'Look,' Tenning said, staring at the radio, his eyes jitterbugging inside his head, 'you're not supposed to question me without my lawyer. You should put me in a holding cell.'
'We're
'We're trying to
'Fine with me,' I said over the radio static. I fiddled with the dial, found some '80s heavy metal, turned it up so that the discordant electronic twang almost vibrated the table.
'We're going to exhume the dogs you killed, Garry,' I said over the music. 'Match the teeth up with those wounds in your arm. And we're going to match the DNA from the blood on your club to your victims.
'And then Inspector Conklin and I are going to sign up for front-row seats for your execution in twenty years or so, unless of course you want to have me call the DA. See if we can get the death penalty off the table.'
I looked at my watch. 'I figure you've got about ten minutes to decide.'
A band called Gross Receipts launched into its jarring rendition of 'Brain Buster.' Tenning shrank into a ball, wrapped his arms over his ears.
'
Chapter 107
IT WAS STILL POURING when I parked behind Claire's SUV.
I cut across the street in the lashing rain, ran fifty yards to the front door of Susie's. I opened it to the ringing beat of steel drums and the smell of curried chicken.
I hung my coat on the rack inside the door, saw that Susie was coaxing her regulars into a limbo competition as the band tuned up.
Susie called to me, 'Lind-say, get out of your wet shoes. You can do this, girl.'
'No way, Suz.' I laughed. 'Don't forget, I've seen this before.' I showed myself into the back room. I buttonholed Lorraine and ordered a Corona.
Yuki waved to me from the back booth. Then Cindy looked up and grinned. I slid onto the banquette next to my best friend, Claire. It had been a while since we'd been out together as a group.
When my beer came, Cindy proposed a toast to me for the takedown of Garry Tenning.
I laughed off the toast, saying, 'I was extremely motivated, Cindy. I didn't want a roommate, and you were going to have to move in with me permanently if we didn't catch that bastard.' Yuki and Claire hadn't heard the details, so I filled them in.
'He's 'writing' this book called
'Come on! He's writing about
'Yeah, if you can call page after page of statistics 'writing'! Like, how much milk and grain were produced in each state in each year, how many kids went through grade school, the number of accidents involving kitchen appliances -'
'Jeez, you can Google that stuff,' Yuki said.
'But Garry Tenning thinks
'How'd he even hear all those people and their noises in his closed-off little room?' asked Claire.
'Sound travels through the plumbing and the vents,' Cindy said. 'Comes out in weird places. Like, I can hear people singing through my bathroom air duct. Who are they? Where do they live? I don't know.'
'I'm wondering if he doesn't have hyperacusis,' said Claire.
'Come again?' I said.
'It's when the auditory processing center of the brain has a problem with noise perception,' Claire told us over the racket in the back room and the clanking of dishware from the kitchen. 'Sounds that others can barely hear are intolerable to the person who has hyperacusis.'
'To what effect?' I asked.
'It would make the person feel isolated. You stir all that up with explosive-anger disorder and sociopathology, well, you get Garry Tenning.'
'None,' I said. 'He confessed. We have the murder weapon. He's in and he's done.'
'Well, if he really has this auditory disorder, Garry Tenning is going to go absolutely bug-nuts in prison,' Yuki said as Lorraine brought our dinners.
'Hear! Hear!' said Cindy, pointing at her ears.
We dug in, swapped stories and worries, Claire telling us that her workload had doubled and that 'We're having a farewell pour for Dr. G. tonight. He got a job offer he couldn't refuse. Somewhere in Ohio.'
We toasted Dr. Germaniuk, and then Claire asked Yuki how she was feeling these days.
'I'm feeling a little bipolar,' Yuki said, laughing. 'Some days I think Fred-a-lito-lindo is going to convince the jury he's a legitimate psycho. The next morning I wake up absolutely sure I'm going to beat Mickey Sherman's pants off.'
We got into a good-natured competition to name Claire's unborn baby, Cindy calling out, 'Margarita, if she's a girl,' and winning the next round for free.
Way too soon, dinner had been reduced to bones, coffee had been served, and hungry would-be diners were backed up in the doorway.
We tossed money at the check on the table and dared one another to rush into the rain. I was last out the door.
I drove toward Potrero Hill, absorbed by the rhythm of the wiper blades and the halos around oncoming headlights, finding that the vacuum of silence in the wake of the tumultuous day and the camaraderie with my friends was bringing me back down.
Joe wouldn't be sitting on my front steps when I got home.
Even Martha was still on vacation.
Thunder rumbled as I ran up the steps to my apartment. It was still raining when I went to bed alone.
Chapter 108
RICH AND I FRETTED AT OUR DESKS the next morning, waiting for Mary Jordan to come through the gate. She arrived ten minutes late, looking rattled.
I invited the Westwood Registry's office manager to join us in the windowless cell we call the lunchroom. Rich pulled out a chair, and I made coffee – black, two sugars, the way she'd taken it when we'd seen her last.
'I've been praying for Madison,' Jordan said, twisting her hands in her lap. There were prune-colored smudges under her eyes. 'I feel in my heart that I've done what God would want me to do.'
Her words stirred up a little eddy of apprehension in the pit of my stomach. 'What did you do, Mary?'
'When Mr. Renfrew went out this morning, I opened the door to his office again. I did some more digging in there.'
She hefted a large leatherlike handbag onto the table and removed a slate-blue, clothbound, old-fashioned