7
Lenny Fitzpatrick, the
current warden of Central State, didn’t know me from Adam, and he
wouldn’t have given me the time of day if he wasn’t stuck on a
treadmill. I knew this because when I finally found him in the
dizzying maze of buildings that make up the massive Cleveland
Clinic, he looked me over with as much suspicion as if I was one of
the inmates in his prison and he’d just found a hole in my cell
floor with an escape-plan map tucked inside.
To my credit, I didn’t let that stop me. But I
didn’t appreciate it, either, especially since when I left the
cemetery at lunchtime, I’d stopped home to shower and change. I was
neat, clean, presentable, and looking as good as ever. I wasn’t
about to be intimidated. Not by a silver-haired, sixty-something
guy wearing gray fleece shorts and a white T-shirt that said I
MIGHT BE OVER THE HILL, BUT I GOT HERE ON MY HARLEY.
I introduced myself and told him the same story
I’d
“That was a long time ago.” Fitzpatrick wasn’t
moving very fast and it was no wonder. His left leg was
crisscrossed with glossy, bright red scars. He took a dozen more
slow, careful steps. “There’s nothing new to learn about Jeff
Lamar, anyway. Anything you need to know about him, you can find in
the old newspaper articles. There were plenty of them. Jeff’s case,
it created quite a media sensation.”
By now, telling fibs didn’t phase me, so I didn’t
miss a beat. “I have read the old newspaper articles. They gave me
all the basic background I need, but there’s nothing like firsthand
information from a person who was really there.”
His jaw went rigid. “I was there at the prison,” he
said. “Not there at the murder.”
“Of course not. That wasn’t what I meant at all.” I
sidled a bit closer to the treadmill, and maybe a whiff of the Marc
Jacobs Pear Splash I’d sprinkled on before I left my apartment was
a welcome change from the combined aromas of sweat and hospital
disinfectant. Some of the starch went out of Fitzpatrick’s
shoulders.
“There never was a chance that Jeff didn’t commit
that murder,” he said.
Since I hadn’t mentioned the bogus note in the
cemetery file that talked about Lamar being framed, this struck me
as interesting.
“That seems like a funny thing to say about a
friend,” I pointed out.
“Who said we were friends?” There was an open water
bottle on a holder at the front of the treadmill, and keeping one
hand firmly on the railing at the side of the
“And you think it’s possible for someone to commit
a murder when he’s a firm believer in the justice system?”
“You’ve learned that much about him, huh?” A smile
twisted Fitzpatrick’s expression. “That was Jeff, all right. Always
preaching about what we could do to help our inmates. Bah!” I had
the feeling if Fitzpatrick could have gotten away with spitting on
the floor, he would have. “He never would listen. Not when I told
him that no matter what he did, criminals were criminals and they
were never going to change. He saw the same figures on recidivism
that I did. He knew that as soon as the prisoners were released and
walked out our front gates, they were going to pick up right where
they left off and end up back behind bars. But Jeff . . .”
Fitzpatrick shook his head in disgust. “Maybe that should have told
me something, huh? Maybe I should have seen that he had criminal
tendencies.”
“Did he? Have criminal tendencies?”
“He killed that girl, didn’t he?”
“What was she like?”
“Vera Blaine?” He probably hadn’t given Vera so
much as a thought in more than twenty years. That would explain why
he had to concentrate for a while before he said, “She was young.
And she didn’t strike me as being very smart. I wouldn’t have hired
her. But then . . .”
“I’ve heard the stories about Lamar and Vera having
an affair,” I told him when it seemed like he was reluctant to
continue. “You don’t have to worry that you’re helping to keep
Lamar’s secret.”
His laughter sounded like sandpaper on stone.
“Is
“So you thought he was guilty? You testified
against him?”
He slanted me a look. “That’s a leap of logic if I
ever heard one. And no, I didn’t testify against Jeff. I testified. I told the truth. That’s
all. Sat there in court and told the truth.”
