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Authors: J. A. Jance

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CHAPTER 1

E
XCEP
T SHE WASN'T.
W
HEN
I
opened my eyes again, that was the first thing I noticed. The second one was that I was “feeling no pain,” as they say, so the drugs were evidently doing what they were supposed to do.

I was apparently in the recovery room. Nurses in flowery scrubs hovered in the background. I could hear their voices, but they were strangely muted, as if somebody had turned the volume way down. As far as my own ability to speak? Forget it. Someone had pushed my mute button; I couldn't say a single word.

In the foreground, a youngish woman sat on a tall rolling stool at the side of the bed. My initial assumption was that my daughter, Kelly, had arrived from her home in southern Oregon. I had told her not to bother coming all the way from Ashland to Seattle on the occasion of my knee-­replacement surgery. In fact, I had issued a fatherly decree to that effect, insisting that Mel and I would be fine on our own. Unfortunately, Kelly is her mother's daughter, which is to say she is also headstrong as hell. Since when did she ever listen to a word I said?

So there Kelly sat as big as life, whether I had wanted her at the hospital or not. She wore a maroon-­and-­gray WSU sweatshirt. A curtain of long blond hair shielded her face from my view while she studiously filed her nails—­nails that were covered with bright red polish.

Having just been through several hours of major surgery, I think I could be forgiven for being a little slow on the uptake, but eventually I realized that none of this added up. Even to my drug-­befuddled brain, it didn't make sense.

Kelly and I have had our share of issues over the years. The most serious of those involved her getting pregnant while she was still a senior in high school and running off to Ashland to meet up with and eventually marry her boyfriend, a wannabe actor named Jeff. Of course, the two of them have been a ­couple for years, and my son-­in-­law is now one of the well-­established members of the acting company at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland, Oregon.

The OSF offers a dozen or so plays a year, playing in repertory for months at a time, and Jeff Cartwright has certainly paid his dues. After years of learning his trade by playing minor roles as a sword-­wielding soldier in one Shakespearian production after another or singing and occasionally tap dancing as a member of the chorus, he finally graduated to speaking roles. This year he was cast as Laertes in
Hamlet
in the Elizabethan theater and, for the first time ever in a leading role, he played Brick in the Festival's retrospective production of
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
in the Bowmer Theatre. (I thought he did an excellent job, but I may be slightly prejudiced. The visiting theater critic for the
Seattle Tim
es had a somewhat different opinion.)

It was September, and the season was starting to wind down
,
but there was no way for Jeff to get away long enough to come up to Seattle for a visit, no matter how brief, and with Kayla and Kyle, my grandkids, back in school, in fourth and first grade, respectively, it didn't seem like a good time for Kelly to come gallivanting to Seattle with or without them in tow just to hover at my sickbed.

In other words, I was both surprised and not surprised to see Kelly there; but then, gradually, a few other details began to sink into my drug-­stupefied consciousness. Kelly would never in a million years show up wearing a WSU shirt. No way! She is a University of Oregon Duck, green and yellow all the way. Woe betide anyone who tries to tell her differently, and she has every right to insist on that!

To my everlasting amazement and with only the barest of financial aid from yours truly, this once marginal student got her BA in psychology from Southern Oregon University, and she's now finishing up with a distance-­learning master's in business administration from the U of O in Eugene. She's done all this, on her own and without any parental prompting, while running an at-­home day care center and looking after her own two kids. When Kelly turned into a rabid Ducks fan along the way, she got no complaints from me, even though I'm a University of Washington Husky from the get-­go.

But the very idea of Kelly Beaumont Cartwright wearing a Cougars sweatshirt? Nope. Believe me, it's not gonna happen.

Then there was the puzzling matter of the very long hair. Kelly's hair used to be about that same length—­which is to say more than shoulder length—­but it isn't anymore. A year or so ago, she cut it off and donated her shorn locks to a charity that makes wigs for cancer patients. (Karen, Kelly's mother and my ex-­wife, died after a long battle with breast cancer, and Kelly remains a dedicated part of the cancer-­fighting community. In addition to donating her hair, she sponsors a Relay for Life team and makes certain that both her father and stepfather step up to the plate with cash donations to the cause on a yearly basis.)

