Scott gave a tense shrug.
âLet me do the interview,' Eric almost pleaded.
âNo. I know they might be the best lead we have on where this asshole is right now â I'll have my kid gloves on.'
âThat's not the reason to wear them, Scott. This is Jayne and Steelie. Look, if King is Tripper, he's leading a double life and there's no way in hell he told Jayne. If she knows anything useful, she won't realize it. She doesn't know Tripper; she knows King.' Eric paused and watched Scott closely. âDon't do an interview. Just ask questions. And make it clear they're not suspects.'
Angie approached. Eric abruptly stepped back from his huddle with Scott. She didn't appear offended by this nor did she ask about the recording equipment on the floor. She held up a sheet of paper.
âWith the help of Health and Human Services, I've got a list of battered women's shelters in the metro area. It's recommended that we go in person so we can show ID, otherwise, forget it.'
Just then, Mark got off the phone and called them all into the office.
âThe Lab confirms that King worked for the Bureau doing trace evidence and photography for seven years. He was loaned to the UN International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda on a nine-month agreement in 'ninety-six, going into 'ninety-seven. Official title: forensic expert. He resigned from the Lab in nineteen ninety-nine, stating personal reasons.'
Eric interrupted: âNothing precipitated it?'
Mark shook his head. âNothing disciplinary in his file. The only thing that stands out was a psych debriefing after the UN mission that came back with a recommendation for further appointments. He never made them but he wasn't required to, either. Speaking of his file, there's no explanation for why it isn't in the Bureau's General Records because it's there in the Lab's database at the Administration level.'
Scott responded thoughtfully. âThat's smart. He doctored it so anyone who knew him from the Lab would find his records as expected but he's not in the system that the rest of us use when we're checking a name against government employee lists. Did the Lab think he had the tech skills to do that?'
âThe Director of the Lab didn't know King well â came on just before he resigned, but said King was known as a jack of all trades. He'd been in the Bureau long enough to gain some working knowledge of everything. Blood spatter, geology, entomology, forensic accounting, you name it.'
âThey got an address for him?'
âSame one we've got crime scene officers at right now.'
Angie looked at Scott. âAre we going to have a problem taking Steelie and Jayne over there?'
âI don't know yet. What I want you to do is keep on the shelters, and see if we can find out where this guy frequented besides his house and the airport. Mark, see if you can get on to whoever was the director of the Lab while King was working there. We need leads on friends, anything on what he was planning to do when he resigned. We need some hidey hole he might be at right now, nursing his wounds from last night.'
The team broke up.
TWENTY-FOUR
J
ayne's mental review of possible signs of violent tendencies on Gene's part had quickly run back to Rwanda. But the only thing she could think of was metaphorical violence.
Steelie said, âI remember when Gerrit called Gene combative, particularly in regard to you.'
Jayne was staring at the tabletop. âHe didn't miss a thing. For whatever reason, Gerrit had my relationship with Gene down pat.' A movement caught her eye and she glanced at the door. Scott was standing there, watching her.
She started to get up. âScott, Iâ'
He launched into the room. âWhatever you have to say about King is going on tape.' The case he was carrying hit the tabletop with a thud.
Jayne froze, half standing, half sitting.
He spoke again, less roughly. âSo just hold that thought and we'll get to it on tape. OK?'
She nodded and sat down.
Steelie was eyeing the contents of the case he'd now opened. âWhat's the deal, Scott? I'm getting the feeling you're about to read Jayne her rights.'
He continued to busily pull out equipment as he replied. âShe's not a suspect.'
He set up a microphone on a stand in the middle of the table. âNeither are you, for that matter. You're material witnesses. I'm recording this because I need it to be available for the whole team. You're going to give us background on the suspect. You're not under oath.'
He yanked tangled wires free and bent down to plug into the sockets on the table's edge. He caught Jayne's eye. âBut it would be helpful if you told the truth.'
