“The British have an odd sense of humor,” I said. “Mr. Singer? Perry Singer?”
The old man started. “Do I know you?” he asked in a soft Southern accent.
We showed him our badges and IDs and told him we were working on a homicide investigation.
“Just tying up some loose ends,” Sampson said. “Nothing to be alarmed about.”
Mr. Singer shrugged. “Okay. How can I help?”
After showing him the tie in the evidence bag, I said, “Do you own one of these ties? It’s a Kiton, the kind they sell at La Cravate.”
He fumbled in his breast pocket, found glasses, and put them on. The old man studied the tie and then nodded. “I do own one. Or did. I haven’t seen it in a while. Besides, this style of tie is almost out of fashion these days.”
“But you said you haven’t seen the tie in a while?” Sampson asked.
Mr. Singer seemed to find that confusing and then amusing.
“That’s right, but who knows, it might be in my closet here or in Palm Beach or La Jolla. I have at least four thousand ties in my collection.”
“So this could be your tie?” I asked.
“Well, I suppose it could have been stolen from me. But I most certainly did not tie that knot. It’s a four-in-hand, and I’ve always preferred a Pratt or, if I’m feeling particularly jaunty, a Van Wijk.”
Before I could reply, I happened to glance up to see FBI special agent Kyle Craig coming through the door. He spotted me and appeared taken aback.
I excused myself and went over. “Kyle?”
“What are you doing here, Alex?”
“Interviewing an octogenarian about his ties.”
Craig curled his lip. “Perry Singer?”
That surprised me. “Yes.”
“You sent over by the British guy?”
“Yep.”
“I don’t like that one, that Bernard.”
“Neither does John. How are you involved?”
“Behavioral picked up the case now that there are three,” he said quickly. “I was looking at pics of the ties and decided to go to the only tie store that was local.”
“Great minds think alike.”
“There anything to him being involved?”
I shook my head. “Mr. Singer owns a tie that matches the one used to kill Kissy Raider but says he hasn’t seen it in a while. Although that doesn’t mean anything; he evidently has four thousand ties spread across closets in three homes.” I also told him about the knots. “Are the other knots four-in-hand?”
Craig shrugged. “I don’t know the difference. I just do the one my dad taught me.”
“The one Nana Mama taught me is a Windsor knot, I think.”
“Dead end, then?”
I glanced over at Sampson and saw him shake Mr. Singer’s feeble hand and then pick up the evidence bag.
“Sure looks that way,” I said.
Chapter 15
We were stalled in the Kissy Raider investigation for another week, and then files and reports came back from labs and in response to requests we’d made to the FBI and various law enforcement agencies in Florida and California. I sat at my desk and read.
It was interesting to me that each of the three victims had had a bad relationship with the father of her child. Each woman had decided to go off on her own with her young son.
Althea Marks, the woman found in Newport Beach, had a six-year-old son. Samantha Bell, the victim found in Boca Raton, had a five-year-old boy. Kissy Raider’s son, Max, was five when his mother was strangled to death.
Kissy’s sister, Crystal, had come north almost immediately to claim her nephew. Crystal had been as forthcoming with information as she could be, given that her sister had run away from home at sixteen to be with Ricco, her biker boyfriend, who’d “treated her like crap and knocked her up.”
Crystal said that once her sister had seen Ricco’s true colors, she’d walked out on him and gone to a shelter to start a new life. And she was proud of it, even if she’d had to work in places like the Stallion Club to support her son.
I checked to see if the other two women had worked in strip joints, but they hadn’t. Althea Marks had been a waitress in various restaurants for years; her last stint was at a burger joint in Laguna Niguel, California.
Samantha Bell had worked in everything from retail to construction to bartending at a Hooters.
To my surprise, the Hooters was in Laurel, Maryland. According to a report I got from the Florida detectives working the case, Ms. Bell had been in the Washington, DC, area three years before. She’d left the job at Hooters ten weeks prior to her strangulation.
I went back to Marks’s file from the Newport Beach detectives and then to an FBI dossier Kyle Craig had sent over. I found her application to the burger joint and looked at what she’d listed as prior employment.
Five months before her death, Marks had left a job at a Hooters in Fairfax, Virginia, after spending nearly a year in the area.
Feeling like I might be onto something, I started digging madly through Kissy Raider’s files. I found her job application for the Stallion Club, but she’d written Not applicable to the question about previous employment.
So I called Crystal Raider in Florida.
When Kissy’s sister answered, I could hear kids yelling. “This is Crystal,” she said wearily.
“This is Detective Cross.”
“Yes?” she said, perking up. “Have you found him?”
“We’re still hunting,” I said.
“Oh,” she said, disappointed. Then she asked anxiously, “How long will it take to find him? You don’t know what it’s like waking up day after day not knowing.”
“Actually, I do know,” I said. “My wife was murdered several years back, and her killer is still at large. Just like my wife’s case, Kissy’s investigation will take as long as it takes. We don’t give up on capital crimes. Ever.”
She sighed. “How do you live with it? Not knowing?”
“You learn to box it up and put it away until it has to be opened.”
“I can’t do that yet.”
“I wouldn’t expect you to.”
Crystal sighed again. “How can I help?”
“Did Kissy ever work at a Hooters? I mean, before the Stallion Club?”
“No, I... wait. Yeah, maybe. I think she said she was there only a couple of weeks. Some creep kept hitting on her, so she quit.”
“To go work at a strip bar?” I asked.
Crystal’s voice was colder when she replied. “Kissy felt safe at the Stallion Club. They had bodyguards for the girls. Far as I know, that’s not the case at Hooters.”
“I’m sorry if I sounded snarky there. I’m just trying to understand the situation.”
There was silence before she said, “Okay.”
“Do you remember which Hooters she worked at?”
“I don’t know. Somewhere around DC. How many can there be?”
Chapter 16
For the record, there are seven Hooters restaurants in the DC area, including one on Seventh Street in the northwest part of the District.
Sampson and I went there on a muggy June evening, but when we showed the manager a picture of Kissy, he said he’d never seen her before. We asked if he could search the Hooters chain for her, but he said we’d have to take that up with corporate in Atlanta.
It was nearly seven p.m., which meant it was highly unlikely that the Hooters’ bean counters would still be at their desks, so we decided to go to the franchises in Laurel, Maryland, and Fairfax, Virginia, where we knew for certain two of the victims had worked.
Alice Fox, the manager at the Laurel location, recognized Samantha Bell right away. “Sure,” she said. “Got a young kid. Hard worker, that one. Why?”