Mirror Image (6 page)

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Authors: Dennis Palumbo

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BOOK: Mirror Image
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Chapter Eleven

 

The gray walls of the Old County Building loomed ahead in the darkness, ablaze with unaccustomed lights at this hour. Above, the full moon floated like a pearl in oil, clouds threading its glow. I pulled into the lot.

It was nine p.m. Time for my meeting with the cops.

I found an empty space, parked, and went into the main lobby. Then I took the elevator up to the Police Bureau’s Central Office on the third floor.

The first person I met there was Angela Villanova. A short, stocky woman in her mid-fifties, she had shrewd but kind eyes, a lacquered cloud of gray hair, and the walk of someone who’d just gotten off a horse.

Though she’d probably never even
seen
one. City girl, to the core. Born and raised in East Liberty, she’d plowed up the ranks to make lieutenant, before accepting the new post of Chief Community Liaison Officer five years ago.

“Danny,” she said, spreading her hands. Her voice was breathy, conspiratorial. Something was definitely up.

Angie gave me a quick hug. I smelled her perfume.
My Sin.
She’d been wearing it since she was twenty, when my dad paid her ten bucks an hour to tutor me in math.

We were related, evidently; her father’s sister had married my third cousin. Or something. That’s the trouble with Italian family trees. There’re so many branches, you can get lost trying to trace your way through the foliage.

As we headed down to the main office, I asked the obvious question. “Angie, why—?”

“Why am
I
here? I guess the suits figure having a friendly face in the room will make you more cooperative.”

“I sure as hell hate the sound of that.”

She shrugged. “First off, I’m really sorry about your patient. I mean, for
you
. Finding him that way…”

“Thanks. But I’m okay.”

“Bullshit, but we’ll let that pass.” A brief smile. “Anyway, the thing is, this murder has heated up all of a sudden. We’re in total siege mode.”

“What the hell for?”

I was confused. Sure, cops always want to clear murders fast. Mostly for pragmatic reasons. The trail turns cold after the first 72 hours. Plus, high clearance rates make department heads happy, which is always good news for homicide cops. Usually the only kind they ever get.

“Listen, Angie. I don’t know how much they told you, but the detectives on this case figure the killer was after
me
, and got Kevin Merrick by mistake.”

She waved a hand impatiently. “Christ, that’s
old
news. Homicide’s working a whole new scenario now.”

“Since when?”

“Since we found out the victim’s name
isn’t
Kevin Merrick.”

Chapter Twelve

 

District Attorney Leland Sinclair pointed to a chair across from his at the conference table.

“Take a seat, Dr. Rinaldi. This thing’s rolling downhill, and we don’t have much time to get you up to speed.”

Unlike most public figures, the DA looked the same in person as he did on the evening news—like a senior tennis pro. Well-connected and ambitious, everyone knew he wanted to be governor one day. And probably would be.

Sinclair turned and introduced me to Lt. Stu Biegler, from Robbery/Homicide. He was probably in his forties, but looked ten years younger. Pale. Male-model thin. His glance at me was narrow-eyed and suspicious.

Polk stepped in behind Angie and me, nodded once to Biegler, his boss, and moved down along the large oval table to where his partner Eleanor Lowrey sat making notes.

We were in the main conference room, sequestered from the maze of cubicles and offices beyond its paneled walls by reinforced double-doors. The mood had seemed pretty tense from the moment I came in, and was ratcheting up fast as we all awkwardly found seats. The pockmarked table was littered with papers, folders, and Styrofoam cups.

Then, before anyone could say a word, the door opened again behind us. The latecomer was tall, blond, wearing a silk blouse and a short, tight-fitting skirt, and was easily one of the most beautiful women I’d ever seen.

She had a dancer’s body, with firm breasts and long, very smooth legs. I must have gaped, because I could sense Angie’s gaze on me. Felt the chill of her disapproval.

“Sorry I’m late,” the woman said to Sinclair, pushing a strand of hair from her forehead.

