The Kept Woman (Will Trent 8) (15 page)

BOOK: The Kept Woman (Will Trent 8)
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Faith walked out the front door. The sun cut open her eyeballs. She wasn’t sure whether she had tears or blood streaming down her face. She didn’t care. Harding had been a cop. He knew what you risked when you pulled your gun and busted into a house. And he had set them up anyway.

She held up her hand to block the sun. The unis were standing by their cruiser, heads down, staring at their phones.

She told the driver, ‘Give me your tire iron.’

He said, ‘My tire iron?’

Faith leaned into the car and popped the trunk. The tire iron was snapped into a kit mounted inside the rear quarter panel. She hefted the weight of the long, heavy metal bar in her hand. It was the single-handle type, L-shaped with a socket on the end to loosen the wheel lugs.

Perfect.

Collier was watching from the window when she went back into the house. Faith grabbed a chair from the cheap dining set and dragged it down the hallway. Collier followed, asking, ‘What are you doing?’

‘I’m beating this asshole.’ She stood on the chair and swung the tire iron into the ceiling. The socket end lodged into the Sheetrock. She shoved the bar in farther, turned it at an angle and pulled down. A chunk of ceiling dropped to the floor. She took another swing with the tire iron. She thought about the Mesa Arms’ website, how it promoted its energy-efficient upgrades, like the spray foam in the attic that made it possible
to break open the ceiling without getting a face full of pink insulation.

Faith dropped the tire iron, pleased that her guesstimate had worked out. The two file boxes were within arm’s reach. All she had to do was fight the flies to get to them.

‘Hey, lady,’ one of the unis called from the hall. ‘You know there’s some stairs right here.’

‘There’s a rat,’ Collier told him. ‘Like, Godzilla’s brother.’

‘You mean Rodan?’

‘Chibi, man. Rodan was a surrogate. Chibi was blood.’

‘Goro,’ Faith said, because she had spent three years of Saturdays watching Godzilla movies when Jeremy went through a phase. ‘Collier, help me with these boxes.’

‘She’s right,’ Collier said. ‘It definitely looked like Gorosaurus.’ He bared his teeth and made his hands into claws. ‘Like it was out for blood.’

Faith let the first box drop on his head.

Annoyingly, Collier still managed to catch it. He put the box on the floor and waited for her to pass down the second one.

The uni said, ‘You need us for anything else, man?’

Collier shook his head. ‘I’m good, bro.’

‘The closet,’ Faith reminded him.

‘Oh, right.’ Collier motioned for them to follow him into the other room. Faith took a precarious step down with the heavy second box in her hands. She put it on the floor beside the first. From the other room she heard a discussion about the best way to pull pins from the hinges, like they had never seen a hammer and a flat-head screwdriver before.

Faith clapped dust from her arms and ran her fingers through her hair to get rid of the grit. The rotting meat smell was so pungent that she had to open the bedroom windows. And push out the screens because the flies were starting to swarm. Ripping down the ceiling probably hadn’t been her best idea, but logic tended to go out the window when she was pissed off, and she was really pissed off at Dale Harding.

At the GBI, Faith had investigated her share of bad cops, and the one trait that they all had in common was that they thought they were still good guys. Theft, rape, murder, extortion, racketeering, pimping—it didn’t matter. They still thought the crimes they had committed were for the greater good. They were taking care of their families. They were protecting their brothers in blue. They had made a mistake. They would never do it again. It was annoying how they were all the same in their insistence that they were still basically good human beings.

Harding hadn’t just embraced his badness. He had forced it on others.

And now she had to go through even more of his crap.

Faith dragged the chair over to the window. She kicked the boxes in the same direction, then she sat down. She tried not to think about why the lid on the first box felt damp, but her mind still conjured up the useful fact that rats leave a trail of urine wherever they go.

She shuddered before digging into the stack of neatly labeled files.

Dale Harding had been a private eye, and the first box contained the sort of glamorous work done by PIs the world over: photos of
cheating spouses in cheap motels, photos of cheating spouses in parked cars, photos of cheating spouses in alleyways and roadside gas stations and inside a kids’ play house in the backyard.

