namely a shortage of field personnel.”
Shoswitz considered this.
Boldt said, “I don’t mean to put you on the spot-”
“No, it’s not that,” Shoswitz allowed.
“Perhaps something to give some consideration to,” Clements said genially. “No hurry. Sleep on it.” Boldt sensed immediately that Clements approved of the suggestion and that it might help his own position in walking a line between the two agencies.
“I like it,” Shoswitz admitted. “My only real concern,” he directed to Clements, “is that if we let them in a little, do we give it up completely somewhere down the road? This is our town, our citizens, our investigation. We have our own political concerns. The Bureau has two faces: one is cooperation, one is complete control. Surrendering control of this investigation would not go over well, and is not what we want.”
“I understand. It is one reason I like Sergeant Boldt’s suggestion. Working as equals on the surveillance-and I’m sure that can be arranged, might indeed fend off any …”-he searched for his words-“hostile takeover.” He added, “I can explore such a relationship, if you like.”
Shoswitz thought a long time, checking with Boldt repeatedly by firing off hot glances in his direction. “If we catch him at an ATM, we all win,” Shoswitz said. It was his way of giving his approval.
On their way down in the elevator together, Daphne and Boldt agreed to meet on her houseboat for a recap. It was not very far out of the way for Boldt, and he wondered if she wanted someone to escort her inside and make sure the place was empty, and so he agreed. At one-thirty in the morning, she made a pot of herbal tea and poured them each a mugful.
She began in a tone of voice that placed Boldt on attention. “I completed my affidavit, Striker obtained a warrant, and we made an inquiry with Norwest National to obtain the checking records for New Leaf Foods.” Norwest National was Liz’s bank, renamed after a string of acquisitions, and this was certainly not lost on Daphne, he thought. “I want to see what checks were being written on and around the date of the altering of that State Health report, because I firmly believe someone was paid off, and maybe there’s a paper trail.”
“I have no objection to that. But my focus remains on Caulfield.”
“It’s not that,” she interrupted him. “The bank told me that they had already cooperated with us, had already turned over that information to us with no warrants involved. They complained at having to do so again.”
“Not me,” Boldt admitted.
“Obviously not me,” she agreed.
“Danielson,” Boldt said, guessing. “How is it that Caulfield manages to always be where our ATM surveillance teams are not?”
“Danielson is in bed with him?”
“Do I believe it? No. Can I rule it out? Also, no. Providing he’s not criminal, what would motivate Chris?”
“Money?”
Boldt nodded. “An offer from the tabloids, TV, a book deal, a movie deal-there are a lot of temptations out there for a cop these days. Different than when I was coming up.”
“Chris, sell out? He’s the department’s number one overachiever.”
Boldt hesitated before dropping his bomb, feeding Daphne’s earlier suspicions. “What if Taplin was paying him for inside information? What if Taplin had promised him Fowler’s job if Danielson could settle this affair without the publicity certain to surround a police arrest?”
“Which one of us is the psychologist?” she asked nervously.
“Do you like it?”
“I can see it, if that’s what you’re asking. Yes, it’s possible. It explains a hell of a lot of what’s been going on, and it fits with Taplin’s defensive position. Taplin’s name is in and around all of the communication on the New Leaf contamination. You want to look for someone with a lot to lose if Caulfield blew the whistle on State Health, Howard Taplin tops the list. We need Caulfield for more than these murders,” she suggested.
“We need Caulfield, period,” Boldt said.
TWENTY-NINE
I READ ABOUT THE TWO BOYS YOU KILLED.
AND YOUR FRIENDS WITH GUNS
SHOULD NOT WANDER THE WOODS.
YOU JUST WON’T LISTEN, WILL YOU?
I MEANT WHAT I TOLD YOU-YOU WILL PAY.
SOONER THAN LATER.
AND MORE WILL DIE UNTIL YOU DO.
MANY MORE.
Two newspaper articles were included at the bottom of the fax-one about the boys, and one, the mysterious murder in Golden Gardens Park. Technical Services informed Boldt that the articles had been scanned into a computer and pasted into the fax, which had been transmitted electronically from a pay phone on a side street near the King-dome. This was all supposed to mean something to Boldt, but it did not. His entire interest lay with the words at the top of this page, and the implication that Clements was right: Harry Caulfield was running out of patience. Time was almost up.
Like water seeking its own level, Boldt sought out the evidence, calling Bernie Lofgrin and complaining to him about the delay in the FBI report on the Longview Farms evidence. Lofgrin suggested he lodge the complaint with Clements; Boldt did so, and Clements promised to do what he could.
For his part, Clements believed he had convinced Captain Rankin to rescind the Adler recall that he had threatened, though the psychiatrist admitted to Boldt that Rankin was “a difficult bastard to read.”
There was a lot of talk and little action. Public Information called repeatedly, frustrated by a press corps that sensed a much bigger story than two boys dying in a tree house. Boldt issued a string of denials and no-comments but could see the inevitable coming. The story was going to break, and when it did there
MANY MORE.
Boldt could not get the words out of his head. Again he waited for his phone to ring with the news of more murders. Again his mood went sour and his squad steered clear of him. Again his appetite deserted him. His bowels bled, and the Maalox did nothing more than make his breath smell like lemon creme.
He did a quick turnaround at the dinner hour-refusing food, but swallowing down a Zantac-and prepared to join Ted Perch at NetLinQ where tonight, for the first time, Lucille Guillard’s monitoring of the Pac-West ATM network had been brought on board. The time-trap software had been expanded to cover 60 percent of the NetLinQ system.
Liz was ironing a pleated skirt for the following morning.
“I owe you a champagne dinner for that software,” he told her.
“Make it in Rome and you have a deal.”
“Rome it is.”
She laughed.
In the corner by the dryer was piled a gigantic stack of clean laundry that was his responsibility to iron, and he looked away from it because it made him feel guilty to see so much of it. In his exhausted state, it seemed to him a physical manifestation representing his total failure as a father and husband.
“If you leave, what do I tell poor Michael Striker?”
“What about Striker?” His shirt tucked in, he leaned for a kiss.
“He called when you were in the bathroom. Said he was coming by. He was checking to see that you were here, and I told him you were.” She tugged at the skirt and said down to the ironing board, “My guess is that it has nothing whatsoever to do with work. He feels a lot closer to you than you do to him.” She looked up at him. “That’s
