The boss’s office was cold. The air-conditioning must have been turned to the max, but despite the temperature, Lou was sweating. He was in his usual position, standing in front of the desk to give a report, waiting for the tongue-lashing certain to follow.
This time Lou was alone. Edgar had been dispatched to reason with someone on behalf of the boss—if you could call breaking a man’s kneecaps “reasoning.”
“He shot at you?” For a moment it seemed that the corners of the big man’s mouth turned upward a fraction of an inch. Then his moon-like face settled into its usual countenance, overlaid with the faintest hint of a scowl. “You and Edgar broke in to carry out a plan so simple two teenagers could have executed it, and Newman chased you away with a gun. Do I have that right?”
Lou felt his pulse quicken as he recalled the event. “That’s all we could do. Newman was waiting with a pistol. He started shooting, and if Edgar and me hadn’t run when we did, you’d be ID’ing our bodies so they could put a toe tag on us.”
“Don’t be ridiculous,” the big man said, with no hint of humor. “You know that if you ever fall into the hands of the law, alive or dead, I’ll deny any knowledge of you.”
“What I mean—”
“Shut up and let me think!” The upraised hand was the size of a small ham, and the gesture stopped Lou cold. He waited for what would follow.
Behind the desk was a window that looked out onto Jefferson Boulevard, a window that in Lou’s memory had always been guarded by a closed blind. Today it was open a fraction, and he was conscious of the movement of cars and occasional pedestrians below. Lou wished he were out there with them.
The boss took a letter opener from his desk and tapped his desk blotter with it. He nodded once, apparently satisfied with his plan, and dropped the opener. “Here’s what I want you to do.” He folded his hands under his chin and paused as though weighing his words. “Using your key, enter Newman’s home when he’s not there. Find that pistol and bring it to me.”
“Sure. How soon do you need it?”
The big man closed his eyes and appeared to consider the question. He spoke without opening them. “I have some work that will take you a day or so. After that’s done, get the gun, with Newman’s prints on it, and bring it to me.”
“So you want me and Edgar—”
“No. Just you. It may be time to throw Edgar off the sleigh, and I think it’s best to keep him in the dark until then.”
Lou nodded, although he didn’t really understand. No Edgar on this one. But what’s he talking about, that stuff about a sleigh?
“On the other hand, Edgar’s talents are perfect for this little job I have in mind. Here’s what you two are to do.”
Lou relaxed when he heard the assignment. It was routine stuff, no problem. And there was enough violence involved so Edgar would love it.
“Any questions?” the big man said.
Lou shook his head.
“Then go. I’ll expect you back here in a few days, with Newman’s pistol. Alone.”
“I can’t afford a security system for my house,” Matt said. “And I don’t want to buy a watchdog. With my hours, I’d have to pay someone to look after him and walk him, and I can’t afford that either.”
Matt felt as though he’d been in Sandra’s office all day. They weren’t really arguing—more like debating issues. The debate was low-key, and Sandra was winning. She suggested ways Matt could protect himself. He countered with reasons they wouldn’t work. She insisted he give her the gun. He finally accepted the validity of her argument.
“I can see why you’re successful in the courtroom,” Matt said. “You wear everyone down.”
“The pistol?”
Matt shrugged. “Yeah, the pistol.”
“Will you bring it to me later today?”
Matt consulted his watch. “I’ve got to go to work soon. It’s safely tucked away, and I promise not to shoot anybody with it before tomorrow. How about then?”
“Okay. Call Elaine to let her know when you’re coming. I want to be here so I can take it right to the police.”
Matt decided he’d had enough talk of guns and police. “So what do we do about this ‘new evidence’ the DA expects?”
“If you’re sure there’s nothing you haven’t told me, all we can do is wait.”
“In case you haven’t noticed, I don’t do that very well,” Matt said. “They say that’s what separates surgeons from internists. The internists wait around, adjust medications, order tests, and get their patients well over time. Surgeons want to identify the problem, cut it out or sew it up, and move on.”
“Unfortunately you’re going to have to take the internist track in this case. But I know how the legal system works, and even though things aren’t moving fast enough for you, I’m on top of them. Let me worry about the DA. You get on with rebuilding your life.” She chewed her lip, a habit Matt found charming. “And it looks like you’re doing a good job of that. Tell me about your new job.”
“Metropolitan ER,” Matt said. “I’ll have to admit it was spooky walking out those doors last night, but I’ve about decided I can’t live my life looking over my shoulder.”