“And the truth was . . .”
He took another drink of water and used the time it
took to do it to arrange his thoughts. “Jeff Lamar was a tough
man,” he said. “Not as tough as he should have been with the
prisoners. He believed in educating them. Like that ever did one of
those scumbags one bit of good! Jeff was tough with us, with the
people he worked with.”
“Then do you think one of them might have—” I’d
said too much too soon, but once the words were past my lips, I
couldn’t take them back. With no other option, I fell back on the
truth. “I talked to Helen Lamar. She believes her husband was
innocent, that he was framed by someone who had a grudge against
him.”
“Helen always was naive. That’s the only thing that
would explain her still believing that crock. With the evidence
they had against him, nobody else could have possibly believed Jeff
didn’t do it. Well . . .” He paused for a moment, his head cocked.
“Maybe Darcy Coleman. But honestly—”
“Darcy Coleman?” I made a mental note of the name.
“She was—”
“Jeff’s secretary. Before Vera Blaine. Darcy’s
husband
“And this Darcy, do you know what happened to
her?”
He looked at me as if I’d just asked him to recite
the alphabet backward, but fortunately, there was still twenty
minutes to go on the countdown timer on the treadmill, and
Fitzpatrick was bored. Talking to me apparently beat sweating all
by his lonesome. “I get a Christmas card from Darcy every year. Her
husband died a few years ago. Some sort of accident. She moved back
to Ohio to be with family. She got her degree out in California.
Last I heard from her, she was teaching down at Kent State
University.”
I told myself not to forget this. Darcy Coleman
sounded like someone I needed to talk to, but before I asked her
the all-important question, I wanted to run it by Fitzpatrick and
get his take. “Darcy believed Lamar was innocent. Why?”
“Why? Because she was devoted to him. It’s that
simple. Not that I thought there was ever anything between
them—”
“But you did think there was something between Vera
Blaine and Lamar?”
Again, he had to think about it before he shook his
head. “Jeff had better taste than that, and I don’t mean that in
some sort of sexist way. But Helen, she was a pretty woman. She was
soft-spoken and educated. She worked as a teacher. Vera was one of
those flashy girls. You know, all hair and attitude.” He realized
what he’d said and flinched, but I didn’t give him time to
apologize.
“So you don’t think they were having an
affair?”
“I didn’t say that. I said Jeff and Helen seemed to
be happy. And I was going to say that I don’t think Jeff was the
type.”
“Which type is that?”
“You know, loose morals. Jeff was a big believer in
doing the right things. He believed in the law.”
“And the law let him down.”
This time, Fitzpatrick’s smile was touched with
pity. “You just don’t get it, do you?” he asked. “The law didn’t
let Jeff down, he let it down. He betrayed everything he said he
stood for. He killed that girl, as sure as I’m standing here. How
else can you explain why his gun was used?”
“Someone stole it?”
“That’s what Jeff said. But it’s like all the other
evidence against him. Too glaring to ignore. He was in Cleveland
that night, you know.”
This was an important piece of information neither
of the Lamars had bothered to mention. “Doing what?”
“Obviously killing Vera.”
I made a face. “Not what I meant. What did Lamar
say he was doing in Cleveland that night?”
“The story Jeff told was that his father called in
a panic, and he raced to Cleveland to check things out. The old man
had Alzheimer’s, you see. Whatever it was that had the old man all
upset, there was nothing wrong when Jeff got there. According to
him, he stopped by his parents’ house for a bit, then headed back
home.”
“And his parents confirmed the story?”
Yeah, I was pushing a little. That might have
been
Somebody could, and I was going to ask him about it
the next time he popped into my life.
“You’re wasting your time if you think all these
questions are going to get you anywhere.” Fitzpatrick’s comment
brought me out of my thoughts. “The evidence against Jeff was too
solid. He was guilty, and if Helen believes otherwise, too bad for
her. She’s living a fairy tale. So are you if you listen to her.
