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Authors: Beverly Connor

BOOK: Dead Past
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While Diane was lost in her thoughts, Garnett was trying to nail down Gil’s alibi. The library is a hard alibi to deal with. Sure, lots of people see you, but it’s easy to come and go.
“Was Joana involved in drugs?” asked Diane.
“Drugs? No, of course not. She hates drugs.”
“Did she know anyone who was killed in the explosion?”
“I think maybe one of her students. She called to tell me about it. I can’t remember his name. Bobby something.”
“Did she know anyone who lived in the apartment house that blew up?” asked Diane.
“No, not that I know of. Look, I don’t understand any of these questions.”
“Just things we need to know,” said Garnett. “Like, do you know if she had any enemies?”
“Joana? No. She doesn’t have any enemies. All her students like her. So do her fellow faculty members.”
“How about socially?” asked Garnett.
“Social enemies? Like jealous wives and lovers? Joana isn’t that kind of person. She’s pretty, but she doesn’t inspire jealousy in people. She’s nice. Everyone likes her. Look, we’re just normal people. She teaches music, I’m getting my doctorate in history. No one would have reason to kill her.”
“How about you? Do you know anyone who might want to get even with you for some reason?”
“Me? No. I tell you. I’m just a student. No, there’s no one I know who would do something like this.”
“Why did you and she get a divorce?” asked Garnett.
He shrugged. “She thought I had an affair.”
“Did you?” asked Garnett.
“Not exactly.”
“Affairs are like pregnancies,” said Garnett. “You either are or you aren’t. Did you have an affair?”
“I didn’t call it that. It was all over the computer. We didn’t even meet in person. It was in a chat room. Look, I don’t have to go into this now, do I?” He cast a quick glance at Diane.
“I need to know the name of the woman you chatted with,” said Garnett.
“Do you have to? I mean . . . I don’t really know her name. She called herself Justforkicks. And that’s all it was. Besides, it’s over now.”
“I see,” said Garnett. “Doing any more online dating?”
He shrugged again. “Occasionally. Nothing serious. It’s like safe sex. It’s all cartoons, anyway.”
“Cartoons?” asked Garnett. Diane didn’t know what he meant, either.
“Webcam. It’ll make you look like a cartoon character. It’s the software. Like anime—the Japanese stuff.”
Diane was completely lost and she suspected that Garnett was, too.
“I tell you what,” said Garnett. “Will you let us have a look at your computer?”
“I don’t know. This is just personal stuff. I don’t even leave my room. I don’t meet anyone.”
“Someone might have taken you seriously and thought your wife was competition to get rid of.”
“That’s crazy. It’s just . . .” He looked at Diane again. “It’s nothing more than what it is. The people I talk to don’t even know who I am.”
“What’s your screen name?” asked Diane.
“Do I really have to say?” he asked Garnett.
“Where are you staying?” asked Garnett.
“I have an apartment on Applewood Street, four seventy-two. I room with two other students. They just went home after exams.”
“You staying in town during the break?”
“Yes.”
“We may want to talk with you again,” said Garnett.
“Where is she?” Gil asked. “Can I see her?”
“She’s with the medical examiner,” said Garnett. “We need for you to make a positive ID. I can have a police officer take you there.”
He nodded, the realization of what he was being asked to do suddenly reflected in his face.
Garnett released Gil Cipriano to one of the officers at the scene to be driven to the morgue. Diane and Garnett watched out the window of the breakfast nook as he walked down the sidewalk in the direction of the patrol car, his shoulders slumped, his hands in his pockets, his head bent down.
“What do you think?” asked Garnett.
“He always speaks of her in the present tense,” said Diane.
“Yes. I noticed that,” he said.
“His knuckles were clean and unmarked,” she said.
“I noticed that, too,” he said. “What were all those drug questions? Did you find something to link her to the meth lab explosion?”
“No, not really, just a chain of thoughts.” Diane explained her results on finding words that rhyme with book. “Thin thread, I know, but worth a shot at asking.”
Garnett gave a slight laugh. “Slim, indeed. But you’re right. Mrs. Bowden could have heard wrong.”