“It’s about time for lunch. I was wondering—” A muted buzz from the phone on her desk made Sandra stop.
Elaine’s voice issued from the speaker. “Horace Allison is on line one, and he sounds pretty upset.”
Sandra frowned. “Sorry, I’ve got to take this.”
“No problem,” Matt said. “I need to go, anyway. I’ll see you tomorrow.”
As Matt walked away from Sandra Murray’s office building, his last words ran through his mind. “I can’t live my life looking over my shoulder.” Actually, that was exactly what he wanted to do, but he resisted the temptation. No question, there was an unfamiliar tingling between his shoulder blades. He’d read in spy novels about people who felt in their guts they were in the crosshairs of an assassin’s rifle. Until now he’d dismissed it as a literary device. No more. He not only accepted it as valid, he knew the feeling all too well.
Sandra rummaged through the files on her desk, found the one she wanted, and buzzed her secretary. “Elaine, have we received the discovery material on the Allison case?”
“Just got it. Do you want me to bring it in?”
Horace Allison was a drug dealer, and there was no question in Sandra’s mind that his most recent arrest would stand up in court. As part of a plea bargain, one of his middlemen had worn a wire during a drug buy. The resulting audio material was enough to put Allison away for a long time. She wanted to make one final pass through the material provided by the prosecutor, but right now it looked like the best she could do for Allison was see if he had something to trade in return for a lighter sentence. It tore at her guts to be defending someone so obviously guilty, even though—as she kept reminding herself—everyone was entitled to the best possible counsel. Maybe having Matt as a client—
Elaine’s voice on the intercom interrupted Sandra’s thoughts. “I asked if you wanted the Allison material?”
“Yes, please bring it in. And if you go out for lunch, would you get me a sandwich? Looks like I’ll be eating at my desk.”
She’d been about to ask Matt to lunch when Horace phoned. Sandra wondered what Matt might have said if there hadn’t been an interruption. She knew she couldn’t see a client socially while still preparing his defense, but she’d already worked that out in her mind. This would have been a business lunch, an opportunity for her to see him in a more relaxed setting and get more information. The better an attorney knew a client, the better she could defend him. Sure, you’re the queen of rationalization. Admit it. There’s an attraction there.
Elaine deposited a large cardboard box, the kind used to store records, on the table beside Sandra’s desk. “What kind of sandwich do you want?”
Sandra made a dismissive gesture. “Surprise me.” Right now, her appetite was gone. Was it because of the prospect of wading through all that material looking for a flaw in the case against her client, or the fact that she wouldn’t be eating with Matt?
Jennifer looked at her watch. Time for lunch, and Matt hadn’t returned her call. Should she call him again? In the past he’d always answered her calls except when he was in surgery or with a patient. Even then, he returned them as soon as he could. But that was then, and this was now. This was after she’d rebuffed him when he needed her. She supposed his hurt would be slow to heal—if it ever did.
Jennifer pulled her purse from the desk drawer and stood up. Maybe she’d slip around the corner for a quick bite, and if Matt hadn’t called by then, she’d call him again. Everything Jennifer knew about Matt told her that he couldn’t have done the things of which he was suspected. On the other hand, his kidnapping story sounded just a bit far-fetched to her. She figured a jury would find it equally hard to believe. And she couldn’t afford to be connected to a man charged with—even suspected of—murder, not if she wanted to maintain the trust of the DA.
Jennifer was halfway to the door when she heard a man’s voice. “Hey, Jen! Got a minute?”
Frank Everett hurried to where she stood. His dress shirt was wrinkled, his tie askew, and he looked like he’d just stepped out of a sauna. “I’ve been taking a deposition this morning, and I need a break. How about having lunch with me?”
Decision time. If she went to lunch with Frank, there’d be no opportunity to call Matt, or even answer if he called back. On the other hand, if she turned Frank down, she needed a good excuse, and she couldn’t think of one on the spur of the moment. Besides, Frank was her lifeline, maybe her future.
Jennifer had never really understood the expression “a heavy heart” until now. She plastered a smile on her face. “Sure. Where would you like to go?”
“Uh, Dr. Newman. I’m surprised to see you here.” The ICU nurse’s expression conveyed what her words only suggested. She was surprised he wasn’t in jail.
Matt searched his memory bank for her name and came up blank. “I’m working in the ER now. And I decided to check on a patient I had yesterday. Don’t recall his name, but he had a traumatic hemopericardium.”