Sinclair and I got back to our feet. Nobody else did.

“No problem. We’re just getting started.” He turned to me. “Dr. Daniel Rinaldi, this is Casey Walters, one of our rising Assistant District Attorneys.”

“Right. Until the next time I fuck up,” she said cheerfully.

I felt her frank appraisal like a searchlight on my face, so I distracted myself by returning the favor. I liked what I saw. High cheekbones. Pale pink lipstick on full lips. The hand that reached to shake mine was strong, sure, with long fingers and short, frosted nails.

Then her glance went to Polk and Lowrey.

“By the way,” she said, “I’m late because of the Paula Stark case. Thanks to you two, I just got beat up by her public defender, which does great things for my image.”

Polk glared at her. “Are you shittin’ me? We got enough to put Paula upstate for a deuce, easy. What about the phone calls to her brother, and the witness?”

“Oh, yeah. The homeboy who swears he saw Paula club the grocer with a wrench from her purse. Before she empties the cash register and escapes to the South Side on the bus. Guys, I can’t make a meal out of that.”

“It’s what happened,” Polk said testily.

“Get me the wrench. Get me the damn bus driver. Get me
something
.” She spread her hands.

“That’s enough,” Sinclair said sharply. “All of you.”

Polk folded his arms on the table. Pouting.

Shaking her head, Casey took the seat across from me, giving me a brief, wry smile as she settled in.

“Let’s not forget why we’re here, people,” Sinclair said calmly. Then, turning to me: “Dr. Rinaldi, Sergeant Polk and Detective Lowrey reported the details of their interview with you last night. Including the conclusion you all came to regarding the killer’s intended target.”

“Me,” I said. “Right?”

“A reasonable assumption, given the evidence. And believe me, we’re not ruling that scenario out.”

“That’s right,” Biegler said. He rubbed his thin nose. “But there’s also a
second
possibility, which I think we ought to keep on the table.”

“Let me guess,” I said. “That’s the one where
I’m
the killer.”

Sinclair smiled patiently. “We have to look at everyone, Doctor. That’s how it works.”

“Then maybe I ought to shut up and call a lawyer,” I said evenly. “That’s part of how it works, too.”

Sinclair and I exchanged cool looks. I got the feeling he figured there was room for only one alpha male in this particular patch of jungle, and he was it.

Angie reached over and tapped my arm. “Cool it, Danny. Nobody here seriously thinks you did it.”

“Not
too
seriously, anyway,” Polk grumbled. He sat glumly under a “No Smoking” sign, meticulously tearing an empty Camel pack into tiny pieces.

Lt. Biegler shifted nervously in his seat. “Listen, we’re getting off the friggin’ track here. Right now, the
killer
isn’t the problem. It’s the victim.”

I looked from Biegler to Sinclair. “Speaking of which, I hear my patient’s name is
not
Kevin Merrick…?”

Casey Walters spoke for the first time since sitting down. She aimed her blue eyes at me.

“His name may very well
be
Merrick. At least, that’s what he’s called himself for years.”

She checked the file folder she’d just drawn from her slender briefcase. “It’s the name on his driver’s license, credit cards, everything. Maybe he even had his name legally changed to Merrick. But if so, it wasn’t in this state. We’re on that already, though it’ll take some time. The point is, Merrick wasn’t the name he had at birth, or when he was growing up in Banford.”

“So what
was
his name?”

“Wingfield. Same as his father’s.”

I started, letting the name sink in. “Now you’re going to tell me—”

“That’s right. Kevin’s father is Miles Wingfield, founder and CEO of Wingfield BioTech. Cutting-edge genetic research, facilities worldwide. Real media magnet, too. Covers of
Time, Newsweek,
you name it. CNN devoted a whole hour to him. Personal worth conservatively estimated at six to seven billion.”

“Jesus,” Polk said, though it was more like a moan.

“Yeah,” Lowrey said wryly, “but is he really happy?”

