Acts of Mercy (11 page)

Read Acts of Mercy Online

Authors: Mariah Stewart

“I’ve been waiting a long time, Suse.” He raised his head to look at her, and corrected himself.
“We’ve
been waiting a long time. You’ve been with me through every moment of this nightmare.”

“It’s what friends do,” she heard herself say.

“You’re the best friend I’ve ever had,” he said. “Have I ever told you that?”

“Actually, yes, you have.” She forced a smile. “Several times.”

“It’s true. You’ve always been there for me, Suse.”

“And I always will be.” She gave his hand a squeeze. “No matter what, I’ll always be here for you …”

NINE

Y
ou’re acting a little antsy today,” Trula observed from her place at the counter where she was trying unsuccessfully to open a jar of cherries she’d canned earlier in the season. “What is it about this Fiona person that’s making you so nervous, Sam?”

“Nervous?” Sam frowned. “I’m not nervous.”

“You’ve been tapping your fingers on the table for the past”—she paused and looked pointedly at the clock—“thirteen minutes.”

“Tapping on the table is usually a sign of impatience, not nerves,” he replied, reaching for the jar. “And I am impatient. She’s a half hour late. It isn’t as if I have nothing to do but wait for her, you know.”

“No, I don’t know.” Trula handed the jar of cherries across the counter and he opened it with ease, the lid making a proud pop. “Hmmmph. I must be getting old,” she grumbled. “Old and weak.”

“Trula, I can think of a lot of words to describe you, but old and weak are not two of them.”

“You heard I was making Belgian waffles for brunch today, didn’t you?” She pretended to glare at him. “That’s why you’re sucking up to me?”

“No. I hadn’t heard that.” Sam handed the jar back to her. “Are you? Making Belgian waffles?”

“I promised Chloe we’d make them for her and her mom, to celebrate Emme coming home. As soon as they arrive, I’ll start. You’re welcome to join us. Assuming of course that your appointment hasn’t arrived yet.” Trula smiled. “It’s hard for people to take you seriously when you go into a meeting with whipped cream on your chin and cherry juice on your shirt.”

“You put whipped cream on your waffles?”

She stared at him as if he had two heads. “I said they were
Belgian
waffles, Sam. Of course, there’s—”

The doorbell rang.

“That’s probably Fiona.” He started toward the door, then looked back over his shoulder at the waffle maker Trula was setting up on the counter.

“Go,” she told him. “I’ll save you something. Maybe.”

Sam could see through the sidelights next to the front door that it was in fact Fiona Summers who’d rung the bell. They’d never met, but he’d seen her at several meetings. She almost always came in alone, usually just as the doors were closing, and always took a seat in the back of the room. He couldn’t remember her ever speaking out or contributing to a discussion. He didn’t think she’d been in his unit all that long and couldn’t remember where or when he’d first seen her. She was a self-professed loner, he recalled as he opened the front door. Just as he was.

“Hey, Fiona.” He stood back to permit her to enter.

“Sam.” She stepped inside, all business. “Nice to finally meet you. I’ve heard a lot about you.”

He raised one eyebrow.

“Miranda’s sister, Portia,” she explained as she set a bulging leather briefcase on the floor. “We ran into each other in the office yesterday, and she said that you and she went way back.”

“Yeah, we worked together a couple of times.” He started to shut the door behind her.

“Hold up.” She reached toward the door to keep him from closing it. “I have to go back to my car for the rest of it.”

“The rest of it?”

“The rest of the files.” She went down the front steps and Sam followed her. When he caught up with her at the trunk of her car, she’d already popped the lid. Inside were three cardboard file boxes.

“Let me give you a hand.” He reached in and stacked one on top of a second.

“Thanks.” Fiona lifted the third box and when Sam had cleared the trunk, she slammed the lid down. “I debated on how much to bring along, then figured the heck with it. I’d let you sort through and see what interested you. Normally, I wouldn’t do that with a PI, of course, but I talked to John, and he said to give you whatever you needed. Help you in whatever way I could.”

“Thanks, Fiona.”

“Thank John Mancini.” She smiled. “Like I said, normally, I wouldn’t do this for a PI who was working on a case of mine. But when the boss tells you to share, you share.”