There wasn’t anyone who would have framed Jeff. Not anyone with
anything much to gain from it.”
“You got his job.”
The look Fitzpatrick tossed me was so fierce, I
took a step back. He slammed one finger into the button that
stopped the treadmill so that he could glare at me more
effectively. “Are you implying—”
“Nothing. I’m implying nothing. What I’m doing is
looking for the truth.”
“It was more than twenty years ago. What difference
does it make?” He poked the button one more time. The treadmill
started up again, and Fitzpatrick started with it, walking each
cautious step while he kept an eagle eye on me. “Why would anyone
care anymore?”
That same afternoon
before we wrapped up work for the day, Greer made a long,
impassioned (and needless to say, boring) speech about long
shadows, sunsets, and creating a moody atmosphere. Consequently,
she’d
Which didn’t mean I couldn’t fudge things. Just a
little.
Instead of our usual starting hour, I told my team
to be at Monroe Street at ten, and with time on my hands and in
need of a computer, I stopped at Garden View first thing in the
morning. It was a good thing I did. Otherwise I wouldn’t have found
the vase of flowers on my desk.
It wasn’t a showy bouquet, and yellows and creams
really aren’t my colors, but the summery daisies, a couple white
roses, and the poof of baby’s breath was charming in its own
grocery-store-bought flowers kind of way. You
were the best thing about that TV show, the card said. I hated
even thinking that Quinn had watched the stupid show. I liked the
idea that he was nice enough to send flowers because of it, though.
I called to tell him both.
“You watched.” I didn’t need to identify myself, so
it was the first thing I said after he’d answered with a brusque,
“Harrison, Homicide.”
“I watched . . . ?” I heard the click of computer
keys while he did whatever it was he was doing when his phone rang.
“The TV show? Yeah, sure I watched. I told you I was going to. I
wasn’t home. I had to TiVo it. You were—”
“The best thing about the show.” I grinned into
my
“You were the best thing
about the show.” He must have finished with his computer because I
heard his chair squeak when he leaned back in it. “The whole thing
was pretty hokey.”
“But I still rate flowers.”
“Uh, yeah.”
It was one of those tactful statements. Noncommital
in a way only Quinn can be. I guess that’s why I thought of the
incident the spring before when I made the mistake of thinking a
huge bouquet of flowers that had been delivered to the office was
from him when they were really from an FBI agent I’d met when I was
in Chicago. History couldn’t be repeating itself.
Could it?
I grabbed the hand-written card again. There was no
indication who’d sent the flowers or where they’d come from.
“You didn’t send flowers.”
“Sounds like you’ve got a secret admirer.” Quinn is
the only guy I know who can say this sort of thing and not sound
the least little bit jealous.
It would have been kind of nice if he did.
And I was getting way off track. Still holding the
gift card, I flipped it over, but there was nothing written on the
other side. I tossed the card on my desk.
“Your secret admirer taking you to dinner
tonight?”
I was tempted to tell him that as a matter of fact,
I did have a date that night, because this bouquet of flowers was
even more spectacular than the bouquet Agent Baskins had sent, and
I was so curious to find out who this secret admirer of mine was, I
couldn’t resist.
But that seemed a little petty, even to me.
“I can’t. Not tonight,” I told him, opting for the
truth. “We’re filming tonight. And today . . .” I sat down at my
desk and flicked on my computer. “I need to go look at shrubs.” I
didn’t appreciate the chuckle I heard on the other end of the
phone, so I was instantly defensive. “What?”
“Just can’t imagine you buying shrubs. Ever. Can’t
even imagine you’d know what to look for if you went to look for
shrubs. But you know, there’s a cop over in Robbery who’s got this
cousin who owns a nursery in Rocky River. I hear he’s got good
prices, and he might be able to help you out.”
“Can’t. I’m going to Kent to look at shrubs.” I’d
already brought up the MapQuest program, and I checked out the map
on my computer screen that showed me the way to the town about
forty miles away. “There has to be a nursery in Kent, right?”
