Decker waited about twenty seconds and then followed him, staying on the other side of the street. Paralleling the man, he kept his gaze forward but his peripheral on Leopold.
Fifteen minutes later they had reached an area of Burlington that Decker knew well — seedy, disreputable, and known to harbor criminal elements with relish.
A dive bar was on the right. Leopold walked down the short set of wobbly brick steps and went inside.
Decker looked from side to side and then hustled across the street and down the same steps. He had been in this bar during a couple of stakeouts years ago and had come away empty each time. Maybe the third crack would be the charm.
Leopold was seated at the center of the bar. The interior was dark and dreary, the lights turned down low. Decker knew this was primarily because everything in the place was filthy and the owner probably thought that would be a turnoff to business. Decker doubted the patrons cared, though. When he had been here they were mostly stoned on liquor, drugs, or both.
He settled into a table at the back with a chest-high partition that he could see over but that provided him with some cover. He was hard to miss, and even though he had only met Leopold once, he had to assume the man would remember him. He had seemed to recognize Decker in the courtroom.
But that’s not right. We’ve met twice, according to Leopold. When I dissed him at that 7-Eleven. So why can’t I remember that when I can remember everything?
Leopold ordered a drink, and when the bartender delivered it he just stared at the glass for a long minute before raising it to his lips and taking a small sip before replacing it exactly in the same spot. He maneuvered the glass a bit, apparently to match the water ring on the bar.
This did not escape Decker’s notice.
Possibly OCD.
During his earlier meeting with the man Decker had noted the constant movement of Leopold’s hands. Was he really not all there? The PD said he was bipolar but was now back on his meds. Maybe they could finally have a cogent conversation.
A waitress came over to Decker. She was tall and thin with a sea of bleached blonde hair all done up in curls that nearly covered her face. The smell of the chemically treated hair wafted over him, sweet and slightly nauseating. He ordered a beer, which she brought to him a minute later.
He took a drink, wiped his mouth, and waited. There was no mirror behind the bar, so Leopold had no way to spot Decker behind him unless he turned around.
Twenty minutes passed and no one had approached Leopold. The man had taken exactly two more sips of his drink and was staring down at it as though he was unaware of how it had gotten there.
Decker left two bucks on his table, picked up his beer, walked up to the bar, and sat down next to him.
Leopold didn’t look over. He was still staring at his drink.
“Feel good to be out?” asked Decker. “Celebrating?”
Leopold looked at him. “You were in the courtroom. I saw you.”
“I was also in your jail cell.”
Leopold nodded, but the statement had not really seemed to register with him. He mumbled something Decker did not catch.
Decker’s gaze ran swiftly over the man. They had cleaned him up for his two court appearances and his clothes had been laundered, probably because the cops couldn’t stand the stink.
Leopold said in a louder voice, “In my jail cell. That’s right. We talked.”
“Yes, we did. So you recanted?”
Leopold looked alarmed. “I did what?”
“Took back your confession.”
Leopold picked up his drink and took another sip. “I don’t really drink. But this is good.”
“Celebrating, like I said.”
“What do I have to celebrate?” Leopold asked curiously.
“Not being charged with a triple homicide. Not being in jail. Both good things, wouldn’t you say?”
Leopold shrugged. “They fed me. I had a bed.”
“Is that why you confessed to the murders? For a bed and three squares?”
Leopold shrugged again.
“So you were in jail in Cranston on the night of the murders?”
“I guess I was. It was a long time ago. I don’t remember. There are lots of things I don’t remember.”
“Like your real name?”
Leopold glanced at him but didn’t really seem to register what Decker had said.
“Well, the judge wouldn’t have let you off if there was any doubt. It had to be your picture and prints on that arrest record.”
“The lawyer was very happy,” said Leopold, staring down at his drink.
“How did you even know about the murders?” Decker asked.
“I... I killed those people, didn’t I?” said Leopold in a timid voice that carried with it not a trace of conviction, or even, it seemed, understanding.
The bartender, a man in his fifties with a gut nearly the size of Decker’s though he was six inches shorter, looked up from the glass he was wiping and stared at Leopold for a long moment before looking away.
“That’s not what you told the judge this morning. You said the opposite of that. Did your lawyer tell you to say that?”
“He said I shouldn’t talk about any of this with anybody.”
Decker stared curiously at the man.
A glimmer of lucidity, of self-preservation amid a sea of insanity? Is it the meds talking?
“Well, then I guess you shouldn’t, unless you want to. But I don’t see a problem for you. Cops have zip. You were in jail at the time. The judge dismissed the case without prejudice, but they can’t re-charge you unless they have some evidence tying you to the crime. Now, they may go out and get some. Find an accomplice who did the killings for you for some reason. They may even make something up.”
“Can they do that?” asked Leopold in childlike wonder.
“Sure. They do it all the time. If they think you’re a bad guy they’ll do anything to nail you, get you off the streets. They’re sworn to protect and defend. You can see that, right?”
Leopold bent down and took another sip of his drink without lifting up the glass, like a dog lapping from its bowl.
“So are you, Sebastian?”
“Am I what?”
“A bad guy they need to get off the streets?”
“I don’t know.”
Decker felt his irritation start to rise. What had happened to his head might have rerouted his brain functions and caused other features to mentally intersect, but it had also robbed him of his ability to deal with bullshit, deceit, and generally squirrelly behavior. He liked straight lines, A to B, 1 to 2. He did not like back-and-forth that got one nowhere except riled up. This had been both a blessing and a curse as a cop.
“You said you killed those people. You told me you did. Told the cops you did. And this morning you said you didn’t. But sitting here at this bar you said you probably did even though you were in jail two towns over and couldn’t have even been at that house. So you can understand my confusion, can’t you? And the cops’? Where does the truth lie? That’s what we need to determine.”
Leopold turned to him and seemed to really see Decker for the first time.
“Why do you care?”
If Decker had dissed this guy at the 7-Eleven seventeen months ago, Decker hadn’t changed so much that Leopold wouldn’t recognize him. He was just fatter and uglier now. So either the guy was innocent or the asshole was lying. And Decker had no clear indication of which answer was correct.
“I took an interest in the case. Never thought they’d arrest somebody after all this time.”
“It was a cold case.”
The phrase caught Decker’s attention. “You know about cold cases?”
“I like the TV show. I watch it at the shelter sometimes.”