It’s cold out, and we have an infant in here. And no funds for a repair call.
I manage to get the radiator working. The pin inside the valve head is stuck in the down position, so I wrench it free and put some lubricant on it to stop it from happening again. Not that hard to fix, but every move I make, I’m reminded of that kick to the ribs from Gavin.
Once the radiator is gurgling and hissing, my work is done.
I look out the window again. Will Gavin come tonight?
Or will he wait until tomorrow, November 3, D-Day?
Gavin is a problem. He was a mistake on my part. A loose end.
I hate loose ends.
90
Jane
“Mrs. Bilson, this is exactly why we called this emergency town hall meeting,” says Alex Galanis, Village president, sitting at the middle of a long table. “So we could be transparent. As transparent as the chief is able to be with an ongoing investigation.”
Jane smirks. They called the emergency board meeting at eight in the morning, hoping fewer people would attend. It didn’t work. The place is standing room only, with more than four hundred people crammed in there. She’s glad she isn’t there herself, instead sitting in the chief’s office, watching the whole thing through closed-circuit TV with her partner, Andy Tate.
“Well, it’s November third,” says Mrs. Bilson, standing at a podium. “You’ve had two whole days to investigate, and it feels like nobody knows anything. Or at least you won’t tell us anything. We don’t even know how she died. Is it true she was hung?”
“Hanged,” says Jane, ever the grammarian. Andy throws her an elbow.
“. . . not to compromise the investigation by releasing details,” says Chief Carlyle. “We can say it was a homicide. I’d rather not go further.”
“Well, do you have any leads? Is it true he was wearing a costume?”
“Again, ma’am . . .”
“God am I glad I’m not in there,” says Andy. “Remind me to never be chief of a police force.”
“My name is Donald Fairweather. We’re hearing that it was some gang initiation thing like we had a couple years ago with the carjackings. Is that true?”
Jane covers her eyes with her hand. Three summers ago, the Village did experience a rash of car thefts and carjackings tied to a west-side gang, an initiation ritual. It took coordination from four different western suburbs and Chicago P.D. to finally crack down on it.
“Well, I think we’d all like to know if some Chicago gang has decided to come into our town and start killing people!”
“Sir—Mr. Fairweather—we are confident, as we’ve said before, that this murder was a domestic issue. It was unique to the Betancourt family.”
“Does that mean you’re close to solving it?”
“That’s what I was afraid of,” says Jane. Shit, what do these people want? A sloppy rush to judgment or good, hard detective work?
“People are rattled,” says Andy. “They’re not used to this.”
“Are you increasing patrols around the Village?”
“We don’t believe that’s necessary,” says the chief. “We don’t believe there’s a continuing threat to the community.”
“But that”—President Galanis opens his hands, looks at the chief—“that’s something we could do, right, Chief?”
Oh, great. The chief’s gonna love that. Sure, Mr. President, give us the funds and we can do all the patrols you want.
She checks her watch. She and Andy are due downtown to meet with Sergeant Cheronis of Chicago P.D.
“Then why haven’t you made an arrest, if you’re so sure?”
“We moved here to get away from violence in Chicago,” says another woman, whose name Jane missed. “Is it coming here now? Is this a new normal?”
For at least the fourth time, the chief says, “We do not believe there is a further threat to the community. We believe this crime was personal to the Betancourt family.”
And then, decorum and protocol be damned, a number of residents shout at once, all variants of the same question:
“So when are you going to solve it?”
91
Simon
Thursday morning. Day three of the investigation, day three of November.
I was supposed to meet with Jane Burke last night. Got myself all steeled up, practiced and ready, and then she canceled on me.
Why, I don’t know. Did they find Christian’s body and the green phone? Pretty good chance of that. And maybe that will be that. It really should be. Christian has the phone that was texting back and forth with Lauren at regularly scheduled times. He has the Grim Reaper costume and the muddy boots in his apartment. It’s hard to see coming up with any different story: Christian was sleeping with Lauren, she dumped him, he couldn’t handle it, he came to her house and killed her.
At some point soon, if not already, they’ll have the CSLI from both phones. And if they’ve already found Christian, they’ll know that all the texts were sent from either his house in Wicker Park or his office downtown.
That’s gotta be game, set, match, right?
I’m home today, alone at my house. I could’ve gone into work, but Jane wasn’t sure what time she wanted to talk to me, and I didn’t want her coming to my law school for the interview. So I told her I’d work from home and she could come whenever. Felt like a casual, innocent-y way to handle it.
I leaf through the morning paper I fetched from a convenience store on Division. The Tribune story doesn’t say much new about Lauren’s murder. Too early, I presume. Nothing about Christian Newsome at all. One of many people who die in the city every day.
I still won’t go online. I’m left with the morning newspaper only, and thus little information. It’s unsettling, but I knew that going in. I knew the “days after” would be anxious and frustrating and scary. At this point, I just have to believe in my plan. Easier said than done—
My doorbell rings. I’m at my computer upstairs, answering a student’s email.
Jane had told me she’d call with a heads-up before coming by. I check my phone to see if I missed a call. I didn’t.
I go to the window and look down at the front porch.
A man, dressed in a suit, erect posture, short hair.
I head downstairs and open the door.
“Simon Dobias?” he says.
“Yes?”
He pulls credentials out of his pocket and flashes them.
“I’m Special Agent John Crane with the FBI,” he says. “I’d like to speak with you about Lauren Betancourt. And your wife, Vicky.”
“I— What did you say your name was?” I ask.
He opens his credentials again, a flip of the wallet. “I’m Special Agent John Crane.”
No, you’re not. You’re Gavin Finley, Christian’s buddy.
“Sure,” I say, “come on in.”
92
Jane
Jane Burke and Andy Tate sit inside an interview room adjoining the detectives’ squad room in the Fourteenth District of Chicago P.D. at ten in the morning.
“Nicholas Christopher Caracci,” Jane says, flipping through the pages. “Aka Collin Daniels, aka Richard Nantz, aka David Jenner . . .” She closes up the file.