"Do you remember what he looked like?" Lucas asked. He edged inside the door; she apparently had three rooms, a living room overlooking the street, a bedroom, and a small kitchen. Lucas couldn't see a bath, but he could see a half-open door in the bedroom, and thought that might be it. The place smelled of Glade deodorizer.
She frowned, was uncertain. "Well, I don't know… He was only there for a minute or two."
"Would you mind if I looked out the window?"
"Please do," she said. He crossed her living room in three Steps, looked out the window. The phone was directly across the street and only fifteen feet from a streetlight.
"Did you see more than one man last night?" Lucas asked.
"No, not last night," she said.
"Did you see a car?"
Again she frowned. "Yes, I did. He got out of a car, he parked just over there…" She pointed a bony finger just up the street from the phone. "A white Oldsmobile."
"An Oldsmobile."
"I think so."
"New? Or old."
"New, I think."
"You say, you've said, you think. You've said it several times…"
"I was watching television. That's all I do now, watch television and look out the windows, except on Mondays and Wednesdays when the social lady comes and takes me to the store. But I wasn't paying too much attention to the telephone…"
"Okay… If we showed you some photographs, could you see if you recognize the man? Or the car?"
She smiled; she had improbably small, white, pearly teeth. "I could certainly try, but I'm pretty old."
"Mrs. Bird, I'll be back in a minute, okay?" Lucas said. "Just give me a minute or two."
"I'm not going any place. I hope."
WHEN LUCAS GOT back to the street, Sloan was just coming out of the bookstore, wiping his nose With a Kleenex: "They said you were upstairs."
"The woman upstairs said she saw a guy… I need your photo spread," Lucas said. "What else did she see?"
"She said he's driving a white Oldsmobile. A new one," Lucas said.
Sloan's eyebrows went up. "That could be something."
Sloan got his briefcase from the car and together they went back up the stairs. As they walked up the stairs, Lucas said; "Try not to get too close to her. You give her that cold, you could kill her."
"Goddamnit." Sloan was offended.
"No, no- I'm not kidding."
MRS. BIRD OPENED THE DOOR for them. She was more animated now than when Lucas had first knocked; excited.
"We need a place for you to sit and look at these and see them all at once," Sloan told her.
They all looked around. In the kitchen, a single wooden chair faced a small oval table the size of a pizza pan, and on the table, a paper rose poked out of a glass bud vase. Lucas and Sloan wouldn't fit at the table.
"Could I move your end table around in front of the couch, maybe?" Lucas asked.
"Of course."
Mrs. Bird sat in the middle of the three-cushion couch. Lucas took some old Reader's Digests off the table and moved it in front of the couch. Lucas and Sloan sat on either side of Bird, and Sloan spread out ten five-by-seven color photographs. One of the men was Charlie Pope. The other nine, all of whom met the general description of Charlie Pope, were cops.
She looked at them for a moment, then said to Sloan, "I saw this on television once."
"It's pretty important…"
She looked back at the pictures, and then reached out and touched Charlie Pope's face. "This is the man, I believe."
THEY SAT LOOKING at the pictures for a few seconds, then Sloan said to Lucas, "We need to make out an affidavit and bring it back here." Unspoken: the old lady might die in the next fifteen minutes.
"We'll get somebody with Rochester to do it, and we can bring it back here after the meeting."
They explained the procedure to Mrs. Bird, who nodded and said, "I'll wait for you. I was just going to watch TV anyway." Then she did a little dramatic, girlish shiver: "You don't think I'll be in any danger, do you?"
Lucas thought, Not unless you shake hands with Sloan. But at the same time he smiled and shook his head, No.
12
ROCHESTER WAS A GOOD-SIZED CITY, built around a colony of doctors and wealthy patients, and probably had the highest per-capita income of any big city in the state. The money showed up in the government center, a modern red-brick, concrete, and glass building that sat on the Zumbro River a couple of blocks from the Mayo Clinic.
Twenty-nine sheriffs and police chiefs, or their alternates, along with a half dozen highway patrolmen, game wardens, and parole officers, got together in the boardroom, where the city council and county board met. Of the thirty-five, thirty were middle-aged men, most a little too heavy and going gray. The other five were women, all five tightly coifed and suited.
Lucas had talked to the Rochester chief about Bird; he would make arrangements for a formal statement. Then Lucas started the pitch to the gathered cops: "We know he's down here someplace. You've all seen this morning's Star-Tribune-he's going to do it again. He's probably already picked out somebody, and he's stalking her. Or him. We're looking for another guy from St. John's named Mike West. We're trying to keep this under our hats…"
They had questions, but Lucas had few answers: "Honest to God, we really don't know what he's doing, or how he's hiding. There's been; a parole-violation bulletin out on him for a month, and we've got nothing. He's buried himself someplace. We need to pry him out of his hole."
He told them about the white Olds. They all made a note. One guy held up a hand: "A new white Olds… they stopped building Oldsmobiles…"
"I know."
"We should be able to track every one of them," the guy suggested.
"We're doing that," Lucas said. "The woman who gave us that information is elderly, really elderly, and we're not absolutely sure of its quality."
"You're not sure how he's armed?"
"No, but he says he is, he says he got some guns, and we believe him," Lucas said. "Rice was in pretty good shape. We don't think Pope would have taken him bare-handed. The medical examiner says all of the damage to Rice's body was inflicted either with the whip or a blade. He didn't show any signs of being beaten, or having been in a struggle before he was tied up. So there was probably a gun. If one of your guys even gets a whiff of Pope, he better be wearing a vest."
"Pretty goodamn hot out in the countryside right now," one of the cops said.
"Better hot than dead," somebody else said.
Another hand: "Where'd he get the guns?".
"Same place he got the Olds," Lucas said. "We don't know."
"We know he was in Rochester last night?"
"Three blocks from here," Lucas said. He gestured out the window at his back. "Right across the river." And it went on for a while.
WHEN THEY BROKE UP, Sloan came over and said, "I'm feeling like shit, man. Bobby Anderson from Scott County's here. He said he'd give me a ride back home, if you're gonna go see Marcia Pope."
Lucas nodded: "You look bad. I can't believe the Marcia Pope thing is going anywhere, anyway. The Austin cops already talked to her twice."
Sloan took off, and Lucas, back in the truck, headed south toward the Iowa border, and the city of Austin.
MARCIA POPE LIVED IN a shingle-sided cottage on a tree-shaded street on the edge of Austin, in a subdivision built by meatpackers. The house was technically white, but probably hadn't been painted in forty years; the siding was grooved with dirt and mold, the ragged grass had only been fitfully mown, the narrow sidewalk leading to the front door was cracked and twisted.