Garnett’s phone rang. Diane stood up to go back to helping David finish processing the crime scene. Garnett put a hand on her arm.
“She’s been here at this crime scene for several hours,” he said. Garnett listened for several moments. “Yes, I can. I’ve been here, too.” Pause. “I understand. We have other staff who can come.” He paused again.
Diane wished she could hear the other side of the conversation. She was beginning to feel that she was the
she
he was talking about.
“Of course it won’t be compromised.” He paused for several seconds.
Diane could hear someone on the other end but couldn’t make out the words. She could tell they were excited.
“I don’t give a rat’s ass what she wants.” Garnett snapped the phone shut and turned toward Diane. “Things just keep getting worse.”
“I know I shouldn’t ask, but how have they gotten worse?”
“Someone just murdered Blake Stanton, the kid who tried to jack your car the other night. The mother thinks it was you.”
Chapter 23
 
“That kid? Someone killed him?”
Blake Stanton wasn’t her favorite person, but he was still just a kid who had a great many decades ahead of him.
“What happened?” She asked Garnett.
“I don’t know yet. The commissioner didn’t give any details.” Garnett shook his head at some unspoken thought and stood up. “I’ve got to go on this one. I’ll take Jin and Neva. They can process the scene. I can’t have you anywhere near it.”
“I understand that. David and I will finish up here. After that, I’m going home and turning off my telephones.”
“I hear you there.”
Diane refocused her attention on the Joana Cipriano crime scene. David had finished the living room and kitchenette and was now working on the bathroom. It wasn’t a big apartment—one bedroom, bath, living room, kitchenette with the small nook for a table. It was probably one of the less expensive apartments in the Applewood complex.
She and David went over all the surfaces in detail. They checked for fingerprints on the walls, the door-jambs, the bathroom fixtures, inside, outside, and the underside of everything that might have been touched. Thankfully, it was not a cluttered apartment. They vacuumed the entire house, using a new bag for each grid they had laid out on the floors. When they finished, Diane was confident they had all the evidence the scene would yield. They packed up the books and took them to the lab where they would be examined for any clue as to the motive for Joana Cipriano’s murder or who had murdered her.
It was the early hours of the morning when Diane arrived back at her apartment. She could get perhaps four hours’ sleep if she went to bed now. Jin and Neva probably wouldn’t get any sleep.
Blake Stanton. What was that about? The meth lab explosion? Was someone afraid he would make a deal with the DA for a lighter sentence on the carjacking, so they killed him to shut him up?
Diane tried to put the whole thing out of her mind when she crawled into bed. Before she fell asleep, her last thought was the hope that she would be awakened only by her clock. Before she even dozed off completely, her phone rang. For a whole second she gave serious consideration to not answering it.
“Fallon here.”
“Don’t think you are going to get away with what you did. I will never let you go. For the rest of your miserable life I intend to haunt your every waking moment. You will never get another minute of peace, you hear? Are you listening to me?”
Diane hung up the phone. Great, now Patrice Stanton had become her stalker. The phone rang again. This time Diane looked at the caller ID. Unknown. She unplugged the phone from the wall and went to sleep.
The clock went off too soon, awakening her from a dream in which she was plummeting toward earth with no parachute.
It can’t possibly be four hours since I went to sleep,
thought Diane as she struggled out of bed. She looked at her unplugged telephone and decided not to plug it in. She dragged herself to the shower and turned it on cooler than her usual setting.
“Shit!” she screamed when the cold water hit her.
Diane finished her shower and dried off, shivering the entire time. It would be warmer to lie naked in the snow, she thought as she slipped on her clothes. Well, at least she was wide-awake.
She forced herself to eat a bowl of cereal before she dashed out the door to the museum. When she got to the curb where the museum loaner was parked she stopped cold. Someone had spray-painted in bright red letters the words MURDERER, KILLER, BITCH, and assorted obscenities all over the white Crown Victoria. Diane could guess who it was. The car was left driveable, she noticed. Diane took out her cell and dialed Andie.