As my visitor continued to file her nails with single-­minded focus, the polish struck me as odd. In my experience, mothers of young children in general—­and my daughter in particular—­don't wear nail polish of any kind. Nail enamel and motherhood don't seem to go together, and on the rare occasions when Kelly had indulged in a manicure she had opted for something in the pale pink realm, not this amazingly vivid scarlet, the kind of color Mel seems to favor.

Between the cascade of long blond hair and the bright red nail polish, I was pretty sure my silent visitor wasn't Kelly. If not her, then, I asked myself, who else was likely to show up at my hospital bedside to visit?

Cherisse, maybe?

Cherisse is my daughter-­in-­law. She has long hair and she does wear nail polish. She and my son, Scott, don't have kids so far, but Cherisse is not a blonde—­at least she wasn't the last time I saw her. Besides, if anyone was going to show up unannounced at my hospital bedside, it would be my son, not his wife.

I finally managed to find a semblance of my voice, but what came out of my mouth sounded croaky, like the throaty grumblings of an overage frog.

“Who are you?” I asked.

In answer, she simply shook her head, causing the cascade of silvery blond hair to ripple across her shoulder. I was starting to feel tired—­sleepy. I must have blinked. In that moment, the shimmering blond hair and maroon sweatshirt vanished. In their place I saw a woman who was clearly a nurse.

“Mr. Beaumont. Mr. Beaumont,” she said, in a concerned voice that was far too loud. “How are you doing, Mr. Beaumont? It's time to wake up now.”

“I've already been awake,” I wanted to say, but I didn't. Instead, looking up into a worried face topping a set of colorful scrubs, I wondered when it was that nurses stopped wearing white uniforms and white caps and started doing their jobs wearing clothes that looked more like crazed flower gardens than anything else.

“Okay,” I managed, only now my voice was more of a whisper than a croak. “My wife?”

“Right here,” Mel answered, appearing in the background, just over the nurse's shoulder. “I'm right here.”

She looked haggard and weary. I had spent a long time sleeping; she had spent the same amount of time worrying. Unfortunately, it showed.

“Where did she go?” I asked the nurse, who was busy taking my blood pressure reading.

“Where did who go?” she asked.

“The girl in the sweatshirt.”

“What girl?” she asked. “What sweatshirt?”

Taking a cue from me, Mel looked around the recovery room, which consisted of a perimeter of several curtained-­off patient cubicles surrounding a central nurses' station. The whole place was a beehive of activity.

“I see nurses and patients,” Mel said. “I don't see anyone in a sweatshirt.”

“But she was right here,” I argued. “A blonde with bright red nail polish a lot like yours. She was wearing a WSU sweatshirt, and she was filing her nails with one of those pointy little nail files.”

“A metal one?” Mel asked, frowning. “Those are bad for your nails. I haven't used one of those in years. Do they even still sell them?”

That question was directed at the nurse who, busy taking my temperature, simply shrugged. “Beats me,” she said. “I'm not big on manicures. Never have been.”

That's when I got the message. I was under the influence of powerful drugs. The girl in the sweatshirt didn't exist. I had made her up.

“How're you doing, Mr. B.?” Mel asked. Sidling up to the other side of the bed, she called me by her currently favored pet name and planted a kiss on my cheek. “I talked to the doctor. He said you did great. They'll keep you here in the recovery room for an hour or two, until they're sure you're stable, and then they'll transfer you to your room. I called the kids, by the way, and let everybody know that you came through surgery like a champ.”

This was all good news, but I didn't feel like a champ. I felt more like a chump.

“Can I get you something to drink?” the nurse asked. “Some water? Some juice?”

