“Exactly what is it you want to talk to me about, Mr. O’Conner?”
“You hauled a body out of Russell’s Cave the other day. I suspect I’m being set up to take the fall for that killing. There’s some petty politics and some bad blood stretching way back in this county, and I figure this looks like a good chance to settle some scores. No matter what anybody tells you, I didn’t do it, Dr. Brockton. I guess all I’m asking is that you keep an open mind. Doubt everything except what you can verify for yourself.”
“Including your claim of innocence?”
He considered, then nodded. “Fair enough.”
“I’m a scientist,” I said. “That’s how I work.”
He reached into his shirt pocket and handed me a piece of paper. “Here’s two phone numbers. Please call me if I can help in any way. Offhand, I don’t know who this guy was, but seems like he shouldn’t be too hard to track down.”
I took a moment to consider whether what I was about to say might compromise the investigation. I made my words and tone as neutral as I could. “So you’ve also heard that it was a man?”
O’Connor sat motionless for a moment, then turned to face me. “Ah. I’d just assumed. Possibly a woman? Well, that would certainly change the picture. Perhaps ol’ Lester Ballard is alive and well in Cooke County.”
“Lester Ballard?”
He waved off the question. “Never mind — I shouldn’t’ve said that. Silly and completely inappropriate. Seriously, though, I can think of several men in this county who might need killing, and a few more who wouldn’t bat an eye at doing some killing. But I can’t think of any local women who’ve gone missing recently.”
“How about not so recently? Tall? Blonde?”
His brow furrowed for a moment, and then the look of puzzlement vanished, replaced by a realization that was swift and terrible. His gaze — so clear and confident before — was suddenly stricken. He looked away. “Oh, Jesus, no,” he breathed, staring out across the valley. “Oh, God, not her.” Tears welled in his eyes, then rolled down his cheeks. He made no move to wipe them away, gave no sign that he even noticed them.
I waited what seemed an eternity. “Mr. O’Conner?”
He seemed not to hear, so I spoke his name again, louder. When he answered, he sounded years older and a lifetime away. “Yes?”
“Is Jim your first name?”
“No. Middle.”
“Mr. O’Conner — Lieutenant Thomas J. O’Conner — you want to tell me what your dog tag was doing around a dead woman’s neck?”
When he finally turned to face me once more, his eyes were as cold and lifeless as the waxy spheres I had washed from the face of the dead woman and rinsed down the drain of the morgue.
CHAPTER 11
Waylon and I rode back to the highway in silence. He didn’t duct-tape me this time, but he did cover my face with his rank cap again, giving me a look of sheepish apology as he doffed it and leaned over to hook it under my chin. O’Conner hadn’t spoken another word to either of us; he’d simply waved us away with that dead look still in his eyes. Waylon looked scared, like a child who’s seen his parents fighting or his mother weeping.
He left me sitting in the Cherokee, and a minute or so later Williams appeared, rubbing a visible bump on the back of his head. He, too, was silent the rest of the way into Jonesport. We seemed to have adopted a don’t-ask, don’t-tell policy regarding the last half-hour. I wondered if Williams was too embarrassed to speak of what had happened to him. I also suspected it was more than just coincidence that he’d made his pit stop where and when he did.
Kitchings was pacing his small office when we entered. “Where the hell have you-all been? You shoulda been here an hour ago.”
I kept quiet. Williams cleared his throat. “My fault, Sheriff. I pulled off to take a leak down by the river. Slipped on a wet rock and fell pretty hard. Musta been out longer than I thought.”
Kitchings studied Williams, who was rubbing his head and grimacing, then turned to study me. “He was gone quite a while,” I said. “I reckon I fell asleep. Next thing I knew, he was getting back in the car with that goose egg on his noggin.” I didn’t understand why I was covering for Williams; then it occurred to me that I might actually be covering for O’Conner. I didn’t understand that, either. Then again, maybe it was really myself I was covering for, somehow. But what had I done, or what was I thinking of doing, and why?
Kitchings looked disgusted. “Ever time I send him after you, something goes wrong. I don’t know which one of you’s to blame, but damned if I’ll let it happen again.”
“Sheriff, the minute we can wrap up this case, I’ll be glad to head back to Knoxville for good.”
“Yeah. Well. Whatcha got so far?”
“Well, it’s pretty much what I thought from the beginning: white female, twenty to twenty-three years, unusually tall — somewhere between five-ten and six feet in stature. Blonde hair, fairly long. No dental work; small, unfilled caries — cavities — in two of her molars and one of her canines. Only sign of skeletal trauma was multiple fractures of the hyoid.”
“Fractures of the what-oid?”
“The hyoid.”
“What’s that mean?”
“Means she was strangled. The hyoid’s that small, wiggly bone just above your Adam’s apple.” I demonstrated, and the sheriff and his deputy jiggled their hyoids from side to side. “Hers was crushed. Pretty sure sign of manual strangulation.”
He looked grim. “Anything else unusual?”
“Well, she was wearing a U.S. Army dog tag around her neck.” I paused, giving him a chance to process the information. “I took it to Art Bohanan, the resident fingerprint guru at KPD, in hopes he might pick up a print from whoever had his hands around her neck.”
Kitchings took in a breath and leaned toward me, his eyes blazing. “And?”
“Nothing.”
He exhaled. “Shoot. But was the tag still legible?” I nodded. “What’d it say?”
It was my turn to take a breath. “It said Lt. Thomas J. O’Conner.”
Kitchings turned away. “That cocksucking son of a bitch,” he whispered. “I am gonna nail his sorry ass to the cross.”
I waited. “Sheriff?” He turned. “Any idea who she was?”
I was conscious, at the edge of my field of view, of Williams, motionless but tightly coiled. Kitchings drew in a long breath, let it out, and shook his head. “Hard to say, Doc. Real hard to say.”
I was getting that impression. Maybe not so hard to know—at least, to insiders — but damned difficult to say, at least to outsiders. He was hiding something, I felt sure; I wondered if it was the girl’s identity, and if so, why. I turned to Williams with an inquiring look, but the deputy just shrugged and shook his head. I decided to play the card Jim O’Conner had just handed me. “Sheriff, does the name Lester Ballard mean anything to you?”
He looked up at the ceiling, as if the answer might be found somewhere in the peeling plaster. “Lester Ballard? No, can’t say as it does. Why?”
“Hard to say. It just sorta came up.”
He eyed me suspiciously, sensing some subtext but not sure what it was.
“There’s some Ballards over in Union County, I believe, but I don’t know of any Lester. I damn sure know of a Thomas J. O’Conner, though.”
I nodded. “Sheriff?” He looked annoyed. “What’s he like, this O’Conner?”
Kitchings made a face, shook his head. “Smartass. Thinks he’s better and brighter than the rest of us.”