Authors: Sydney Bauer
âNo, Simba,' said Brains, his red cheeks clashing with the thick aqua rims. âI've had enough. First of all I find out he took a piece of evidence from the locked bags which were in
my
office at the time, and then I discover he sent said piece to Philadelphia â to a
private
forensics laboratory of all places â to be examined by an independent DNA Analysis and Latent Print Unit without paying me the courtesy of a heads up. I mean, seriously,' said Hackenbacker, shaking his head, âthe guy has had his nose half way up his ass ever since he got here, but the fact he thinks our FBI team in Quantico so incompetent that he has to fast track this piece to an independent crew, well, it's beyond insulting.'
âWhoa . . .' said King, moving down the corridor towards Brains, checking the curving hallway was empty along the way. âAre you saying ADIC Ramirez took a piece of evidence from your office and then sent it to a commercial lab for analysis without telling you?'
âThat's exactly what I am saying. But in the end, the joke is on him because the Philly guys mislabelled the package figuring Ramirez must have been in evidence response. So it ended back in my office after all. So I open it and . . .'
âYou opened Ramirez's mail?'
âHell, yes. It was addressed to evidence response, wasn't it? And if I failed to read the name on the front then . . .' Brains allowed himself a half
smile and King could not help grinning back at his opinionated friend. Ramirez's holier-than-thou attitude had not won him a lot of friends around the Boston office.
âSo?' said King, dying to ask what was inside the controversial package.
âSo,' said Brains, still mad as hell but enjoying this camaraderie with the boss he
did
respect. âADIC Ramirez spent all that time and effort and money shipping the piece only for his independent geniuses to come back with a whole load of nothin'. The piece â a Bible from Bradshaw's hotel suite â is covered in prints. Well, obviously, considering it was a hotel room Bible, but none of them belong to the ex-VP.
âIn fact the Philadelphia dudes don't identify any of the DNA on the Bible, not even the traces of semen they apparently found on page 1267, smack in the middle of St Paul's letter to the Corinthians.' Hackenbacker took delight in the look of distaste on King's face. âYep, some sick fuck sat in his hotel room and jerked off while reading the Good Book. Must have been Good News for him, right?' Brains let out a laugh.
âHold on, Brains, Ramirez asked the private team to check for
Tom Bradshaw's
prints on the hotel room Bible?'
âYeah â and not just Bradshaw's, Richard Ryan's as well.'
âRyan? Why in the hell would he do that?' asked King, now completely confused.
âYou got me. Now if he asked them to check for Montgomery's prints that might have made sense, given the Bible was by the bed next to all the other evidence. He seems to forget that we were the ones who collected the evidence in the first place â and it was our guys in Quantico who found Montgomery's print on the plastic syringe cover â the same little piece of evidence that helped him get his indictment. But the Bible was never sent to the FBI Laboratory for testing,' continued Hackenbacker. âBelieve me I checked.'
âBut that still doesn't explain why the independent lab didn't check for Montgomery's prints. Maybe Ramirez figured prints or no prints it doesn't affect our case one way or another,' said King. âThe plastic is more than enough to link him to the murder weapon. Whether or not the Professor has a penchant for praying while he kills is kind of irrelevant. So why would Ramirez . . . ?'
Brains followed King's lead. â. . . check for Bradshaw's and Ryan's prints? Maybe he was after something else.'
âWhat do you mean, Brains?'
âWell, after its run through DNA analysis the Philly dudes sent it to their Questioned Documents Unit. By the looks of their notes, they were asked to go to town on this one â side lighting, ESDA and VSC2000.'
Side lighting, electrostatic detection apparatus and video spectral comparator 2000 were all techniques and equipment used to detect the presence of indented writing. The VSC2000 not only detects invisible indentations on paper, but it can also decipher the writing, render it visible and differentiate between inks and papers by their optical qualities.
âWhich was also a big dead end,' said Hackenbacker. âGiven all of their tests turned up zip.'
King was confused. âSo Ramirez wanted to know if Bradshaw used the Bible as a resting pad,' he said. âIf he wrote something in it, or on top of it, or . . .'
