CHAPTER 23 – SCHAUMBURG, ILLINOIS
Lynch and Johnson were in the middle of what Lynch figured was their tenth circuit of the Ikea store in Schaumburg, Johnson showing him all sorts of end tables and shelves and shit she thought would look good in her place. She had good taste, little quirky maybe.
“So this is your idea of fun, huh?” Lynch said.
“You’re forgetting, Lynch, I’m not a Chicago girl. I grew up in white-bread country, home of the largest mall in America. This isn’t the main event, though. We’re going over to Woodfield next, walk the mall, maybe see a movie.” She’d called him just after he got back from Marslovak’s office, told him it was her turn to take him out.
“Jesus. We gonna eat bad pizza in the food court?”
“Bet your ass.”
“Chick flick?”
“Yep.”
“We gonna at least sit in the back so I can feel you up?”
“That’s the idea,” she said.
Halfway through some movie about some young, good-looking chick dying of cancer, Lynch caught himself smiling. Christ. He was having fun. Sitting through a bad movie, wandering through a mall, out in the freakin’ suburbs, and he was having fun.
Johnson sniffled next to him. “I need your hanky,” she whispered.
“Don’t have one.”
“What kind of man takes a girl to a movie like this and doesn’t bring a hanky?”
“Sorry, out of practice.”
Johnson nudged her head into his shoulder, and he put his arm around her head. He slid his hand down, gave her breast a little squeeze. She slapped his hand.
“I’m trying to watch the movie,” she said.
A minute later, Lynch felt her hand rubbing his thigh.
“Thought you were watching the movie,” he said.
“I am,” she said, “but you’re not.”
Lynch smiling again. God, this was fun.
After the movie, Johnson drove to one of the restaurants ringing the mall. Houlihans, TGIF, Chili’s, Lynch couldn’t remember without looking at the little plastic dessert menu. Bennigans.
“I know this will sound stupid, but this place reminds me of home,” Johnson said.
“Why? Your dad like to make up stupid names for drinks?”
Johnson laughed. “Just growing up. Out with my friends, we’d always end up in some place like this, you know? Talk about who was going out with who and how far they were going. Just comfortable, that’s all.”
They just sat for a while. Lynch was drinking a black and tan, which he’d had to let stand for five minutes before it got any separation, but still, a black and tan. Johnson was having some drink named after a cartoon character. Nice they could just sit, drink, play a little footsie, nobody feeling like they had to talk all the time.
“Are you doing OK, Lynch? Having urban withdrawal?”
Lynch smiled. “This is nice. You keep doing that with your foot, and I’m not going to be able to stand up, though.”
“So, when was the last time you were out of the city?”
“Berwyn count?”
“No.”
“Cicero?”
“No place where Al Capone used to hang out.”
Lynch laughed. “I guess Christmas. I drove my mom up to my sister’s. Right before she got real bad.”
“Where’s that?”
“Milwaukee. She’s some big-shot VP with Northwestern Mutual. Her husband is a surgeon. Got a couple kids, getting up to junior high now.”
“Are you guys close?”
“Not like we should be,” Lynch said. “Guess I’m supposed to lie about that, right? Used to be, when she was little.”
“What happened?”
“Hard to say. Everything changed after my father was killed. I tried to be dad, she resented it. Nothing horrible, but we just… People say drifted right? That sounds so stupid. I mean, I call sometimes, she calls sometimes, and it’s, you know, how are the kids? They’re fine. How’s work? Work’s good.” Lynch took a sip of his beer, looked out the window. Wind shifting around, starting to pick up. “I miss her. Funny, huh? She’s not dead or anything, but I miss her.”
“That’s got to be hard now, with your mom.”
Lynch shrugged.
The waiter came by, asked if they wanted dessert.
“I think we’re going to have that somewhere else,” Johnson said, looking at Lynch, her foot sliding up his leg again. “I’ve got a taste for something I don’t see on the menu.”
It was colder walking out to the car. The wind was out of the northwest now, Lynch smelled rain in the air. Johnson drove south on 355 toward the 290 extension that ran east toward the city. She drove fast, weaving through the moderate traffic.
“You’re quiet, Lynch,” she said.
