“There’s still his daughter Kim. She may have been in on it with him. If Norris thinks we can prove that, he’ll confess if we agree to treat her as a juvenile.”
“What do you have on her?”
“Wheeler talked to Sonia Steele, who was Robin’s best friend. According to Sonia, mother and daughter have fought for years.”
“Fought about what?”
“Whatever moms and teenage daughters fight about, which I guess for them was everything. Things got worse in the last six months or so. Kim started staying out all night and Robin was afraid she’d graduated from smoking dope to using meth. And a few weeks ago, Kim was expelled from school when she was caught with a box cutter in her purse.”
“How did Kim explain the box cutter?”
“She said she was going to use it to cut a bitch.”
“Damn, that white girl went ghetto in a hurry.”
“Not hard when you take the meth express. Sonia said that Robin was trying to get Kim into an alternative high school but that Kim refused to go.”
“Have you gotten into Kim’s computer and phone yet?”
“Wheeler is getting a search warrant for the computer and is going to serve the phone company with a subpoena today.”
“What about the hidden car keys? Any luck with that?”
“The one for the Camry was right where it was supposed to be, but there were no prints. Not even partials, smudges, or swirls. And nothing on the metal box it was kept in.”
“So,” Kalena said, “the killer wiped the key and the box clean, which supports Norris’s story. If he’d been behind the wheel, he’d have used his own key.”
“Unless he used the spare and wiped it clean to make it look like someone stole his car.”
“Which is a theory in search of proof. I hate to say it, but you’ve got to let him go. Whoever did this did a pretty good job of hiding his tracks, but you’ll find him.”
“What makes you so sure?”
“Aren’t you sure?”
“You know that I am.”
Kalena grinned. “Then, that’s good enough for me.”
Rossi gave instructions for Norris to be released and headed to the City Diner at Third and Grand, taking a window booth at the back, ordering coffee and telling the waitress to keep his cup full. He needed the caffeine to weed out the cobwebs from the night before and figure out what to do next.
He’d let Bonnie Long get to him, taking it out on a bottle of scotch he’d meant to save for a better occasion. He was halfway through the bottle before he decided he didn’t give a rat’s ass about the lawsuit. The lawyers for the department and the city would tie the case up in knots that would take years to untangle. When he finished the bottle he fell asleep, waking in the middle of the night and looking out the window, seeing the women and children from Bonnie’s patio standing outside, staring at him, then waking a second time, realizing the first time had been a dream.
He’d killed four men in the twenty years he’d been a cop. The department’s shrink had to clear him before letting him return to duty after each shooting, which meant giving him tests to find out how fucked-up he was, never telling him he was too fucked-up to go back. He figured they knew he was lying when he told them the nightmares never lasted more than a week or two and that his drinking wasn’t a problem but looked the other way because they needed a guy like him who wasn’t afraid to put a bad guy down. Their unspoken deal had worked for both sides for a long time.
Stirring his coffee, he chided himself for letting Bonnie Long knock him on his ass. She’d called him out, and for the first time in a long time he had to admit that there wasn’t as much of a difference between him and Alex Stone as he wanted-needed-to believe. They’d both worked the system.
Bonnie had proved tougher than he’d expected. Instead of getting scared and folding, she’d gotten angry and fought back. Walking through their house, seeing their family portrait and the home they’d created, he understood why. And if he had any doubts, seeing them together in the hospital took care of that. Their life together was worth fighting for, and he was no longer certain he had the stomach to take it away from them.
He sipped his coffee. It had gone cold with all the stirring. The waitress came by to freshen it, but he told her, “No, thanks,” and left. It was his day off. If he went back, Mitch Fowler would tell him there was no money in the budget for overtime and to get lost.
He stood in the parking lot, the day cool and crisp for late September. He clasped his hands together behind his neck, stretching the kinks out of his muscles. A day off. What the hell was he going to do with that? He knew the answer. He’d work the case on his own time.
The neighborhood canvass had been a bust. But a lot of those businesses had their own video surveillance systems that might have captured Robin and her killer. The cops doing the canvass hadn’t checked for that.
I-29 and Barry Road was a major intersection in the northland. There were shopping centers on three corners and two motels on the fourth. Continuing west of the intersection, the direction Robin Norris had chosen, there were a couple of churches, a high school, a park, and several residential neighborhoods, after which development thinned out, turning Barry Road into a little-traveled, unlit country lane by the time it reached the curve five miles farther west where Robin had been killed.
Rossi was confident that his basic premise was correct. While there were many different routes to the intersection, because Robin was unfamiliar with the area, she would have used I-29 to bring her to the junction with Barry Road. She placed her last-second call to Alex at ten fifteen p.m. She could have been anywhere on either side of I-29 prior to that. The timeline he had established for her movements had a gap of seven hours from the time she left the office to the time of the phone call. But the most important part of that period was the fifteen to thirty minutes before she called Alex. Something happened in that time frame to send her racing into the unknown darkness.
He started on the east side of I-29, working his way west, limiting himself to the places that would have been open that late in the evening, like the Hooters, Boston Market, and Starbucks. There was nothing on their videos.
There were more places to check on the west side of I-29, and the going was slow. Some managers refused to allow him to see their videos without a warrant and without authorization from someone higher up in the company food chain. Others confessed that their video cameras didn’t work. And still others told him that they recorded over their videos so that they had only the most recent twenty-four hours.
It was late afternoon when Rossi got to the motels. The manager on duty at the first one cited company policy requiring a subpoena or court order before allowing anyone to look at their security videos. Rossi told him that he’d be back the next day with a subpoena and warned him not to let anything happen to the video.
The manager at the second motel, an overweight, middle-aged man named Milton with a comb-over and beer breath, was more helpful, taking Rossi to his office and pulling up the video from the night of the murder. After watching for ten minutes, Rossi turned to the manager.
“Why are we only seeing three sides of the motel? What about the west side?”
Milton shrugged. “No cameras on that side.”
“Why not?”
“Can’t afford ’em.”
“Then why did I see cameras on the west side when I drove through the parking lot?”
Milton stuttered. “Uh, uh. . what I meant to say is that we got cameras but they don’t work.”
“Let me ask you a question, Milton. Suppose I get a search warrant and bring the department’s video crew up to take a look at those cameras. You suppose they’d work then?”
Milton paled. “Well. . I don’t know. .”
“Oh, Milton. I think we both know.”
“I could get in a lot of trouble.”