Tough Customer (28 page)

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Authors: Sandra Brown

Tags: #love_detective

BOOK: Tough Customer
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"Where is it now?"
"Safely stored. So what do you want to do? Slug out our difference of opinion on protocol and chain of evidence in front of God and everybody? Or talk about the significance of those pictures?"
Ski removed his sunglasses and wiped his sweating forehead on his sleeve. He glanced into the car at Caroline, who was still talking on her cell phone. Coming back around to Dodge and keeping his voice low, he said, "Best I can tell, they were taken with a telephoto lens."
"But close enough to be scary."
Ski gave a solemn nod of agreement. "Close enough. They're a whole friggin' photographic study of Berry's life here. He got shots of the lake house from every angle. He's got her coming and going all over town."
"Wearing different clothes," Dodge said. "Which means he followed her on numerous occasions."
"He got up close and personal, too."
The deputy's square jaw hardened, and Dodge knew he was thinking about the series of shots taken of Berry through her bedroom window, and when she was sunbathing on the pier, blissfully unaware that a man who'd vowed to kill her was watching, perversely violating her in a way that made Dodge's blood boil.
"Careless of him to leave them in the motel room."
"He didn't," Ski said. "I found them in a trash barrel on the side of the road behind the motel, near where he'd hidden the car."
"So even after killing the kid, he had the presence of mind to take them with him and try to unload them."
"He didn't want to be caught with something that would implicate him."
"Careful bastard."
"Berry told me he works puzzles. He's methodical. He won't stop."
"Which means we gotta stop him," Dodge said, tossing away his cigarette butt.
"He's on foot. At least he was."
"Fill me in."
"We found an abandoned maroon Toyota. Just by eyeballing the tire tracks, I'm almost certain it's the same car that was at the lake house and behind the motel. Starks left it on foot, shoeless."
"You used the dogs to track him." Dodge motioned to the trio of German shepherds, which were leashed but still moving in frenzied circles, their noses to the asphalt.
Ski said, "Army buddy of mine has this canine search and rescue outfit out of Tyler. He called up one of his best trainers and his dogs, got them down here in a hurry. We had Starks's shoes. The dogs picked up his scent, followed it along the railroad tracks till they crossed Highway 287 at a point a half mile from here."
Caroline got out of the car and joined them. "I caught Berry just as she was leaving the hospital. She'll be here within minutes."
"Then what?" Dodge asked, turning back to Ski. "After Starks got here."
"Then nothing. The trail goes cold."
"Shit."
"Tell me," Ski muttered. "All the dogs converged on the area just over there by the Dumpsters. Either he stole a vehicle, which I doubt since none has been reported, or he hijacked one, or somebody picked him up."
"You've ruled out that he was sucked up by space aliens?"
Ski snuffled. "At least then I'd know where to start looking. As it is, the trail ends here." He motioned toward the Walmart employee who seemed inflated by all the attention he was receiving. "Store manager. He's got Starks on several security camera videos. At least I'm fairly certain it's Starks. That's why I want Berry to take a look."
"Here she comes," Caroline said.
The parking lot was swarming with law enforcement personnel and onlookers, including a van full of elderly people from an assisted living facility, but Berry spotted the trio she sought the instant she turned off the highway.
She pulled her car to a stop near them and got out.
Ski said, "Thanks for getting here so fast."
She responded with matching formality. "Mother said Oren has been here."
He gave her a bullet-point rundown of the events that had taken place since the discovery of the abandoned car. "I thought you might look at the videos, confirm it's Starks."
"Of course."
"I'll get the manager and meet you inside the main entrance." He left them and, in his long-legged stride, walked over to the group of peace officers huddled around the man in a blue vest.
As she, Dodge, and Caroline made their way toward the store entrance, Caroline asked after Ben.
"He's glad he has drugs for the pain."
Berry had no more to say on the subject and was relieved when they didn't press her for details. The AC inside the store was a welcome relief from the heat of the parking lot. Ski and an older deputy, whom she remembered simply as Stevens, came in accompanied by the store manager, who said importantly, "This way," and busily jangled a cluster of keys attached to his belt.