“Thinking about the Marslovak case.”
“And you’re afraid to say anything to me?”
“Yeah, well, you’re still the press, Johnson. I mean, this is your beat.”
Johnson cut right around a slow-moving SUV, ran up behind a semi in the right lane with a panel truck next to it, cut two lanes left around them and then back across all three lanes and onto the 290 ramp.
“Jesus,” Lynch said. “Good thing I’m not working traffic.”
Silence again, and not comfortable.
“This could be a problem for us,” said Johnson. “If we can’t talk to each other.”
“Yeah.”
Quiet again for a while.
“How about this, Lynch. Unless I say otherwise, everything you tell me is off the record. Not just not-for-attribution, not just background, it’s strictly between us. Can you trust me that far?”
Lynch thought for a second. He’d only known Johnson at all for a few months, only known her personally for three days. But you either trust somebody or you don’t. He could think of guys he’d known all his life he’d trust about as far as he could dropkick a floor safe.
“Yeah. I think I can.”
“OK, then.”
They drove in silence for a while, Lynch knowing it was a kind of test now. He’d have to say something. She wanted him to say something.
“It’s the confession thing,” Lynch said. “I can’t get past thinking that Marslovak said something in that confessional, and whatever she said, that got her killed.”
“And the priest won’t say?”
“Can’t say,” said Lynch. “You’re not Catholic, are you?”
“Lutheran, I guess. You hear people say they’re cultural Jews? I guess I’m a cultural Lutheran. My family didn’t go to services much. Christmas, Easter, stuff like that. Gives you a place to have weddings and funerals, though, almost like being in some kind of club.”
“I’m pretty much in the same boat now. We went growing up. Every Sunday, every holy day. Catholic schools, altar boy, the whole thing. I just... I don’t know. I don’t believe a lot of things I used to believe. I don’t do a lot of things I used to do. I guess church is one of them.”
“Lose your faith, Lynch?”
“Makes it sound like a quarter under a couch cushion somewhere. I believe there’s a God,” Lynch said. “Hard to know what to believe beyond that. I can’t help feeling sometimes that if I ever meet him, I’m not going to like him much.”
“So what’s with the confession thing? Priest really can’t say?”
“Rules are the priest can’t reveal anything said within the seal of confession.”
“Even though she’s dead?”
“Doesn’t matter.”
“Then how could anyone know? I mean if he didn’t say anything–”
“Oh, shit.” Lynch grabbed his cell phone off his belt and dug a small notepad out of his jacket pocket. He found the number for Sacred Heart and dialed it. Father Hughes answered.
“Father, Detective Lynch. I know it’s a little late. I hope I didn’t wake you.”
“Actually, I just got in from the hospital, detective, visiting a parishioner. What can I do for you?”
“The crime scene guys, did they look inside the church at all?”
“Not much.”
“You going to be up in, say, half an hour?”
“I could be, why?”
“I’d like to take a look inside the church.”
“All right, detective. I’ll see you around 10.30 then.”
Lynch flipped the phone shut, dropped it on the seat.
“Get over to 294 north, we’re going to church. And stop driving like an old lady, will you? Let’s make some time.”
Jose Villanueva cruised past the church. Lights were out. Weather had turned some, a misty rain just starting, wind picking up a little. He saw one dog walker a block past the church. Guy had his collar up, head down, pretty much dragging some poodle-type rat dog along. Villanueva looped back to the east and parked his Explorer in the lot of a convenience store near Belmont.
Villanueva jogged the six blocks back toward the church. Tracksuit on, use the die-hard exercise addict disguise. He had his picks, a Swiss Army knife, and a mini-Maglight in his left-hand jacket pocket. The short-barreled .38 bounced, zipped in the right-hand pocket. Also had several different lengths of coated wires with alligator clips on the ends. The rain was picking up and coming sideways, but the black Adidas warm-ups were Gore-Tex, so it wasn’t too bad. As he came to the church, he was tempted to cut right up the narrow walk on the north side, get in out of the rain, but he ran past, circled the block. Nobody was out. Visibility was getting bad, too.
