32
MARCH 26, 2010
FRIDAY, 4:58 p.m.
FRIDAY, 4:58 p.m.
Laurie got on the elevator first. She
punched the button for the first floor but then pressed the
door-open button and held it to keep the door from closing while
Detective Lou Soldano and Jack boarded. Only then did she release
the door, allowing it to close immediately.
Laurie was in a rare, self-congratulatory mood.
Just before she’d gotten the call from Rebecca, she’d finished her
mini-news conference—mini because it was attended only by Jack and
Lou, concerning the only two cases she currently had: the two
unidentified Japanese men, which according to Rebecca was now only
one unidentified man.
In less than five minutes Laurie had been able to
prove to Jack’s and Lou’s satisfaction that the second man, who was
most likely a Yakuza hit man, as suggested by the extent of his
tattoos, the pearling embedded in the shaft of his penis, and the
fact that he was missing the last joint of his fifth finger, had
killed the first individual during the commission of a robbery on a
subway platform with an accomplice who was also of Japanese
descent. She’d also been able to prove that the crime had most
likely been carried out with an air-powered pellet gun hidden in an
umbrella with a fatal dose of a toxin called tetrodotoxin.
The last point about the tetrodotoxin was not yet
official, although Laurie was convinced. When Laurie had mentioned
that final point in her presentation, she had admitted that the
findings had yet to be certified by John DeVries. Although Laurie
had come up with the correct peaks on the mass spec, John still
wanted to certify the results by running the sample of known
tetrodotoxin Laurie had gotten from the hospital next door.
“I cannot believe you’ve accomplished all this in
two days,” Lou said. “You’re like an entire task force. You’re
supposed to be part of the support for us detectives. Instead,
you’ve done our job and yours. It’s unbelievable.”
“Thank you,” Laurie said. She knew she was
blushing. Getting such a compliment from Lou truly meant a lot to
her.
“On the security tapes there were two people
involved in the killing,” Laurie said, to divert attention away
from herself. “I hope you are taking that into
consideration.”
“Don’t worry, I remember. From what you’ve said,
there’s probably another body out there in the harbor, which I’ll
get right on. It’s good that we’ll be getting an ID on the first
guy. It will provide a solid place to begin our investigation. As I
said this morning, my biggest fear is that whatever is going on
might be the harbinger of a nasty turf war.”
“I don’t think number one was a member of the
Yakuza,” Laurie said.
“We’ll see,” Lou said.
“And to think I tried to discourage you,” Jack
said, speaking up for the first time.
“You tried to discourage her?” Lou asked, looking
at Jack with a questioning expression.
“I did,” Jack confessed. “My sense was that her
case was a natural death, especially after a completely negative
autopsy. I didn’t want her to make a huge effort and then come up
with nothing. Not on her first case.”
“It’s true,” Laurie said. “He tried to talk me out
of watching the security video, which did take quite a while. And
then, of course, was the threatening letter. I have to say, Jack,
that was a low blow. I suppose it bothered you when I failed to
respond to your prank.”
“What do you mean ‘threatening letter’?” Lou
blurted with immediate concern.
“We occasionally get letters or e-mails from
paranoid people who somehow misinterpret our role,” Laurie
explained. “Usually we turn them in to the front office, who alerts
security, and that’s the end of it. The people are usually grieving
and angry, having a problem dealing with the loss of a family
member and want to put blame someplace. They used to upset me, but
one gets accustomed to just about anything. No big deal.”
The elevator door opened, and they all got out.
Jack put a hand on Laurie’s shoulder and spoke very deliberately.
“I didn’t write you a threatening letter! I’d never do that!”
Laurie tipped her head to the side. “You didn’t
write me a letter threatening me if I didn’t stop my investigation
into the first case?”
“Cross my heart and hope to die.”
“Are you sure?” Laurie questioned. “I mean, doesn’t
it sound like your style of black humor? You were, after all,
serious about trying to talk me out of continuing what I was
doing.”
“Maybe in some respects it sounds like me, but I
assure you, I’d certainly never do it to you.”
“What did the letter say?” Lou questioned
“I can’t remember exactly, but it was short and to
the point. Something like if I didn’t stop working on the case
there’d be consequences, and if I went to the police there’d be the
same consequences. I mean, it was so over-the-top melodramatic. All
the other letters I’ve ever gotten ran on and on with all sorts of
ranting and raving. This one seemed like a joke in its brevity.
Marlene had found it having been slipped under the front door. She
put it on my computer keyboard.”
“I’d like to see this letter,” Lou said
gravely.
“Fine,” Laurie said with false indifference. She
couldn’t help feeling judged in the middle of a moment of glory,
although she did feel a touch guilty. “Let’s first meet the Good
Samaritan who has identified my first case. Then we’ll head back to
my office and examine the letter.”