Death Plays Poker (33 page)

Read Death Plays Poker Online

Authors: Robin Spano

NINETY-TWO

GEORGE

George watched the girl who wasn’t Fiona setting up her microphone. This was the best the network could do on short notice? She was short, frumpy, and if she had any personality, it was well-hidden inside her cheap navy pantsuit. George normally liked women in glasses, but this girl wore hers with chunky frames and zero intelligence.

Today’s game would be short. There were twenty players left and they’d stop when it was down to ten. The final ten would play for the grand prize the following morning. They could have played it all out today, but some organizing genius had opted for the late start. George wondered if the delay was to keep people around so the cops could do their work before the suspects dispersed.

The notes George had received were bothering him. The first one about stirring the shit around, okay. George had known he was playing with fire, stalking the ice machine, writing the “novel.” He’d even included a couple of suspicions on his blog, which in retrospect had probably not been wise.

But the second note was plain strange:
Introducing Nate Wilkes as your Dealer
. Did that mean that Nate, or someone else, was bringing the Dealer’s identity into the open? Or was Nate being introduced as the new Dealer on the scene? That would add up, with Fiona receiving the apparently contradictory notes. Would someone else — the “old” Dealer — soon be showing up dead? Or were they already dead? Jesus, maybe Fiona had been lying to him — it wouldn’t be the first time. Maybe Fiona had been the Dealer all along. Or maybe whoever had broken into Fiona’s room had taken the notes so they could replicate them. Was the original Dealer even still alive?

George had all the pieces — he knew he did — but they weren’t coming together.

“George Bigelow?”

He heard the voice, but when he spun around, he couldn’t find the source.

“Are you George Bigelow?” The young uniformed cop was trying to move into George’s line of sight, and eventually the two connected.

“Yes.” George felt dizzier than he should have from turning around a couple of times.

“I need to ask you some questions,” the officer said, moving slightly to one side as if he expected George to accompany him.

“I . . .” George faltered. “I spoke with someone yesterday.”

“This regards new information. Would you come into the interview room?”

George followed the young cop into a conference room the police had commandeered from the casino. Another — larger, older — cop was seated behind a desk. Inspector Smyth. The same man had interviewed George the previous day. A third officer stood against the wall.

George sat in the seat he was offered.

Smyth asked if he could tape the interview.

George said fine.

“Maybe there’s something you forgot to tell us yesterday.”

George thought for a few seconds. They probably had him, but why should he give it away? “What did I forget?”

Smyth slammed his fist on the desk. “You forgot that you borrowed a fucking Supercar, or, what the fuck is it really called?” He consulted his notes. “Zipcar, drove across the border, murdered your ex-girlfriend, and drove home in time for breakfast.”

“That isn’t true.”

“Which part isn’t true? You didn’t have breakfast? She wasn’t technically your girlfriend?”

“I didn’t kill Fiona.”

“So what happened? You found her dead and didn’t say anything?”

George knew his story was going to sound lame. Whoever said the truth was supposed to set you free was living in a naive wonderland. “I borrowed a Zipcar.”

Smyth waited.

“I drove across the border.”

No expression.

“I went to a diner in Bellingham.”

“Let me guess,” the cop said. “You paid cash.”

“All I had was coffee.”

Smyth shrugged.

“I bought cigarettes.”

“Also cash?”

George nodded. It was the first time he’d smoked in ages, and he felt like a failure for caving, but cigarettes were his quickest comfort when life was overwhelming.

“Please answer verbally so the recording includes your response.”

“Yes,” George said. “I paid cash for the cigarettes.”

“So you bought coffee, you bought cigarettes. What next?”

George took a deep breath. “I drove up the Mount Baker highway.”

“Why Mount Baker?”

“Fiona was there. She was scared. I wanted to protect her.”

“Did she tell you she was there? Did she ask you to join her?”

“No. That’s why I didn’t knock on her door.”

The cop shook his head, like now he’d heard them all.

“I sat in the parking lot. I didn’t know what room she was in. I had her cell number, so I could have called to find out. She would have let me in. If she was still alive when I was there.” George looked at Inspector Smyth. “Was she still alive then?”

“She was alive when you arrived,” the cop said. “That’s how murder works. When you left, because you killed her, she was dead.”

“I didn’t kill Fiona.”

“Okay,” Smyth said. “So let’s humor you and say your story checks out. We’ll pretend it’s not in either the give-me-a-fucking-break or the does-this-guy-think-my-asshole-is-my-brain category. Did you see anything when you were sitting in the parking lot? Any other human activity?”

“Yes.” George suddenly remembered the hitchhiker. This was going to sound even crazier, and for sure the inspector wouldn’t believe it, but if the weird guy with the black hair had anything to do with Fiona’s murder, maybe someone listening to the tape would use it to find the real killer. He told Smyth what he’d seen.