I didn't want anything to drink right then because part of me was still looking for the girl. Part of me was still convinced she had been there, but I couldn't imagine who else she might have been. One of Ron Peters's girls, maybe? Heather and Tracy had both gone to WSU. Of the two, I'd always had a special connection with the younger one, Heather. As a kid she was a cute little blond-­haired beauty whose blue-­eyed grin had kept me in my place, properly wrapped around her little finger. At fifteen, a barely recognizable Heather, one with hennaed hair and numerous piercings, had gone into full-­fledged off-­the-­rails teenage rebellion, complete with your basic bad-­to-­the-bone boyfriend.

In the aftermath of said boyfriend's death, unlamented by anyone
but
Heather, her father and stepmother had managed to get the grieving girl on track. She had reenrolled in school, graduated from high school, and gone on to a successful college experience. One thing I did know clearly—­this was September. That meant that, as far as I knew, Heather was off at school, too, working on a Ph.D. somewhere in the wilds of New Mexico. So, no, my mysterious visitor couldn't very well be Heather Peters, either.

Not taking my disinterested answer about wanting something to drink for a real no, the nurse handed me a glass with water and a straw bent in my direction. “Drink,” she said. I took a reluctant sip, but I was still looking around the room; still searching.

Mel is nothing if not observant. “Beau,” she said. “Believe me, there's nobody here in a WSU sweatshirt. And on my way here from the lobby, I didn't meet anybody in the elevator or the hallway who was wearing one, either.”

“Probably just dreaming,” the nurse suggested. “The stuff they use in the OR puts 'em out pretty good, and I've been told that the dreams that go along with the drugs can be pretty convincing.”

“It wasn't a dream,” I insisted to the nurse. “She was right here just a few minutes ago—­right where you're standing now. She was sitting on a stool.”

The nurse turned around and made a show of looking over her shoulder. “Sorry,” she said. “Was there a stool here? I must have missed it.”

But of course there was no stool visible anywhere in the recovery room complex, and no maroon sweatshirt, either.

The nurse turned to Mel. “He's going to be here for an hour or so, and probably drifting in and out of it for most of that time. Why don't you go get yourself a bite to eat? If you leave me your cell phone number, I can let you know when we're moving him to his room.”

Allowing herself to be convinced, Mel kissed me again. “I am going to go get something,” she said.

“You do that,” I managed. “I think I'll just nap for a while.”

My eyelids were growing heavy. I could feel myself drifting. The din of recovery room noise retreated, and just that quickly, the blonde was back at my bedside, sitting on a rolling stool that seemed to appear and disappear like magic at the same time she did. The cascade of swinging hair still shielded her face, and she was still filing her nails.

I've had recurring dreams on occasion, but not very often. Most of the time it's the kind of thing where something in the dream, usually something bad, jars me awake. When I go back to sleep, the dream picks up again, sometimes in exactly the same place, but a slightly different starting point can lead to a slightly different outcome.

This dream was just like that. I was still in the bed in the recovery room, but Mel was gone and so was my nurse. Everyone else in the room was faded and fuzzy, like from the days before high-­def appeared. Only the blonde on the stool stood out in clear relief against everything else.

“Who are you?” I asked. “What are you doing here? What do you want?”

She didn't look up. “You said you'd never forget me,” she said accusingly, “but you have, haven't you?”

I was more than a little impatient with all the phony game playing. “How can I tell?” I demanded. “You won't even tell me your name.”

“My name is Monica,” she answered quietly. “Monica Wellington.”

Then she lifted her head and turned to face me. Once the hair was swept away, however, I was appalled to see that there was no face at all. Instead, what peered at me over the neck of the maroon sweatshirt was nothing but a skull, topped by a headful of gorgeous long blond hair, parted in the middle.

“You promised my mother that you'd find out who did it,” she said. “You never did.”

With that she was gone, plunging me into a strange existence where the boundaries between memory and dream blurred somehow, leaving me to relive that long-­ago time in every jarring detail.