Biegler snorted. “I’d say goddam ecstatic. Guy’s sixty-five years old, he goes through supermodels like Kleenex. Throw in the dozen houses, fleet of jets, and his very own island, and I’d say, yeah, definitely feeling pretty damn good about life when he gets up in the morning.”

“All right, children.” Sinclair shook his head. “Now that we’ve genuflected before Wingfield’s wealth and celebrity, let’s not lose sight of the real issue. Namely, the cost of having him as an adversary.”

I could guess what was coming next.

“He’s putting the pressure on to find Kevin’s killer.”

“Pressure?” Biegler grimaced. “Like Def-Com Four. Wingfield hears about it on the news, realizes it’s his kid, and starts making phone calls—”

“Which is how we found out who your patient really was,” Casey explained to me.

“Wingfield called the White House, for God’s sake,” Angie said. “Then the Governor’s mansion. He woke the mayor up at five this morning.”

“Who called
me
at 5:15,” Sinclair said. “More hungover than usual, but lucid enough to realize his ass is on the line. As are
all
our asses, I might add.”

“Give the guy a break. It
was
his son,” Lowrey said, looking at the white men around the table as though we were all clueless bastards. Maybe she wasn’t far wrong.

“Bullshit,” Biegler said. “They were estranged. Hadn’t seen each other in years, since before the old man got rich. Nobody close to Wingfield even knew he
had
a kid.”

“Except for the people in this room,” Sinclair said, “and the people he called last night, nobody still knows.”

“You want to bet how long
that
lasts?” Casey shook her head. “Christ, the media will be all over this…”

I said nothing. It seemed…unbelievable. The Kevin
I
knew was barely making it, emotionally
or
financially. He lived on student loans, and delivery jobs after classes. Yet all along he was the estranged heir to billions?…

I had another thought. If his father left their town in disgrace when Kevin was a kid, how did he change his life so radically, grow into some
Fortune 500
heavyweight, the Bill Gates of the biotech world?

And had Kevin really had no contact with his father all these years? What about Wingfield’s other child, his daughter Karen? Had
she
?

A final, darker notion rose in my mind.

If Kevin’s murder
did
have something to do with who his father was, did that mean Karen—wherever she was—might be next?

Unless this whole investigation had begun too late, and she was already dead…

Chapter Thirteen

 

“Hey, Doc!” Polk was staring at me from his end of the table. He wasn’t alone. “You with us or what?”

“Sorry. Just thinking.”

Sinclair smiled. “I understand what a shock this is, Doctor. You knew your patient as one person, and now it turns out he was someone else.” He paused, aware of its effect. “Assuming, of course, it
is
a shock…”

“Meaning what?”

“Meaning, we need to know as much about Kevin as we can. What
was
his current relationship with Wingfield, if any? Who were Kevin’s friends, employers? Did
they
know who his father was?”

Sinclair’s gaze at me was unwavering. “In other words, was Kevin’s murder a kidnap-for-ransom gone wrong? It’s a real possibility, in light of who his father is.”

“And I’m supposed to just
tell
you all this?”

Angela Villanova turned to me. “Danny, it’s not a violation of Kevin’s memory. Or his rights. Not if it helps to find his killer. You know that as well as I.”

I waved a hand in surrender. “Yeah, I know. It just goes against the grain.”

I noticed Casey Walters staring intently at me. In sympathy? Concern? I couldn’t be sure.

“Besides,” I went on, “the truth is, all this stuff about Wingfield is news to me. You can trash my office, read my files. Stick electrodes in my brain, if you want. But Kevin never mentioned Wingfield. I just knew his father as a small-town banker who deserted his family and never looked back. Kevin never saw him again. He spent the rest of his adolescence in foster care.”


And
in and out of mental hospitals,” Casey said, referring again to her file folder. “Tough life for the kid. Mother dead, abandoned by his father, battling mental illness. Living on the edge…” Her voice trailed off.

