Zero Break (16 page)

Read Zero Break Online

Authors: Neil Plakcy

Tags: #Fiction, #Erotica, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Police Procedural, #General Fiction

“We never heard back from Ellen Toyama, the girl who gave Greg Wyatt’s name.” I called and left another message for her, then turned back to Ray. “If she doesn’t call back by tomorrow we’ll track her down.”

“You know any lesbians?” Ray asked. “I mean, I watched
The L Word
. In LA, they’re all sleeping with each other. Why not here?”

“That’s a TV show. But I can give it a try.” I called my friend Sandra Guarino, an attorney with a prominent downtown law firm who’s also the most connected lesbian in the islands.

“Kimo. You never call. Cathy and I were just talking about you the other day.”

“Then you could have picked up the phone.” Cathy was her partner, the tiny half-Japanese woman who’d recruited me for the gay teen group. “Listen, do you have a few minutes? I need to talk to you about something.”

“You’re in luck,” she said. “My lunch date just cancelled a few minutes ago and nothing else has had a chance to take over the time. How about the Little Village, one o’clock?”

While I was on the phone, Ray had been Googling Anna Yang. He found a website for her murals, including an email link. “I already emailed her,” he said, when I swiveled over to his desk. “We’ll see if she gets in touch.”

Her work was beautiful, more photos of murals like the ones in the house on Lopez Lane and the apartment in Chinatown. Fortunately, there were a couple of client testimonials, and we were able to track down full names and phone numbers for three of them.

We left messages at two of the numbers, but got the lady of the house on the third call. “Mrs. Buchanan?” I gave her my name and said I wanted to ask about Anna Yang.

“I can’t recommend her highly enough. The mural she did for my daughter’s room is just lovely.”

“I’m afraid I’m not calling for a recommendation. Do you think I could come over and talk to you for a few minutes?”

She lived in a high-rise just a few minutes from downtown, and Ray and I got there about half-past noon. The doorman buzzed us up, and an elegant haole woman in her forties opened the apartment door to us.

The first thing we saw was the magnificent view of Honolulu harbor. “Please come in,” Renata Buchanan said. “I hope Anna isn’t in any trouble.”

“We’re just trying to learn about her,” I said, as she led us into the living room. We sat on a half-round white couch. “Can you tell us what she was like to work with?”

“A real perfectionist. She knew exactly what she wanted to do, and she was determined to get it done right. The hardware store sent over the wrong color blue—and you should have heard her tell them, in no uncertain terms, what was wrong, and what she expected them to do to fix it.”

“Would you say she had a temper?” Ray asked.

Renata shifted uncomfortably on a plush chair. “Well, when you put it that way…” She hesitated. “I did see her get very angry a couple of times, when things weren’t going right. She accidentally put a brush with paint on it into a different color, and she got very upset.”

She leaned forward. “She isn’t in any trouble, is she?” She hesitated again. “I never asked her for her papers. I didn’t think it was my responsibility. She was just an independent contractor, after all. Not like an employee. She spoke with an accent, of course, but so many people do. That doesn’t mean someone is illegal.”

“We’re not from Immigration,” I said. “And Anna’s not in any trouble right now. We’re just trying to learn about her.”

Renata relaxed. “She was devoted to her children, I know that,” she said. “She loves those girls. You should see her face light up when she talks about them.”

We thanked Renata Buchanan for her time. “Well, we know she has a temper,” I said. “She has a motive, too.”

“And she has the upper body strength to wield a knife,” Ray added.

I dropped him back at headquarters and drove over to the Little Village, a Chinese restaurant favored by attorneys since the tables were far enough apart to have private conversations. I parked behind an SUV with a bumper sticker that read, “Your kid’s an honors student but you’re a moron.”

I walked in the restaurant a few minutes before Sandra and snagged us a table under the trellis, ordering us both water and hot tea. She was talking when she walked in, the picture of the corporate lawyer, in a dark suit and sensible pumps. It took me a minute to notice the wireless earpiece and realize she was on the phone. Only the pink pin on her lapel in the shape of the Greek
lambda
indicated she was anything beyond the norm.