 

CHAPTER 2

W
HEN IT CO
MES TO BORING,
nothing beats second watch on a Sunday afternoon. It's a time when nothing much happens. Good guys and bad guys alike tend to spend their Sunday afternoons at home. On a sunny early spring day, like this one, the good guys might be dragging their wintered-­over barbecue grills out of storage and giving them a first-­of-­the-­season tryout. The bad guys would probably be nursing hangovers of one kind or another and planning their next illegal exploit.

Rory MacPherson was at the wheel of our two-­year-­old police-­pursuit Plymouth Fury as we tooled around the streets of Seattle's Central West Precinct. We were supposedly on patrol, but with nothing much happening on those selfsame streets, we were mostly out for a Sunday afternoon drive, yakking as we went.

Mac and I were roughly the same age, but we had come to Seattle PD from entirely different tracks. He was one of those borderline juvenile delinquent types who ended up being given that old-­fashioned bit of legal advice: join the army or go to jail. He had chosen the former and had shipped out for Vietnam after (a) knocking up, and (b) marrying his high school sweetheart. The army had done as promised and made a man out of him. He'd come home to the “baby killer” chorus and had gone to work for the Seattle Police Department because it was a place where a guy with a high school diploma could make enough money to support a wife and, by then, two kids. He had been there ever since, first as a beat cop and now working patrol, but his long-­term goal was to transfer over to the Motorcycle unit.

Mac's wife, Melody, stayed home with the kids. From what I could tell from his one-­sided version of events, the two of them constantly squabbled over finances. No matter how much overtime Mac worked, there was never enough money to go around. Melody wanted to go to work. Mac was adamantly opposed. Melody was reading too many books and, according to him, was in danger of turning into one of those scary bra-­burning feminists.

From my point of view, letting Melody go out and get a job seemed like a reasonable solution. It's what Karen and I had decided to do. She had been hired as a secretary at the Weyerhaeuser corporate headquarters, but we had both regarded her work there as just a job—­as a temporary measure rather than a career—­because our ultimate goal, once we finally got around to having kids, had been for Karen to stay home and look after them, and that's what she was doing now.

In that regard, our story was different from Mac and Melody's. The two of us had met in college, where I had snagged Karen away from the clutches of one of my fraternity brothers, a pompous ass named Maxwell Cole. Due to the advent of the pill, we did
not
get “in trouble” before we got married, but it wasn't for lack of trying. My draft number came up at about the same time I graduated from the University of Washington, so I joined up before I was drafted. Karen was willing to get married before I shipped out; I insisted on waiting.

Once I came home, also to the by-then-routine “baby-­killer” chorus, Karen and I did get married. I went to work at Seattle PD, while Karen kept the job at Weyerhaeuser she had gotten while I was in the ser­vice. It's possible that Karen had a few bra-­burning tendencies of her own, but it didn't seem like that big an issue for either one of us at the time, not back when we were dating. For one thing, we were totally focused on doing things the “right way.” We put off having kids long enough to buy the house on Lake Tapps. Now that Scott had just turned one, we were both grateful to be settled.

Yes, I admit that driving from Lake Tapps to downtown Seattle is a long commute. That's one of the reasons I drove a VW bug, for fuel economy, but as far as this former city kid is concerned, being able to raise our kids in the country rather than the city makes the drive and the effort worthwhile.

I was raised in Seattle's Ballard neighborhood, where I was one of the few kids around with a single mother. My mom supported us by working at home as a seamstress. Growing up in poverty was one of the reasons I was determined to raise my own kids with two parents and a certain amount of financial security. I had my eye on being promoted to investigations, preferably Homicide. I had taken the exam, but so far there weren't any openings.

Karen and I had both had lofty and naive ideas about how her stay-­at-­home life would work. However, with one baby still in diapers and with another on the way, reality had set in in a very big way. From Karen's point of view, her new noncareer path wasn't at all what it was cracked up to be. She was bored to tears and had begun to drop hints about being sold a bill of goods. The long commute meant that my workdays were longer, too. She wanted something more in her life than all Scotty, all the time. She also wanted me to think about some other kind of job where there wouldn't be shift work. She wanted a job for me that would allow us to establish a more regular schedule, one where I could be home on weekends like other ­people. The big problem for me with that idea was that I loved what I did.

