“All it’s missing is that sickle or whatever he carries,” says Andy.
Jane looks at her partner. “This is . . . the Grim Reaper?”
“Jane, they want you back inside.”
Jane heads back in. Ria Peraino, a forensics technician with the West Suburban Major Crimes Task Force, is standing on the landing halfway up the staircase to the second floor. Jane worked with Ria on a sexual assault a couple of years ago and took a shine to her.
“We found something you’ll want to see,” she sings.
Jane takes the stairs carefully, Andy Tate following her. When they reach the second floor, Ria stops them. “Nobody moves except me,” she says. “We have blood spatter all over this landing.”
“Roger that,” says Jane.
Ria carefully steps over to the far wall, stepping around evidence markers. Flush against the wall, below colorful impressionist artwork left undisturbed, is a small antique wood table, a warm brown color, probably with a fancy name like cappuccino, with scalloped legs and a storage shelf below that is empty. The table appears to have served as the base for a vase of fresh flowers (lying in pieces on the floor) and a framed photograph of Conrad and Lauren Betancourt (knocked flat on its face).
Ria looks at them with a sheepish grin, like a game-show hostess about to unveil the grand prize. With a flourish, she lifts the wood table straight up, revealing what was lying below it, nearly flush against the wall.
“A phone,” Jane mumbles.
A hot-pink phone.
“Andy, call the number for Lauren’s cell phone again,” Jane says. “The one registered with the Village.”
They hear a buzzing coming from the evidence bag holding the cell phone registered to Lauren Betancourt, one they found on the kitchen counter.
“So what is this phone?” Jane mumbles.
“That’s a burner if I’ve ever seen one,” says Andy. “That’s no fancy iPhone or Samsung that a rich woman like Lauren Betancourt would carry around. That, my friend, is a love phone.”
BEFORE HALLOWEEN August
18
Simon
“You wanted to see me, Dean?” I say.
“Oh, Simon, good. Come, sit.” Today, Dean Comstock is wearing a purple bow tie, matching the law school’s color. I’ve never worn a bow tie in my life. I hate bow ties.
He could come to my office. It wouldn’t kill him. But it would alter the dynamic. As if he doesn’t already hold enough power over me.
“I hope you’ve had a chance to think about what we discussed.”
Yeah, we discussed that you wanted me to go away quietly and let your benefactor’s son, Reid Southern, waltz into the full professor slot without opposition.
“I promised you I’d consider it carefully,” I say. “I am.”
And yet, I still haven’t withdrawn my name for full professor. I haven’t completed my application, haven’t submitted my materials, but I still could. I still have a few weeks left before the deadline.
Why, exactly, I have not officially pulled the plug is anyone’s guess. Maybe it’s my passive-aggressive protest against the dean strong-arming me, making him wait to wonder whether I will submit my materials at the last minute and defy him.
Or maybe I really am going to submit my materials. Vicky has made her opinion clear, and she has a way of moving the needle with me.
The dean apparently had something different in mind. He figured I would formally withdraw my name immediately after our talk before summer break. Who knows, maybe he promised as much to Reid Southern’s daddy, Mr. Big Bucks. Which means I am making him look bad. Can’t have that, can we?
“I hope you understand that I had your best interests in mind, truly,” says he.
I nod my head, because if I tried to give a socially acceptable response, I’d probably vomit.
“Simon.” With that, he leans back in his big leather chair. “I’m sure you can understand that these days, the law school has to be exceptionally careful about questions of character among its faculty.”
Then why are you here, Dean?
“Of course,” I say.
“These days, as you know, we have to be exceptionally careful not only about a candidate’s character but about his . . . his past.”
I blink.
Then I do a slow burn, as he watches me.
“Why, we’ve all seen examples of people losing their positions of prominence these days for things that happened as long as . . . twelve, even fifteen years ago.”
Twelve years ago. Fifteen years ago. He didn’t pick those numbers at random.
You’ve been busy, Dean.
“Particularly when the choice of candidates is so close, such as between you and Reid,” he says. “The smallest thing could make the difference.”
He’s smiling. He’s actually enjoying himself.
“Of course, if the choice were obvious, as it might be if you were to apply next time,” he says with that condescending ponderous look, “it might not be necessary to dig so deeply. Why, I doubt anyone would so much as inquire what a young fellow was doing with himself some twelve years ago.”
Some twelve years ago. Some twelve years ago.
“But in a close competition like this one . . .” I say, trying to keep my voice steady.
He opens his hand. “People naturally look for tiebreakers, for a slight edge to one side. They dig more deeply. They look into the candidate’s entire history. Even things that the candidate forgot to mention back when he first applied to the school.”
My jaw clenching so tight it hurts. My teeth grinding together. Black spots clouding my vision.
“I was under no obligation to disclose that,” I whisper.
“Understood, Simon, understood,” he says. “And the presumption of innocence, as well. Nothing was ever proven, obviously. I just wonder . . . how things will go for you if that were to be publicly disclosed? The whole court fight and everything.”
Yes, the whole court fight and everything.
“Which is why I say again, I have only your best interests in mind when I suggest that now might not be the best time to apply for the position.”
My eyes slowly rise to his. To his credit, he doesn’t look away. He holds that smarmy smirk, but he doesn’t look away.
“And if I withdraw my application?” I say.
“Well, then, there’s no need for anyone to be concerned with ancient history,” he says. “Which, as far as I’m concerned, is exactly what it is.”
19
Vicky
I get back from the day shift at the shelter—buying groceries, a group counseling session, trying to fix the broken A/C window unit in the dorm upstairs—near six o’clock. I pull into the alley behind the house and park in the alley garage. I walk through the backyard, the tall shrubbery and its privacy, and through the rear door of the house to the alarm’s ding-dong and sultry electronic female voice, Back door.
I don’t hear Simon banging around. Not downstairs in the den or upstairs.
“Hello?” I call out.
I put down my bag and wander toward the stairs. “Simon?”
Nothing. The shower isn’t running. I’d hear the water.
“Simon Peter Dobias!”
Maybe he’s not home. He said he would be. Maybe he decided to go for a run. That boy and his running.
I walk up the stairs. “Hello-o,” I sing.
I hear something. Something above. I go into the hallway. The stairs have been pulled down from the ceiling. He’s on the rooftop deck.