In an effort to lighten up the conversation because neither of them could do much to solve the ills of the world at the moment, she said, “So fill me in on your Nabbed in the Nasturtiums case.”
“There is no Nabbed in the Nasturtiums,” he said instantly. But the quirk of his lips belied something.
She dug a little deeper. “Come on. I fed you,” she said, “and it was a good stir-fry, right?”
He nodded enthusiastically. “It’s was a great stir-fry,” he said. “Wonderful.”
“So then surely you can tell me a little bit about the nasturtium case.”
“The gardener was working in the nasturtium bed,” he said. “That’s hardly a reason to call it that.”
“Oh, I don’t know,” she said. “It seemed like a good name to me. Was he a chef?”
“No, a gardener, and he has worked for the city, assigned to that particular set of gardens, for quite a while. Seven years, in fact.”
“Oh, where was he before that?”
He looked over at her, one eyebrow raised, and asked, “Why?”
“Just wondering.” She chuckled. “You just don’t want to share anything,” she accused him gently.
“I can’t share anything,” he reminded her.
She nodded, sat back, then looked around her backyard from her position on her new deck and said, “You guys sure did a wonderful job in this garden.”
“We did,” he said, but he was looking at her, as if waiting for the next question.
She shrugged. “An awful lot is going on,” she said. “I’m still trying to figure out what Nick and Mathew are up to and how it’ll impact me. Then I started in on this Bob Small business to take my mind away from it all. Now I’ve gone down a rabbit hole on that,” she admitted.
“Not necessarily. It could be a positive rabbit hole.”
“That’s hard to imagine,” she said. “I mean, it’s easy to judge Hinja for not going to the police, and, although Nan says Hinja went later, I couldn’t find anything in the police file. So I don’t know when it might have been.”
“Who knows? Maybe they didn’t find it credible at that point,” he muttered.
“Maybe not.”
“Does Hinja mention anybody else in her life at that time? Could it have been anybody else associated with Bob?”
“It’s possible, but, according to her, Bob was a loner, and she’s the one who mentioned the curly hair.”
“Which is a reach at best,” he pointed out. “Plus, did Hinja ever say he was Bob Small, or did she just call him Bob all the time?”
“I know. I know,” she said, “but he did have those photographs.”
“Which she doesn’t have, right?”
“No. She doesn’t, and I don’t know anything about where Bob Small is at this point.”
“I’m not sure he’s even alive. I thought I heard, at some point, that he was in jail for something different.”
“That could explain why the killings stopped.”
“Killings can stop for all kinds of reasons,” he said. “Incarceration is one of those options, but it could also be that he had his fill. Sometimes serial killers stop from one day to the next. Sometimes they have fulfilled whatever compulsion was driving them, and they just stop.”
“Maybe,” she said, “but it seems, like you said, thin.”
He laughed. “Maybe so, but, at the same time, none of that is enough to go on. Even when all added together.”
“And that’s probably why Hinja felt the way she did. All she had were her bad feelings and a couple conversations.” She paused. “And the photos. And the missing curling iron. And mentioning her niece’s curly hair.”
“Exactly,” he said. “Now, if you found other information or personal belongings of his that gave us more to go on, that would be a different story.”
“So, you guys always thought Bob Small had something to do with a lot of these.”
“Yes, but we had no proof.”
“What about some of this genealogy DNA stuff that’s going on?”
“That would be possible,” he said, “if we had any funding for it.”
“Everything comes down to budget in the end, doesn’t it?” she said, staring at him, though not in surprise but almost with an inner resignation.
“Same as you,” he said. “You know that you want salmon again, but it’s expensive, and you know you can have twenty cans of tuna for the same cost as a good salmon fillet.”
“And twenty cans of tuna is twenty meals, versus one, possibly two, from salmon,” she said, with a nod. “I get it. The budget money, the manpower, the hours, all have to go to current crimes, versus tracking somebody who may not even be alive anymore.”
“Or, if he’s in prison, and he’s not a danger where he is, that makes a difference too. But an awful lot of cases could be potentially tied to him. But I don’t know that there’s DNA from very many victims because we don’t have very many bodies,” he replied.
“Right, so what you really need to find is his body dump.”
He nodded. “Did she mention anything like that?”
