Jayne looked at the report in front of her. âAnd maybe you can run DNA on the torso? That's the other BP that could have been hers.'
âWe're all over that.'
âI take it you won't be running DNA from the younger person's leg through CODIS, given that we couldn't even tell you what sex it was?' She was referring to the FBI Laboratory's Combined DNA Index System.
âEven if the Bureau would let me, it won't be worth it â not enough information. And the leg's not one of your cases?'
âNot enough information.'
âTell me about it.'
She recalled Scott's desire to get around the backlog at the coroner's office when he'd asked 32/1 to do the preliminary investigation. âSo you're OK with the leg and maybe the torso going to the LA coroner's office after all?'
âID'ing Patterson makes up for a lot.'
âYeah.' Jayne smiled. She had said almost those exact words to Gene when he was looking at the 32/1 filing cabinets. Gene had been negative but here was Scott, sharing her positive perspective. This was why she liked the man. âHow's the search for the van going, if you can say?'
âActually, we've got a lead on that and . . . I've . . . gotta run.'
Jayne knew Carol had left while she was on the phone, so she went in search of Steelie and found her in the kitchen, washing up cups. She told Steelie about the identification of Patterson.
â
Mrs
? Sounds like he thinks she was married,' Steelie commented. âI'll bet it was her husband who gave her all those fractures.'
âOr maybe she divorced him and married a new guy.'
Steelie looked at her. âYou live in a dream world.'
âYou live in a lawyer's world,' Jayne retorted lightly.
âOh, that reminds me. Did you remember the raffle ticket books?'
âDamn. I completely forgot.'
âIt's OK. I did too, until someone from Legal Aid called to remind me that I'd volunteered.'
âYou need them today?'
âYeah. The raffle's tomorrow morning so I have to go straight thereâbut I don't have to stay. Can I swing by your place tonight and get them?'
âYeah, I'll be in.'
âI'll call when I'm nearby. Should be around eleven.'
âThat late?'
Steelie turned to go. âI have that thing with those people. Don't ask.'
The pinky-white flower heads waved high above the gaura plants as Jayne carefully lifted them out of her truck. Next were the two geums: absolutely shameless doubles in a clear red, swooning in front of anyone who came near, and sure to meet with Marie's approval. Jayne nestled them in the two terracotta pots she'd bought to replace the ones by her door. She was still debating about whether the damage had been inflicted by possums or raccoons; either had the strength to tip over cacti pots. She made her way up the stairs to her apartment, reached the landing and then stopped.
Three metal washtubs filled with blooming white daisy bushes were arrayed next to her front door. The tubs were different yet complementary sizes, their shine artfully worn off in places. Jayne thought the arrangement was gorgeous, like something from a magazine, and it made her doorway look hip and inviting. She stood back, admiring first them and then her mother, who had to be responsible for this transformation. She'd have to remember to call her after she'd potted the other ridiculous flowers she'd bought, which could now live on the deck. She went inside.
TEN
J
ayne had fallen asleep on her sofa but the scraping noise woke her. She sat up, pushing the open book on her lap to the side, and turned to look at the front door. It was too early to be Steelie and it sounded too loud and definitive to be an animal poking around. It sounded like a person was out there and now . . . were they gone? Without a window to look through, she only had a few choices. She could wait for the sound again and try to identify it, look through the peephole, or open the door. The peephole was out. She'd seen a film where someone was shot through the eye doing just that. And she had seen too many people lying dead on autopsy tables after having let their killers in the front door. So she waited to hear the sound again. She almost jumped out of her skin when her cell phone came to life, its vibrations creating a buzzing noise against the coffee table's glass surface.
âHello?' she half whispered.
âIt's Steelie . . . are you OK?'
âI thought I heard a noise.'
âWhat kind of noise?'
âHang on, I just heard it again. Something on the front landing.'
âHuman or non-human?'
âCan't tell. There it is again.'
âThen keep your door locked. I'm less than a minute from your place.'