“Right,” Smyth said, in the exact tone George would have predicted. “You just remembered. This white guy with dreadlocks walks onto the motel grounds, dials a number on a cell phone, knocks on a door, enters the room of a person you can’t see, leaves five to ten minutes later, and thumbs his way, in the middle of the night, back down the highway. You know the hitchhiking part because . . .”

“I passed him as I left. He had his thumb in the road.”

“Did you pick him up?”

“No. Obviously.” George wished he hadn’t added the “obviously.”

The cop nodded. “You understand we’re going to arrest you?”

George shrugged. Of course he understood. Nothing really mattered anyway, with Fiona dead.

But he felt fire in his veins when he thought of Fiona’s killer going free. He remembered what Mickey had seen in the hallway the morning Loni died.

“Can you get security camera footage from the casino?” George said to the inspector.

“Probably.”

“Check the hallway outside T-Bone Jones’ room the morning his girlfriend was killed. He claims he was downstairs playing poker all morning, but a friend thinks he saw T-Bone going back to his own room.”

Inspector Smyth said nothing.

“I understand,” George said. “Arrest me. Fine. But I have more information. About a cheating ring that might be linked to the murders. I’ll share it with you. I want the real killer found.”

“Okay, buddy.” The big cop nodded to two younger officers, who had been in the room but silent during the interview. They came forward now. The one who had led Geoge into the interview room put him in handcuffs while the other read him his rights.

“Do I really need handcuffs?” George said. “I told you I’ll go willingly.”

Inspector Smyth nodded to the young officer, who seemed to understand this as the signal to uncuff George.

“Okay,” Smyth said. “Before we take you in, tell me what you know about this cheating ring.”

“Can I negotiate?” George asked. Maybe not the strongest way to lead into the discussion, but he knew he had something valuable.

“What for?”

“The information I give you. I want something in exchange.”

Smyth shook his head very slightly. “I don’t think so. What do you want?”

“I want to keep my computer in jail. Or the holding cell, or whatever you call the place you’re going to keep me. And I want a room to myself.”

The inspector leaned forward, rested his chin in his hand, seemed to contemplate the request. “I’ll see what I can do.”

“Okay,” George said. “Based on your success securing those things, I’ll see what kind of information I have.”

“Are you fucking kidding? You have to share what you know. If you don’t, you’re impeding an investigation.”

George shrugged. Fiona was gone, his freedom was going. “I don’t have anything more to lose.”

NINETY-THREE

CLARE

Clare knocked on Mickey’s door. He’d had an hour to process the note she’d left him.

“I know we don’t have lessons scheduled,” Clare said when he opened the door.

“You gotta leave this scene, kid. It’s getting too dangerous for all of us.”

“I know.” Clare hoped her look was innocent.

“Look, I know you’re not involved. You can’t be — you came on the scene too late. But don’t tell me you’re blind to the fucking dead bodies that keep popping up everywhere.”

“I’m not blind,” Clare said. “I’m scared.”

Mickey’s eyes scanned the hallway. “Come in if you want. We got time for some peanuts.”

Clare sat at the table while Mickey grabbed two Cokes from the minibar.

“You gotta get on a plane,” Mickey said. “Like outta here, tonight.”

Clare shook her head. “I still have chips in the game. Are you leaving?”

“I can handle myself one more night. And then fucking right I’m leaving,” Mickey handed her a Coke but continued to pace around the room. “I can’t believe I stayed so long, thinking I was immune to his rope. Things are back on with your boyfriend, huh?”

“Nate? He’s not my boyfriend. But yeah, we’re talking.”

“You shouldn’t fucking trust him,” Mickey said, ticking a finger in Clare’s direction.

“Why not?”

“Just take my word for it and sleep alone tonight.”

The note Clare had left Mickey had been the same as the one she’d left George:
Introducing Nate Wilkes as your Dealer.
So naturally Mickey would be suspicious.

“You think you can do that? Sleep alone for one night?”

Clare looked up at Mickey. “Don’t you think I’m safer sleeping with someone than alone?”

“That theory only works if you’re not sleeping with a killer.”

“There are hundreds of people milling around this scene,” Clare said. “Why Nate?”

“Just take my fucking word for it.”

Clare wrinkled her mouth, trying to look puzzled. “It’s your word that he’s the killer?” She looked up quickly, as if she was finally putting it together. “Are you a cop? Nate said there are probably a lot of cops on the scene, with all the murders that have been happening.”

Mickey grinned. “No, kid. I’m not a cop. I’m someone who’s concerned for your safety. Here, have some peanuts.” He unscrewed the cap like he was a Chinese businessman offering her tea from the top shelf.

Clare thanked him, and it was only as she was chewing that she remembered what her parents had told her when she was five and she’d first walked to school on her own: never take food from strangers.

NINETY-FOUR

NOAH

“I want to talk about Clare,” Noah said to Bert on the phone. “I think we should make her a job offer.”

“You’re joking.”

Noah looked out his window at the Fraser River. He missed the Hudson. Hell, he even missed the East River. But the thought of going back to New York without Clare made him feel bizarrely bereft.

