Chapter 4
Outside the cottage, Calvano was busy pissing
people off. “Get back behind the tape before I take you in myself,”
he told one woman who had leaned so far over the crime scene tape
in her efforts to see inside the front door that her breasts were
spilling out of her shirt. The lady’s husband sputtered at Calvano
in outrage, but he’d already moved on to insulting someone else.
His tall figure in its well-cut suit towered above the sea of
neighbors who had come running from their homes and from the park
across the street to see what the fuss was about.
Crime scene crowds are a strange lot. Since my
death, I had learned just how strange they truly were. For one
thing, I always spotted familiar faces among the crowd—the very
same faces, in fact—at virtually every crime scene since my days
tracking Maggie had begun. I called them The Watchers. There was a
blank-faced black man with tattoo stripes on his cheeks, a pale,
blonde lady wearing a light cotton dress and no shoes, two
teenagers with greasy hair and even greasier skin, and a rigid
dark-haired man with military posture. They were always there,
scattered among the crowd, waiting, though I was not sure what they
were waiting for. I’d see them when I first searched the faces of
the crowd, but when I looked again—they’d always be gone. Today I
was late, having lingered inside with Maggie, and I’d caught a
glimpse only of the black man with the tribal tattoos on his
cheeks. I tried to find him again, but he had disappeared.
If these were my colleagues in the afterlife, I was
in sad shape indeed.
Calvano was scanning the crowd, just like me,
examining faces, looking for anyone who seemed out of place. Most
of the people were from the neighborhood. They came in all ages,
all shapes, all sizes. Most looked curious and very little more,
although a few seemed frightened. Only my old lady friend, Noni
Bates, looked upset.
“You knew the woman who lived here?” Calvano asked
abruptly, not bothering to conceal his use of the past tense.
“Yes,” Noni said in a voice that lacked her usual
preciseness. “I give her advice on her garden. She’s a nurse in the
emergency room at the hospital. What happened?”
“She killed herself. Stay here,” Calvano told her.
“We’ll want to talk to you.”
She blinked, taken aback by his abruptness. Her new
friend, Robert Michael Martin, interceded. “Are you sure?” he asked
Calvano. “Isn’t it a little soon to make that call?”
Hoo-boy. Calvano was going to love this one.
He looked at Martin with contempt. “Who are you?” he
demanded.
“I’m her neighbor.”
“Did you know her?”
“No.”
“Then shut up and leave the scene to us.”
“There was a man in the park,” Martin said. “He was
sitting on the bench right over there.” He pointed straight across
the street to where a row of benches lined two sides of the
playground, forming a neat right angle that gave one row of benches
a perfect view of the cottage’s front door.
“That’s what benches are for,” Calvano said
impatiently. “For sitting on.”
“But he’d been there for days,” Martin
insisted.
“And you know that how?” Calvano asked
brusquely.
“I’ve been watching him.” Martin started to
explain, but Noni put a warning hand on his arm. She knew people
like Calvano on sight. Martin fell silent.
It was too late. Calvano was staring at Martin more
closely, sizing up his sloppy clothes and intense gaze. “What’s
your name?” he asked abruptly.
“Robert Michael Martin,” the chef said
promptly.
“Well, Robert Michael Martin, I’m going to need
your address, too.” Calvano held a pad out to the man. “Print,
please. We’ll be in touch.”
Martin wrote his address down, eager to help, not
knowing he would likely pay dearly for speaking up.
The old lady knew better. She’d lived longer. She’d
run into bullies like Calvano before. “Robert, you go home and wash
up,” she said firmly when he was done printing his address. “I have
some things to tell this nice detective and then I’ll stop
by.”
“But someone needs to—”
“I can do that,” Noni interrupted firmly. “You go
on and I’ll stop by when I’m done.” Even Robert Michael Martin got
the hint. With a look at Calvano that was part scorn and part fear,
Martin started marching resolutely down the block, trying to
maintain his dignity. Calvano’s only choice in stopping him was to
tackle him and risk damaging his expensive suit, possibly for
nothing, or let him go.
Naturally, Calvano let him go. He was an even worse
detective than I had been. At least I’d had the excuse of being a
drunk to explain my sloppiness.
Calvano took it out on Noni. “Lady, I don’t
appreciate you—”
“Did you want to talk to me or not?” Noni demanded.
“I can give you ten minutes and then I intend to go to church and
pray for this young woman’s soul.”
I was impressed. Her voice had gone from
cooperative to steely in an instant. I bet she’d been one hell of a
teacher in her day. Calvano actually flipped to a new page in his
notebook, ready to take notes. What a grand old dame.
“What did you know about . . . ?” Calvano asked,
his voice faltering. He flipped back a few pages and checked for
the victim’s name, one he had already managed to forget. “ . . .
about Fiona Harper?”
“Her name was Fiona Harker,” Noni correctly
him grimly. “She lived alone. She never married. She didn’t have a
boyfriend that I know of. And she would never have killed herself.
You’re quite mistaken on this point. Fiona was a practicing
Catholic. She would not have killed herself.”
Calvano looked bored. I wanted to brain him. Fiona
Harker deserved better. Yes, I had been just as careless when I was
alive. But I was different now. I was sensitive. Which was why I
knew he needed a good beat-down. Watching Calvano reminded me of
how sloppy I had been, and I didn’t like looking in the
mirror.
“What else can you tell me?” Calvano asked
Noni.
“She was very private and a little shy. We only met
because she stopped by my house to ask me about some perennials in
my garden. People say she was an excellent nurse, and I know she
was an excellent gardener.”
“But no boyfriend?” Calvano asked
skeptically.
“Not that I know of,” Noni said. “Although I’m not
the one to ask. We did not discuss our personal lives.” She managed
to make it sound like Calvano had been a pervert for asking, even
though it was his job to know. I totally enjoyed his shamefaced
reaction. Noni had his number.
“Are people in this neighborhood tight?” Calvano
asked, trying to regain his authority. “Can you point out other
people who might have known her?”
“I can’t help you,” Noni said. “I didn’t know her
well enough to say.”
That was when the screaming began. We all heard it:
uncontrolled, feral panic, so intense it made you want to flee
first and ask questions later.
The crowd turned, searching the park, trying to put
it all together. A woman in her late twenties stood on the edge of
the playground, face flushed, her hands held over her mouth, her
eyes searching the park as she screamed and screamed and
screamed.
Noni was the first to realize what it meant: a
playground, a panicked mother, the strange man in the park. She
pointed to the woman and yelled at a stunned Calvano, “Go. A child
is missing. Go.”