Then: his mother gasping a brief inhaled scream.
The skid flinging him against the door, the brakes locking, then—
‘Sir?’
March blinked.
‘Here you go, sir.’ The waitress set the bill in front of him. ‘And at the bottom you can take a brief survey and maybe win a free dinner for the family.’
March laughed to himself.
He doled out bills and didn’t tell her that after his business was concluded here he wouldn’t be coming back to the area again for quite a long time, if ever.
When March looked up, the couple and their children were gone.
It would be a busy day tomorrow. Time to get back to the inn.
His phone hummed with an email.
At last.
It was from a commercial service that ran DMV checks. The answer he’d been waiting for.
That morning as he’d enjoyed the Egg McMuffin and coffee, parked near the multiplex that would have been his next target, March had noted an assortment of police cars and — this was curious — a gray Nissan Pathfinder.
He couldn’t learn anything from the other vehicles or the uniformed or sport-coated men who climbed out of them. But the occupant of the Pathfinder, that was a different story. It wasn’t an official car. Not a government plate. And no bumper stickers bragging about children, no Jesus fish. A private car.
But the driver
Her posture, upright. March had sensed instinctively that this woman was one of the main investigators against him.
The search had revealed that the Pathfinder belonged to one Kathryn Dance.
A lovely name. Compelling.
He pictured her again and felt a stirring low in his belly. The Get was unspooling. It, too, was growing interested in Ms Dance. They both wanted to know more about her. They wanted to know
PRECAUTIONS
FRIDAY, APRIL 7
CHAPTER 27
‘Never rains but it pours,’ Michael O’Neil offered, walking into Dance’s office.
TJ Scanlon glanced at the solid detective, who was sitting down across from her desk. ‘I never quite got that. Does it mean, “We’re in a desert area, so it doesn’t rain but sometimes there’s a downpour and we get flooded because, you know, there’s no ground cover?”’
‘I don’t know. All I mean is, my plate’s filling up.’
‘With rain?’ TJ asked.
‘A homicide.’
‘Oh. Sorry.’ TJ often walked a fine line between jovial and flippant.
Dance asked, ‘The missing farmer? Otto Grant?’ She was thinking of the possible suicide, the man distraught about losing his land to the eminent domain action by the state. She couldn’t imagine what he had gone through, losing the farm that had been in his family for so many years. She and the children had been at Safeway recently and she’d noticed yet more 8.5-by-11 sheets of paper, attention-getting yellow, with Grant’s picture on them.
O’Neil shook his head. ‘No, no, I mean another case altogether.’ He handed Dance a half-dozen crime-scene photos. ‘Jane Doe. Found this morning at the Cabrillo Beach Inn.’
A dive of a place, Dance knew. North of Monterey.
‘Prints come back negative.’
The photo was of a young woman who’d been dead seven or eight hours, to guess from the lividity. She was pretty. She had been pretty.
‘COD?’
‘Asphyx. Plastic bag, rubber band.’
‘Rape?’
‘No. But maybe erotic asphyxia.’
Dance shook her head. Really? Risking death? How much better could an orgasm be?
‘I’ll get it on our internal wire,’ TJ said. This would send the picture to every one of the CBI offices, where a facial-recognition scan would be run and compared with faces in the database.
‘Thanks.’
TJ took the pictures off to scan them.
O’Neil continued, to Dance: ‘The boyfriend’s probably married. Panicked and took off with her purse. We’re checking video nearby for tags and makes. Might find something.’
‘Why wasn’t she on the bed? I don’t care how kinky I was, sex on the floor of
O’Neil said, ‘That’s why I said
‘So,’ she said slowly, ‘you still with us on the Solitude Creek unsub?’ She was afraid that the death — accidental or intentional — would derail him.
‘No. Just complaining about the rain.’
‘You still on the hate-crime case too?’
‘Yeah.’ A grimace. ‘We had another.’
‘No! What happened?’
‘Another gay couple. Two men from Pacific Grove. Not far from you, down on Lighthouse. A rock through their window.’
‘Any suspects?’
‘Nope.’ He shrugged. ‘But, rain or not, I can work Solitude Creek.’