He checked his watch as he came up on the narrow walk the second time. 10.14. Good a time as any. He didn’t vary his pace, just turned up the walk like it was a short cut he used all the time, then trotted down the cement stairs to the basement door of the church.
He turned on a penlight and held it in his mouth. Then he took the pocket knife, opened the blade, and carefully sliced back the coating on a couple of wires attached to the alarm on the door. He pulled the wires out of his jacket, picked two that were the right length, and clipped them to the exposed spots on the wires. He looked at his watch. 10.19.
He put the extra wires and the pocket knife back in his jacket and pulled out the narrow black case that held his picks. It took him less than thirty seconds to rake the tumblers and turn the lock. He was in.
Johnson pulled up in front of the rectory at 10.41. Father Hughes pulled the door open just as they walked up. He was wearing black pants and a heavy turtleneck. Johnson and Lynch stepped into the foyer.
“Guess spring is over already,” the priest said.
“You Chicagoans are such wimps,” said Johnson.
“Father, this is Liz Johnson,” said Lynch. “Liz, Father Hughes.” Johnson and Hughes shook hands.
“Your partner?” the priest asked.
“Friend,” said Lynch. “We were out when I had a thought I should have had a couple days ago. I’m still thinking all this goes back to whatever Mrs Marslovak said in confession. But that only makes sense if someone knows what she said.”
The priest put up his hands. “I didn’t say anything, and I’m not going to.”
“I know. You wouldn’t have had time anyway. But somebody heard.”
The priest’s mouth dropped open. “You mean–”
“I mean I think somebody bugged your confessional, Father.”
The priest pulled a ring of keys off a rack by the door. “We’ll go in through the basement. Light switches are down there.”
Villanueva needed a few minutes to find the camera, longer than he expected. He was lying on his back, shining the penlight along the bottom of the pew, when he finally spotted it. Whoever had placed it had put it right up against one of the supports. Damn, it was small. Villanueva had never seen one so small. He slipped the pocket knife blade under the adhesive holding the unit and pried it loose. Villanueva pulled a small Ziploc bag out of his pants pocket, dropped the camera in, sealed the bag, and shoved it back into his pocket. The camera had been pointed at the set of doors with the priest’s name on the plate over the middle door.
The confessionals took a while. He started with the priest’s booth, figuring if you had good pickup on the unit, you might get stuff from both the other booths. Checked under the chair, checked the molding around the doorjambs and around the little sliding screens into the other booths. Checked along the baseboards and the molding in the corners and the juncture between the walls and the ceiling. Nothing. Did the same in the booth on the right. Nothing again.
Villanueva had gone through the entire third booth and was getting pissed off. If the camera was that small, then the bug was probably even smaller. Must have missed it. He’d have to start over in the priest’s booth. He checked his watch. 10.44. He’d already been inside for twenty-five minutes. Church was quiet, and he had no reason to expect company. But this whole job seemed queer from the start, and Villanueva wanted to get out, get home.
He was about to leave the booth when something caught his eye, just a sliver of something sticking out from behind the molding on the right side of the sliding screen that opened into the priest’s booth. Could be a hair or even an antenna from a cockroach. Villanueva held the light in his mouth and carefully slid the knife blade up behind the molding. Bingo. Bug wasn’t much bigger than a fat grain of rice, couple wires leading out of it. He put it in the bag with the camera. 10.47.
Lynch put his hand on Father Hughes’ shoulder just as the priest went to put his key into the lock in the basement door. Hughes looked back. Lynch put a finger to his lips and pointed up at the bypass wires rigged into the alarm at the top of the door. Lynch motioned the priest back toward the stairs.
“I left my cell phone in the car,” Lynch whispered. “I need you to get back to the rectory as fast as you can. Call 911, tell them you have a break-in at the church. Tell them there is an officer on the scene who needs back-up. Go.”
The priest scurried up the stairs and back up the narrow walk. Lynch edged along the wall and back to the door. He reached up under his jacket, sliding the Berretta 9mm out of the hip holster. Standing on the last step with his back flat against the wall of the church, Lynch reached down and slowly turned the doorknob and pulled. The door moved. It was open. For just an instant, in his peripheral vision, Lynch thought he saw light in the door’s window.