Jayne decided to sit on the floor, her back against the bedroom door. This gave her a clear view of the front door but kept her hidden from all the windows. She kept the phone cradled in her lap but didn't hear the noise again. When the phone vibrated with another incoming call, she didn't flinch but she still answered quietly.
Steelie sounded confident. âIt's me. I've looked around down here but don't see anything. I'm coming up.'
Jayne got up with relief and went to the front door. She opened it just as Steelie exclaimed, âWhoa!' and there was a sound of footsteps thudding down the stairs.
âSteelie?!'
Her voice came from the bottom of the stairs. âMake some noise up there, Jayne. You've got a mother possum on your stairs with her baby. And the baby's big enough to have a name. I'll wait in the driveway.'
Jayne started clapping her hands and whistling. Then she walked forward until she could see around the corner. The possums were about halfway down the stairs and the larger one was the size of a small dog. She was leading her cub in an unhurried manner down the stairs. When they reached the bottom, Steelie turned on the flashlight she was holding and mimicked airport ground staff guiding a plane into its berth, raking the light across the lawn and away from the driveway. The possums obediently headed off into the darkness.
Steelie trotted up the stairs. âThat's probably who you heard.' She looked down at the silver plant tubs by the front door. âAnd you got off lightly with the mess. At my place, they get in the dirt, then put their paws in the water I leave out for the birds, wash their handsâ'
She broke off and sank down into a crouch by the pots, flicking on her flashlight again. âLook at this. There's something in the soil.'
âWhere?'
âYou're at the wrong angle. Come this side.'
Jayne walked over and they crouched down to look at one of the tubs. Something was glinting in the beam of light. It looked like the top of a metal plant marker.
âHas that always been there?' Steelie asked.
âI'm not sure.' She hadn't looked at the daisy bushes closely when she came home but thought she would have noticed the marker. She'd since forgotten to even call Marie to thank her.
âMind if I pull it out?'
âNo, go ahead. It's the sort of thing my mother would do. She's responsible for these things.' Jayne stood up and looked at the roofline of the duplex where a telephone wire seemed to be hanging loosely.
Steelie said, âIt's only got a series of dots, like Braille.'
Jayne looked sharply at the metal tag in Steelie's hand. It was a flat rectangle above a sharpened stake, now studded with soil. A series of dots were etched into the soft metal.
âYou think your mother would have brought this by without knocking on your door to say hi? No way, Jayne, not Marie.'
âShe brought the plants without telling me.' They stood for a moment in silence. âWhy don't I call her?'
She stepped inside while Steelie began poking around in the other plant tubs. While Jayne waited for Marie to answer, she took the book of raffle tickets from the kitchen counter and waved them in front of Steelie, who pocketed them with a nod.
Marie answered after five rings.
âWell, hello darling! To what do I owe this pleasure?'
âI wanted to thank you for the daisies and the tubs. Sorry I didn't do it right away.'
âDaisies?'
âYeah, the ones in the metal washtubs.'
âBy your front door?'
âYes.' Jayne was relieved that her mother remembered them.
âWell, I'm glad someone replaced those cacti, but it wasn't me, darling.'
âWait. So you didn't leave a plant marker in them today?'
âNo, but what a cute idea!'
âIt's not cute if
you
didn't do it!'
âJayne, what's going on? You sound . . . frazzled.'
âLook, did you tell anyone about my cacti?'
âWhy would I tell anyone?'
âYou know, like one of your landscapers? Tell them to replace the cacti for me?'
âNo. What
is
this? Jayne?'
She didn't answer because Steelie had come to stand in the doorway and was making a throat-slitting motion, which Jayne took to mean,
Get off the phone NOW.
âI'll call you later, Mom. Bye.'
She looked at Steelie who now had a finger to her lips and was beckoning to her.