Harding’s record-keeping was meticulous. Receipts for gas and meals and developing photos were stapled to expense reports. Daily logs followed the movements of his targets. He wrote in tiny block lettering and his spelling was exactly what you’d expect from a guy who probably went from high school to the police academy. Not that Faith hadn’t done the same, but at least she knew the difference between
you’re
and
your
.

Collier stood in the doorway. ‘Closet’s clear.’

‘You probably should’ve had the bomb squad check it.’

Finally he registered something other than cocky self-assuredness as they both realized that considering Harding, it wasn’t exactly a joke.

He said, ‘Something was in the closet at some point. There’s an impression in the carpet. Round, like a five-gallon bucket.’

Faith stood up so that she could see for herself. The two unis were back on their phones, heads down, thumbs working. She could probably murder Collier with the tire iron right in front of them and they wouldn’t notice.

The closet door had been propped up against the wall. Faith used the flashlight app on her phone to examine the inside of the four-by-eight walk-in closet. It was just as Collier had said. In the back corner, a circle impression was imprinted into the brown carpet. She scanned the rest of the closet. The rods had been removed. Wires dangled down where the light fixture should have been. The white walls were scuffed at the bottom. The enclosed space had a lingering odor of raw sewage.

Collier said, ‘We see this a lot. Drug mules come up from Mexico with pellets or powder heroin in their stomachs. They shit them out in a bucket, take their money, then head back to Mexico to fill up again.’

‘You think a place like this, where they have to specifically ban lawn jockeys in the yards, wouldn’t be lighting up nine-one-one if they saw a bunch of Mexicans going in and out of Harding’s house?’ She told the unis, ‘Turn the door around.’

‘We gotta boot. Dispatch called.’ Neither looked up from their phones as they walked out of the room.

Collier seemed impressed. ‘Good guys, right?’

Faith wrapped her hands around the edges of the door. Of course it was solid wood. She tilted it onto its corner and swiveled the door around. She lost her grip at the last minute. The top edge of the door slammed into the wall, leaving a gash. Faith stepped back to look. There were scratch marks low on the wood. She double-checked the hinges, making sure she was looking at the side that faced into the closet.

‘The rat?’ Collier guessed.

Faith took a photo of the scratches. ‘We need to get forensics in here.’

‘My guys or your guys?’

‘Mine.’ Faith sent the photo to Charlie Reed, who would likely be open to a change of scenery after processing Marcus Rippy’s nightclub for the last seven hours. She texted him the address and told him to process the closet first thing. She wasn’t a scientist, but a five-gallon bucket and a locked closet door with scratches on the back probably meant that someone had been kept inside.

Or it could be more of Harding’s bullshit waste of their time.

Collier said, ‘The closet door was locked when we got here. Why lock the door when there’s nothing in there?’

‘Why did Harding do anything?’ Faith went back into the other bedroom. She sat down in the chair and started putting the cheating spouse files back into the first box. Collier stood in the doorway again. She told him, ‘There’s nothing here, at least not the kind of thing you’d hide behind a rat.’

‘I don’t care what Violet said. That thing looked pregnant.’ Collier sat down on the mattress. It made a farting sound. He gave Faith the exact look that she expected him to give. He pushed the lid off the second box. There were no file folders, just a stack of pages with lots of nude photos on top.

Collier took the pictures. He handed Faith the papers.

She thumbed through them quickly. Hospital admittance records. Arrest warrants. Rehab. Rap sheet. They were all for one person. Delilah Jean Palmer, twenty-two years old, current address the Cheshire Motor Inn, which was a known hangout for prostitutes. There was no family listed. From birth, Palmer had been a ward of the state.

She was also a current model for BackDoorMan.com. Palmer’s most recent booking photo showed the same woman from the racy pictures Sara had found inside Dale Harding’s wallet. Her hair was different in each photo, sometimes platinum blonde, sometimes her natural brown, sometimes purple or pink.

‘It’s her.’ Collier leaned over, his shoulder pressed against Faith’s arm. He showed her a larger image of the wallet-sized photos: Delilah Palmer leaning over a kitchen counter, her head turned back toward the camera, mouth open, approximating sexual excitement. He said, ‘I’m gonna guess she’s not a real
blonde. See, I’m a fast learner, Mitchell. You should keep me around.’

Faith knew that the GBI’s computer division was already looking into BackDoorMan.com, but she told Collier, ‘Why don’t you check the website?’