He wasn’t sure if she resented the interference of her boss—his former boss—into her case, but the important thing was that she did bring all her files with
her, which he greatly appreciated, and said so. He balanced the two file boxes on his hip and opened the front door.

Once inside, Fiona picked up her briefcase and asked, “Which way?”

“Straight up the steps, third door on your left,” he told her. “We can use the conference room, gives us more space to spread out.”

Ten minutes later, they were seated at the large wooden table, a stack of files in front of Fiona, two bottles of water and a couple of ballpoint pens between them. Sam twisted the top off one bottle and took a long drink. Obviously Fiona wanted to dole out the information her way, piece by piece, in the order of her choosing. Well, that was all right with him. He’d take it however he could get it. Besides, she was nice to look at: wavy dark hair pulled back in a high tail and green eyes set in a heart-shaped face, skin that was tanned just to the point of looking healthy, and a mouth that curled up just a little on one side when she smiled. She wore no makeup, but then, Sam thought, she didn’t need to.

So, yeah, Fiona could drag out this meeting for as long as she wanted to. Sam had all day.

“Here’s what I have on your case,” Fiona was saying. “I doubt if we have anything different here.”

She handed him a copy of her case recap report, which John Mancini had required of all the agents working in his unit. Sam scanned the notes. Fiona was right. There was nothing new.

At least, not until he got to about a third of the way down on the fourth page, where it was noted that the
DNA from the skin cells removed from underneath Ross Walker’s fingernails matched that from the nails of one Joseph Edward Maynard.

“This Maynard case.” Sam’s heart began to beat a little faster. “Tell me about this one.”

Fiona sorted through her files and began to slide one out from the others.

“No, talk to me about it. Don’t read to me. I can read for myself later. I want to hear it the way you see it.”

“Okay.” She pushed the file away and sat back, an arm resting on each side of her chair, and swiveled slightly to meet his eyes head-on. “Twenty-two-year-old Joseph Edward Maynard was the son of David Maynard, of Maynard Appliances.”

She paused to let that sink in.

“That’s supposed to mean something?” he asked.

“Think about those commercial-grade ovens and stoves and refrigerators that are going into all the hotels and restaurants these days.”

“So this kid came from money. So what?”

“So here we have this kid from a wealthy family—probably the most affluent family in Kendall, Illinois—and they find his body—”

“From where?” Sam wasn’t sure he’d heard correctly.

“Town south of Chicago. Kendall. Not much there, but it’s a relatively affluent area,” she explained. “You’ve probably never heard of it. I hadn’t until—”

“I know Kendall,” he told her. “Carly—my wife—was from Kendall. We were married there. Her family still lives there.”

“Then chances are your in-laws would know the
Maynards. They’re quite active within the community.”

“Carly’s dad recently retired as president of the chamber of commerce as well as chairman of the board of the bank,” Sam said. “If the Maynards are well-to-do the chances are damned good.”

“Well, there’s certainly a coincidence for you.” She paused. “Maybe we can call on them later to get a little more background, if we need it.”

“Tell me about this kid. What happened to him?” Sam tried to ignore the jolt he’d gotten when Kendall was mentioned. Coincidences always made him uneasy.

“His last weekend home before he was leaving for college, his senior year. Purdue. He goes out on a Friday night with a couple of his buddies to a local bar. His friends tell me he got up to go to the men’s room, around one, one fifteen
AM,
and never came back. After a while, they go to look for him, he’s not there. He’s nowhere. They figure he ran into someone, started talking, maybe went out to the parking lot, and went somewhere from there.”

“The guys are thinking someone, as in a girl.”

“Right.”

“Was he in the habit of doing that, picking up girls and leaving his buddies sitting at the bar without telling them he was going?”

She shook her head again. “They all said he’d never done that before.”

“What are the chances he ran into a pro, got an offer he couldn’t refuse, took off for the parking lot for a quickie, and ended up getting more than he’d bargained for?”

“That would seem to be the most logical explanation, except she’d have to be one hell of a girl to overpower him. He was almost six feet tall, close to two hundred pounds.”

“So she had an accomplice.”