“I’ll want a copy of that file,” Biegler announced.

“Copy everyone in this room,” Sinclair ordered. “And
nobody
outside of it. But we have to coordinate all this. I spoke to the chief just before I got here, and we’ve decided to run the whole show from here.”

“Hey, it’s
our
case,” Polk blurted out. I could see from his face he’d just as quickly regretted it.

Sinclair’s voice was like ice. “Haven’t you been paying attention, Sergeant? Your petty jurisdictional concerns are irrelevant.”

“I’m just sayin’—”

Biegler glared at Polk, seething. “You heard the man, Sergeant. They want to run things from downtown, if that’s okay with you. This way, if we screw up, and Harrisburg decides to drop a bomb on us, we’ll all be conveniently located in the same place. You fucking shit,” he added.

Polk sat down, face a livid red. Eleanor Lowrey, her own brow creased with anxiety, touched his arm.

Sinclair sighed. “Look, we better wrap this up. The chief and I have to confer with the mayor in an hour. He wants to figure out a game plan for tomorrow.”

“What happens tomorrow?” I was getting tired of playing catch-up. Or maybe I was just getting tired.

“Wingfield happens tomorrow,” Sinclair replied. “He’s flying in at six a.m. Breakfast with me and the Mayor. And His Honor is not, shall we say, a morning person.”

He nodded in my direction. “So. With all due respect to Dr. Rinaldi, and whatever skeletons he may have in his closet, I think we should keep the mistaken-identity theory on the back-burner. Let’s work on the assumption the killer knew who Kevin really was—or, more to the point, who his
father
was. The motive must lie there.”

“Besides,” Casey added, her gaze seeming to challenge him, “Wingfield will be more supportive of a line of investigation going in that direction. Don’t you think?”

Sinclair didn’t answer. Just gave her a look. Not so much in anger as betrayal. But something else, too.

“One more thing,” Biegler said suddenly. He flipped open a file folder on his lap. “What about James Stickey?”

“Who?” Sinclair asked.

“Our vic was robbed and assaulted by Stickey six months ago. He’s doing hard time now up in Cloverbrook.”

Sinclair’s face darkened. “Jesus Christ.”

“Can’t be a connection,” Polk said. “Stickey’s just some hype. Broke into Kevin’s place for some quick cash. Two nights later, we nailed his sorry ass.”

“But there’s no indication he knew who Kevin was? That the break-in was a cover for something else?”

Polk shook his head. “Pure coincidence, I’m tellin’ ya. Besides, Stickey was in the can when Kevin got killed.”

“Maybe,” Sinclair said. “But I don’t like this. Kevin Wingfield gets assaulted six months ago, and now murdered? And these events are
not
related?”

“On the face of things, sir,” Casey said evenly, “it doesn’t look like it.”

Biegler was sulking. “I still think it’s worth putting Stickey on the grill. Just to cover our asses with Wingfield. I’d hate for him to find out about it, and—”

“Okay, okay,” Sinclair said briskly. “Send your people up there. Just so we can cross it off the list.”

He glanced at his watch, then started straightening his jacket. Seemed like we were about to be dismissed.

Eleanor Lowrey was looking in my direction. “Want Harry and me to accompany Dr. Rinaldi back to his office for those patient files?”

Biegler rose to his feet. “We can send some uniforms to do that,” he said irritably. “You two got enough work ahead of you tonight.”


I
don’t mind doing it,” Casey Walters said.

This caught me—and everybody else—by surprise. I turned to her. She was leaning back in her chair, stretching. Her breasts were taut against the thin silk of her blouse. You could just make out the beige outline of her wispy bra beneath.

It was strange. I hadn’t been with a woman in a long time, hadn’t even thought about them much lately. And yet suddenly I felt a long-buried, distant shiver of anticipation. The dryness in my mouth, the tightness in my gut. Forget the past twenty-four hours, the death and the guilt, the shock and the pain.

Now, I thought.
Now
I’m in trouble.

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