aside and showed me the ropes. How many times he covered for me.' Bontrager put his hands in his pockets. He looked across the cemetery. 'Nobody wanted me to have this job. Not really. I heard all the jokes, you know. All the stuff said behind my back.

Вы читаете The Echo Man
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