her, and extended his trajectory.
She entered the kitchen, checking the counters and opening drawers. As she searched, she took out her cell phone and called the emergency number. “This is Detective Sergeant Catherine Hobbes. I need an ambulance at 59422 Vancouver. We have an injured victim here. Thank you.” She kept going to the back door. There were some jackets hanging on pegs beside it. She patted the pockets of a jacket, then felt the hard shape of the wallet and heard the clinking. She reached in and pulled out the key ring.
She dashed out to the garage. First she tried the wrong key, and then found the right one. The springs of the lid made it pop up a few inches, and instantly the smell of fear—urine and sweat—came to Catherine in a wave. She raised the lid the rest of the way.
The woman rose to the light like a drowned body rising from the depths to break a calm surface. She had streaks of dark dried blood that had run from her nose and lips, and from a cut at her hairline. All of them had run in stripes on both sides of her face as she lay there in the dark. The bleeding seemed to have stopped a long time ago, so the blood was cracked like old paint. She was naked, and Catherine could see purple bruises on her arms, ribs, hips. Her wrists had been tied behind her. A separate strand of cord had been tied to keep her elbows back and make it harder for her to move. Catherine helped her sit up, and untied the cords. “Are you Myra?”
The woman nodded and her chin began to tremble.
“I’m Sergeant Hobbes. It’s over now, and you’re going to be all right.”
“Did he kill my parents? He said he had already killed them. He had insurance on all of us.”
“No. They’re fine. They’re the ones who called us.”
“He said he had already killed them, and that he was going to kill me today.” She began to sob.
“Don’t worry, Myra. They’re just fine, and you’ll see them later. Don’t worry. He can’t hurt anybody again. You don’t have to worry about anything. Let’s get you out of there.” She helped Myra ease one foot out of the trunk to the floor of the garage, then the other. She opened the Escalade, snatched the blanket, and wrapped it around her.
“You’re safe,” she said. “It’s all over now.” She held her in a gentle embrace and rocked her back and forth. In the distance there was a siren.
37
When Catherine got home and picked up her telephone, there was a message tone. She dialed her code and listened. “Catherine, this is Joe Pitt. You said you would go out with me if I came up to Portland. Well, I’m here. Meaning Portland. I’d like to see you tonight, and I’m making reservations for every half hour from eight until ten at different restaurants. Give me a call whenever you come in. I’m at the Westin hotel.” He recited the telephone number, but Catherine was not ready to write it down.
She replayed the message, wrote down the telephone number, and then dialed it. When Pitt answered, she said, “Hi. You’re pretty sure of yourself, aren’t you?”
“No. As far as I can tell, there’s nothing in our history together that would give me the least bit of confidence,” he said. “I just haven’t been able to pin you down on when I could come, so I figured I would come now and wait until you have time to go to dinner with me.”
“What a speech. I’d have to be a fool not to go. What should I wear and how much time have I got?”
“Dress up—really fancy. You have five minutes.”
“I might be able to make it to your hotel at eight, so keep the eight-thirty reservation.”
“See you then.”
When she arrived at the hotel, Joe Pitt was standing inside the entrance in a dark suit. Catherine was glad that she had taken him seriously and worn her only recently purchased fancy outfit, a black cocktail dress. She had also put on her white-gold necklace that had been her grandmother’s. Pitt walked outside as soon as he saw her, and told the valet, “Take her car, please, and bring mine.” He handed him a ticket.
She got out and watched her car disappear down the ramp to the garage, and said, “What—you don’t want to be seen in a working woman’s unpretentious Acura?”
“No. I just like driving when I’m on a date, so I rented a car.”
The valet returned with a Cadillac, and she smirked at Joe Pitt. “You can’t impress me with that. I used to pull those things over all the time with a crummy Crown Victoria Interceptor.”
“Me too,” he said. “But I always wished I had one.”
They drove to the restaurant, and the maitre d’ conducted them to a table. They ordered their dinners, and ate while they talked about Catherine’s near miss in catching up to Tanya in Flagstaff, and then her failure to head her off in Albuquerque. Joe Pitt said, “I’m sort of surprised you haven’t told me about your day.”
She frowned. “You know about that?”
“Yes,” he said. “But I’d be delighted to listen to the story again if you’d like to tell it.”
“How?” she said. “How do you know already?”
“I called your office at around noon, trying to reach you. I talked to Mike Farber, and he told me about it.”
She looked crestfallen. “That’s why you came? Because you heard about the Olson thing and felt sorry for me?”
“Sorry for you?” he said. “I came because I thought you’d be in a good mood and let me celebrate with you. You’re a hero,” said Joe Pitt. “In the next couple of days the wire services will pick up the newspaper stories, and the networks will pick up the television news.” He sat back to let the waiter clear their plates.
“I hope they run my picture,” said Catherine. “I’ll be able to cash a check at my bank branch without having to show my ID anymore.”
“Probably not. But next time the promotions get handed out, there might be something in the goody bag. They need people like you, and they know it.”
“Why say ‘like you’? I’m me, other people are other people, and we’re not alike.”
“ ‘Like you’ means cops who actually got to a murder victim before the guy killed her. When the brass see a young, beautiful homicide detective who saves an abused victim—probably by minutes—they want to throw a party. You’re the proof that what they’re doing makes sense. With that bandage on your forehead that you’re bravely trying to hide under your hair, you’re a photo op they couldn’t buy for anything.”
“It’s a Band-Aid, and I put it on myself.” She smiled. “Want one?”
“No, thanks.”
“You certainly do bring a better brand of malarkey than you used to.”
“Malarkey? I don’t think I’ve heard that word in about thirty years.”
“Ladies don’t say ‘horseshit.’ ”
“Oh?”
“At least not to somebody who flies a long way and takes them to a nice restaurant.”
“If compliments embarrass you, I’ll stop talking about it.” He lifted his wineglass. “I’ll just drink to your courage and sagacity.”
She lifted her glass of water. “And I to your discerning taste.”
They sipped, and put down their glasses. Pitt looked at her closely. “You never drink. Did you ever?”
“Sure,” she said. “When I was young. Not for a few years, though.”
“Are you an alcoholic?”
She was taken aback. “What?”
“A lot of friends of mine who will never touch a drink are alcoholics. A lot of them are cops. I wondered if you were.”
She felt defensive and angry for a second, but as she looked at him, she detected nothing but honest sympathy. “I don’t know,” she said. “Let’s just say that alcohol does things to me that I don’t particularly want done, so I stopped drinking.”
“Good for you,” he said. “But bad for me. I’ll just have to try to seduce you with my wit and charm alone.”
She smiled. “I guess your strategy doesn’t include surprise. I did like the flattery, though.”
“It was admiration,” he said. “And I really meant it.”
“Now that I know your intentions, I’ll have to be a bit skeptical.”