So that's how me and Mac's second-­watch shift was going that Sunday afternoon. We had met up at Bob Murray's Doghouse for a hearty Sunday brunch that consisted of steak and eggs, despite the warning on the menu specifying that the tenderness of the Doghouse's notoriously cheap steaks was “not guaranteed.” I believe it's possible—­make that likely—­that we both had some hair of the dog. Mac had a preshift Bloody Mary and I had a McNaughton's and water in advance of heading into the cop shop in downtown Seattle.

Once we checked our Plymouth Fury out of the motor pool, Mac did the driving, as usual. When we were together, I was more than happy to relinquish the wheel. My solitary commutes back and forth from Lake Tapps gave me plenty of “drive time.” During Mac's and my countless hours together in cars, we did more talking than anything else.

Mac and I were both Vietnam vets, but we did
not
talk about the war. What we had seen and done there was still too raw and hurtful to talk about, and what happened to us after we came back home was even more so. As a result we steadfastly avoided any discussion that might take us too close to that painful reality. Instead, we spent lots of time talking about the prospects for the newest baseball team in town, the second coming of the Seattle Rainiers, to have a winning season.

Mac was still provoked that the “old” Seattle Rainiers, transformed into the Seattle Pilots, had joined the American League and boogied off to Milwaukee. I didn't have a strong feeling about any of it, so I just sat back and let Mac rant. Finished with that, he went on to a discussion of his son, Rolly, short for Roland. For Mac it was only a tiny step from discussing Seattle's pro baseball team to his son's future baseball prospects, even though Rolly was seven and doing his first season of T-­ball, complicated by the unbelievable fact that Melody had signed up to be the coach of Rolly's team.

My eyes must have glazed over about then. At our house, Karen and I were still up to our armpits in diapers. By the way, when I say the word “we” in regard to diapers, I mean it. I did my share of diaper changing. From where I stood in the process of child rearing, thinking about T-­ball or even Little League seemed to be in the very distant future.

What I really wanted right about then was a cigarette break. Mac had quit smoking months earlier. Out of deference to him, I didn't smoke in the patrol car, but at times I really wanted to.

It must have been close to four thirty when a call came in over our two-­way radio. Two kids had been meandering around the railroad yard at the base of Magnolia Bluff. Somewhere near the bluff they had found what they thought was an empty oil drum. When they pried off the top, they claimed, they had discovered a dead body inside. I told Dispatch that we were on our way, but Mac didn't exactly put the pedal to the metal.

“I'll bet dollars to doughnuts this is somebody's idea of a great April Fool's joke,” he said. “Wanna bet?”

“No bet,” I agreed. “Sounds suspicious to me.”

We went straight there, not with lights and sirens, but without stopping for coffee along the way, either. We didn't call the medical examiner. We didn't call for the Homicide squad or notify the crime lab because we thought it was a joke. Except it turned out it wasn't a joke at all.

We located the two kids, carrot-­topped, freckle-­faced twin brothers Frankie and Donnie Dodd, waiting next to a pay phone at the Elliott Bay Marina where they had called 911. They looked to be eleven or twelve years old. The fact that they were both still a little green around the gills made me begin to wonder if maybe Mac and I were wrong about the possibility of this being an April Fool's joke.

“You won't tell our mom, will you?” the kid named Donnie asked warily. “We're not supposed to be down by the tracks. She'll kill us if she finds out.”

“Where do you live?” I asked.

“On Twenty-­third West,” he said, pointing to the top of the bluff. “Up on Magnolia.”

“And where does your mother think the two of you are?” I asked.

Frankie, who may have been the ringleader, made a face at his brother, warning Donnie not to answer, but he did anyway.

