Monday was the day she disappeared.
Teffinger dialed the people who had called the woman and got their stories as to why they called, what they talked about, and whether Chase mentioned anything about meeting a man for sex.
He took notes but none of substance.
One of the calls came from a payphone north of Pueblo.
Teffinger dialed the number.
No one answered.
The oversized industrial clock on the wall, the one with the twitchy second hand, said 9:10 p.m. Overhead, a fluorescent bulb hummed. He stood up, dumped a cup of cold coffee into the snake plant, and turned the lights out as he left.
Then he headed south on I-25.
He was passing through the tech center, trying to stay out of the way of maniac drivers, when Sydney called for an update. He filled her in and was almost about to hang up when a stray thought entered his head.
“Hey,” he said, “before you go, help me out on something. One of the calls to Chase on Monday came from a public phone north of Pueblo. For some reason, that’s been nagging me. It means something but I don’t know what.”
“Pueblo?”
“Right.”
“We have a missing person down there,” she said.
Teffinger knew he should have remembered that as soon as she said it. Early in the case he’d asked Sydney to keep track of anyone who turned up missing in Colorado. She subsequently told him about a Pueblo woman. He’d dismissed it as not much more than a curiosity at the time because the location was too far away and all of the bodies found at the railroad spur had been white.
“I remember,” he said. “What’s her status? Did she ever show back up?”
“I don’t know.”
“It’d be interesting, if she hasn’t.”
Fifteen minutes later, when he arrived at Davica’s, a strange car was in the driveway-a white Jaguar. When he knocked on the door, no one answered. He tried the doorknob, found it unlocked, and stepped inside.
He called for her.
No answer.
He grabbed a Bud Light out of the fridge, took off his weapon and put it on the kitchen counter, and finally found Davica out back in the hot tub, naked, in the company of another equally naked and well-endowed young woman with long, wet, jet-black hair.
“Hey, stranger,” Davica said. “We’ve been waiting for you. This is Monica.”
The woman stood up, displaying a totally shaved body, and leaned over to shake his hand. When she did, she suddenly grabbed his arm with both hands and yanked him into the water.
When his head came to the surface both of the women were laughing.
“Be careful of her,” Davica warned. “She has a bit of a wild side.”
Teffinger shook water out of his ear.
“So I see.”
“Now get out of those clothes,” she said.
He hesitated.
“You said I could have another woman,” Davica said. “This is her. But we haven’t done anything yet, because I’m not going to do anything unless you’re with me.” She squeezed Monica’s breast and then looked back at Teffinger. “And now you are.”
The two women kissed.
Long and deep and passionately.
Then Davica looked back at Teffinger.
“You can join in or you can watch. Your choice.”
76
DAY ELEVEN-SEPTEMBER 15
THURSDAY EVENING
When Aspen arrived back at the law firm after meeting with Sarah Ringer at CU, she called Blake Gray and asked if his office door was still open.
He laughed.
“Yeah, but not until tonight,” he said. “I’m totally slammed all day.”
“Tonight’s fine. That way if you fire me, at least I can sleep in.”
“Let me tell you where I’ll be.”
That evening, after supper, she headed to Chatfield State Park, paid an expensive entry fee, and then drove all the way around the lake to the marina. The Accord ran sluggish, as if twenty horses had been pulled from under the hood and were now being dragged behind instead.
“If you break, I’m leaving your ass here,” she said.
The car sputtered.
“I’m serious,” she added.
The marina turned out to be a lot bigger than she expected. There must have been three or four hundred slips. Tons of geese walked around, not showing a bit of fear. A gentle but steady wind blew out of the northwest, surprisingly warm. Blake Gray met her at the gate, escorted her to a thirty-foot sailboat moored at the end of D-Dock, and helped her aboard.
“When I want to forget everything, this is where I come,” he said. “This isn’t mine, by the way. It belongs to Doug Willoughby, the CEO of Omega.”
Aspen recognized the name-Omega.
That was the client that had the big antitrust judgment against Tomorrow, Inc. The one Derek Bennett represented. The one that Robert Yates was going to take over, before he and his daughter got killed while playing Frisbee in Central Park.
Aspen couldn’t believe the vessel and headed for the cabin.
“Can I go inside?” she asked.
“Absolutely.”
Fifteen minutes later they had the boat on the lake, tilted fifteen degrees to starboard, with the mainsail and jib taut with wind.
He let her take the wheel, disappeared below, and then returned with two glasses of white wine.
They passed a small fishing boat.
“See that guy over there, baiting that hook?” Blake asked. “I’ve known him for years. At one time he was just an amateur baiter. Now he’s a master baiter.”
She laughed.
They sailed for over an hour, long enough for her to learn how to work the lines. Then they dropped the sails and bobbed. A flock of eight or ten geese floated over looking for a handout. Blake went below and returned with a loaf of bread. Aspen threw pieces into the water and decided that this was as good a time as any to get to the point of the meeting.
“I had some information fall into my lap today,” she said. “The long and short of it is, Rachel was sexually assaulted in her office on March 14th. It happened late, after nine o’clock or thereabouts. It wasn’t rape but it was definitely an assault.”
Blake frowned.
“What makes you think so?”
“Rachel’s sister told me.”
“Sarah?”
“Right.”
He took a long swallow of wine. “I already know about it,” he said. “She reported it to me back when it happened.”
“She did?”
“Yes,” he said.
“Who did it to her?”
He looked blank. “She wouldn’t say. I told her to take it to the police but she didn’t want to. She was embarrassed and felt it would hurt her career if the word got out. She didn’t want me to press it so, out of respect for her and against my better judgment, I didn’t.”
“She disappeared just two weeks after that,” Aspen said.
“I know.”
“There’s got to be a connection.”
He didn’t seem convinced.
“Maybe, in theory. But keep in mind that she got killed by some psycho maniac who cut her head off,” he said. “That’s a guy in a totally different league.”
She stopped throwing bread.
Every goose on the water watched her, waiting.
She wasn’t sure whether she should bring up what she was about to, but couldn’t hold back any longer.
“I followed Derek Bennett the other night,” she said. “He goes to a place called Tops amp; Bottoms, which is an S amp;M place, and sticks pins into women.”
Blake looked shocked and studied her face, as if trying to decide if she was messing with him.
She wasn’t.
“That’s the kind of guy who could saw someone’s head off,” she said.
Blake didn’t disagree.
“Assume he’s the one who sexually assaulted Rachel,” she said. “Two weeks pass and she hasn’t reported it to the police yet, but then he finds out that she’s in the process of leaving the firm. He starts to get nervous about whether she’ll change her mind after he doesn’t have so much of a grip on her any more.”