âOr if he was investigating some “X File” and relaying messages to aliens by tracing over specific letters in some system of supernatural binary code. Who the fuck knows?' said Brains. âWhatever the case, your boss suspected Bradshaw used that book for more than just reflection. But in the end it came up blank, so I guess he was chasing his tail, which I am convinced he has by the way, along with a pair of horns and a pitchfork.'
âBrains?' interrupted King, his head now spinning with questions.
âYeah?'
âDo me a favour, will you? Re-bag the Bible in its original package and leave it on Ramirez's desk.'
âWhat? And deny me the pleasure of fronting the boss on his sneaky evidential pickpocketing?'
âI'm sorry, Howie. I know how much you love to “front” but . . .'
âIt's okay, Simba. I'll have other opportunities.' Brains understood at once. King had bigger fish to fry and Hackenbacker was not about to stand in his way if it meant delivering a bigger kick to Ramirez's pompous ass.
King's first reaction was one of anger. The bastard lied to him. He told King that the Bible had not been included with the other âbedside table'
evidence â and worse still King had unwittingly parleyed this lie to Mannix. â
The Bible is a non issue
,' he had told his detective friend. â
The evidence bag was mislabelled. The FBI tabled six items, not seven
.'
Bullshit.
And why the hell would Ramirez be checking the Bible for
Bradshaw's
prints? And for CIA Director Ryan's? And what was with the extensive indentation tests? It just didn't make sense.
King was an experienced agent with almost eleven years on the job. He had been recruited from the Chicago PD at the age of twenty-four, back when he was young, enthusiastic and determined to âmake a difference'. Of course, now he wasn't so young but the enthusiasm to set things right was just as keen, maybe even keener considering all the crap he had witnessed over the past decade. He wouldn't call himself jaded, but the FBI had certainly taught him that trust was something to be earned, and right now his Washington boss was not exactly swimming in a pool of mutual confidence.
Worse still, King knew that, more often than not, when someone told one lie to cover their tracks, there were usually others that went along with it. There was the chance Ramirez was investigating a top secret tangent of the investigation at the Chief of Staff's request, but knowing his boss as he did, he was pretty sure that wasn't the case. Ramirez was up to no good and King was determined to find out exactly what it was.
So where to start?
Ramirez had included his Boston counterpart in most aspects of the Montgomery investigation and up until now, despite Ramirez's arrogance, King had felt like part of the team set on convicting the man responsible for Tom Bradshaw's death. But, when he really thought about it, when he sat down and picked the investigation process to pieces, he realised that most of the time Ramirez had collated the evidence single handed. He had conducted interviews alone, made telephone calls behind closed doors, presented statements as fait accomplis and simply reported to King what he had discovered, adding the new findings to their growing list of damaging evidence against the Professor.
One incident in particular came to mind â Ramirez's insistence that he interview Eleanor Caspian, Oliver Caspian's widow, solo. Mrs Caspian was the one who told Ramirez that she had no knowledge of her husband's
Saturday visit to Montgomery, during which, according to the Professor, Caspian asked for the stronger pain relief. The fact that Mrs Caspian had denied any knowledge of her husband's visit and later failed to find any of the OxyContin at their home after her husband's death had basically formed the backbone of their argument that Montgomery concocted the Caspian story and filled the OxyContin script himself. King had taken Ramirez's version of Eleanor Caspian's account as gospel, mainly because he had no reason not to. Until now.
King leapt up from his busy but ordered walnut veneer desk and shut his office door. His assistant was still at lunch, and with Ramirez and his PA both absent he felt confident enough that he would not be overheard. He retrieved his note book from the top right hand drawer and immediately found the number. He dialled the DC code, punched in the seven digits that followed and waited for someone to pick up â not exactly sure how to play this without alarming the elderly widow and, perhaps more importantly, preventing Ramirez from finding out that he ever made the call.
âHello,' said the accented male voice on the other end of the line.
