nearly inaudible muttering. All Dance caught was “dear Jesus.”
Praying, it seemed, not an exclamation. The voice faded, or she was cut off.
“Hello?” Dance asked.
“Yes, I’m here,” Linda said.
Dance asked the same questions she’d put to Rebecca Sheffield.
Linda hadn’t heard from Pell in years — though they’d stayed in touch for about eighteen months after the Croyton murders. Finally she’d stopped writing and had heard nothing from him since. Nor did she have any information about Samantha McCoy’s whereabouts, though she too told Dance about a call from Morton Nagle last month. The agent reassured her they were aware of him and convinced he wasn’t working with Pell.
Linda could offer no leads as to where Pell would go. She had no idea of who his accomplice might be.
“We don’t know what he has in mind,” Dance told the woman. “We have no reason to believe you’re in danger, but —”
“Oh, Daniel wouldn’t hurt me,” she said quickly.
“Still, you might want to tell your local police.”
“Well, I’ll think about it.” Then she added, “Is there a hotline I can call and find out what’s going on?”
“We don’t have anything set up like that. But the press’s covering it closely. You can get the details on the news as fast as we know them.”
“Well, my brother doesn’t have a television.”
No TV?
“Well, if there are any significant developments, I’ll let you know. And if you can think of anything else, please call.” Dance gave her the phone numbers and hung up.
A few moments later CBI chief Charles Overby strode into the room. “Press conference went well, I think. They asked some prickly questions. They always do. But I fielded them okay, I have to say. Stayed one step ahead. You see it?” He nodded at the TV in the corner. No one had bothered to turn up the volume to hear his performance.
“Missed it, Charles. Been on the phone.”
“Who’s he?” Overby asked. He’d been staring at Nagle as if he should know him.
Dance introduced them, then the writer instantly disappeared from the agent in charge’s radar screen. “Any progress at all?” A glance at the maps.
“No reports anywhere,” Dance told him. Then explained that she’d contacted two of the women who’d been in Pell’s Family. “One’s from San Diego, one’s from Portland, and we’re looking for the other right now. At least we know the first two aren’t the accomplice.”
“Because you believe them?” Overby asked. “You could tell that from the tone of their voices?”
None of the officers in the room said anything. So it was up to Dance to let her boss know he’d missed the obvious. “I don’t think they could’ve set the gas bombs and gotten back home by now.”
A brief pause. Overby said, “Oh, you called them where they live. You didn’t say that.”
Kathryn Dance, former reporter and jury consultant, had played in the real world for a long time. She avoided TJ’s glance and said, “You’re right, Charles, I didn’t. Sorry.”
The CBI head turned to O’Neil. “This’s a tough one, Michael. Lots of angles. Sure glad you’re available to help us out.”
“Glad to do what I can.”
This was Charles Overby at his best. Using the words “help us” to make clear who was running the show, while also tacitly explaining that O’Neil and the MCSO were on the line too.
Stash the blame …
Overby announced he was headed back to the CBI office and left the conference room.
Dance now turned to Morton Nagle. “Do you have any research about Pell I could look at?”
“Well, I suppose. But why?”
“Maybe help us get some idea of where he’s going,” O’Neil said.
“Copies,” the writer said. “Not the originals.”
“That’s fine,” Dance told him. “One of us’ll come by later and pick them up. Where’s your office?”
Nagle worked out of a house he was renting in Monterey. He gave Dance the address
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