He turned on the recorder, pulled over a legal pad, and looked squarely at her. âWho is Gerrit?'
Jayne opened her mouth, closed it, then started again. âGerrit? Aren't we supposed to be talking about Gene?'
âYeah and it sounds like this Gerrit is a mutual friend of you and King so I'll want to talk to him.' He dropped his eyes to the pad, jotted something on it and added, âFor background.'
Scott repeated his question, directing it at Steelie. âSo, who is Gerrit?'
Steelie calmly replied, âHe was the UN Tribunal's lead criminal investigator for the sites we exhumed in Kigali in 'ninety-six, when we worked with Gene.'
âSurname?'
âLeuven.'
âSeconded or . . .'
âSeconded.'
âOne year or two?'
âHe was into his second year.'
âFrom?'
âGovernment of the Netherlands.
Politie
.'
âDo you know his current title?'
She looked to Jayne, who replied, âChief of Police.'
âYou've got contact information for him?'
Jayne nodded and pulled her bag from the chair next to her. She dug around for her cell phone while Scott pushed the legal pad toward her, a fresh page uppermost. She wrote down Gerrit's email and direct telephone numbers as stored in her phone, then pushed the pad back across the table. âHe continued working with Gene after we left.'
Scott turned to the next page of the pad. âYou stated that you saw King last week?'
âThat's right.'
âWhich day, what time?'
So much had transpired since that night, Jayne had to think for a second. She felt the pause made it seem like she had something to hide so she met Scott's gaze directly. âWednesday evening. I picked him up around seven and he left my place at about eleven.'
She saw his pupils dilate and the start of a frown in the moment before he looked down at his pad. It felt like an entire minute passed before he looked up from his pad.
âSo, did he contact you for the meet?'
âI wouldn't call it a meet. It was just dinner. He contacted me â us, really. Sent an email to the Agency on Tuesday andâ'
âMeaning last Tuesday, the day before you met?'
âRight.'
âSo you were in regular contact?'
âNoâ' She threw her hands up. âYou don't understand.' She looked to Steelie.
Steelie's tone sounded conversational compared to Jayne's. âScott, we hadn't heard from him since we worked with him in Rwanda. This was a one-off.'
âUh-huh. So you get this email out of the blue. What did he say?'
âJust that he was flying into LA the next day and could we meet up,' replied Steelie.
âJust Jayne or both of you?'
âBoth of us.'
âBut you didn't attend the meet, Steelie?'
âGene was never my favorite person. Even before you alleged he was a serial killer.' Steelie gave him a thin smile.
He made a note. âOK, we'll get to that.' He looked to Jayne again. âHow many more emails did you have from him?'
âI wrote back, said I'd be meeting him, then he just wrote one more time to tell me that he'd be staying at the Omni and what time I could pick him up.'
âThat's it? Nothing about what he was doing in LA?'
âNo.'
âAnd you're sure he said he was flying in the next day, the Wednesday?'
âYes, positive.'
âFlying in from . . .?'
âI presumed DC because that's where he used to live.'
Scott tapped his pen against the pad. âWe'll need to see the email traffic between his account and yours, track his account.'
Jayne bit back the words
I'm not lying
. âFine. We can get into the Agency account from here.'
âHave you had any more emails from him since you met?'
âNo . . .' Jayne paused, remembering the message she'd sent Gene on the day the half-empty filing cabinet had depressed her. She realized that Scott would probably see that message now.
âYou sound unsure.'
Jayne noticed Steelie looking at her curiously, so mustered herself. âI'm sure. He hasn't written again.'
The door opened and they all looked up.
Mark Wilson walked in and addressed Scott. âYou want this now?'
Scott nodded and turned off the tape recorder.
âThere's almost nothing on this guy. Two people say they were friends of his when he worked at the Lab but they haven't been in touch since. They understood he was resigning to take care of his mother down here, who was getting sick; one of them thought it was Alzheimer'sâ'
Jayne cut in. âThat's right. He told me she died a few years ago, after living with Alzheimer's.' She looked at Scott but he only indicated that Mark should continue.
