the body.”
“You’re kidding. You mean you’re the one who called the cops?”
“It’s worse than that. Someone else called the cops. They found me in the apartment.”
“They what?”
“That’s right. And here’s the kicker. Lieutenant Farron’s on vacation and Sergeant Stams is in charge.”
“Oh shit.”
“Yeah. Stams is ready to throw the book at me. He’s so pissed off about the Sheila Benton case I think he’d frame me if he thought he could get away with it. Anyway, he’s convinced some client called me, told me Bradshaw was dead, told me about some incriminating evidence in the apartment, and had me rush up there and pinch it just before the cops got there.”
“Did you?”
“Fuck you, Mark. The thing is, if it sounds that good to you, think how it sounds to Stams. As a result, the murder has paled into insignificance. Stams is out to get me for tampering with evidence, obstructing justice, and being an accessory after the fact.”
“Has he got anything?”
“No, he hasn’t. Just the fact that he found me in the apartment. But his theory’s so damn logical I’ll have a devil of a time disproving it.”
“Shit.”
“So, get everything you can on the murder. Some woman, probably the one in the apartment across the hall, heard something she didn’t like and called the cops. Get the dope on her, find out what she heard and what she knows. For the time being, forget the Harding thing and concentrate on Bradshaw. You won’t be able to call me, so I’ll call you.”
“Where are you going?”
“You don’t want to know that. But give me Marilyn Harding’s address, will you?”
Taylor read out the address. Steve jotted it into his notebook.
“O.K.,” Steve said. “I’ll call you back.”
“Just one thing, Steve.”
“What’s that?”
“Who’s your client now?”
“I don’t know. And I just got through telling Stams I couldn’t answer questions because I was protecting his interests.”
Steve hung up the phone, stepped out in the street, and hailed a cab.
13.
T RACY G ARVIN COULDN’T CONCENTRATE ON her book. And it wasn’t that bad a book, either. It was a murder mystery, of course, and it was actually pretty exciting. There’d just been a second murder, and everything pointed to the client, and the detective was withholding evidence, and if the police found out there’d be hell to pay, and ordinarily Tracy would have been really into it.
But not tonight.
Tracy was stretched out on her living room couch, her shoes off, her feet up, a position in which she often read. She squirmed uncomfortably, scrunched up to a sitting position, pushed the hair back off her face, and adjusted her glasses.
The detective found a broken matchstick.
Tracy frowned. Shit. She knew that. She’d read the page twice.
Damn. She never should have come home. Never should have let Mark Taylor talk her into it. When he’d called to tell Steve about Philip Harding, she’d wanted to stay and keep the office open, but he’d convinced her there was nothing she could do. And he’d promised to call her at home if anything broke. And, of course, nothing had, and there was no point in her hanging out in an empty office.
But still.
Tracy sighed and returned to her book. The matchstick. What was it about the matchstick? Probably something important, or it wouldn’t be in the book. What did the detective think? Had she read that far?
One of the reasons Tracy couldn’t concentrate was that she had the radio on. She’d been listening to 1010 WINS , hoping to get an update on the Phillip Harding murder. And, of course, there’d been none. And, she realized, realistically, there wasn’t apt to be at that time of night. Every twenty minutes there was another report, but they were all the same. The body’d been exhumed, arsenic had been found, and the police were investigating. The end.
The news report came on again. Tracy put down her book and listened. Same thing. Exhumed, arsenic,
C. J. Box
S.J. Wright
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Michael Williams
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Serenity Woods