‘Good idea.’ He took out his phone. With any luck, he would waste the next hour looking at porn so that she could get some work done.

So, basically like every romantic relationship Faith had ever had in her life.

She returned to the documents for a more careful reading. She realized she was holding Delilah Palmer’s juvenile records, which was strange, because juvenile records were usually sealed. Palmer’s first arrest was at the age of ten for selling OxyContin at John Wesley Dobbs Elementary in east Atlanta. Faith had spent quite some time at Dobbs while helping the state build a RICO case against the Atlanta Public Schools system for widespread cheating on standardized tests. Some of the faculty had hosted a fish and grits sit-down dinner where they erased and changed the answers on students’ Scantrons. Meanwhile, 99.5 percent of their struggling student body qualified for free or assisted lunch.

Faith studied Palmer’s first booking photo from twelve years ago. The girl’s hands were so small that she couldn’t hold the reader board straight for the camera. The top of her head didn’t reach the first line in the ruler painted on the wall behind her. There were scabs on her face. Her short brown hair was unwashed. She had dark circles under her eyes, either from lack of sleep, lack of food, or lack of belonging.

Delilah would’ve been an oddity at Dobbs, and not just because she had entered the drug trafficking trade at such an early age. Last month, when Faith was preparing documents for the RICO trial, she had to explain to the district attorney that she hadn’t made a mistake in her charts. In 2012, Dobbs did not have a 5 percent white student body. They had a total of five white students. Had the demographics been reversed, there was no way the city would’ve allowed that level of corruption to go unchecked for so long.

Faith flipped to Delilah’s next arrest. More Oxy sales at age twelve and then again at fifteen. By sixteen, Delilah had dropped out of school and was slinging heroin, which was what happened when you couldn’t afford Oxy anymore. A single 80 milligram, pill could run sixty to one hundred dollars, depending on the market. The same money for a bag of heroin could keep you high for days.

She flipped ahead to the charging sheets. Parole. Diversion treatment. More parole. Rehab.

Despite her criminal history, Delilah Palmer had never spent more than a night in jail.

Her first prostitution arrest came at the end of her sixteenth year. There were four more arrests for solicitation, two more for selling pot and heroin respectively, all accompanied by a free one-night accommodation in the Fulton County jail.

Faith scanned the names of the arresting officers. Some of them were familiar. Most of them were from zone six, which made sense because criminals were like everybody else. They tended to stay in their own neighborhoods.

Dale Harding had also worked in zone six. He had obviously kept an eye on Delilah Palmer for most of her life. Reading
between the lines, Faith guessed that he’d called in every favor he had to keep the girl from doing serious time.

Collier said, ‘You gonna share or do I have to guess?’

‘You smell like vomit.’

‘I just threw up. Didn’t you hear me in the bathroom? It, like, echoed.’

She handed him Delilah Palmer’s rap sheet. ‘Two bedrooms, two beds. Someone was staying here with Harding.’

‘You think it was this Palmer chick?’ He frowned. ‘She ain’t much, but she could do better than Harding.’

Faith thought about the locked closet, the bucket, the sewage smell. Harding could’ve been doing his own rehab. Cold turkey in a closet was a hell of a lot cheaper than fifteen grand for in-patient treatment. Again. That might better explain the squalor. This place certainly looked like a junkie was living here.

‘Didja see over there?’ Collier nodded toward a retainer on the floor. ‘My sisters all wore those after they got their braces off. Like, not the same retainer, different ones, but they were all small, just like that one. Meaning it’s sized like what a girl would wear in her mouth.’

Faith couldn’t understand why he used so many words to say just one thing. ‘What about the website?’

‘Nothing popped out.’ He laughed. ‘Pun intended. I’m more of a front-door man myself. Especially the knockers.’

Faith felt the strain of her eyes rolling.

‘You know what, Mitchell? When I first met you, I figured we’d end up in a bedroom looking at porn.’

Faith started to stand.

‘Hold on.’ He grabbed a stack of photographs from the box. ‘Lookit these. Delilah’s been modeling for a while. The BackDoorMan.com ones, I’d say they started when she was around sixteen. The earlier ones don’t have a website or identifying marks, but I’d put her closer to twelve, maybe thirteen.’

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