As he approached the third row, he saw a couple officers stringing police tape around an empty parking space, and knew that was where the BMW had been. Like with the officers in the office, he didn’t recognize them.
Don’t think about it. Just do it, he told himself, then turned down the aisle before he could talk himself out of it.
As he neared the empty spot, the two officers looked at him. Instead of avoiding their gaze, he smiled and walked over.
“I hear someone made off with one of the cars,” he said.
The older of the two took a step forward. “Can I help you?”
“I’m on the force, too.” He held out his hand and, as if it were the most natural thing in the world, said, “I’m Davies.”
The older cop shook his hand. “Halen.”
His partner nodded at Jake. “Alvarez.”
Jake shook his hand, too. “I came by to check on a vehicle involved in a hit and run, and the guy inside told me there was a little excitement here last night.”
“Apparently,” Halen said.
“They just take the one car?” Jake asked. It was a rational question, one that any curious cop would ask, but one he thought he already knew the answer, too. He was wrong.
“It was the only one they took. They set another car on fire back there.” Halen looked over his shoulder, further into the lot.
For the first time, Jake noticed several other cops gathered a couple rows back. “Burned? Why would they burn one and take another?”
Halen shrugged. “Who knows? We think it was one of the gangs. Maybe an initiation. They certainly knew what they were doing. Disabled the security cameras and knocked out the guards first. Organized, know what I mean?”
“Gang, for sure,” Alvarez said. “I’ll bet the missing car was stuffed with coke.”
His partner nodded in agreement.
Just then, a voice came over their radio. “Halen, Alvarez. You done?”
Halen glanced at his and Alvarez’s handiwork. Tape not only encircled the slot the BMW had been in, but also one car to either side and the three straight back in the row that butted up against them.
He keyed his mic. “Yes, sir.”
“Then I need one of you over here,” the voice ordered.
Halen and Alvarez exchanged a look, each asking the other what they wanted to do.
“I’ll go,” Halen said.
“Doesn’t matter to me,” Alvarez said.
As Halen started to walk off, Jake said, “Take it easy.”
“Yeah, you, too,” Halen replied.
Jake then gave Alvarez a nod goodbye. “Nice meeting you.”
“Good luck with your case,” Alvarez said.
Jake turned and started to amble off the way he’d come.
What the hell had gone on here last night? The BMW stolen and a car fire? He had the sudden urge to find out what kind of car the one that had burned was. Had it been involved in the events out on Goodman Ranch Road, too?
He paused in the aisle, and silently admonished himself. You need to forget about the murder and the fire. You need to forget about all of that. You’re only here to try to find out where Berit is. That’s it.
But it really wasn’t. Berit and the BMW, it all tied back to the murder and the fire. That’s why she was coming out here. He looked back toward the slot now surrounded by yellow tape, but the void it created in the row of cars gave him no new information.
As he started to turn back around, he paused. There was something under a Cadillac parked two spaces away from where the BMW had been. It was lying against the front tire, hidden mostly behind it.
He checked Alvarez. The officer had moved to the back of the empty slot, his attention now on the group at the burnt-out car. Jake stepped over to the Cadillac, then, keeping his movements even and smooth, he lowered himself into a crouch next to the fender. The item by the tire was a rectangular piece of black plastic. His initial thought was that it was something that must have fallen off the engine. But as he pulled it out from the shadows of the car, he realized it was a phone.
Still in a crouch, he pressed one of the phone’s buttons. The screen came to life, the battery gauge showing that it was half full. There was nothing on it to indicate ownership, so Jake accessed the menu to see if there was any information there. He was given a list of choices, and while his inclination was to try and determine the phone’s number, he selected the line for previous calls.
He stared at the new screen in disbelief. There were seven missed calls. Every single one of them was from the same person: “JAKE.” He selected one of the calls just to be sure. Contact information came up for the caller—his contact information.
The phone was Berit’s. She had been here.
The possibilities of what might have happened made his head spin.
He started to think she must have been here when the car was taken, but immediately realized that didn’t make sense. She had called him during the afternoon. The car had been taken at night. She would have had no reason to be anywhere near the yard then. Her phone must have been there since not long after she’d left him the message.
“What are you doing?”
Jake’s head whipped up. Officer Alvarez was standing a few feet away, the look on his face suspicious.
“I, uh…” All the possibilities ran through Jake’s mind, paths with different outcomes, none of which seemed to get him where he needed to be. “Dropped my phone.” He raised Berit’s phone so Alvarez could see it. “Thought maybe it was broken, but still working.”
Alvarez eyed him for a moment longer, then smirked. “My wife dropped hers on the driveway. Busted into a million pieces. You’re lucky.”
“Yeah. I guess I am.”
As he was walking away a few moments later, Jake’s phone buzzed — his own phone, not Berit’s. He checked to make sure Alvarez wasn’t watching, then pulled it out.
“Oliver,” he said, answering it.
“This is Sergeant Stroop. You are to report here in thirty minutes.”
“I’m on suspension, ma’am.”
“I’m well aware of that, Oliver. Thirty minutes.” The line went dead.
While he had been planning on going to the substation anyway, he had wanted it to be on his own initiative. Given the tone Sergeant Stroop had just taken with him, it sure sounded like he was in for another reprimand.
But what about Berit?
He thought about it as he jogged toward the exit. He’d have to tell them, explain that he was afraid that something had happened to her. It didn’t matter how much they dressed him down, as long as they put a team together to try to find her.
That’s all that mattered.
21
When Jake arrived at work, he was directed back to the same meeting room where his suspension had been handed out the previous day. Walking down the hall, he passed other officers he knew, but it didn’t take a psychology major to see that word of his current situation had spread. Most of the officers avoided his gaze, while those who didn’t gave him looks of pity or contempt.
Was what he’d done really so horrible? He hadn’t actually interfered with the investigation. What he’d been doing was looking into an angle no one else would have even considered. It wasn’t like he was a dirty cop or anything. He’d been trying to be a good cop. That’s all.
When he opened the door, he expected to find only Sergeant Stroop. And while the sergeant was there, so was Commander Ashworth, and a man Jake didn’t know.
“Have a seat, Oliver,” Sergeant Stroop said.
The three of them were sitting on one side of the table. A single chair for Jake was on the other. He pulled it out and sat down.