“So how’s that handsome fireman of yours?” she asked, after she’d finished her call, kissed my cheek and sat down.

“Still as handsome as ever. Though if I could train him not to leave his underwear on the living room floor, our house would be more peaceful.”

“You sound just like a woman,” she said. “Don’t you drop your shorts on the floor too? Leave the toilet seat up? And all those other stereotypical man things?”

“Spoken like a true lesbian,” I said. “Some of us have manners, you know.”

The waiter brought us a dish of cucumber pickles with our water and tea. I ordered the clams in lemon grass sauce, and Sandra had the steamed
basa
, catfish fillets in ginger and green onions. “So what’s new in the world of homicide?” she asked. “I know you didn’t call me just to chat.”

“Sandra. I’m hurt.”

“I refer to our previous conversation. You’re a man.”

“Did you or Cathy know Zoë Greenfield and Anna Yang?”

She pursed her lips. “Let me think for a minute. Neither of them are someone I know well, that’s for sure.” She pulled out her Blackberry and started scrolling through it. “Greenfield. Yup. Accountant, right? Works for the state?”

“I’m impressed,” I said. “You have every lesbian in Hawai’i in there?”

“Almost. A girl’s gotta network, you know.”

“Did you know her personally?”

Sandra shook her head. “What was the other name again?”

“Anna Yang. She’s an artist. Paints murals in peoples’ houses.”

She frowned. “Don’t know how she got past me. I haven’t heard of her.”

The waiter brought our platters, my clams balanced on each other and smelling sweet and tart at the same time. “Which one of them is in trouble?” Sandra asked, cutting off a piece of her fillet.

“Zoë Greenfield’s dead, and Anna Yang’s in the wind.” As we ate, I gave her the basics of the case.

“What can I do to help?”

“Ask around. See if any of your friends knows anything about Zoë, or why someone might have killed her. And if you can get a handle on Anna’s whereabouts, we need to talk to her.”

“Sounds like she could use an attorney.”

“Not quite yet. But if she overstayed her visa, she’s in trouble for sure.”

“I have an idea you might not have checked yet.” She pushed her plate away while I was still working on my clams and pressed a couple of keys on her Blackberry. She placed the phone down on the table and stared into space. “Lucy, it’s Sandra Guarino,” she said after a minute. She laughed and made some small talk, then said, “I need a quick favor. Can you check your database for a woman named Anna Yang?”

She laughed again. “No, not one of those.” She looked at me. “What’s the guy’s name?”

I looked at her, and then it clicked. “Greg Oshiro.”

She repeated the name to Lucy, whoever she was. “You’re going to need to write this down,” she said to me.

I pulled out my pad and pen. “Great. That’s what I thought. June 21, you said, 2010?”

I wrote the date down. She thanked Lucy and promised that they’d get together.

“Let me guess,” I said, when she was finished. “Greg Oshiro and Anna Yang are married.”

“Two points for the boy in blue,” she said, even though I was wearing an aloha shirt in shades of green and white. “Lucy works in the Department of Health.”

I knew that was the department that issued marriage licenses; I’d gone down for the license with Haoa and Tatiana when they applied. “So why doesn’t INS know about that?” I asked. “Marriage is Anna’s ticket to citizenship.”

“Did they all live together?” she asked. “Zoë, Anna and this guy?”

I shook my head. “Not that I know.” I told her about the house on Lopez Lane, and Anna’s apartment in Chinatown.

Sandra shrugged. “Maybe it’s just a backup plan,” she said. “ICE is cracking down on marriages between citizens and foreign nationals. If they weren’t living together, it could have been construed as immigration fraud.”

She insisted on paying for lunch. “Call it a chit you owe me. You and Mike have to come over to the house for dinner sometime.”

As we were walking out, I said, “You guys ever think about kids?”

She stopped and looked at me. “Are you and Mike thinking about it?”