“Not that I saw,” she said, frowning, “and I’m not sure there is anything in the letters beyond the rantings of a betrayed woman.”
“In which case,” he said, “you have to really weigh that in with her beliefs.”
“Yes,” she said, with a nod. “But maybe I’ll go through them again. There did seem to be a favorite place they used to go.”
“Which would be the last place he would use as a body dump,” he said. “Is there an address or anything? A location where he lived? Anything?”
“You know what? I’m not sure. I wasn’t thinking of things like that at the time, so I’ll read it all again.” And she needed to rummage around in Solomon’s files again. See what he had mentioned in there.
“You do that,” he said, “and, if you come up with a location, we’ll be more than happy to investigate the place. Finding a site where he disposed of the bodies would make a huge difference in tying up things regarding all these cases that might involve Bob Small.”
“Right, because bodies are the first and foremost source of forensic evidence, aren’t they?”
“If there are any, yes,” he said. “Just think about it. The cause of death, whether drugs were used, weapons, fibers, hair, DNA, all of that can be gotten from a body.”
“I’ll read through the letters and that one journal again tonight,” she promised.
“You don’t have to rush,” he said, with a lopsided look her way. “Remember. You’re supposed to de-stress, decompress, and relax. That last case took a lot out of you.”
“I think a lot of that was just knowing the individuals involved so personally,” she murmured. “Knowing it was Mathew and Robin, bringing up all that old hurt and betrayal again.”
“With good reason,” he said. Then briskly changing the subject, he stood, collected the dishes, and said, “You cooked, so I’ll do dishes.”
She watched in astonishment as he carried everything inside and started the hot soapy water in the sink. It also wasn’t the first time that he’d gotten up and walked away while they were discussing the case involving Mathew. Maybe it made him uncomfortable. Or maybe he was just trying to change the subject to stop her from focusing on it. She rose, collected their cups, and walked back in. “Will you want a cup of coffee when you’re done there?”
He looked at her, smiled, and said, “No, not tonight, thanks. I’ll head back to the office.”
“Really? You’re sure putting in a lot of overtime.”
“I am,” he said, “but, right now, we’re kind of overwhelmed with cases.” And he wiggled his eyebrows at her.
She smiled. “I guess I really should slow down, shouldn’t I?”
“Not on our account,” he said. “We’re all about the victims and the families. If you come up with something else, just let me know.” He pulled the plug on the soapy water, dried his hands, and said, “You did a great job with dinner tonight. Don’t ever doubt yourself.”
And, with that, he bent down, picked up Goliath, and gave him a great big hug, while Goliath acted like a sack of flour in his arms. But Goliath’s heavy diesel engine kicked in, making them both laugh, as the purring began in earnest. Mack bent to cuddle Mugs for a moment and then walked over to the table to Thaddeus and trailed his finger gently over the bird’s cheek and back. “Have a good evening, Thaddeus.”
Thaddeus stood up, flapped his wings, and said, “Mack, Mack, Mack.”
Mack laughed. “Yep, that’s me,” he said. “I’m here, but I’m leaving now.”
“Goodbye, Mack. Goodbye, Mack. Goodbye, Mack.”
She walked over, shaking her head. “He learns the darndest things.”
“Yep, but he’s been a huge savior on many occasions,” Mack said, “so we’ll forgive him.”
“True enough,” she said, laughing.
Everybody trooped to the front door, as she watched Mack get into the front seat of his truck and drove away. Feeling a little lost and forlorn, she headed back to the kitchen, put on the teakettle, grabbed the last journal and her notepad, and headed outside. When the teakettle whistled, she went and made a cup of tea and went back to her reading. She started at the beginning, but this time reading a little more intently, looking for more specific information and details. She found bits and pieces, such as this note.
He called from Abbotsford.
And then another one, where he’d called from Abbotsford again. She wished she had some time line log of his travels, showing where and when he’d gone from one place to another. Abbotsford appeared to be a fairly consistent theme. She picked up the phone and asked Nan, “These notes and things don’t have any address or anything. Where did your friend live?”
“Langley,” she said, “kind of out toward the Abbotsford area, but not that far.”
“So she was what maybe twenty minutes or half an hour from Abbotsford?”
“Oh, I have no idea,” she said.
“I just see an awful lot of phone calls from her trucker friend to her from Abbotsford.”