The nurse bent over the chart rack, and as she turned, Matt got a better look at the nameplate pinned to her scrub dress. “Candace, what do people around the hospital think of me? Am I going to be treated like a leper everywhere I go?”
She straightened and handed Matt a chart. “Dr. Newman, I try not to pay attention to gossip. But I’ve worked with you for almost a year, and I don’t think you could be guilty of murder. Frankly, when I heard what they were saying, I was shocked.”
“Thanks.” Matt opened the chart and scanned the progress notes. He kept his head down as he said, “I appreciate your saying that. And, if it makes any difference, I’m totally innocent of all those charges.”
“Well, I’ll be praying for you.” A buzzer sent Candace hurrying off to answer.
Matt tucked the chart under his arm and headed for ICU room 6, where his patient—now Lonnie’s patient, he guessed—was located. The blinds were open, and the huge glass picture window gave him a clear view inside. A patient lay on the bed, an endotracheal tube in his throat connected to a respirator that was chuffing at a rate Matt guessed to be about twelve breaths per minute. In addition to two IVs, a tube led from the patient’s chest to a drainage setup. A monitor scrolled numbers and patterns across a screen, beeping while displaying information that was incomprehensible to a layperson but critical to medical professionals.
Matt was about to enter when he saw the woman sitting at the bedside, still as a wax figure. Stray strands escaped here and there from her otherwise perfectly coiffed ash-blond hair. She wore a simple navy dress, accented by a single strand of pearls. Her right hand rested on the patient’s arm, her left lay in her lap, squeezing a wad of tissue and occasionally using it to dab her eyes.
“Excuse me,” Matt said.
The woman rose from her chair, startled. Matt thought he had never seen such sorrow on a face. She blinked back a tear. “Shall I leave?”
Matt had changed into scrubs for his stint in the ER, covering them with a white coat, so there was really no need to explain his presence. Nevertheless, for some reason he felt the need to do exactly that. “No, please stay. I’m Dr. Matt Newman. I’m the doctor who saw Mr. . . .” Matt sneaked a glance at the chart. “I saw Mr. Penland in the emergency room yesterday. I wanted to look in on him, see that he’s okay.”
“You’re the doctor who saved his life,” she said. Her tone was as flat as though she were ordering a grilled cheese sandwich.
“I just did what an emergency room physician does,” Matt said. “I diagnosed the problem, then I treated it until I could turn him over to the specialist.”
The woman held out her hand. “I’m Roland’s mother, Abby Penland. And Dr. Witt told me your quick action saved Roland’s life. So thank you.”
Being thanked for doing his job always felt wrong to Matt. He murmured, “You’re welcome,” then busied himself with the read-outs from the monitor until Mrs. Penland took her seat once more.
Lonnie Witt’s notes indicated he’d done a thoracotomy—entering Penland’s chest—necessitating the chest tube drainage. He’d opened the sac surrounding the heart and sutured a small laceration of the heart muscle. Matt had never done this procedure, but was familiar enough with it to know that Mr. Penland had a period of convalescence ahead of him. On the other hand, without Matt’s intervention, the woman sitting at the bedside would be planning a funeral instead of holding her son’s hand.
Matt glanced at the clock. “I need to go now. I’m due on duty in the emergency room soon.” He started to leave, then turned back. “It was nice meeting you. I hope your son continues to do well.”
She rose and took Matt’s extended hand in both her own. He noticed that she wore what looked like a platinum engagement and wedding ring set featuring a large emerald-cut diamond, with smaller stones on either side. Although Matt hadn’t gone so far as to buy a ring for Jennifer, he’d done some looking and was certain he’d just seen a five-carat diamond.
“Thank you for coming by. And good luck.”
Matt started to respond but found that he had nothing to say. Did she mean “good luck” with the patients he was about to see? Or was his predicament such common knowledge that her “good luck” referred to his battle to prove his innocence of murder charges?
As the door closed behind Matt, he decided that looking for motives behind what people said to him was just another unpleasant by-product of the mess he was in. He longed for it all to be over . . . one way or another.
Sandra Murray reached across her desk to still the buzz of the intercom. “Yes?”
“Dr. Newman just called. He’s on his way with that package you wanted.”
Package? What—? Oh, the pistol. “Thanks, Elaine. When he gets here, send him right in.”
Sandra pulled Matt’s case file from the stack on her desk. It was near the top, the position it had occupied from the beginning. She’d been careful not to short-change her other clients, but Matt’s case had been foremost in her mind since that first encounter in his ICU room. That was natural, though, wasn’t it, given the charges he faced? And besides that . . . She shook her head and wondered why the man attracted her so.