“In the middle of one of the biggest potential goat fucks I’ve ever seen from an operative, you want me to take your hiring advice?”

“She’s good,” Noah said. “We went with her plan and we’re waiting for players’ reactions. I think it’s going to work.”

“George Bigelow has already been arrested.”

That didn’t work for Noah. He waited a beat before asking, “Why?”

“The usual reason: authorities think he’s the killer. He crossed the border the night Fiona Gallagher died.”

“Shit,” Noah said. “He used his real name and everything?”

“Apparently.”

“Hm.” Noah’s mind was racing. “Don’t you think a killer who’s been murdering successfully for this long would know enough to not use their real identity at the border?”

“People screw up all the time,” Bert said. “Some more than others, but criminals are human. Most times we’re lucky enough to be working with a dumbass who fucks up near the beginning of their enterprise. With the smart ones, it’s a waiting game. They’re going to do something stupid eventually. In this case, the bad move was crossing the border with a real name. Anyway, it’s not our case. Your job here is done; just play this game out and come home.”

Noah grinned. “You just told me I’d goat-fucked this up. Now you’re saying mission accomplished?”

“Your fuck-up is your leaky mouth. Case success aside, that’s a problem for me, Walker.”

“That’s fair,” Noah said. “But here’s the thing: the killer isn’t George Bigelow.”

There was a pause on Bert’s end of the line. “How can you know that?”

“I don’t. Not for sure. But this game has taught me to think in odds, and I’d lay six to one it’s not Bigelow.”

Bert sighed. But he didn’t shut Noah up.

Noah took in a breath and continued. “Someone else may have taken a trip across the border that night. I was in the high stakes room for a bit. Joe was at the poker table all night — well actually, he fucked Clare, then dressed up as Snow White and played cards for the rest of the night. But T-Bone left the same time George did. He seemed particularly interested in Fiona’s departure.”

Bert stayed quiet.

Noah said, “Clare and I have another idea. Use facial recognition software — we’ll send you our primary suspects — to see if someone crossed under a false name.” Noah picked a T-shirt up off the floor. He was about to fold it and put it into a drawer when he remembered he’d be leaving the next day. He folded it and put it into his suitcase, instead.

“It’s ‘we’ now, huh?”

“She’s new,” Noah said. “You could get her cheap, which I know appeals to you.”

“You’re hot for the girl and you want to negotiate a crap deal for her?”

“I want it to work.”

“Why? So she’ll move to New York?”

“It isn’t like that. She has a boyfriend she’s crazy about. There’s nothing romantic between us.”

“But you want there to be.”

“Bert, will you listen to me for five seconds? We’ve been working together — we’re damn close to solving this case. You know how hard it is for me to work with anyone. But her mind — it meshes with mine. I think we’d make an amazing undercover team.”

“Undercovers don’t work in teams.”

“They sometimes do.”

“If we made her an offer, it would be as a solo act. If we team you up on an assignment, fine. But she has to be able to stand on her own. How old did that report say she is?”

“Twenty-three.”

“She’s a fucking child. She’s breakable. Buy her a sundae.”

Noah groaned. “We’re all breakable. We can ease her in slowly.” He pulled jeans from the floor and folded them for his suitcase as well.

“What’s special about her? Other than the fact you want inside her?”

“She’s got it. That’s all. She can read people, she can put on the face she needs — she’s convincingly playing a spoiled debutante when she’d rather be taking apart cars. She kicks my ass at chess, which is more than I can say for you, that time we were holed up in Omaha with nothing to do.”

“I hate games.”

“Come on, Bert. You read the report on her, as much as you claim not to remember it. You know she’s not your run-of-the-mill Canadian twenty-something.”

Bert was quiet.

“Is that a yes?”

“I read the report. I’ll talk to some people on this end.”

“Fantastic.”

“No one’s being offered anything until this case is solved. That goes for you and your continued employment, too.”

“What, now you care about finding the murderer?” Noah was confused.

Bert sighed. “I’ve been in touch with your little friend’s handler. You’re both being pulled at the end of tomorrow, solved or unsolved. We’ve agreed to let you work together until then.”

“Good.” Nice to have permission after the fact. “Does that mean you like our plan?”

Bert snorted. “Just find the fucking killer.”

“You don’t think it’s Bigelow either?”

“I don’t have an official opinion. But until the cheating scam has been wrapped up, I don’t think we can know if we have our man.”

“What does Clare’s handler say? Is there an official Canadian opinion?”

“The official Canadian opinion is that their man is in jail, naturally. But Clare’s handler is also keeping an open mind.” Bert said they’d talk later and hung up.

There was a knock on Noah’s door. He looked out the peephole and saw a familiar face. He froze.

No way was he letting this person into the room with him. Noah grabbed his phone, wallet, and room card, and in one strong movement brushed breezily past his visitor into the hallway.

“Just heading out,” Noah said on his way to the elevator. “Feel free to come along.”

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