“That’s if you can believe everything,” Nan said. “Don’t forget. He could say he’s calling from Abbotsford, but that doesn’t mean he was. He could have been sitting at a hotel or restaurant just around the corner from her house.”
Doreen winced at that thought. “That isn’t really something I want to think about. It’s kind of creepy.”
“Men who want to deceive will find all kinds of ways to do it,” Nan said. “You’re still working on that case, but I’m not sure it’s a healthy one for you.”
“No, but when there are so many victims,” she said, “it does make you wonder.”
“I get that,” she said, “and I know there’s absolutely nothing I can say to turn you away from it at this point.”
“No, you’re right about that,” she said, and soon they disconnected.
After talking to Nan and realizing that the case was starting to get a bit dark, Doreen put everything away, locked up her house, set the alarm, and headed upstairs, where she curled up with the animals around her on her bed and watched an old comedy. She was still laughing when her phone buzzed with an incoming email. She took a look to find an email from somebody who she didn’t know, asking Doreen if she could help. She quickly opened up the email.
My uncle has been kidnapped in Kelowna. I know he had a very varied and reckless past, but I don’t want that to impact how the police look after him. I was hoping you could look into the case.
Doreen stared at it for a long moment, then quickly responded. How did you find my email?
Immediately the response came back.
You’ve been featured in several news stories lately. I just tried your first letter of your first name and your complete last name with Gmail. It’s a fairly common way people set up their emails these days.
Doreen winced because that’s exactly what it was. Just what is it you want me to do? She had quickly replied, then waited for the response to come back.
Investigate. Your success rate is phenomenal, and I would hate to think that my uncle Dicky would be looked upon simply because of who he is.
You’ll need to give me more information as to who your uncle is and what you think is going on here. Honestly you might as well call. That would be faster and more expedient. Then she added her phone number. Her telephone rang almost immediately. When she answered, a young woman was at the other end.
“Hello, I’m Denise,” she said. “I’m the one who emailed you about my uncle.”
“Hi, Denise. I’m not sure how I can help you.”
“I know,” she said. “I’m desperate though. My uncle has a criminal record, and he found it very difficult to get this job in Kelowna in the first place. But, since he has been there, he’s really done very well.”
“No more criminal activities?”
“No, in fact, he’s been there for seven years. Prior to that he spent ten years in prison in Abbotsford.”
Her ears perked up. “A prison is in Abbotsford?”
“Yes,” she said, “it’s been there for quite a few years.”
“Hmm,” she said, “interesting. What did your uncle go away for?”
“He falsified documentation for somebody and got caught.”
“Like an accountant-type thing?”
“Something like that, though I’m not sure of the details. He doesn’t talk about it, and honestly, once I saw how much it upset him, I didn’t bring it up again.”
“So how do you know he hasn’t been involved in anything like that since?”
“I don’t know for sure,” she said, “but he promised me that he would go on the straight and narrow and that he’d only gotten in too deep because he hadn’t really been thinking about what he was doing. He was trying to get ahead in the world, and, once he realized he was in too deep, he knew he was in trouble and had no way to get out.”
“Who was he working for back then?”
“I don’t know,” she said. “Is it important?”
“If he’s involved with various people, keeping their accounting records, and some of them are less than savory, doesn’t it make sense that they might be the ones who kidnapped him?”
“But why would they?” she asked. “He was in jail for many years. They could have got to him through the prison system.”
“Maybe,” she said, “but sometimes things take time. Or maybe they didn’t know he had something they wanted. Or maybe he went into hiding when he got out, and they’ve only really been looking for him for the last seven years.”
Denise sounded more than doubtful when she said, “I guess you have to look at all aspects.”
“Assuming it isn’t any of that,” Doreen said, “what do you think is going on here?”
“I don’t know,” she said. “I was thinking he was in the wrong place at the wrong time or something. You know? Like a drive-by shooting or something.”
“But what would be the purpose of taking the body away? The fact that there is no body is what makes this very curious.”
She gasped. “I’m hoping he’s alive and well and that somebody would ask for ransom, but, so far, that hasn’t happened.”
“Sometimes that can take a while, as they wait to make sure the family is really frantic and losing hope, and then, when the call for ransom comes, the distraught family jumps at a chance to get their loved one back.”