âAh, hello, my name is Special Agent Leo King from the Boston FBI. I was wondering if I could speak with Mrs Eleanor Caspian?'
âI think she is already gone.'
âGone? Ah, forgive me, but who is this?' asked King. âAre you a friend? Do you work for Mrs Caspian?'
âMy name is Ivan. I am the removalist,' said Ivan, obviously not pleased with having to deal with King's volley of questions.
âRemovalist? Is Mrs Caspian going somewhere?'
âWhy else would she need a removalist?' said Ivan, making no attempt to hide his displeasure.
âLook Ivan, is Mrs Caspian there or not? I need to speak with her urgently.'
âYou wait. I see.' Ivan had obviously had enough of the friendly banter.
King waited for what seemed like an eternity when he finally heard someone pick up the receiver at the other end.
âHello? This is Eleanor Caspian.'
King gave his credentials and began by asking the widow where she was moving to.
âBrussels,' said Eleanor Caspian.
âBrussels!' exclaimed King, unable to disguise the surprise in his voice.
âYes, Special Agent King. My daughter and her family live in Belgium. Kate works for UNICEF, she was recently promoted to the position of America's foremost UNICEF representative in Central Europe. You may have heard of her.'
King had. Kate Caspian Cole was an intelligent woman who had a reputation for being a tough lobbyist for greater UNICEF funding. He hadn't made the connection with Eleanor and Oliver Caspian, until now.
âYour daughter is a credit to you, Mrs Caspian.'
âAs she was to Oliver.' King could hear a tremor of grief in the elderly woman's voice but his guess was Kate Caspian Cole had inherited her âchutzpah' as much from her mother as she had from her late father.
âI'm sure,' King went on. âForgive me, Mrs Caspian, but I was wondering if Assistant Director Ramirez told you that you may be needed to testify at the Montgomery trial. If you are in Europe I am afraid you may need to . . .'
âAssistant Director Ramirez told me it was unlikely I would be needed at trial â that my statement should be more than enough. But I can return for any testimony if necessary, Special Agent King. I was a great fan of the late Vice President and as I told Assistant Director Ramirez, I am happy to assist in any way that I can.'
Not needed at trial
. That didn't make sense. Eleanor Caspian was a key witness for the prosecution.
âAccording to Assistant Director Ramirez, you had no knowledge of your husband visiting Professor Montgomery on Saturday 16 April of this year.'
âCorrect, but as I also told Agent Ramirez, this was not unusual. I went shopping on the sixteenth and Oliver was never one to relay all of his movements. He was an independent man, Special Agent King. Professor Montgomery was an old friend and he may have decided against telling me of any said visit for fear of worrying me. He was in a lot of pain, you know.'
This was odd. According to Ramirez, Oliver Caspian kept his wife abreast of all of his movements, especially in the last weeks of his life.
âOne last thing, Mrs Caspian. I believe that, following your husband's death, you cleaned out his medicine cabinet and there was no . . .'
âNo OxyContin. No. I am sure of it.'
âHow so?'
âI am no doctor, Special Agent King, but my husband had been ill for some time and I was very familiar with all of his pharmaceutical needs. Besides, if it had been amongst the other bottles and packets I would have noticed it.'
âYou would?'
âYes. It was the colour, you see. Assistant Director Ramirez explained the bottles would have been green â and the tablets themselves round and in the same colour. Oliver's medications were limited to those in cardboard packets and bottles that were clear or plain or brown or blue. Most of the medication was in capsule form â or oblong shaped. No, I certainly would have noticed the little round pills, Special Agent, especially if they were . . .'
âGreen.'
âYes.'
They paused then, as King took a moment to absorb this new piece of information.
âForgive me, Special Agent,' said Eleanor Caspian. âBut I thought that would have pleased you, it reinforces your case, does it not? Stuart Montgomery was a friend, make no bones about it, but if he killed that wonderful young man, leaving his wife and children without a husband and father, and this country without a true leader, then he deserves to face the full force of the law.'
King liked this woman, she was sharp and opinionated â a far cry from the distressed widow Ramirez had described.