âKing's friends only ever socialized with him at their local bar in DC or at professional conferences. He used to have a DC-area code cell phone. I called it and also checked with the phone company. He dumped the number four years ago.'
âWhen his mother died?'
âAround the same time, yeah.'
âFind out if it was before or after and by how much time.'
âYou want me to check on the Alzheimer's business?'
âYeah.' Scott flipped back to another sheet on his pad, ripped it off and handed it to Mark. âAnd get a hold of this guy in Holland; get him out of bed if you have to. He was the lead investigator when King was working with Jayne and Steelie in Rwanda. He may have worked with King even longer than they did. Find out if anything happened out there. And his name's pronounced
Herrit
.'
Mark nodded and left the room.
Jayne opened her mouth to speak but Scott was already restarting the tape recorder.
âOK, let's go back to Wednesday night. Did you ask for King at the desk inside the Omni?'
âNo, he said he'd meet me where the taxis pull in.'
âDid you see him come out of the hotel, through the doors?'
âNo . . .' Jayne felt sudden surprise. âI was scanning the area but he spotted me first and met me at the truck.'
âWhat was your impression of him?'
âLike, his behavior or what?' Jayne knew she sounded distracted.
Scott frowned at her. âAre you getting tired?'
Jayne shook her head. In fact, her brain was busy fast-forwarding her memories of that night, now alerted to how much she'd taken for granted with Gene's visit to LA and how little she'd actually learned from him.
Scott sounded more solicitous. âJust think back to the first moment you saw him. Close your eyes if that helps.'
Jayne dutifully followed this direction. She thought back to Gene jumping in the passenger side of the truck, the hug he gave her once in the cab. âI didn't recognize him at first; he looked older than I'd expected even though we're all older. His skin seemed grayer and it was as though his cheeks were being pulled down by gravity but he was energetic, lively, funny, and it was . . . nicer to see him than I'd expected.' She opened her eyes and shrugged.
âGood. OK. Was he clean shaven? Moustache? Beard?'
âNo. No facial hair.'
âWhat was he wearing?'
âAll beige. A zip-up windbreaker, golf shirt, slacks. I don't remember his shoes. No logos.'
âSo he got in the truck. It's about seven p.m. and then what?'
âI drove to Little Tokyo.'
âHis choice or yours?'
âMine, because it was close.'
âHe pick the restaurant?'
âNo, I'd suggested we see what looked good once we got there.'
âDuring the drive, what did you talk about?'
âLet's see . . . he explained that he'd left the Bureau years ago, didn't miss it, and now worked for an electronics company that was expanding to the West Coast and he was the advance guard.'
âWhich company?' Scott had drawn a line out from his notes and was circling something three times, the ink sitting in a groove on the paper.
âI don't know. Didn't ask.'
âAnd he didn't volunteer? At any point in the evening? Give you his business card?'
âNo.'
âDid he say where he was based?'
âNo.'
âSo you park and walk into Little Tokyo. Where'd you eat?'
âUm, I didn't notice the name. We had stopped in front of it and the host just handed us a menu.'
âHe stopped or you stopped?'
âI don't remember; we just stopped. No, wait. I stopped because he'd said something that pissed me off and I couldn't walk and respond at the same time.'
Scott's mouth twitched into a tiny grin and then he became serious again. âYou were arguing?'
âNo. He just made a typical Gene statement, sounding supercilious and sure of his facts as he questioned the likelihood that the Agency could make a difference. He was basically saying that our efforts to link up mispers with unidentifieds was just a drop in the bucket.'
Steelie cut in, leaning towards her. âYou never told me this.'
Jayne gave her a quelling look. âThere was no point getting you riled up as well.'
Steelie's protest was cut off by Scott's follow-up question for Jayne. âWhy did that bother you so much that you stopped walking?'