The Switch (33 page)

Read The Switch Online

Authors: Sandra Brown

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense

She pretended to run out of steam and paused to take a deep breath. "I'm sorry to have bothered you, Ms. Croft. Forgive me for placing you in such an awkward position. You were very kind to come to Gillian's memorial. We won't keep you any longer. I'd hate for you to miss your program. Thank you.
"

"Goodbye, Ms. Croft," Chief said, briefly touching the woman's hand. "A pleasure to have met you."

He was turning Melina about when Linda Croft blurted out, "I send them cards periodically."

They came around slowly.

Before continuing, Linda Croft nervously moistened her lips. "Little pick-me-up notes. You know the kind. Thinking of you. Take heart. Good things are yet to come. Things like that. The Andersons are kind enough to acknowledge them, so they're still at the address I have. It's in my address book at home. You could follow me."

Her house was in an area of Dallas called the "M streets," so named because for several blocks all the street names began with that letter. It was an older residential neighborhood, but in recent years it had become fashionable again. As retirees sold out or died off, single professionals and young families bought the old houses for renovation. Situated between two houses recently redone, Linda Croft's cottage looked like an outdated dowager trying to hold on to her dignity.

"Snow White's house," Melina remarked absently as he pulled to a stop at the curb. Linda Croft waved to them from the small porch, then unlocked the arched front door that was set between two mullioned windows. "You go. You handle her better than I do."

"It's that male-female thing," he said.

"It's
your
male-female thing. The chemistry doesn't work that well for everybody."

He got out and jogged up the walk. Linda Croft had already disappeared inside, calling out to her cats that Mama was home. "Come on in, Colonel Hart."

He stepped directly into the living area. It was filled with family photographs, needlepoint cushions, and the scent of cat boxes. While he waited, the cats, half a dozen at least, wove their way around and in between his feet, curling their tails up around his shins. Linda Croft returned from the back rooms, extending to him a lined sheet of notepaper with an address written in purple ink.

"This is against the rules, but Ms. Lloyd's heart is breaking over her sister's death. To my way of thinking, people are more important than rules. Maybe a talk with those who've been there will help her."

"Melina appreciates this. So do I. Thank you."

He shook her hand. She held on to his maybe a second or two longer than politeness required. "You remind me of my late husband."

"He was a lucky man."

She blushed becomingly. "He was very handsome. He had some Indian blood. A drop or two of Cherokee," she added with a smile. "I never dreamed I'd have such a celebrity inside my house."

"It's my honor."

He said a final goodbye. As he was going down the walk, she called after him, "Take care of that cut so it doesn't scar."

He got in the car and passed Melina the note, then sat for a moment staring directly ahead through the windshield across the dull, dented hood. "What?" she asked.

"I feel like crap."

"Do you need another aspirin?"

"Not physically. I feel bad over the way we manipulated her." "I know what you mean," she sighed. "Sort of like we just screwed over Cinderella's fairy godmother.""Oh, thanks. That makes me feel a lot better."

He pulled away from the curb. The club where he'd been forced to abandon his car was only a few blocks away. The sports model he owned was an automobile, and this clunker was an automobile, but there the similarities ended. He longed for the maneuverability and speed of his car and was tempted to drive past the parking lot just to see if it was still there and intact. He doubted anyone lying in wait for them would recognize them in this car, but he couldn't take the chance. Resisting the temptation, he circled a block and headed back toward the expressway.

"Look at it this way," Melina said, evidently still on the subjec
t of manipulating Linda Croft. "
By doing this, we could prevent another woman from being killed or keep another couple's child from being kidnapped."

"That's your motivation for doing all this investigative work yourself? Crime prevention?"

"Isn't that motivation enough?"

"Very noble." He glanced at her. "But are you sure there's no vengeance lurking in there somewhere?"

In a voice made husky by steely determination, she said, "That, too. Definitely."

"What is this garbage?" Tobias frowned with distaste. He'd sifted through hovels before, many a lot more derelict and dirty than Dale Gordon's apartment. Few, however, had rated this high on the creep factor.

"Doomsday stuff," Detective Lawson explained as Tobias thumbed through the low-grade paperback booklet. It was filled with graphic illustrations depicting the tribulation to come in the end days. Decapitations. Disembowelments. Babies impaled on swords. "Gordon was big into the apocalypse. I told you about his calls to that Brother Gabriel character."

After leaving Hennings's brokerage firm, Tobias and Patterson had met the detective at Melina Lloyd's house and recounted for him her story about the two imposters. Chagrined, Lawson had admitted that even though Dale Gordon was Gillian Lloyd's killer, it seemed the case wasn't as open-and-shut as he had originally believed. He'd suggested that the two federal agents see Gordon's apartment, in the hope that out of the rubble they would find a direction to take their further investigation. Leaving other detectives to collect evidence, the three drove to Gordon's apartment together.

At the mention of the TV preacher, Tobias conjured up a mental image. "Brother Gabriel makes some orthodox religious leaders nervous. They claim his ministry is a cult."

"Could be," Lawson surmised. "Or maybe established churches are just jealous of the following he's enlisted. Europe. Asia. Africa. He's not just here. He's everywhere."

"You've researched this." Tobias was impressed with the background work Lawson had done. He looked like an aged hoodlum, but apparently he was more astute than his appearance implied.

"I followed up on Gordon's fascination with Brother Gabriel," he explained. "Telephone counselors out at the Temple in New Mexico told me Gordon called so often he made a pest of himself, although they put it more tactfully. They're too much into peace and love to speak ill of a disciple. Especially a dead one. Anyway, they said Gordon seemed to be preoccupied with Armageddon."