“You’re going to Kent to look at shrubs and you
don’t know if there’s a nursery in Kent?”
“Yeah, something like that.” I looked at the map
again. According to the turn-by-turn directions that accompanied
it, it would take me exactly forty-eight minutes to get to Kent
State University—and Darcy Coleman. That meant I was right on the
money when I told my teammates we’d meet at the cemetery at ten,
because they were coming with me.
“We’ll do dinner another time,” I told Quinn.
“Sure.” He wasn’t happy about it.
“You’re not the only one with a busy schedule,” I
reminded him.
“Point taken,” he said, and though on the surface
it was conciliatory enough, he somehow made it sound like an
ultimatum. “When you’re not busy with your secret admirer—”
“I’ll call. I promise.”
“This week?”
“Are you going to be chasing murderers this
week?”
“That’s the thing with murderers. They never work
around my schedule.”
It looked like we had a lot more in common than
Quinn could ever imagine.
The Garden of Eden
Nursery was tucked between a taco joint and a bar in the area of
Kent the locals charitably call downtown, when what they mean is
the strip of businesses (largely restaurants, bars, T-shirt shops,
and tattoo parlors) where the college kids party when they’re
supposed to be studying. The nursery was run by an elderly man
named Walter who looked a little uncertain when I walked in with my
team in tow but brightened right up when he heard the word
shrubs. Shrubs, it turned out, were
Walter’s be-all and end-all. Within the first couple minutes of our
arrival, I knew more about broad-leaved plants, conifers, and
subshrubs than I’d ever hoped to know.
I left my team to get all the details as well as
some prices, and promised that I’d be back ASAP. Except for Crazy
Jake, who demonstrated an instant attachment to Walter and showed
it by snapping dozens of pictures of the old guy, none of my other
teammates were happy with what sounded a little too much like
homework. They reminded me we weren’t anywhere near the planting
stage. I told them I didn’t care. With them busy with a project
that would pass as work-related if anyone questioned us, I was free
to search for Darcy Coleman.
According to the university’s website, she was a
professor of philosophy who taught classes in alternative
religions. Whatever that was.
When I finally located the classroom where
Darcy
I schlepped there, parked the van I’d borrowed from
Garden View to accommodate my team members, and followed a little
trail of signposts—purple balloons hanging from paint sticks along
with handwritten notes that said Prof.
Coleman’s Class, This Way.
Good thing I wasn’t a student. By the time I got to
a clearing surrounded by tall oaks and hemmed in on all sides by
lilacs as overgrown as the ones in Monroe Street, most of the class
was already heading back the other way. There were still a couple
stragglers—or brown nosers—around, and I watched as they chatted
with a middle-aged woman who was gathering an armful of
books.
There was nothing all that unusual about Darcy
Coleman. She was average height, with an abundance of dark, thick
hair streaked with gray. It hung around her shoulders. The style
wasn’t particularly flattering to a thin face scored with wrinkles.
Had we passed in a more conventional setting, I probably wouldn’t
have noticed Darcy at all.
Well, except for the fact that she was wearing a
long velvet robe. Purple. It brushed her bare feet.
“Professor Coleman?” I moved in as soon as those
last remaining students were gone. “I wonder if I could talk to
you.”
She glanced at a watch that graced her arm along
with a dozen or more bangle bracelets. “I’ve got another group
coming in just a couple minutes. Do I know you? Are you one of my
students? If so, I’m guessing you’re in a pack of trouble, because
I haven’t seen you in any of my classes, and part of what I grade
on is attendance.”
“I’m not a student.” I was glad, too, especially
when the professor set aside her books, reached into a large duffle
bag, and brought out a dozen or more tall purple candles. She
handed them to me.
“Talk,” she said, “while you help me get
ready.”
I wasn’t about to pass up the opportunity. While
Darcy walked a wide circle around the center of the clearing, I
followed along. And when she stopped and signaled, I handed her a
candle. At each spot, she used a stick to poke a hole in the
ground, placed a candle, and moved on.
