“Hey, guera—I’ll meet you there.”

There he goes with the white girl comment again.

Sometimes it was such a pain in the ass to be Anglo.

Tess parked on Ft. Lowell Road. The dirt road into Barkman’s mother’s property was jammed with vehicles. She saw four TPD units—one of them a D car and another belonging to a detective sergeant—and a crime scene unit, TV satellite truck, and a regular TPD unit. All of which were parked either in the long driveway or along the side of the semirural stretch of road.

She waited for Danny. When he appeared, they walked toward the property.

The officer guarding the crime scene tape looked like he’d give them trouble, and he did.

Danny badged him. “We have an ongoing investigation involving Mr. Barkman—”

“Nobody can come in here.”

Tess glanced at the crowd beyond the tape and spotted a woman with a blonde ponytail in conversation with a crime scene tech and another detective. She wore a long-sleeved blouse, tan slacks, her weapon in plain sight, and most important, a silver shield clipped to her belt.

“Cheryl Tedesco!” Tess called out.

Cheryl Tedesco looked up, shading her eyes against the bright Arizona sun. She detached herself from the group. “Tess! Holy cow, girl! What’re you doing here?”

Tess introduced her partner. “We think your case links with ours.”

“I’m all ears.” Cheryl lifted the tape, and Tess and Danny ducked under. “Tell me what you’ve got.”

Three months ago, Tess and Cheryl had roomed together at an interrogation methods course in Lake Havasu City. Not only did they hit it off right away, but they shared an experience that bonded them. On their way to dinner the first night, they witnessed a car accident that nearly wiped them out and did knock down a pedestrian. Fortunately, the pedestrian survived with cuts and bruises, but the driver had to be cut out of her car. The woman was in a panic, because her dog was in a crate on the backseat. Tess and Cheryl took turns directing traffic and placating the woman as they waited for the paramedics. Between them, they were able to get the small dog carrier out and show the woman her pet was all right. This enabled her to calm down and cooperate, and eventually she was freed of the wreckage. She only went off to the hospital after they promised her the dog would be taken care of. And a day later, the woman and her dog were reunited.

Tess admired the efficient way Cheryl handled triage, the calmness with which she directed traffic and talked the panicked driver down. Maybe because Tess hoped that what she saw in Cheryl, she saw in herself.

“So what’s your interest in Barkman?” Cheryl asked.

“He was very curious about a case I’m working.” Tess told her about George Hanley, and about Barkman’s seeming obsession with the idea Hanley had been shot multiple times.

Cheryl looked mildly skeptical, and Tess didn’t blame her. It was a tenuous link. “Tell you what. I have to get back in there, but I’ll see who can brief you.” She scanned the group behind her. “Manuel—can you come here?”

A detective left the group and approached them. Cheryl introduced them and said, “Catch them up on what we’ve got, will ya? I’ll be back in a bit.”

The sun was high in the sky by now and hot, even for April.

Manuel hitched his trousers. “The victim fell through a glass-topped coffee table headfirst. What it looks like, he was in the process of changing a light bulb in the ceiling fan—there was one of those short stepladders like you’d use? He could’ve slipped and fell and hit the coffee table with his head, which is what it looks like he did. And his head went right through the glass. We think he bled to death.”

Tess stared at him, tried to assimilate this.

Danny said, “You saying it was an accident?”

“We don’t know. But it looks that way.”

“Man, that’s a weird one,” Danny said. “Talk about a freak accident.” He added, “If that’s what it is.”

Tess asked, “The ceiling fan was close to the coffee table? Close enough—”

“That he could take a header into the coffee table?” Danny finished helpfully.

“We’re trying to figure that out now.”

“Can we get in to see the scene?”

“I don’t know—”

“Hey!” It was Cheryl, walking toward them. “Thanks, Manny. All right, here’s the deal. I can slip you in to take a look, but it’ll have to be quick, okay?”

She went to the trunk of her car and handed out blue booties and gloves.

They went up to the house. A thick-trunked eucalyptus tree towered above the flat roof of the brick ranch. The desert around here was basically untouched, populated by creosote bushes and a few mesquite. A bank of vertical windows framed by posts from roof to foundation looked out on the carport. The carport was just a pad of concrete with a ramada covering above. Tess recognized the Range Rover parked on the pad.

Cheryl passed around the Vicks VapoRub.

Tess dabbed some in her nostrils. It would help, but if the smell was bad, it wouldn’t help a lot.

The door was open and the crime scene techs were already working the scene.

Tess wasn’t prepared for the carnage.

Steve Barkman had been driven by his own weight nose-first into the coffee table, shattering the glass. One shard had pierced his eye. His face had stopped five inches from the floor, and blood collected on the slope of his nose and then dripped and spattered on the Saltillo tile below.

His neck and spine had accordioned into the table—part of the force that drove his head through the glass— and the forward momentum of his torso had been stopped instantly in an awkward sprawl. He’d tried to avoid his fate by throwing out his hands, but it was too late.

He wore shorts and a T-shirt, similar to those he’d worn when Tess had met him in Credo.

It seemed like a hundred years ago.

She looked around. There was the aluminum stepladder, three to four feet tall. It had fallen to the floor. Iridescent orange paint circled the broken light bulb lying on the tile. Above, Tess saw the empty socket for the light. Barkman must have set the light globe on the coffee table; now it lay on the floor, one side broken open.

Tess kept her hands under her arms and stared at the body and the environs.

The television was on. She looked at Cheryl.

Cheryl said, “The maid said he always had the television on.”

Tess saw the logo on the bottom right-hand corner of the screen. Fox News.

“You seen enough?” Cheryl asked. “We haven’t even got a body temp yet. We’re gonna have to clear out and let the techs get to work.”

Outside, the sun shone down on them, a mockingbird sang in a tree nearby, and the air smelled like fresh laundered clothing on the line—a memory from her childhood. It smelled like spring.

But the death smell lurked underneath. It sat in the membranes of her nose and lay at the back of her soft palate.

It happened at every death scene. Tess carried the residue on her, like a thin film of dust mixed with sweat, just gritty enough to stay on her clothes and her hands. She knew this was her imagination, but it didn’t stop the odor from taking up inside her, from clinging to her pores.

Tess thought it was the price she paid to do the work she did. It was something she took from the crime scene, a part of people who had lost their lives. And it resonated for a while.

A physical manifestation of a respect for the dead.

Like a mortuary that knew part of its job was to comfort the survivors, speaking in low, respectful tones, the flowers beautiful but not glamorous, the music lovely but muted.

Just part of her job.

“So what do you think?” she asked.

“Everyone’s thinking—not just me—that it looks like an accident. Anything out of place other than what we saw?”

“Let’s wait for the techs to finish with the body and then we can go back in.”

Вы читаете The Survivors Club
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