Steelie shined light into the plant tub closest to the house. She had excavated more soil than the possums had and the landing was a mess. The root ball of the daisy bush was exposed and nestled beneath it was a plastic box. Steelie gently tilted the tub to expose its underside. A coated wire snaked out of the central drainage hole and ran under the landing. Steelie used the light to trace the wire along the inner edge of the floorboards until it disappeared into a small hole just under the threshold to her apartment. The hair on the back of Jayne's neck stood up.
Steelie whispered, âGet your purse and whatever else you want. You're coming to my place and we'll call for help from there.'
Jayne was filled with an overwhelming desire to get out of there and perhaps never come back. A few minutes later, she was driving behind Steelie, her overnight bag on the bench seat next to her, concentrating on the Wrangler's tail lights. She couldn't think; felt frightened out of all proportion and that fact bothered her as much as the situation itself.
Her cell phone rang and Jayne jumped again. She knew it would be half an hour or so before she settled down. It was Steelie on the phone, telling Jayne she was stopping for âemergency ice cream' and confirming that Jayne had the spare key. Steelie pulled into the left turn lane for the Atwater Village Shopping Center, followed by the sedan behind Jayne, who herself indicated a right turn.
Jayne drove slowly through Atwater's rows of 1920s Spanish houses, each looking compact and picturesque under graceful towering trees. Few had fences, so the streets felt open and inviting. Narrow driveways separated most houses, enough of whose stucco finishes were painted in earthy tones to give away mild gentrification.
She parked in front of the
casita
, noticing that Steelie had left a light on inside but only sheer shades pulled over the front windows. That wasn't like Steelie but the effect was nice. The glow emphasized the arches of the tall living room windows while the up-lights among the aloes in the garden picked out the interlocking curves of the clay roof tiles. Jayne's shoes crunched on the gravel path to the front porch, reminding her of how Marie and Steelie had collaborated to make a water-conscious garden on a budget. She unlocked the door and stepped inside.
Steelie waited for the arrow, feeling a little worried. She was used to Jayne's fears, which almost bordered on paranoia, but she knew from where they originated. She'd learned it was better to address whatever had frightened Jayne rather than try to talk her out of it. PTSD didn't work like that.
But this was different. There was something man-made in the plant tubs outside Jayne's front door. Someone had put it there, and Steelie couldn't come up with a ready explanation. She made the turn into the shopping center parking lot. Almost immediately, she was blinded by light reflected in her rearview mirror. She put her hand up to cut the glare. The side mirror showed nothing but bright light. Then she heard the too-brief
wa-woop
of a siren behind her. It seemed to echo on the night air. Odd that she hadn't noticed a police cruiser before now and she didn't think she'd rolled through a red light anywhere.
There were plenty of parking spaces to choose from at this time of night and she navigated the Jeep into one. She locked the door, opened the window, and got out her identification, using her side mirror to see if the officer was approaching. She could barely see him because the spotlight on his vehicle had made a silhouette of his form but she noted his swagger and that he didn't make the usual stop to write down her license plate number.
When he reached her window, the bright light slanted across his oversized, tinted glasses. It was impossible to see his eyes.
âMa'am.'
âEvening, Officer.' Steelie scanned his uniform for his badge. The way he was leaning hid most of his nametag â âMarron' or âMarion'.
âDo you know why I stopped you?'
âNo. Is there a problem?' She was looking at his mouth since she couldn't see his eyes. A light-colored moustache all but hid his upper lip.
âOne of your tail lights is out.'
âReally? Which one?'
âStep out of the vehicle, Ma'am.'
âDon't you want to check my license and registration?'
âPlease step out of the vehicle, ma'am.' He took a step back and crossed his arms over his chest. âI can help you determine if it's a fuse or a bulb. It's a lot cheaper to fix if it's a fuse.'
Warning bells were going off in Steelie's mind but she couldn't tell how much was Jayne's paranoia infecting her and how much was her ex-Legal Aid bias against police but she was going to follow Legal Aid's advice to its clients. âCan I see your ID first, please?' She tried to smile. âNever can be too sure these days.'