“Andie,” she said to the perky voice that answered. Andie was always perky in the morning. Diane bet she didn’t have to take a cold shower to get that way. “Are you at the museum or are you en route?”
“En route. What’s up?”
“Can you swing around by my place and give me a lift?”
“Sure, something happen to the museum car?”
“Patrice Stanton, trying to work through her grief,” said Diane, before flipping her phone shut.
Diane stamped her feet trying to keep warm as she waited for Andie. She called Neva to come and photograph and print her car ASAP. Then she called a mechanic she often used and asked him to pick it up after Neva finished and take it to his brother’s shop for a paint job.
“Sure thing,” he said. “You want flames?”
Diane could see him grinning into the phone. “No, it got those last night. I want it like it was. Can he resist making it a canvas?”
“Sure thing. Somebody vandalize your car?”
“Indeed they did. They weren’t very poetic about it, either.”
“I’ll get it right away,” he said.
“It’s in front of my apartment building. You can’t miss it,” she said.
Andie pulled in front of the museum car, stopped and got out, and looked at it.
“Who is Patrice Stanton and why did she do this?” said Andie, her Orphan Annie curls bouncing as she shook her head.
“I’ll tell you on the way.” Diane got in Andie’s Honda and closed the door.
“OK, what happened? Why does this woman think you are a murderer?” said Andie.
Diane explained about Blake Stanton.
“The kid with one hand who held a gun on you and tried to take your car?”
“Yes, the same,” answered Diane.
“And this chick thinks you did him in and is harassing you about it?”
“Yes.”
“Bummer.”
When they were almost to the museum, Diane asked Andie to take the gravel access road that led around to the loading dock.
“You think she is waiting on you out front?” asked Andie.
“I wouldn’t be surprised. She’s a woman with a mission.”
Her son was dead. Diane tried to remember that. Grief takes many forms. Mrs. Stanton’s form was certainly destructive.
Andie turned in the gravel access road, drove to the back of the museum, and stopped.
“Thanks, Andie.”
Diane hopped out of the car and entered the museum by the back way, which was actually a quicker way to her office. She let herself in by her private entrance, locked the door behind her, set her coffeemaker to chugging, sat down, and began sorting through paperwork on her desk. The phone rang and she picked it up.
“RiverTrail Museum of Natural History,” she said automatically.
“I want to speak with that killer, Diane Fallon.”
Diane recognized Patrice Stanton’s voice. It crackled with hatred.
“May I take a message?”
“Yes, you can take a message. Before I’m through, everyone is going to know what a cold-blooded killer they have working for them at the museum.”
“May I say who’s calling?”
Patrice Stanton was quiet a moment.
Startled by the polite response? On to me? Wondering if she should reveal herself? Thinking of a snappy comeback?
“Tell her it’s the mother of the son she murdered,” Patrice said. “Murdered in cold blood.”
“In cold blood, got it.” Diane replaced the receiver.
In a few minutes she heard Andie come into her office. Diane rose and opened the adjoining door.
“Andie, we’re going to be getting some harassing phone calls today from Patrice Stanton.”
“Can’t the woman be stopped? Isn’t there anything we can do?” asked Andie.
“Yes, there is. I know she is suffering and is trying to vent her anger, but we have to exercise caution and protect the museum from whatever imprudent thing she might do.”
“So, what should I do?”
“I’ll have Chanell make necessary security arrangements. If you receive any calls from her, field them as best you can. Keep a log and a brief summary of them and notify Chanell. Check discreetly with the heads of the museum departments; instruct them to let me know immediately if any of them receive abusive calls from her, and I’ll have our attorneys get a restraining order against her.”
“OK, will do.”
Diane walked to the office of Chanell Napier, her chief of museum Security. She brought Chanell up to date on the situation, including calls at Diane’s home and the vandalizing of the museum car.
“I feel sorry for the woman,” said Chanell, “but she better get a grip on herself. I can record all the calls coming into the Director’s Office in the event that we take legal action. My people will have that set up within the hour. If she’s already been arrested once, I can get a mug shot of her and provide all of my security people with her picture. I think we better keep her off museum property until this whole thing is cleared up, don’t you?”

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