“But there is mostly just me now,” Denise said quietly. “Everybody else is pretty well gone. We had extended family, but they moved back east when he was jailed, afraid they would be tarnished by the same brush,” she said. “But there’s just him and me now. My father died a good fifteen years ago now, and Uncle Dicky is the only family I have left.”
“And have you kept in touch with him?”
“Absolutely,” she said, “we talked every day. He was really happy with his job, was loving everything here. He was enjoying his life here very much. He was learning to do a lot more cooking, which had always been his thing. He’s a bit of a foodie,” she said in a confidential whisper, as if it were a secret.
“If he was in a nasturtium garden that was for eating, then that would make sense,” she said. “What about his boss? Any problems with him?”
“Not that I know of. Uncle Dicky kept telling me how absolutely wonderful his job was and how much he appreciated fresh air and being free.”
“Even after all these years?”
“I think, as the years went by, instead of getting blasé about it, it seemed like he was more grateful as time went on. I know he felt like he should do something for others in his world, but he felt like he was handicapped because of his record.”
“When you say, others in his world, you mean, his other convicted friends?”
“Yes,” she said, “an awful lot of them hung out for the first few years, and I don’t mean hung out physically because that’s always bad news, but I mean they kept in touch.”
“So, do you have any names for me, so I can contact them and see if they have any idea who might have done this?”
“Oh, gosh,” she said, “let me think. Maybe a couple names that I picked up just from listening to him talk.”
“Do you have any contact information?”
“No,” she said doubtfully, “nothing like that.”
“Can you get into his email? Or do you know his phone number or anything?”
“I do have a little bit of that kind of information,” she said. “I’ll put it into an email for you.”
“That would be good,” she said, “otherwise I might lose it.”
“I know,” Denise said. “Everything on the phone is so hard to remember these days. As soon as you get off, it’s a scramble to remember what you were supposed to do,” she said, laughing. “Don’t worry. I’m writing up an email as we talk.”
“Good,” Doreen said, “and, while you’re at it, put down anything you know of anybody who might have bothered him over the last many years. Anybody from jail who might have scared him, anybody from his previous life in his fraudulent activities who might have not wanted him to have a good life.”
“Wow,” she said, “that’s an awful lot more information than I think I have.”
“Give me whatever you’ve got,” she said. “We have to start somewhere.”
As Denise gushed out her gratitude, Doreen said, “And remember. I can’t promise you anything.”
“No, I understand,” she said. “I just appreciate you looking into it. Honestly I’m afraid the cops won’t give it a fair shake.”
“I think you’re wrong there,” she said. “I know several of the local policemen here, and they don’t discriminate.”
“I hope you’re right,” Denise said doubtfully. “But I haven’t seen it.”
“Have you even talked to anybody yet?”
“No, they won’t give me any information.”
“Are you the only living relative?”
“I said so.”
“Yes, you did, but I’m questioning that because, if you’re the only living relative, or even the closest living relative, they will often want to talk to you, in order to ask you some questions.”
“I did get a phone message from somebody named Mack,” she said, “but I haven’t answered it. I just got it a little while ago.”
“I do know Mack,” Doreen said, with a smile. “And he will give your uncle a fair shake.”
“Maybe, but why didn’t he call me as soon as it happened?”
“Maybe he didn’t know about you,” she said. “When did you contact somebody to let them know that you were looking for him? How are they supposed to know that you were somewhere nearby? It’s not like there is a directory for that sort of thing.”
“You’re right,” she said in surprise. “I didn’t even think of that. I’m probably not listed on his contact information anywhere.”
“Exactly.” And, with that, the two women hung up.
Doreen realized it would probably be a lot longer than a few minutes for the email to be typed up by Denise and then sent to Doreen, but it was hard to do anything else now, she was so keyed up. “Just because of that,” she said, “I may as well look into Abbotsford and the penitentiary there, while I’m waiting.”
Doreen found a lot of information, but it read like a government report. It had been around for X number of years. It held X number of prisoners. There was X number of staff who worked there, and all safety precautions were taken, blah, blah, blah. Nothing particularly helpful or any data with tangible information, like a list of prisoners from seven years ago. But the fact that it was Abbotsford again just made her antenna quiver. That didn’t mean it was connected or that it would have anything to do with Bob Small. But it did make her ponder the possibilities, which is what she was still doing when she finally crashed and fell asleep.