Before they fell into step behind him, Dodge motioned toward the store's snack bar, where a young man was slouched in a booth. Across from him was a woman wearing a Merritt County sheriff's deputy uniform. The young man's posture and expression conveyed boredom and bad attitude. The deputy looked angry and dour as she tapped a pen against her blank notepad.
"Who's that with the deputy?" Dodge asked.
"The cashier who rang up Starks's purchase. We haven't been able to shake much out of him."
"Mind if I give it a shot?"
Ski shrugged. "Be my guest."
Stevens looked at Ski with surprise but didn't question his decision to give Dodge a turn with the witness.
Dodge strolled over to the booth. Ignoring the young man, he said something to the deputy, who looked over her shoulder at Ski. Ski gave her a nod. She shrugged, slid out of the booth, and left the store through the exit. Dodge took her place in the booth, facing the young man across the table.
Berry said, "I thought women were his speciality."
Caroline smiled faintly. "He can be persuasive with men, too."
Ski said, "I gotta get back outside, so I'm turning you over to Stevens."
He left, and the store manager ushered Berry, Caroline, and Stevens to the rear of the store and into his office. He seemed disappointed when Berry identified Oren Starks within seconds of watching the first security video he put into the player.
"That's him. Definitely." On the monitor Starks could be seen entering the store. "He's even wearing the same clothes." The video was in black and white, but even though the pants and shirt were rumpled, they matched those he'd had on when he came to the lake house.
"He's limping, too," she observed. He appeared benign, an average-looking man without a single sinister aspect. But seeing him again made Berry shiver with revulsion and fear.
"Didn't anyone notice that he was in stocking feet?" Caroline asked.
"The store is open twenty-four/seven." The deputy pointed at the digital time readout at the bottom of the screen. "He walked in at three-twelve a.m. That time of morning, only a skeleton crew is manning this huge store. There were a handful of other customers, but you can tell Starks avoids going down aisles where there were other shoppers."
Oren had made short work of picking out a pair of sports shoes and paying for them. He was in and out of the store within minutes. Caroline asked, "Why didn't he just put on the shoes and walk out? Why risk being recognized by the cashier?"
"Why risk being caught shoplifting?"
"And it wouldn't have been gaming," Berry said. The others looked at her. "He knew security cameras would be recording his movements. He's saying to us, 'I may be a killer, but I'm not a thief.'"
Stevens said, "You're positive this is our guy?"
"Positive."
"Ski was, too, but he wanted it corroborated anyhow. He's careful that way."
They filed out of the office and made their way through the aisles of the store toward the exit. There was no sign of Dodge and the young man in the snack bar, but when they emerged from the store, they saw him standing with the female deputy who'd been questioning him before Dodge took over. He now appeared much more talkative; the deputy was taking rapid notes.
"Guess your guy got him to open up," Stevens remarked as he guided Berry and Caroline over to where Ski and Dodge were conferring. Dodge was pulling hard on a cigarette. As they got near, Berry heard him say through a foggy exhale, "It's amazing how cooperative a guy can get when his dick is the bargaining chip."
Berry couldn't help but smile. "Dare I ask?"
Dodge grinned, but it was a chilling expression. "The cashier. I told him his attitude needed some readjustment, like right fucking now, or else. I made myself understood and believed."
"What did he say about Oren?"
Dodge was grinding out one cigarette and lighting another, so Ski answered for him. "He'd never heard of Oren Starks. He just moved here from Fort Worth to live with his grandmother, and all she watches on TV is the Weather Channel. Since he didn't go to school here, he didn't know Davis Coldare, either. He hates his job, hates the manager, hates the hours, but needs the money."
"For dope," Dodge provided. "He smoked some weed during his break about half an hour before Starks showed."
"You got that out of him?" Ski asked.
Dodge shrugged. "As I said, we reached an understanding."
