"And with the same gun. They found the other man in the corner of the same room, dead of an apparently self-inflicted wound. Again, the same gun."
"He shot his partner and then committed suicide."
"That's how it was supposed to look."
"But you don't think that's what happened?"
"No, I don't," I said. "I think someone else killed both of them."
She looked at me, then down at her coffee cup. She said, "Caf and Decaf."
"I beg your pardon?"
"The coffee cups," she said. "One he's wide awake, the other he's zonked out on his doghouse. My father called them Caf and Decaf."
"Oh."
"Not that either cup ever had decaf in it. Both my parents thought of decaffeinated coffee as a crime against nature."
"They wouldn't get an argument from me."
"I've always thought there was something wrong with it. The solution. It was too quick, too easy. But then I'd have to think that, wouldn't I? That there was more to it than showed on the surface, because these were my parents, and I saw them in the morning and the next time I saw them they were dead." She leaned forward. "My reasons are personal, they come from inside me, from my need to believe things happen for a reason. Have you heard of a book called When Bad Things Happen to Good People?"
"I've heard of it. I haven't read it."
"Well, you're welcome to a copy. Three different people sent me copies of it, can you believe it? I tried one of them but I didn't get very far. Maybe I should try the other two. But for now I think I'm better off in the fourteenth century. What makes you think the death scene was staged?"
Because it felt wrong, I thought, and maybe she wasn't the only one with a need to believe. But I picked something specific.
"The door was bolted," I said.
"From within, you said."
"With a two-dollar bolt from the hardware store."
"And that means someone outside did it?"
"The bolt was shiny," I said.
"I don't follow you."
"I never saw the bolt," I said, "but the cop I talked to did, and he described it down to the gleam of its brass finish. That meant it was new, because the painters who slap a coat on apartments like that one don't paint around the trim. They never heard of masking tape, they paint over everything- electric cords and outlets, switchplates, hardware, everything. If that bolt had been there when Jason Bierman moved into that apartment, it would have been painted the same washed-out white as the walls and windowsills and ceiling."
"But it wasn't."
"No."
"Which means what, exactly?"
"Which means Bierman would have had to buy it himself, and I can't see him doing it. The guy lived in a dump and made zero improvements to the place. He slept on a mattress on the floor. He didn't have anything that anybody might want to steal. Once he'd bought the bolt, he'd have needed tools to attach it. I just can't see him taking the trouble."
She thought about it. "You didn't actually see the bolt," she said. "Maybe the cop just said 'shiny brass bolt' because you think of them that way, even if this particular one was painted. I mean- "
"It hadn't been installed when the place got its last paint job," I said. "I saw where it had been, with the screw holes, and there was no interruption in the paint like you'd get if there'd been something there that was painted over. There had been a bolt there, that's why they had to kick the door in, and it had been installed during Bierman's tenancy."
"And you say he had no reason to install it."
"None."
"So someone else installed it."
"I think so, yes."
"Bought it and installed it so that it would look like murder and suicide. But actually you're saying it was two murders."
"Yes."
"Someone else killed both of them. I'm not going to say their names."
"All right."
"I'm just not going to, not for the time being. They killed my parents, and somebody else killed them." She frowned. "They were the ones who killed my parents, weren't they?"
"One of them was." She hadn't said I couldn't say their names. "Carl Ivanko. I'm not sure about Bierman."
"The one who had the apartment."
"Right."
"And who shot the other one, and then killed himself, or at least that's what we were supposed to think. Wouldn't we have thought that anyway, even without the bolt?"
"Yes."
"Because if you find two men dead like that, and it looks as though one of them shot the other one and then committed suicide, you'd think that, wouldn't you?"
"Yes. The bolt was just to be cute."
"Cute?"
"Showing off," I said. "Gilding the lily."
"I see. If he did it that way, though, killed them both and locked and bolted the door- "
"Then how did he get out?"
"That's what I was wondering. Through the window?"
I nodded. "The windows were closed, but this was the ground floor. It wouldn't have been terribly difficult to climb out a window and close it after yourself. You couldn't engage the window locks, assuming they worked, but I don't think there's any way to tell whether the windows were locked or not. The first thing the responding patrolmen would have done was open all the windows."
"Are they supposed to do that?"
"No," I said, "definitely not, but they were in a small apartment with two dead bodies that had been in there for several days, and I don't know a lot of cops who wouldn't have opened a window without thinking twice."
"So the locked bolt was supposed to prove one thing," she said, "and instead it proves another."
"Prove's the wrong word," I said, "because it doesn't really prove anything. It suggested something to me, but I was probably pretty suggestible. I went in there looking for something to be wrong."
"And the bolt was it."
"The bolt was part of it."
"What else?"
"The way Ivanko was shot. Two in the torso, one in the head."
"The same as my father."
"Yes and no."
"What do you mean?"
"I don't want to be too graphic here," I said.
"I walked in," she said. "I found them. You can be as graphic as you want."
I said, "Your father was shot from the front. Two bullets in the chest from a couple of feet away, then a third fired point-blank into his temple."
"He was probably already dead by then."
Maybe, maybe not, but let her think so. "Ivanko was shot from behind. Two bullets, one of which got the heart, both shots leaving powder burns on his shirt. Then the killer knelt down next to him and put a third bullet in his temple."
"So?"
"The killer didn't want Ivanko to know what was coming. He deliberately took him by surprise, followed him into the bedroom and shot him in the back. That doesn't sound like somebody who just had a sudden attack of conscience, or a mental breakdown."
"Suppose he decided he just wanted to keep everything for himself?"
"The score wasn't big enough to make anybody kill his partner in order to hog it all. The killing was done in a calculated manner, but it wasn't the act of a calculating man. And the ritual of three bullets, two in the back and one in the temple, was an obvious signature, but there was no real reason for it except as a signature. Why just two shots in the back? Why not empty the gun into him? The only reason that jumps out is that he'd shot your father twice in the chest. He wanted to establish a pattern."
"A third man," she said. "It sounds like a mole in a British spy novel. Or wasn't there an old movie with that title? An Orson Welles movie?"