a toupee?” She crossed her arms. “Just be glad you sent a woman to this one.”
“I’m thrilled, can’t you see?” He forced a yawn.
“The stiff’s clothes are in a messy pile on the floor-this anally neat guy, right? Worse, six pair of laced shoes in the closet, every single one with the laces untied. But the shoes found in the bathroom, the ones he was apparently wearing prior to his shower, the laces are found
“Shoelaces? Come on, Detective!”
“Listen, this is the circumstantial stuff. It just gets my juices going, right? Gets me looking around. The smoking gun is in the hamper where I find a pair of khakis stained yellow around the knees. Knee height, as in the Shotzes’ crib.” She leaned over him and tapped the lab report he had chosen not to read. “Yellow, as in pollen.”
LaMoia shook his head to clear it and replayed her words inside his head. She spoke deliberately slowly. “The yellow smudge on the crib-pollen-was at knee height. The Taurus carpet fibers vacuumed from the nursery also contained pollen.” She crossed her arms. “You still want me to clear this one,
“Lay off.” She wasn’t the only one teasing him about his promotion. She had turned up a possible link to the Shotz kidnapping. He couldn’t ignore it, even if he wanted to.
She explained, “Lofgrin worked the Shotz evidence. Samantha Hiller worked Anderson’s. Two different techs, same result: yellow pollen. We’ve got to pursue it.” Her eyes sparkled. LaMoia missed that feeling.
He pushed back his chair, faced her, and said reluctantly, “Who is he?”
She was pretty when she smiled. “He has a pretty long sheet: trespass, couple counts of invasion of privacy- tapping phone lines, snapping Polaroids.”
“A private dick,” LaMoia guessed.
“But without the license. I checked.”
“Boldt might know,” LaMoia suggested. Intelligence had files on everyone.
“I thought you weren’t interested in Anderson,” she crowed.
“Put a sock in it. We’re going upstairs.”
“He’s a camera for hire,” Boldt informed them, studying his computer screen. “Or he was. Low-rent surveillance: the husband doing the secretary, the wife doing the tennis pro. Maybe run some drug or gambling money if he’s desperate for rent. Maybe use a baseball bat if the pay’s good enough, and I’m not talking softball. He’s small change. A troublemaker. A bottom feeder.”
“Good riddance,” LaMoia said.
“Is he, was he, the Pied Piper?” Gaynes inquired. “Is that possible?”
She had briefed Boldt on the pollen connection. He scowled. “He’s trash, Bobbie. A sucker fish. A local. Room temperature IQ. He’s not capable of something like this.”
“The pollen is a coincidence?” Gaynes asked, knowing Boldt hated the word.
LaMoia tossed out, “What if the Pied Piper hires low-rent guys to do his legwork? Once it’s done, he clips ’em.”
The suggestion won Boldt’s interest. “Not the actual abduction,” Boldt protested. “Some of the advance work maybe. We’ve seen stranger things, I suppose.”
Gaynes suggested, “They arrange a meeting and both come away carrying pollen. The Pied Piper carries it to the crib, Anderson leaves it in the hamper. Why not? Circumstantial, but it’s still a direct link between the Shotz kidnapping and this vic. One of those coincidences my former sergeant told me never to accept.” She glared at Boldt.
“And one we must pursue,” Boldt agreed. “We need the source of that pollen,” he reminded LaMoia. “A garden near the Shotzes? A commercial nursery? A rendezvous between the Pied Piper and Anderson, as Bobbie suggested? Maybe this pollen gives us the Piper’s location.” He continued, “No matter what, it’s worth pursuing.” He asked her, “Autopsy?”
“When they can get to it,” she answered. “Several days at least.”
“I’ll push Dixie,” Boldt said. Dr. Ronald Dixon was one of Boldt’s few close friends. “You two have a minute to brainstorm this?” They nodded. “Okay. Bobbie’s right about not taking the hairpiece into the shower-”
LaMoia jumped in. “So the doer smokes him, missed the hairpiece, strips him naked and leaves him in the tub for us to find.”
Gaynes said, “In stripping him, he leaves the shoes tied. Doesn’t notice that Anderson is the neat and tidy type. He leaves the clothes in a pile.”
LaMoia spoke excitedly, “Let’s say they didn’t meet until Anderson’s crib. It’s Anderson with this pollen on him. The Piper does Anderson, gets the pollen all over himself, and the rule of mutual exchange leaves it on the crib and the floor mat of his Taurus.”
Boldt cautioned, “Possible. But the pollen is on the knees of Anderson’s pants in the hamper,” he said, checking with Gaynes, who nodded, “and the smudge on the crib is at knee height. Could mutual exchange explain that? More likely Anderson and the Piper were in the same garden, or nursery, or field. But, no matter what, we-”
“-Need a second look at Anderson’s apartment,” Gaynes interrupted.
LaMoia didn’t want Boldt running his investigation. Advice was one thing, taking control another. He spoke quickly. “Sarge checks his snitches for any word about Anderson on the street. You,” he said to Gaynes, “sit in on Dixie’s autopsy. Cause of death is critical here.” LaMoia ignored her attempt to interrupt. “I chat up Bernie Lofgrin and ask for some comparison microscopy on the pollen, hoping pollen A matches pollen B. SID returns to Anderson’s for a more thorough pass. You know why I love this shit, Sarge?” he asked Boldt rhetorically, not pausing. “We’ve got ourselves some lunch meat. A bag in the fridge. A toe-tagger. A good old naked stiff, hairpiece and all. A body!” He felt elated. “So shoot me,” he said, catching Gaynes’s disapproving expression. “I love dead bodies. I’ll take a bloody crime scene over a missing baby any day of the week.”
“You’ve still got two missing babies,” Boldt reminded. “The dead body is Bobbie’s. She’s lead on it. And I happen to be free at the moment.” He stood and offered Gaynes an expression that asked if she were ready to go. She nodded. “SID can do Anderson’s again, but it needs a detective’s eye first.”
“Foul ball,” LaMoia complained, searching for some support.
Boldt said slowly, “Your job is to deliver all this to the task force. Our job is to keep you from making a fool of yourself and make sure it’s worth it.”
“We’ll get back to you,” Gaynes said, proud as a peacock.
LaMoia grimaced at her. He felt as if his head were in a vice. He checked his watch: Hayes Weinstein had been missing for twenty-two hours. Rhonda Shotz, for ten days.
“Shit,” LaMoia said.
CHAPTER 14
Anderson’s apartment occupied the left half of a 1930s clapboard that had been converted to a duplex. Situated behind a video store, it shared space with a JC Penney catalog outlet. The potholed alley leading into it was partially buried in fast-food litter and soggy newsprint and smelled of cats.
Reaching the mouth of the alley, Boldt grabbed the elbow of Bobbie Gaynes and stopped her. He listened hard and then looked around, studying every crack and crevice. The sun would be up for another few hours, but wedged between two towering brick walls the alley was in the midst of an artificial twilight. Boldt looked around, his unease contagious.
“Okay,” he said, though unsure. He’d been out of the field too long.
They walked on. Anderson’s banged-up door had three keyholes at varying heights and a Day-Glo police sticker laid across the doorjamb, sealing it. They both donned latex gloves. Boldt felt a rush of satisfaction: a crime scene. At the same time, he experienced a pang for the two missing kids. If anything ever happened to Miles and Sarah … he didn’t blame Weinstein for breaking. No one could.