‘What happened?’ said Robbie.
‘Something was dicked with in the car,’ said Cliff. ‘And there was an accelerant used…’
‘By someone clearly not interested in hiding the fact that it was a murder,’ said Colin.
‘Something is rotten in the state of Denver,’ said Ren.
‘Colorado,’ said Robbie.
‘Glenn Buddy is sure earning his money right now,’ said Cliff.
‘Does he think Hammond’s death is linked to Helen Wheeler’s?’ said Ren.
‘I don’t know,’ said Cliff. ‘We didn’t get into it. Give him a call.’
‘No, no,’ said Ren. ‘I’ll leave him to it. He’s got a lot on.’
Her phone rang. It was Glenn. ‘Hey, Ren. I’m sure Cliff filled you in about Hammond. I just wanted to let you know that it’s obviously stalled things for a little while on Helen Wheeler’s case. A new judge will have to be drafted in. But I’m sure once that happens, it’ll speed on up.’
‘Well, isn’t it a little unusual that the judge who was about to access patient files is killed the day before they’re due to land on his desk?’
‘I think it was unusual that patients were being looked at in the first place,’ said Ren. ‘There was no indication that this was linked to a patient. And none of those patients knew that their files were going to be accessed, right?’
Glenn let out a breath. ‘None of this looks good. I just need to work out how the hell it all fits together.’
‘I wanted to talk to you about something else,’ said Ren. ‘You guys went through Helen’s computer I presume.’
‘Yes.’
‘Just – was there any trace of her searching any book-related stuff?’ said Ren. ‘Like had she researched publishers of non-fiction or what length a book like hers should be, et cetera, et cetera.’
‘No,’ said Glenn. ‘But…it was early days.’
‘Even so, a doctor of sixty-two years of age is not going to even jot notes down without checking first if there’s a market for what she’s about to do.’
‘Maybe she didn’t care,’ said Glenn.
‘Yes,’ said Ren, ‘but it makes no sense for her to write a book about psychiatry if she didn’t plan to share it with people. It’s not like there would be a burning urge in her to commit something to paper. I mean, she had already done that by writing patient notes in the first place.’
‘But she had to have been writing a book – we found the notes on her desk. And Peter Everett confirmed that she was.
‘Well, I just don’t get it,’ said Ren.
Later that night, Ren sat on the sofa in her pajamas, surrounded by food wrappers. She changed channels, skipping past soap operas, reality television, pausing on true movies and ending up on a nature channel. Ren didn’t do nature.
A crocodile was lying in the sun watching a tiny bird flying in front of him. The crocodile opened its jaws wide. Ren sat up.
‘No, little bird, get away from him. Nooo!’
Ren closed her eyes and sucked in a breath. But there was no sound of flapping wings or piercing screams. Ren slowly opened her eyes. The bird was inside the crocodile’s open jaws.
Ren turned up the volume and heard the deep voice narrate: ‘
‘Yes, we can,’ said Ren
The narrator continued: ‘
Ren turned off the television.
She went upstairs and started brushing her teeth.
Domenica Val Pando worked by exploiting weakness. And once she had leverage, she could get people to do whatever she wanted. She had top accountants, legal experts, ex-military. She had links to border patrol agents, police and Mexican government officials. Domenica bartered. And the deal was always in her favor. She used illegal immigrants who needed money for medical bills or to pay ‘coyotes’ – the guides who would bring their families across the border. Ren knew she had given shelter to a businessman on the run from fraud charges.
At some point in her life, Domenica Val Pando had learned the value of leverage. And from then on, that was her personal drug of choice. Not heroin, not coke, not meth.
27
Robbie Truax was sitting at his desk with a giant green hat on. Ren paused in the middle of the floor.
Robbie raised his hands. ‘Happy Ren Bryce Day!’
‘Oh my God, it is March seventeenth,’ said Ren. ‘This is officially the first year I have not known about it until the actual day. I am losing my touch.’
‘Do you want a Leprechaun hat?’
‘We’re all hitting Gaffney’s later.’
‘Gaffney’s is going to be mobbed.’
‘That’s never stopped you before,’ said Robbie.
‘Only if you’re the bird,’ said Robbie.
‘What is it with you and crocodiles?’ said Colin, looking up. ‘Last time it was pedophiles are like crocodiles because they haven’t changed since the dawn of time…’
Ren turned on him. ‘Listen, you – you’re either in a conversation or you’re not. Just keep your eyes on your frickin’ screen. You can’t just listen in, then look up every now and then like some little old lady from her knitting.’ She addressed Robbie, but spoke a little louder. ‘So there’s symbiosis,’ she said, ‘and
‘Yeah?’ said Colin. ‘I know which is which.’
‘Does the plover bird not get nervous?’ said Robbie.