“She dropped us off at the Cinerama to see
Charlotte
's Web.
We tried to tell her that's a kids' movie, but she didn't listen. So after she drove away, we caught a bus and came back here to look around. We've found some good stuff here—­a broken watch, a jackknife, a pair of false teeth.”

Nodding, Frankie added his bit. “Halfway up the hill we found a barrel. We thought there might be some kind of treasure in it. That's why we opened it.”

“It smelled real bad,” Donnie said, holding his nose and finishing his brother's thought. “I thought I was going to puke.”

“How do you know a body was inside?” I asked.

“We pushed it away from us. When it rolled the rest of the way down the hill, she fell out. She wasn't wearing any clothes.”

“That's why we couldn't tell our mother,” Donnie concluded, “and that's when we went to the marina to call for help.”

“How about if you show us,” Mac suggested.

We let the two kids into the back of the patrol car. They were good kids, and the whole idea of getting into our car excited them. Kids who have had run-­ins with cops are not thrilled to be given rides in patrol cars. Following their pointed directions, we followed an access road on the far side of Pier 91. There were no gates, no barriers, just a series of
NO TRESPASSING
signs that they had obviously ignored, and so did we.

The road intersected with the path the barrel had taken on its downhill plunge. Its route was still clearly visible where a gray, greasy film left a trail through the hillside's carpet of newly sprung springtime weeds and across the dirt track in front of us. What looked like a bright yellow fifty-­gallon drum had come to a stop some fifteen yards farther on at the bottom of the steep incline. The torso of a naked female rested half inside and half outside the barrel. The body was covered in a grayish-brown ooze that I couldn't immediately identify. The instantly recognizable odor of death wafted into the air, but there was another underlying odor as well. While my nicotine-­dulled nostrils struggled to make olfactory sense of that second odor, Mac beat me to the punch.

“Cooking grease,” he explained. “Whoever killed her must have shoved her feet-­first into a restaurant-­size vat of used grease. Restaurants keep the drums out on their loading docks. Once they're full, they haul them off to the nearest rendering plant.”

I nodded. That was it—­stale cooking grease. The combination of rotten flesh and rotting food was overwhelming. For a time we both stood in a horrified stupor while I fought down the urge to lose my own lunch and wondered if the victim had been dead or alive when she had been sealed inside her grease-­filled prison.

Eventually the urgent cawing of a flock of crows wheeling overhead broke our stricken silence. Their black wings flapped noisily against the early April blue sky. I'm a crossword puzzle kind of guy. That gives me access to a good deal of generally useless information. In this instance, I knew that a flock of crows is called a murder, and this noisy bunch, attracted by what they must have expected to be a sumptuous feast, seemed particularly aptly named.

Mac was the first to stir. “I guess it's not a joke,” he muttered as he started down the hill toward the body. “I'll keep the damn birds away. You call it in.”

Mac was a few years my senior in both regular years and in years on the force. He often issued what sounded like orders. Most of the time I simply went along with the program. In this instance, I was more than happy to comply.

I went back over to the car and leaned inside. Donnie and Frankie were watching, wide eyed, from the backseat. “Did you see her?” Donnie asked. At least I think it was Donnie.

“Yes,” I said grimly. “We saw her. While I call this in, I want the two of you to stay right where you are. Got it?”

They both nodded numbly. It wasn't as though they had a choice. There was a web of metal screen between the cruiser's front seat and the backseat. The doors locked from the outside, and there were no interior door handles. Frankie and Donnie Dodd weren't under arrest, but they weren't going anywhere without our permission. They sat there in utter silence while I made the call, letting Dispatch know that they needed to summon the M.E. and detectives from Homicide. When I finished, I hopped out of the car and skidded down the steep incline. Mac was already on his way back up.

“I gave up on the damn birds,” he muttered. “She's already dead. How much worse can it be?

“That's all right,” I said. “I think I'll go have a look anyway.”

“Suit yourself,” Mac said with a shrug. “Some ­people are dogs for punishment.”

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