"I'm not an expert on cults, but we have specialists who are," Tobias related. "I read their reports regularly. Dale Gordon fits the profile of a cult member. Low self-esteem. Social outcast. Brother Gabriel would have represented both a father figure and a savior, somebody who loved and accepted him, warts and all."

"When he joined, he became part and parcel of a large family of believers."

"Which gave Gordon instant identity, something he'd lacked. His devotion to Brother Gabriel became his life to the exclusion of everything else."

"Not everything else," said Patterson from the other side of the dim room.

The younger FBI agent came forward with a stack of what appeared to be snapshots. "Found these beneath some loose boards under the bed. Your guys must've missed them," he said to Lawson.

Lawson harrumphed. He had almost as many years of investigative experience as Patterson was old. Local law enforcement officers typically resented the FBI when they came in and took over their case—especially one already closed. Hoping to keep that resentment at a tolerable level, Tobias exercised some diplomacy. "Easy to overlook something in a dump like this. What've you got?"

He reached for the photos. To his credit, Patterson exercised a little diplomacy himself by dividing the stack of pictures between him and Lawson. "Ladies. Naked ladies."

Tobias leafed through them, his anger for the dead man mounting. "Not your average porno, is it?" It was obvious that the women didn't know they were being photographed. Some were wearing short robes, the kind one donned for a medical examination. Others were completely nude. All were young and appeared healthy.

"He took them at the clinic." Lawson told them about the peephole they'd discovered. "These must've been other patients. We found a couple of snapshots of Gillian Lloyd like this," Lawson said. "Over there on the altar."

"Altar, my ass," Patterson said. "I hope God wasn't in a forgiving mood when this fucker died."

Tobias frowned at the younger agent's editorial comment; but he didn't rebuke him for it. "Does this mean that Gillian Lloyd wasn't Gordon's only obsession?"

Lawson raised his beefy shoulders.

"What was Gordon's job at the clinic?" Patterson asked.

"Here goes your dinner." That was Lawson's way of warning them that what they were about to hear wasn't going to be pleasant.

"Gordon was an andrologist. I'd never heard the word. Had to look it up. They're the lab techs who work with semen specimens at sperm banks and infertility clinics. They perform all the procedures on it. Storing, freezing, washing. Everything required to prepare it for artificial insemination of one kind or another. Intrauterine or in vitro." He sighed, giving them an opportunity to paint their own mind pictures. "Knowing what I know about him, makes me kinda sick to think about him handling. . . it. Ya know?"

"Yeah, I know." After a thoughtful moment, Tobias said, "Know what else I know?"

"We gotta toss that clinic."

He looked across at Patterson. "Go to the head of the class."

 

CHAPTER 24

As George Abbott paced, he was brutalizing a fingernail already gnawed down to the quick. "I don't understand why."

"I've explained why." Dexter Longtree was measuring the width of the empty office, using his boots as his measuring stick. Toe to heel, heel to toe, he counted off the yardage.

"Well, forgive me, Dexter," Abbott said with a nervous laugh. "Maybe I'm not as in touch with my spiritual self as you are. I don't believe in dreams and visions. I leave that kind of crap to the old men of the tribe."

Longtree raised his head and gave Abbott a hard look. "No offense," he muttered.

"None taken." Longtree continued pacing off the yardage until he had covered the distance to the far wall. Removing a pencil and paper from the breast pocket of his shirt, he wrote down the measurement. It was only an approximation, but it would serve to plan the layout of NAA's first headquarters.

"All I'm suggesting," Abbott continued, "is that we should push him a little harder."

"There's no need to push."

"We're fresh in his mind. If too much time goes by, he'll for-

get he ever heard about NAA. Now's the time to move in, apply some pressure."

"We said everything we needed to say."

"Guys like Hart, he's got people coming at him left and right wanting favors, asking for this, asking for that. Write a book. Give a speech. Visit a school. Sign an autograph. He can't do everything, so his stock answer to every request is no." Abbott slapped his palm with the back of his other hand. "I'm telling you, Dexter, only the persistent are going to get anywhere with him."

Longtree finished counting the electrical outlets and made a notation on his paper. "Hart doesn't want to be wooed."

"Hell, everybody wants to be wooed," Abbott argued as he attacked another fingernail. "We could go down to Houston. Leave tomorrow. Or the day after at the latest. We'd have to drive. There's no budget for airfare. Maybe spend one night on the road each way. We'll take him to lunch. Someplace nice. White tablecloths, white wine, the whole nine yards. Convince him we're not savages. Then we'll make our appeal." He glanced at Longtree. "I don't suppose you'd think about cutting your hair?"

Longtree had listened to George's plan with barely contained amusement. "It would be a wasted trip, George. Christopher Hart will come to us."

Abbott dropped his hand from his mouth. "Come to us? Come to us? Are we talking about the same guy?" His voice rose to a shrill note. "He couldn't wait to get rid of us."

Longtree could read Abbott's mind. He was thinking that what people said about Dexter Longtree was probably true, that the gossip had some basis of truth. Most of the time, Chief Longtree was a force to be reckoned with. Strong. Passionate. Determined. Intimidating.

But occasionally he went a little soft in the head. He would become one feather short of a full war bonnet. One arrow shy of a full quiver. They'd tap their temples and shake their heads sorrowfully.

"It's the tragedy," the old-timers explained. "Sometimes it still affects him."

Although Abbott had been in grade school when it happened, he'd heard the story about how Longtree had gone crazy. He had made a painstaking and gradual recovery, but he was prone to relapses. No doubt Abbott thought that he was suffering one now.

That was all right. Let him think what he wished. "George, nothing we say will convince Christopher Hart to join us. He'll make the decision when he's ready. On his own. It will come from something within himself."

But Abbott wasn't listening. He was already on to another thought. "We could up the ante. Increase the amount of his retainer."

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