She stopped again, turned a circle. Puffed out a breath. “It’s possible it could have been done by one of them without being seen. Low risk, as if they had been seen, their kid goes here. Any handy excuse or reason to be on site would have passed without a blink.”
“But they weren’t seen.”
“No, they weren’t. Straffo was in his office off and on that morning, door closed. Did he slip out, get over here, and do it? Possibly-very tight, but possibly. Allika was shopping. Same deal. However, Allikawas seen on the day Williams was killed. Signed in, hung around.”
Again, he followed her reasoning. “If she decided to eliminate teachers, why run the parallel line with one and intersect on the other?”
“Exactly. I’ve got other reasons for and against, but that one sticks on me. Nobody’d have thought anything about it if she’d come into the school the day Foster was killed. Any excuse would’ve worked.”
She crossed to Foster’s classroom. Saw him again, lying on the floor in pools of his own waste. “These killings aren’t passionate and impulsive, and they’re pretty damn smart. Smarter for her-Allika-to have come in clean. I don’t like her for it, and she’s too emotional to have pulled this off. Straffo, now, he’s got the control and the focus, but not his wife. And still…”
“Something bothers you about her.”
“A few things. But I need to turn it around in my head some before I lay it out. Meanwhile, Foster comes back, goes in, closes his door for his daily lunch/lesson-planning deal. Drinks really bad hot chocolate. If he’d got medical attention in the first few minutes, he might have made it. But the killer’s banking on it going as it did.”
She stepped in for a moment, and again saw Foster. Alive now, going through his habitual routine. “He sits. Shoots off a cheerful little e-mail to his wife, gets working on the pop quiz he has planned. He drinks, he dies.”
“Painfully,” Roarke murmured, knowing what she was seeing.
“Painfully. Then the two kids, sprung from their study session on the main level, come up, see the janitor, speak with Dawson, show their passes, go to the classroom.”
“Question? Why is it Dawson doesn’t seem to blip on your radar?”
“No motive, no sense, no buzz. Teacher for twenty-odd years, fifteen right here. No current around him. He’s the…What is it? He’s the tortoise type.”
“Slow and steady.”
“Yeah.”
“Follow-up. You’re veering well away from Principal Mosebly, though you’ve shown she had motive.”
“Yeah.” Raking her fingers through her hair, Eve walked out of the classroom again. “I could be way off on her, but I can’t see her for it either. Murders on her sanctified ground, under her watch? It’s a nightmare for her, worse than having her sexual indiscretion revealed. She’s hemorrhaging students out of here, getting slammed with unpleasant media. Maybe she did it, maybe she thought she could spin it all and weather the damage. But it doesn’t ring. Still like to fry her for crying rape. Bitch.”
She frowned. “Where was I?”
“The two girls go to the classroom.”
“Right. If they’d come up fifteen minutes earlier, Foster’s got a chance. Instead, he’s gone and they run out screaming. Dawson runs over, sees what’s happened, calls the principal.”
“A fairly predictable series of events.”
“It is, isn’t it? Now we’ll take Williams.”
She led the way downstairs, through the fitness center, into the pool area.
“Not bad,” Roarke commented.
“Yeah, a pretty sweet setup for a kid or a teacher. In here, Williams intersects with Mosebly. Allika Straffo is on premises-no intersections reported-then, according to her statement, she went looking for Williams, and-using your terms-ran a parallel line with him and Mosebly, overhearing their argument.”
From where she stood, Eve could see the exits, entrances into the pool area. Staff. Students.
“She leaves, Mosebly leaves, more intersections with her and Hallywell, Dawson. Dawson comes in to see Williams, and for the second time in a week finds himself a dead body.”
“Quite the coincidence.”
“Yeah, yeah. But he and the nurse, who was also called to both scenes, they’re peripheral. Someone else reached the center of both these circles, undetected.” Eve stared down at the surface of the water. “Both times.”
“You’re sure it was the same killer?”
“Yeah. Yeah, I am. Pretty sure I know who the killer is, but I don’t have the why. I have to have the why on this one.”
“Well now, share.”
She nearly did, then shook her head. “Not yet, okay? I’d like to see what a geek like you comes up with without prejudicing the, ah, theorem. Want to talk it over with Mira, too. But that’s all gut right now. I’m going to look at the solid first, and track the go-cup angle.”
“Are we going shopping?”
“Just going to check a few of the places that sell that make and model, in a ten-block radius.”
“You said radius. Does that make you a geek?”
“Smart-ass.”
He took her hand. “That’s more like it.”
It didn’t blow the investigation open for her. Like the majority of cop work it was routine-repetitious and tedious.
She spoke to clerks, to managers, to the clueless and the chirpy. The item in question was a popular model, not the cheapest or the priciest. A good value, she was told endlessly. Practical, attractive, and hard-wearing.
“We had to order in another shipment two weeks before Christmas,” Eve was told by an eager-to-help assistant manager. “Great stocking stuffer or emergency gift, and we had them on sale. Couldn’t keep them on the shelf. We’re still selling them briskly. Valentine’s Day. Free inscription inside a heart, or with heart motif.”
“Adorable. You’ve got records. I’m interested in one of these models inscribed to ‘Craig.’” She spelled it out.
“Sure, I’ll look it up. If they went credit or debit, we’d have a record. Cash, we wouldn’t. Most people don’t do cash because once they come in, they end up buying multiple items.”
“Uh-huh.” Eve glanced around, noticed that Roarke was roaming, browsing, examining. All the things that people who actually liked to shop ended up doing.
“I’m really sorry.” And the guy actually looked it. “We don’t have a sale of that model-or any other-with an inscription added that says ‘Craig’-any spelling-during the last thirty days.”
“Go back another thirty.”
“Oh. Um.” He looked distressed now. “That’ll take me a few minutes, and on the main unit in the back, since I’d have to go back into last year. You’ll have to excuse me.”
“Done. I’ll wait.” She turned now and saw that Roarke wasn’t just shopping, he was buying. She crossed the store, winding around displays. “What are you doing?”
“I’m making a purchase.”
“How? Why?” It must be a kind of sickness, she decided. “You already own six of everything.”
He only smiled, and took the bag from the clerk. “Thank you. And now,” he said to Eve, “it appears I have more of everything. Any luck?”
“No. Still checking. It was always going to come down to cash. Killer thinks clearly. Not going to leave a paper trail. It’s easy to breeze into one of these places, buy something, add the fee for inscription, pass some paper money, and walk out. Nobody’s going to remember you.”
The clerk came back, dripping apology. “I’m so sorry, I couldn’t find what you’re looking for. I can ask around, see if any of the clerks remember.”
“Yeah, great. Thanks. You can contact me if you find out anything.” She dug out a card, passed it over.
“That’s one to cross off,” she said when they were outside. “Had to be done, though.”
“Here.” He took out a pair of gloves from the shopping bag. “To replace the ones you’ve lost since Christmas.”