“It’s also a man’s name.”
“Not any man I know.”
“Why the cutters, Doyle?”
“What I said, an emergency.”
“It’s a crime scene, Doyle.”
“It’s a crime scene now, but it’s not gonna be a crime scene forever. You don’t give me the key to that chain, I got to get in.”
“Emergency,” said Milo. “Like the place burns down.”
“What I said was just in
“You think of it as your place.”
“I know it better than anyone.
“Who?”
“Those two. Look what happened to them,” said Bryczinski. Reaching for the soda can, he took a long, slow sip.
“Their fault?”
“I’m not saying that, I’m saying it was stupid to go in there at night.”
“What’s your theory about the murders, Doyle?”
“They went up there to fool around, I dunno, maybe some psycho crashed the party. That’s my point: Way the chain was before, anyone could get in.”
“So you should be happy I put on a new one.”
“Leave the key, I’ll say thank you. Now I need to get back there. Can I have that ride?”
“Happy to arrange it, Doyle. If you take a polygraph before you leave.”
Bryczinski’s eyes widened. “Company gave me a poly when they hired me. I passed with honors, ask ’em for a copy.”
“So you wouldn’t mind doing it again.”
Bryczinski thought. “Hell, why not? If it don’t take too long.”
Detective Three Delano Hardy was the closet to a polygraph specialist the day shift had going. He hadn’t administered the test in over a year, wasn’t even sure where the gear was, but he agreed to look for it.
Ninety minutes later, the procedure was over and Hardy stepped out of the room, shaking his head. “A little jumpy on baseline, but I’m not seeing deception, not even close, sorry.”
Milo took the printout. “Thanks for trying, amigo.”
Milo and Del had partnered a long time ago, until Del ’s devout wife had objected to her husband working with a homosexual.
Del said, “No sweat, Big Guy. Good luck.”
A uniform drove Bryczinski back to Borodi. I scanned the poly results.
Milo said, “You see something?”
“Nothing but truth,” I said. “Especially given the anxious baseline. He’s not a cold psychopath able to fake the machine.”
Milo said, “But he is overinvolved with that site. Him and Charlie Rutger.”
“Must be the edifice complex.”
We returned to his office, where he picked up a fresh message slip. “Well, well, well, Professor Ned Holman wants to talk.”
He returned the call. “Professor? Lieutenant Sturgis… yes, sir, of course I remember… that so? No prob, I can be at your house in-all right, yes, I know where it is. An hour would be fine.”
Dropping the receiver in its cradle, he said, “First time we met him, he was all mellow. Now just the opposite, definitely something on his mind. Wonder what
CHAPTER 14
Ned Holman had chosen to meet at a public parking lot in Playa Del Rey, the westernmost tip of the district where the neighborhood turns to a village and the ocean washes past dreamily.
Just a few miles past the Bird Marsh, where the bodies of four women had shown up last year, minus right hands, and facing east. Milo and Moe Reed had closed that case, solved two other homicides in the process.
Not a word about it as we sped past. Like a lot of driven people, he prefers the agony of living in the moment.
Holman’s van was pulling into a handicapped slot just as we arrived. Other than us, no other vehicles. The van’s door glided back, a ramp slid out. By the time we were out of the unmarked, Holman had rolled down in his chair and was watching the breakers.
He wore gray sweats that accentuated the heft of his upper body and tried to do the same for wasted legs. His beard was neatly trimmed, his hair plastered down hard, to resist the breeze.
We positioned ourselves between his chair and the sand.
“Thanks for coming, gentlemen. This is a place I go to relax.”
“What’s on your mind, Professor?”
Holman watched a solitary beachcomber parallel the tideline, fishing through sand with a metal detector. Stopping to inspect something shiny, the man tossed it back.
Holman said, “I see them out here all the time. No one ever finds anything.” Smiling. “Maybe everything’s already been discovered.”
“Oh, I don’t know, sir,” said Milo. “My job, I’m learning new stuff all the time.”
“Good for you.” Holman licked his lips. “This is extremely difficult, but I feel I need to.”
Thick fingers drummed the wheels of his chair. “I want to be clear, at the outset: I love my wife. She takes good care of me.”
Tightening up on the last three words. “Why should I complain if she has needs?” Holman’s barrel chest heaved. “Like many people in our situation, Marjie and I engage in mutual deception. She pretends not to miss what we had, I pretend not to know she’s pretending.” Inhaling. “Thirty-eight years has cemented our relationship.”
“Makes sense,” said Milo.
“So I don’t blame her,” said Holman. “I won’t claim it doesn’t bother me, but I’m not tormented.”
The beachcomber picked up something else. Held it to the light. Discarded it.
Holman watched with satisfaction. Grew grim. “The ones that peeved me were so-called friends of mine, and even there, I know I’m being irrational. Two guys, in particular, part of our social group. After my accident, my relationship with them changed because it had been based on tennis, basketball, squash, all that good stuff.”
A heron soared west. Needle-nosed, blue-gray pterodactyl with a six-foot wingspread. Stalking my koi pond, the bird would be the enemy. Out here, a magnificent creature.
Ned Holman said, “I’m running on because I want you to understand Marjie. She’s not some slattern, she’s a fine woman.”
A button-press rotated the chair away from us. We shifted to face him. Western light limned his bulky frame with a bright silver aura.
“Sometimes, when she goes out, I follow her,” he said. “Not every time, not even most of the time. I don’t know why I do it. Perhaps its because when she leaves, the house grows silent in a rather repugnant way. Somewhat like a mortuary, I suppose, and being alone makes me feel moribund. Marjie makes it easy, she’s a creature of habit, always ends up in the same place. Places.”