She grabbed up her phone and called the lab, annoyed when she was given the runaround. Hanging up with them, she called Ashley Tang direct and said, “I need some DNA results yesterday. Isn’t there someone at the lab you can lean on?”
The forensic investigator answered, “They’re getting to it. You know how it is.”
“I don’t care how it is! I need answers.”
“Well, I’ve got one for you. Not DNA, but an explanation of sorts.”
“Hit me.”
“The poison found in Jocelyn Wallis’s system? We believe it was administered in the coffee grounds.”
“Put there on purpose? It wasn’t something picked up by mistake, somehow.”
“Most likely it was deliberate.”
“Was it meant to kill her?”
“Doesn’t look like it. The dosage was too small at this point, but then, there might be a lot more left in the coffee. We haven’t tested it yet.”
Alvarez jumped ahead to Kacey Lambert. The microphones. Maybe Jocelyn had been bugged, too? But the killer removed them before her place was examined?
“I’m going to check some other coffee, too,” Alvarez said. “Thanks. I’ll get it to you.”
This time when she hung up, she could feel her pulse racing and her breathing was rapid. Was Dr. Lambert in a killer’s sights?
It sure felt that way.
“Pescoli. Get back here!” she said aloud.
“You always overreact,” Jeremy declared, glaring at her from the couch. He held up his phone. “It’s just a picture. There’s nothing wrong with it!”
“If Heidi’s dad saw it, I don’t think he’d agree,” Pescoli responded.
“You showed it to him!”
“How could I show it to him? It’s on your phone. But he knows about it. Pay attention here. Sending pictures like that over the Internet is not a good idea.”
“There’s nothing illegal about it. Nothing!”
“You’re putting words in my mouth. I said it’s not a good idea. Period.”
“It’s just on my phone. Mine. Which you looked at without asking. That’s an invasion of privacy!”
“Invasion of privacy?” Pescoli swept an arm to angrily encompass the mess surrounding her, the detritus from Jeremy’s video gaming: empty soda cups, a plate with the remnants of his cheese sandwich, or maybe Bianca’s — that had yet to be determined — several pairs of his shoes scattered haphazardly over the floor. “Everything you do is an invasion of privacy these days.”
“Fine. I’ll leave.” He stomped across the living room and headed down to his bedroom.
“Praise God. He listens.”
“Mom. .?” Bianca’s voice warbled from down the hall. Pescoli walked briskly down the hall and peeked into her daughter’s room, where Bianca lay on the bed, big eyes wide and a little teary. “Why can’t Chris come over?”
“When I’m here. He can come over when I’m here.”
“I want him here now. He brings me water.”
“I’ll get you a glass of water. Did you eat any of your cheese sandwich?”
“What cheese sandwich?”
“Jeremy!” Pescoli yelled, stomping out of Bianca’s room and turning to the stairs that led down to his bedroom.
“I asked her! She said she didn’t want it!” he yelled back up at her.
Pescoli returned to Bianca’s room. She looked at her daughter, buried in the blankets on her bed. “Is there something that sounds good?” she asked her.
“Soup.”
“Campbell’s okay?”
“Chicken noodle.”
As she headed toward the kitchen to whip up this culinary delight, she heard softly, “Thanks, Mom,” and she exhaled a long breath and almost smiled, remembering why she’d had children in the first place.
Thirty minutes later she was back at the station, and Alvarez was just hanging up the phone as she entered the squad room. “What have you got?” Pescoli asked, and her partner told her about the sperm donor theory from top to bottom.
When she finished, Alvarez said, “Well?” and Pescoli nodded, processing.
“Wow,” she said. “What does it mean?”
“I’m working that out. But that’s the connection. The common denominator.”
“If—”
“Pescoli.” Cort Brewster’s voice barked her name as if it tasted bad.
“Brewster,” she responded neutrally, turning her eye his way.
“Come into my office.” Then, as an afterthought, “Please.”
“Well, shit,” she muttered under her breath as she followed after the undersheriff.
Brewster didn’t bother to sit at his desk. He stood behind it and Pescoli did likewise, preferring to stand herself.
“I talked to Heidi. She says there are no pictures.”
“Ahh. .”
“I think she might not be telling the truth,” he admitted. Pescoli lifted her brows. This was a surprise. “It’s no secret I don’t like your son seeing my daughter. He’s a dog in heat, and if I could, I’d bust his ass.”
“You tried that once before,” Pescoli reminded.
“I don’t need an unemployed loser hanging around, and neither does Heidi. He’s a bad influence on her. You and I don’t always see eye to eye, but we have to work together. I’m doing my best to keep things professional. I expect the same from you.” He paused, and when Pescoli didn’t respond, he added, “That’s all.”
She turned on her heel and marched out of the room, annoyed, frustrated, and a little overwhelmed. Not that she’d let Cort Brewster see that. Bastard.
She suddenly ached for Joe. Man, it would be good if he were around. Theirs hadn’t been a perfect marriage; she could admit it had already been fraying when he was killed in the line of duty. But, oh, she could use his level head now in dealing with their son.
And then she thought about Santana. The man she loved. Maybe she should move in with him. What was she waiting for? Her kids to accept him? Ha. That’d be a cold day in hell.
Shaking off her confrontation with Brewster, Pescoli returned to Alvarez’s desk. “Should I call Jocelyn Wallis’s parents and ask them if Dad was a sperm donor?”
“I already left a message,” Alvarez admitted. “Told them to call. But I think it’s time we take this to Grayson.”
Pescoli heard something in Alvarez’s tone that she probably wouldn’t have wanted to be heard. “What’s with you and the sheriff?”
“Not a damn thing,” she responded with uncharacteristic punch.
Grayson was just leaving his office, but upon seeing Alvarez and Pescoli heading straight his way, he stepped back inside and asked, “What?”
“We think the deaths of Elle Alexander and Jocelyn Wallis are connected,” Alvarez said. “And there may be a number of others.”
“Should I sit down?”
“I would advise yes,” Pescoli said dryly.
Twenty minutes later Alvarez had recapped where they were so far, finishing with, “We have a lot of questions, and we’re following up with the relatives of the victims. One thing. Those victims are all women. Brenda Morris, Elle Alexander’s mother, said both of her children were from Donor Seven-twenty-seven. Her son, Bruce, is in Florida and presumably alive and well. Is he on the list? Or is it only women?”
“The list. .,” Grayson said wearily. “That implies there’s more.”
“Maybe a lot more,” Alvarez admitted.
“Every damned Christmas,” Pescoli said. “The season for homicidal nut jobs.”
Grayson’s gaze met Alvarez’s, and Pescoli looked from one to the other. Sturgis, Grayson’s dog, crawled from beneath the sheriff’s desk and stretched and yawned.
“Damn it all,” Grayson said. “Get me some more information. If we’ve got another serial killer on the loose, I’m going to have to call the FBI.”