“Mr. Foster had it in his head he might outrun me,” Mendez said, depositing Foster on a chair.
Vince frowned. “Oooh ... never run, Mr. Foster. It makes you look guilty.”
“I haven’t done anything.”
“Then why did you run?” Vince asked, taking his seat. “See how that works?”
“I’m being harassed.”
“No, I believe you’re being arrested. Which will follow with being booked and fingerprinted and deposited in the county jail.”
He made a couple of notes, referred back a few pages, took his glasses off and set them aside.
“Gina Kemmer regained consciousness this afternoon.”
“That’s good news,” Foster said.
“Not for you. Gina tells us you shot her and dumped her down an abandoned well and left her for dead.”
“That’s absurd!” Foster said, trying to laugh. “Gina is a friend! She’s confused. She must have a concussion or something.”
“No, actually, she doesn’t. She broke her leg during the fall, but she didn’t hit her head. There’s nothing but layers and layers of garbage down at the bottom of that well. A pretty soft landing.”
“Why would I do that to her?” Foster asked.
“Here’s another tip for you: Never ask a question you aren’t going to like the answer to.
“When Marissa was killed, Gina got scared, on account of she knows a lot of secrets,” Vince said. “She’s a sweet kid, Gina. She doesn’t have the stomach for secrets. She just wants to have her little store, and live in her little house, and have her friends. That’s all Gina wants.
“But her best friend gets killed, and she’s afraid maybe she knows who did it. She figures to get out of Dodge before something bad can happen to her. But she should take a rack of cash with her—just in case. So she calls a friend—you. You’ll give her a little ‘loan,’ she thinks.
“The next thing she knows, she’s in the trunk of your car.”
Foster shook his head. “That never happened.”
“I can tell you haven’t done this a lot, Mr. Foster,” Vince said. “Tip number three: Don’t deny what can be proved absolutely.”
“We’ve impounded your vehicle, Mark,” Mendez said. “It’s in our garage, and as we sit here, evidence technicians are going through that trunk with a fine-toothed comb—literally. All they need to find is one hair.”
“Do you own a handgun, Mr. Foster?” Vince asked.
“No.”
“If you do, and it’s registered, we’ll find out,” Mendez said.
“I don’t own a gun.”
“Does Darren Bordain own a gun?”
“You would have to ask him.”
“Oh, we will,” Mendez said.
“You don’t strike me as the kind of guy who reacts aggressively to situations as a rule, Mark,” Vince said. “You must have felt very threatened by Gina. You must have thought she could cause you to lose something or someone very important to you. Your career, for instance.”
“She threatened to tell Bruce Bordain about you and Darren, didn’t she?” Mendez said. “Bruce sits on the board at McAster. If he wanted you gone, you’d be gone.”
“You define yourself by your career, don’t you, Mark?” Vince said. “You’re proud of what you’ve achieved. People your age don’t reach the status you’ve reached in your world, do they?”
“Or did you do it for Darren?” Mendez asked. “If Gina let that secret go ... Bye-bye, political career. I wouldn’t be surprised if the old man disowned him, either. Even if Haley Fordham is his kid.”
Foster sighed. “You might notice I’m not participating here. I don’t have anything to say—other than that I didn’t do it.”
“We have a victim ID,” Mendez said. “You’re not going to come out on the right side of this, Mark. You need to think about how you can salvage something out of this mess. If Darren killed Marissa—”
“Darren didn’t kill Marissa.”
“How can you know that—unless you were with him that night.”
“I know because I—”
Dixon rapped on the door and opened it, grim faced. “Mr. Foster’s attorney is here. Courtesy of Darren Bordain.”
93
“He was going to confess!” Mendez exclaimed. “Ten more seconds and he would have confessed! He was going to say he killed Marissa. Ten more seconds!”
They had adjourned to the war room while the Bordain attorney consulted with his new client.
Vince tuned out Mendez’s rant. He went to the whiteboard and made a new entry on the timeline for Wednesday evening.
Gina’s explanation had been sketchy and piecemeal. She hadn’t been able to give them more than a few words at a time before exhaustion pulled her back under. The doctor had finally intervened and kicked them out of her room.
“Let’s think this through,” Vince said, turning away from the board. “Go back to Wednesday. Gina is scared. We’ll assume because she knows who killed Marissa. She decides she needs to get out of town before something happens to her. She goes to Mark Foster. If she thought Mark Foster killed Marissa, she would never have gone to him.”
The excitement drained out of Mendez’s expression, leaving just the frustration. “But he was about to say —”
“What you wanted to hear?” Vince asked. “He could have just as easily been about to confess to having been with Darren Bordain.”
“Why else would Foster have tried to kill her?” Hicks asked.
“She threatened him,” Vince suggested. “She knew about him and Bordain. She and Marissa facilitated the relationship. They were together as a foursome a lot. Foster and Bordain both gave Gina as their alibi for part of Sunday night.”
“She was a beard,” Hicks said.
“So she’s desperate for cash to get out of town. If he hesitates, that’s the thing she has to hang over his head. Maybe it’s like I said to Foster: She threatened to expose them to Bordain’s father. He sits on the board at McAster. Bruce Bordain can ruin Mark Foster’s career. Gina can ruin Mark
“And Foster just happens to dump her in the same abandoned well Marissa’s killer dumped the bloody sweatshirt?” Mendez said, skeptical.
“That well is a public dumping ground by the sound of it,” Vince said. “It’s located equidistant between Marissa’s home and the Bordain ranch. Foster could have hiked out there in those hills. Or Darren could have told him. Or Darren could have been the one to take her there for all we know at this point.”
“Either way,” Mendez said. “I don’t think it was a coincidence that sweatshirt was down there. I think we’ve got to give a hard look at both Bordain
“At least we know the girl is going to make it now,” Dixon said. “As soon as she’s strong enough, we’ll get the whole story.
“Do we know if Darren Bordain owns a weapon?”
“We can’t find out until tomorrow,” Hicks pointed out.
“In the meantime,” Dixon said, “we’ll get a warrant to search Foster’s home and office. And we sit on Darren