“I’ll pretend I didn’t hear that.”
“Is Michelle any better?”
“We need to help her clean up her soul, Sean, so she won’t have to worry about a bomb ever going off again. And I’m not letting go until we get her to that point.”
“I’ll be right there with you, Horatio.”
“Good, because from what I’ve seen of that woman, there’s not a man alive who can take her by himself.”
“Tell me something I don’t know.”
CHAPTER 38
AS THEY PULLED THROUGH the college town of William and Mary and its neatly laid out brick buildings, Sean glanced over at Hayes. The good sheriff was hunched forward gripping the steering wheel so tightly his knuckles were the color of an eggshell.
“Sherriff Hayes, if you break the steering wheel in half we won’t be able to get back.”
Hayes’s face reddened and he loosened his grip. “Just call me Merk, everybody does. I guess I’m not acting like a proper law enforcement officer, am I?”
“Most cops don’t get summoned to meet with the big bad wolf in the middle of an investigation.”
“What do you think he’s going to say?”
“I doubt anything we really want to hear. And I can tell you straight out, the C does not stand for cooperation.”
“My day just keeps getting better and better!” Hayes exclaimed.
“So did you talk to Alicia?”
Hayes nodded. “After you told me she was seeing Rivest, I had to.”
“Was it serious between them?”
“She seemed to think so.”
They parked in front of the address Hayes had been given. It was a three-story brick building that appeared to Sean to be made up of residential units.
A man dressed in a polo shirt and khaki pants met them inside the lobby area. Sean sized up the fellow as Ian Whitfield’s security. The guy wasn’t as tall as Sean, and lacked bulging muscles, but there wasn’t an ounce of fat on his body; the man’s six-pack abs were visible through the shirt. And to Sean’s informed eye, the guy carried himself with the air of someone who could kill you a dozen different ways without breaking a sweat.
The first thing he did was show them his ID, then confiscate Hayes’s sidearm. He next frisked Sean, all without saying a word.
They rode the elevator up to the third floor and were soon seated in comfortable chairs around an oval table inside one of the corner units. Six-Pack disappeared for a moment and then returned with another gent. This guy also wore a polo shirt and khakis and was in nearly as good condition as the other, even though he had close- cropped gray hair and was probably nearing sixty. However, Sean noted the man limped. There was something wrong with his right leg.
A flick of a gaze by the man at Six-Pack and a manila file folder appeared in Whitfield’s hand, for this was Ian Whitfield, Sean assumed.
There followed a few minutes of silence while their host methodically read through the file. Then he finally turned his attention to them.
“There have been four confirmed suicides in the vicinity of our installation over the last twenty-seven months,” Whitfield said.
Sean hadn’t expected this opening line and obviously neither had Hayes.
Whitfield continued: “For some reason we’ve become the whipping boy for the depressed and suicidal. I don’t know why, but it seems there could be many reasons, including wanting notoriety or causing trouble. It goes without saying that I’m growing a little tired of these stunts.”
“Someone dying hardly qualifies as a stunt, does it?” Sean asked while the blood drained from Hayes’s face. “The circumstances of Monk Turing’s death have not been fully uncovered yet. Suicide, murder, we don’t know yet.”
Whitfield tapped the file. “All facts point to suicide.” He looked at Hayes.
“Don’t you agree, Sheriff?”
Hayes stammered, “I guess you could say that.”
“There was no evidence that Monk had been depressed enough to take his own life,” Sean pointed out.
“Aren’t all geniuses depressed?” Whitfield answered.
“How do you know he was a genius?”
“When people move into
“You’ve been to Babbage Town, have you?” Sean pressed.
Whitfield turned back to Hayes. “I trust I’ve made my position clear. Four suicides and now five. My patience is at an end.”
“A man
“Anyone can jump a fence and blow his brains out.”
Sean said, “Just because you say it doesn’t make it true.”
Whitfield kept his eyes on Hayes. “I’m assuming this man is associated with you somehow.”
Sean piped up. “Sorry, I’m Sean King. I guess we missed the introduction phase of the conversation. I
“The FBI has concluded its investigation and suicide was the verdict,”
Whitfield said.
“Well, it wouldn’t be the first time the Bureau has jumped the gun, would it? And of course we have the murder of Len Rivest, head of security at Babbage Town.”
“That’s no concern of mine,” Whitfield said.
“Well it is if it turns out that Turing’s death is connected somehow.”
“I highly doubt that’s the case.”
“Well, that’s why we play the game, isn’t it?” Sean said. “Because your opinion doesn’t really count.”
In response, Whitfield’s gaze flicked to the door. A moment later Six-Pack had Sean’s arm in a vise grip and was leading him rapidly to the exit.
Back in the lobby Hayes’s gun was returned to him, Six-Pack gave Sean’s arm an extra-hard squeeze and both men walked out into the darkness. As they reached the cruiser, Hayes said, “Are you nuts talking to him like that?”
“Probably.”
“Come on, you went out of your way to tick him off, why?”
“Because he’s a prick, that’s why.”
Hayes said, “He’s right about the four suicides.”
“That doesn’t mean Monk killed himself. In fact, it might have given whoever murdered Monk the idea to make it look like suicide.”
“That’s a good point.”
“Thanks. I try to have at least one a day.”
“So it’s back to Babbage Town?”
“I want to check something out first.”
Sean climbed in the driver’s seat of the cruiser while Hayes scrambled into the passenger side.
“I’m not sure regulations allow you to drive the car,” Hayes pointed out.
“In for a dime, in for a dollar,” Sean said as he put the car in reverse, backed out of the space and then took up a position away from the building entrance.
“What are we doing here?” Hayes asked.