Ski resumed. "Starks came up to the counter with the shoebox. The cashier scanned the bar code. Starks paid cash. The cashier gave him change for three twenties and a ten. He remembered because every other customer had paid with a credit card. He asked if Starks wanted a sack. Starks said no and walked out carrying the box, which we found along with his receipt in one of those containers. I'm assuming that's where he put on his new shoes."
"Then pulled a Casper and disappeared," Dodge said with finality.
"That was the extent of his exchange with the cashier?" Berry asked. " 'Do you want a sack?' 'No.' That was it?"
"I'm afraid so," Dodge said. "I asked him if Starks was acting funny. He said no. I asked was he acting weird or furtive. He asked me what
furtive
meant, so I described furtive behavior, and he said, 'Well, yeah, I mean, dude, I guess, maybe.' Make of that what you can."
Before they could make anything of it, Berry's cell phone rang. She took it from her handbag and touched the screen. "Hello."
"Hello, Berry."
Her heart nearly leaped from her chest. Even through the phone, despite the noise in the parking lot, there was no mistaking Oren's voice.
"Surprised to hear from me?" he asked.
Caroline and Dodge were bickering over his cigarette, but Ski's gray gaze was fixed on her. Reading her shocked expression correctly, he waved for the others to be quiet and moved to stand within an inch of her, a silent question in his eyes.
She nodded, wet her lips, said into the telephone, "Yes, Oren. I am very surprised. Where are you?"
He laughed, the awful sound causing goose bumps to break out on her arms. "Wouldn't you like to know?" He hummed a few bars of a tune.
Berry turned the screen of her phone toward Ski so he could read the number displayed. He scribbled it into his palm with a pen and held it out for Dodge to read. Dodge dropped his cigarette and ran toward a group of sheriff's deputies.
Ski was making a rolling motion with his hand, indicating to Berry that she should keep talking. But it was hard for her to hold a thought with all the commotion going on around her. She thought of switching over to speakerphone but was afraid that Oren would detect that others were listening in and hang up.
"Tell me where you are, Oren, so I can come and help you."
"Help me?" He dismissed that with a snort. "As if."
"You need help. You're hurt."
"Clumsy of me to fall down your stairs. It put my aim off, or you'd be dead."
It was difficult to ignore that, but she did. "Is your leg broken?"
"I'm not sure." He answered nonchalantly, as though she'd asked him whether or not he thought it would rain. "It's black and blue. Very swollen."
"Painful, I'm sure."
"Nothing I can't handle with some ibuprofen."
"You should get it examined. You might have developed an infection that could be fatal."
"Oh, I won't die that ingloriously, Berry. And I won't die without taking you with me."
She shuddered. Ski took her arm in a firm, reassuring grip that fortified her enough to continue. "Please listen to reason, Oren. You're in a lot of trouble. Ben is going to be okay. But the boy you shot last night died."
"That wasn't my fault."
"That's what we think, too."
"We? Meaning you and Deputy Nyland?"
At the mention of his name, Ski's eyebrows shot up, and she realized that he could hear Oren's voice through the phone.
"How do you know Deputy Nyland's name?"
"He's been mentioned in all the news reports."
"Yes, well, he believes you didn't mean to kill the Coldare boy." Ski nodded approval of what she'd said. "He thinks that shooting was an accident."
"Oh, I'll just bet he does."
"He does. He told me so himself. He's giving you the benefit of the doubt, Oren, but you're making yourself look guilty. Turn yourself in and--"
"He's there with you now, listening in."
"No, he isn't. I'm alone."
"Liar. There's too much background noise."
"I'm at a fast-food place waiting for my order."
"Which fast-food place?"
"What difference does it make?"
"Which fast food-place? I've become rather familiar with Merritt. Are you at the Chicken Shack or The Smokehouse?" Then he laughed. "Don't bother answering. Whatever you say, I know differently."
"Oren--"
"Shut up and listen to me, Berry. I'm going to kill you. I'm going to kill you slowly. I'm going to watch you die, and I'm going to enjoy it. Turn around."
"What?" she asked hoarsely.

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