I shrugged. “Everywhere I look these days, gay men and lesbians are having kids, or adopting, or showing up with kids from some previous relationship. It’s like it’s in the air or something.” We stepped out into the sunshine.

“We’ve talked about it,” Sandra said. “But Cathy’s so busy with the teen center, and she doesn’t have the chance to write as much as she should.” Cathy was a poet with an MFA. I’d read a couple of her poems in the past, and though I’m no expert, I’d been moved by them.

“I love my career and my volunteer work. Neither of us think it would be fair to bring a child into the mix right now.” She paused. “Cathy had fibroids a few years ago,” she said, lowering her voice. “So if we decide to have children, I’d be the birth mom. We have some time to make the decision, though, so the jury’s still out.”

She looked at me. “How would you feel about being the sperm donor?”

I can’t say I hadn’t thought about it. When I discovered, a year before, that Greg had donated sperm and fathered two kids, I had wondered if anyone would ever ask me. Sandra and Cathy were my closest lesbian friends, so they’d been the obvious choice.

“Anna told me that they picked Greg Oshiro because Zoë was going to be the birth mom, and they wanted kids who were mixed race,” I said.

Sandra looked at me like I was on a witness stand avoiding one of her questions. And I was. “It was great to see you,” I said, kissing her cheek. “I promise we’ll have dinner soon.”

She laughed. “Think about it.” Then her Blackberry buzzed and she was a corporate attorney once again, walking off down the street speaking into the air about an upcoming deposition.

When I got back to headquarters, Greg Oshiro was at Ray’s desk talking to him. “Good, you’re back,” Ray said. “Greg just got here.” He stood up. “Let’s go into an interview room so we can talk.”

Greg and I followed him down the hall. “What have you found out?” Greg asked, as soon as we were all in the room.

“How about if we ask a couple of questions first,” I said. “That’s the way we generally work it around here, you know.”

Greg frowned. But he put down his notebook and pen.

“Let’s talk about marriage first,” I said. “Like you and Anna Yang, exchanging vows.”

He looked down at the table, twiddling his pen back and forth in his fingers. Finally, he looked up. “Yeah, we got married. A couple of months before the twins were born.”

“Why?” Ray asked. “For her citizenship?”

Greg looked at him. “I thought she had a green card. She worked all over the place.”

Ray shook his head. “She had a student visa, which expired when she finished her degree. Nothing after that.”

“Shit. I didn’t know that. It’s not like we were trying to scam ICE or anything.”

“Then why did you get married?”

He looked embarrassed. “We were protecting ourselves,” he said. “You know, in case something happened with Zoë.”

“And something did,” I said.

He glared at me. “It was nothing like that. It’s just that Anna had no rights to the girls, and I was worried that the two of them might gang up on me and shut me out. I mean, for the longest time, they kept calling me the sperm donor, not even the dad.”

Greg had started to sweat, and he reached into his pocket and found a handkerchief to wipe his forehead.

“You see how it looks,” I said, playing the bad cop once more. “You and Anna thinking for so long about ganging up on Zoë. Then she ends up dead. And who benefits? Well, you and Anna get to keep the kids here in Hawai’i, for one thing.”

Greg’s eyes narrowed.

“Yeah, Greg, we know that Zoë was threatening to move the kids to the mainland with her new boyfriend. That must have made you and Anna both pretty angry.”

“I didn’t kill Zoë,” he said. “If you’re accusing me, then you should be reading me my rights and letting me call an attorney.”

“Nobody’s accusing you of anything yet,” I said. “We’re just asking questions. And you know we don’t have to Mirandize you until we take you into custody and you’re no longer free to leave. Right now we’re just talking.”

Ray jumped in. “Kimo gets a little over excited, Greg. You know that. We’re just trying to figure out what’s going on. And you want to help us find out who killed Zoë, don’t you?”

I said, “We know you love the girls. Your parents love them, too. You want them to stay in Hawai’i. You’ve got to admit, you’ve got a motive.”

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