I waited until we’d set up two candles before I
broached the subject. “I’m here about Jefferson Lamar,” I
said.
This wasn’t something she expected. Her eyebrows
arched, she looked over her shoulder at me. “You know he’s
dead.”
“Yes, of course. But his widow—”
“Helen.”
“Helen thinks he was innocent.”
Darcy stopped in her tracks, and believe me, I’m
not overly sensitive or anything, but when she looked me up and
down, I couldn’t help but feel a little defensive. “And she sent
you to try and find out more?”
I didn’t like her tone. Then again, I wasn’t crazy
about her fashion choices, either, so I guessed there wasn’t much
the professor and I had in common. I reminded myself to hold on to
my temper. “I’m doing some research about Lamar. I thought if I
talked to someone who knew him well . . .”
“All these years, and Helen still won’t let it go.
She wants you to prove Jeff was innocent, right?”
“Can you help me do that?”
She shook herself out of the initial shock that had
rooted her to the spot and continued on. We didn’t stop
“I never thought Warden Lamar was guilty,” she
said.
“Why?”
She shrugged. “I knew he was innocent. That’s all.
Or I thought I knew. He wasn’t that kind of man.”
“But there was plenty of evidence against
him.”
“The gun, you mean.”
“And his blood at the scene.”
“On Vera’s blouse. Yeah, I remember that.” She
moved on to the next spot. “It made him look really bad. I remember
how disappointed I was. I didn’t want it to be true.”
“But you think it was.”
“I think the jury had to make a decision based on
the facts, and the facts were pretty clear.”
“But what if he wasn’t guilty? What if someone
framed him?”
I thought maybe I’d get the kind of reaction I had
from Lenny Fitzpatrick, but Darcy was more matter-of-fact than
angry. “Of course, I thought of that,” she said. “I was living in
California by that time, and I was pregnant and pretty sick. I
couldn’t travel back for the trial, but I gave a deposition. I told
the court everything I knew, and everything I knew said that Jeff
was a good and honor-able man.”
“Did you tell them you thought he’d been
framed?”
“There was no proof.”
“But it was possible?”
Another shrug.
“If somebody framed him, do you have any idea who
it could have been?” Her expression was sour, and I knew if I
didn’t justify myself, she’d tell me to get lost. “You must have
known more about what went on in that
She grunted a laugh. “Every prisoner in there had a
beef with the warden. Comes with the territory.”
“But maybe some of them were more pissed than
others?”
This gave her pause, and we stopped in the shade of
the biggest of the oaks. “I was Jeff’s secretary for six years, and
I’ll tell you what: in that time, I saw my share of trouble-making
prisoners. There were a couple who were worse than the others,
though. Yeah.” Thinking, she narrowed her eyes. “There were a
couple who were lots of trouble.”
“Would any of them have been capable of framing
Lamar?”
This time when she laughed, there was not one bit
of humor in it. “You don’t know prisoners, do you? Oh yeah, there
were a few who would have loved to see Lamar get jammed up. I told
the police that when they called and talked to me about the case.
If they followed up on my information or not, I can’t say. I only
know that if they did, they must not have found anything, because
Jeff was the one who was arrested, and he was the one who was
convicted.”
“It’s possible things might look different now. I
mean, a lot of time has passed. If you could give me some names . .
.”
I don’t know if she was going to agree or not
because at that very moment, five other women entered the clearing.
They were all middle-aged and all dressed pretty much as Darcy was,
in long robes. I’d held my curiosity in check long enough.
“What in the world—”
Darcy’s smile sparkled. “We’re doing a croning
ceremony,”
“Will it get me the names of the prisoners you
think might have framed Jefferson Lamar?”
Darcy didn’t answer. In fact, all she did was
smile.
Right before she and all the other women there
stripped off their robes.
Every single one of them was stark naked
underneath.