She’d given up on talking with Charlie Greaver about Matt’s case. His standard answer had become, “Talk to Frank Everett.” But talking to Frank was like arguing with a stone.
Sandra insisted that the case against her client was purely circumstantial. She repeated Matt’s contention that he was the victim, not the perpetrator in this situation. But Frank would only say that one missing piece of evidence was all that stood between Matt and a murder indictment.
What was this mysterious missing piece of evidence? Matt continued to deny any knowledge of such a thing. Was he being straight with her? He—
“Here you are.” Matt stood in the door, holding a small brown paper bag. He moved to her desk and deposited the bag there as casually as though he were delivering a half-dozen donuts. “One revolver, unloaded. Five unfired bullets and an empty cartridge case. I didn’t get any extra ammunition with it. Guess the guy I bought it from wasn’t running a special that week.”
Sandra parted the top of the bag just enough to confirm that the contents were as Matt described. “Did you by any chance—”
“There are no fingerprints on the gun. I even wiped down the bullets.” Matt sank into the visitor’s chair and crossed his legs. “And I’ve patched the bullet hole.”
“Good,” Sandra said. “I’m going to tell them that this came into my possession and I wanted to turn it over to them for disposal. To my knowledge it wasn’t used in the commission of a crime. Beyond that, I’ll claim lawyer-client privilege.”
“Won’t they infer that it came from me?”
“Let them infer all they want to. There’s no way they can tie this to you.” She frowned. “Is there anything else they might find in your home or car that could be used as evidence against you?”
“Absolutely not.” The response came rapidly, and was accompanied by such an earnest expression, Sandra was sure he was telling the truth.
“Got to head for work,” Matt said. “But I wanted to drop this by first. I hope I’m doing the right thing.”
“Don’t worry,” Sandra said. “You are.” At least, I hope you are. Please, God, keep him safe.
Detective Virgil Grimes left his unmarked car a block away from Matt’s house. As he moved along the sidewalk, he wondered when the city would realize that a black Ford Crown Vic with plain steel wheels and basic hubcaps, red and blue strobes faintly visible through the grill, was as clearly a police car as a black-and-white with a light bar on top. But he was entitled to drive a city car, and beggars couldn’t be choosers.
Over the years, Grimes had developed the policeman’s walk, along with the “I don’t want any trouble out of you” stare that marked him as a cop as plainly as flipping open his badge wallet. It was too late to try to disguise it, but if any of the neighbors saw him approaching Newman’s house, he figured they wouldn’t think it unusual. The man was a suspect in a murder, so a policeman in the area would be as normal as an ice cream truck in a family neighborhood during the summer.
While he was there, Grimes decided he might as well see if he could find a nosy neighbor, some housewife or retired man who spent their day with eyes glued to their window. You never could tell what you might turn up that way. But first he had a little business to take care of.
Grimes rang the front doorbell, not expecting an answer. If Newman had stayed home from work, he’d ask him a dozen or so questions and leave. There’d be another time for what he had in mind today.
The bell went unanswered, so Grimes slid the key he’d liberated from the property room into the lock. At least, he tried to slide it in, but it wouldn’t go. He turned the key over and tried again. Still no luck. Maybe it fit the back door. He trudged around behind the house. Same thing.
So Newman had been smart enough to change the locks. If Grimes had a warrant in his pocket, that wouldn’t be a problem, but this visit was strictly unofficial. He pulled out a flat leather wallet containing a series of picks and metal strips, possession of which would earn him a nice vacation at state expense if he weren’t a policeman. Using a talent he’d perfected after a lesson from one of his informants, Grimes had the back door open in less than a minute.
He closed the door behind him and stood silent as a statue, listening to the sounds of the house. Satisfied that he was alone, he moved swiftly up the stairs. Might as well start with the bedroom. That was the logical place.
Grimes had done his share of searches, most of them with a warrant, but one or two without benefit of legal sanction. He knew all the hiding places, knew them better than most criminals, he figured. Once he found the right place, it took him less than a minute to finish the job. He hurried down the stairs, and in another minute he was out the back door, having locked it with even more ease than when he’d entered.
He paused in the backyard and ran through what he’d done, looking for mistakes. Now was the time to correct them. But, no, the house was just as he’d found it—well, almost. And the change wouldn’t be evident to Newman or anyone else until Grimes wanted it to be.