“If it weren’t for the other cases, I’d agree with you. Fast forward to the following afternoon, some kids following the creek find his body underneath a bridge on the outskirts of town. Cause of death was manual strangulation but there were numerous postmortem stab wounds to the chest.” Fiona paused. “Sound familiar?”

“Go on.”

“Here’s the kicker. He’s found underneath a structure made out of cardboard, like a shelter had been built around him. The body was lying on a blanket underneath this cardboard house.” She reached for her water bottle and opened it, took a long sip, her eyes watching his face. When she’d finished drinking, she put the cap back on the bottle and said, “So say something.”

“Anyone see him leave the bar?”

She shook her head no. “The men’s room is right by the back door that leads to the parking lot. No one remembers seeing him, but then again, this is close to one in the morning after these kids had been drinking for several hours. Someone could have seen him, but might not remember.”

Sam rubbed the back of his neck. “Anything in the guy’s mouth?”

“No. But that brings us to my third case.” She started to reach for the file, then stopped. “You want it off the top of my head. Right. Okay. Next up is
Calvin Adams. He’s in his early sixties. Homeless man who’s been battling both schizophrenia and drug addiction for years. He’s found lying on a park bench, stretched out as if he’s sleeping. A bottle of water,” she picked up the bottle in front of her and twirled it around, then tipped it upside down, “is standing upright in his mouth and halfway down his throat, the contents frozen solid because it’s winter.” She set the bottle down and said, “Here’s your chance to dazzle me with those mad investigative skills of yours. Tell me how the man died.”

“Manual strangulation. Multiple stab wounds—postmortem stab wounds—to the chest.”

“My God, you are every bit as sharp as they say you are.” She shook her head in mock amazement. “You know, it’s so rare that someone lives up to their reputation.”

“DNA match the others?” He ignored her sarcasm.

“No DNA this time around, but since what I’m thinking is the signature—the water bottle, which to my mind corresponds to the burger found in Ross Walker’s mouth—and with the MO being the same, I gotta think it’s the same guy. You’re free to offer up a different opinion, if you have one.”

“So you’ve drawn a line from the two where the physical evidence is similar—Walker and Adams—to the DNA match in the Walker and Maynard cases.” Sam stared into space for a moment. “So where’s the guy’s signature on the Maynard case? If we’re assuming it’s stuffing something into the mouth.” He paused again. “Maybe we’re not interpreting that correctly, though.” He thought for another moment.
“Maybe somehow the signature in the Maynard case is the structure that was erected around him.”

Fiona pushed her chair back, opened her briefcase, and reached inside.

“Here are the photos from Maynard.” She opened a letter-sized brown envelope. “You’ve seen the photos of Walker, but we want to put them in context. You need to see all three together.”

She lined the photos up across the table, repeating the names of the victims as she did so. “Walker. Maynard. Adams.”

Sam stood to get a better look. He stared at each for a moment before moving to the next. After he’d studied all three, he said, “It’s in the prop. The signature is in the prop. The killer is telling us something, but I don’t know what it is.”

He picked up the photo of Joseph Maynard. “This structure is too well thought out to have been some random means of hiding a body. He was very well organized here. I’m assuming he brought the blanket with him? Do you know?” he asked Fiona.

“No one in his family had seen it before, and since one of his buddies had driven that night, it hadn’t come from the victim’s car. So yes, we are assuming the killer probably brought it with him.”

“The structure was carefully constructed. See here, it looks as if several large boxes were opened up and then pieced together to make the shelter.” He slid the photo closer to Fiona and pointed. “This is not the work of someone tossing cardboard boxes onto a corpse to hide it. It’s more than that. I just don’t know what.”

He placed the photo between the others and lifted
the last one to take a closer look. The photo slipped from his hands and flipped over. On the back was written:
Calvin Adams. Age 62. DOD: 2/9/09. Dutton, NE
.

Sam stared at the writing, the hairs on the back of his neck standing straight up.

“What?” Fiona asked. “What are you thinking?”

It took several moments for Sam to put his thoughts together.

“I’m thinking this is the damnedest thing.” His eyes were still on the back of the photo.

“What?” she repeated, somewhat impatiently.

“I went to high school in Dutton.” He sat down, the photo of Calvin Adams in his hand. “The regional high school for all the small towns around where I grew up was in Dutton.”

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