“Easier just to replace it.”
“But that would be very expensive.”
“Compared to what? How much do suitcases cost?”
“But you would keep a suitcase forever. You would use it over and over again for many years.”
I said, “I think I’ll just take the new shirt. No need to wrap it.”
I paid the guy and then ducked into his changing cubicle and pulled the curtain. I took off the old shirt, put on the new, and came back out.
“Got a trash can?” I asked.
The guy paused a beat in surprise and then ducked down and came back up with a knee-high metal canister. He held it out uncertainly. I balled up the dirty shirt and hit a three-pointer from about ten feet. The guy looked horrified. Then I headed back across the street to the diner for breakfast. And for a little more purposeful loitering. I knew my best chance of running into Deveraux would be right there. A woman who ate like she did couldn’t stay away for long. It was just a matter of time.
In the end it was a matter of less than twenty minutes. I ate eggs and was halfway through my third cup of coffee when she came in. She saw me from the doorway and paused. The whole world paused. The atmosphere went solid. She was in uniform again, and her hair was tied back. Her face was a little set in place. A little immobile. She looked wonderful.
I took a breath and kicked the facing chair out. She didn’t react. I saw her eyes move as she considered her options. She looked at all the tables. Most of them were unoccupied. But evidently she decided that to sit on her own might cause a scene. She was worried about voters. Worried about her reputation. So she came over to me. She pulled the chair out another foot and sat down, quiet and reserved, knees tight together, hands in her lap.
I said, “I don’t have a fiancee. I don’t have any kind of other girlfriend.”
She didn’t answer.
I said, “It was just an MP colleague on the phone. They’re all playing a game with the undercover thing. Apparently it amuses them. My CO calls himself my uncle.”
No answer.
“I can’t prove a negative,” I said.
“I’m hungry,” she said. “This is the first time in two years I’ve missed breakfast.”
“I apologize for that,” I said.
“Why? There’s no need, if what you’re saying is true.”
“It is true. I’m apologizing on behalf of my colleague.”
“Was it your sergeant? Neagley?”
“No, it was a woman called Karla Dixon.”
“What did she want?”
“To tell me that no one is running a financial scam out of Fort Kelham.”
“How would she know?”
“She knows everything about anything with a dollar sign in front of it.”
“Who thought there was a financial scam out of Kelham?”
“The brass. I suppose it was a theoretical possibility. Like you said, they’re desperate.”
“If you had a fiancee, would you cheat on her?”
“Probably not,” I said. “But I’d want to, with you.”
“I’ve been burned before.”
“Hard to believe.”
“Yet true. Not a good feeling.”
“I understand,” I said. “But you weren’t being burned last night.”
She went quiet. I saw her thinking.
“I called Bruce Lindsay,” she said. “Shawna Lindsay’s little brother. Did you know they have a phone?”
“Yes,” I said. “I’ve used it. Karla Dixon was returning a call I made from it.”
“I’m heading over there this afternoon. I think you’re right. He has something to tell me.”
Me. Not us.
I said, “It was a fellow officer’s lame joke. That’s all.”
She said, “I’m afraid there’s a problem with the fingerprints. From Janice Chapman’s house, I mean. My own fault, as a matter of fact.”
“What kind of problem?”
“Deputy Butler has a friend over there at the Jackson PD. From back when he took the course. I encourage him to get her to do our processing for us, on the quiet, to save ourselves the money. We don’t have the budget here. But Butler’s friend screwed up this time, and I can’t ask him to ask her to do it over. That would be a step too far.”
“Screwed up how?”
“She got her file numbers mixed. Chapman’s data went to a case about a woman called Audrey Shaw, and we got Audrey Shaw’s data. The wrong person entirely. Some kind of federal government worker. Which Chapman definitely wasn’t, because there’s no federal government work here, and Chapman didn’t work anyway. Unless Audrey Shaw was the previous owner of Chapman’s house, in which case it was Butler’s own screw-up, looking for prints in the wrong places, or yours, for letting him.”
“No, Butler did a good job,” I said. “He looked in all the right places. Those prints weren’t from a previous owner, not unless she sneaked back in and used Chapman’s toothbrush in the middle of the night. So it’s just one of those things, I guess. Shit happens.”
“Tell me again,” she said. “About that phone call.”
“It was Major Karla Dixon of the 329th,” I said. “With information for me. That’s all.”
“And the fiancee thing was a joke?”
“Don’t tell me the Marines are better comedians, too.”
“Is she good looking?”
“Pretty nice.”
“Was she ever your girlfriend?”
“No.”
Deveraux went quiet again. I could see a decision coming. It was almost there. And I was pretty sure it was going to turn out OK. But I didn’t find out. Not right then. Because before she could speak again the stout woman from the department’s switchboard room crashed in through the diner door and stopped dead with one hand on the knob and one on the jamb. She was out of breath. She was panting. Her chest was heaving. She had run all the way. She called out, “There’s another one.”
Chapter 48
Deputy Butler had been on his way to relieve Pellegrino for the middle watch at Fort Kelham’s gate, and a mile out he had happened to glance to his left, and he had seen a forlorn shape low down in the scrub perhaps a hundred yards north of the road. Five minutes after that he had been on the horn to HQ with the bad news, and ninety seconds after taking the message the dispatcher had made it to the diner. Deveraux and I were in her car twenty seconds after that, and she put her foot down hard and drove fast all the way, so we were on the scene less than ten minutes after Butler had first chanced to turn his head.
Not that speed made any difference.
We parked nose to tail behind Butler’s car and got out. We were on the main east-west road, two miles beyond the last of Carter Crossing itself, one mile short of Kelham, out in an open belt of scrubland, with the forest that bordered Kelham’s fence well ahead of us and the forest that flanked the railroad track well behind us. It was the middle of the day and the sky was clear and blue. The air was warm and the breeze was still.
I could see what Butler had seen. It could have been a rock, or it could have been trash, but it wasn’t. It was small in the distance, dark, slightly humped, slightly elongated, pressed down, deflated. It was unmistakable.