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headed out with Walker to her house now.  Can you meet us?"

"Where's the house?"

"Up in the west hills," he said.

"Can you swing by the courthouse and get me?  I took the bus in today."

Schlepping across downtown to check out a car from the county lot would

take longer than the short ride from the courthouse up into the

hills.

"Damn, Kincaid.  What are you doing riding the bus?  We got to get you

livin' a little larger."

"I ride the bus because I'm a good citizen, Raymond.  I recycle too."

"You are definitely a different kind of DA, girl.  Riding the damn city

bus with the rest of the citizens.  I'll swing in front on Fourth in

about ten minutes.  Cool?"

"Yep.  See you then."

I used the ten minutes to make sure nothing urgent was waiting for me

back in the office and to put something called mud in my

moisture-crazed hair for the trip.  My best friend, Grace, is a

hairdresser.  She cut my dark brown locks (the bottle says coffee, to

be exact) into a wispy little do a few months back, and to her chagrin

I was in the ugly process of growing it back into my boring reliable

shoulder-length bob.  According to her, all I needed was the right

product to see my hair through its growing pangs.  I must have been

doing something wrong with the mud, because by the time my fingers were

done crimping and twisting, I looked like Neil Young in drag.

I left the courthouse just as Johnson and Walker pulled up in a white

unmarked bureau Crown Vic.

Lunch-hour traffic had begun to accumulate downtown, but the drive was

quick once we crossed 1-405 and got out of the downtown business

district.  As Johnson maneuvered the tight curves up the west hills, I

asked Walker what they knew so far about Susan Kerr.

"Not too much.  Her PPDS printouts right there," he said, reaching back

to hand me a sheet of green computer paper from the Portland Police

Data System.  "Nothing to see.  She's forty-two, no criminal history,

drives a Mercedes."

"The big one," Johnson cut in.  "I told you, the woman's got some

cash."

"We don't know much more than that.  One criminal complaint four years

ago for a smash-and-grab," Walker explained.

Portland has low violent crime and high property crime, driven

primarily by a large population of street kids and drug addicts. Almost

everyone with a car has at some point been a smash-and-grab victim.  My

poor Jetta's windows have been smashed on three occasions, once for my

stereo, once for the gym bag I stupidly left in the backseat, and once

for nothing but a new Lyle Lovett CD.  That one really pissed me off.

Walker pulled his spiral notebook from the breast pocket of his shirt

to refresh his memory.  "The co-complainant on the smash-and-grab was

Herbert Kerr at the same address.  Presumably the husband, but he's got

a 1932 date of birth.  He died two years ago."

"Hey, some women go for the old guys.  Look at you.  You've got a

woman."  Johnson was laughing at his joke, but Walker gave his partner

a look to show he wasn't amused.

"Yeah, and she's been stuck with me for thirty-two years.  Somehow I

suspect I'm not Susan Kerr's type."

"Well, I know I'm not."

"Excuse me, fellas, but could we get back to talking about the case?

For the record, I think any woman would be lucky to have either of

you."

"Sorry, Sam," Walker said.  "Lack of sleep gets to you.  Truth is,

we're not getting anywhere.  Media coverage is usually good on a

missing persons case, but this one's out of control.  Calls have been

flooding into the hotline we set up, but it's a bunch of stuff that's

either wrong, contradictory, or totally irrelevant."

"Like what?"  I asked.

I could tell he didn't know where to begin.  "Well, we've got people in

the neighborhood telling us they saw her walking her dog on Sunday at

eight a.m."  eleven a.m."  three p.m."  and seven p.m. We've got people

all over town calling us about possible sightings today.  Then we've

got the callers who need us to know everything they ever happened to

notice about the Easterbrooks that their landscapers were out on

Tuesday, that UPS left something on the porch on Friday, that the

windows were open overnight on Saturday.  You don't want to tell people

to stop calling, but you'd think these people would have the good sense

to know they're not being helpful."

"Don't forget the psychics, Jack."

"Ah, Jesus.  The psychics.  One lady called up crying that Clarissa was

at the bottom of the Willamette and couldn't cross over to heaven until

we recovered her body from the river.  Fucking ghoulish.  There's just

way too many nut jobs out there for us to keep up with the leads."

"Well, I think I might have something worth pursuing," I said.  I gave

them the limited information I'd gotten from Nelly Giacoma about the

ticked-off evicted guy.

"Hard to look into it without knowing who we're talking about," Johnson

said.  "Want us to get a warrant for the office?"

"I'm working on it.  I think it'll be faster to go through the City

Attorney, but I'll let you know what I hear.  What about the husband?"

I asked.  "He still acting like what you'd expect?"

Walker answered.  "Yeah, seems all right.  I was over there this

morning.  You know, shook up but not overwrought.  He's definitely in

no shape to be cutting anyone open; he was doing what he could to get

his hospital rounds covered.  But he's out there on the news, being

cooperative.  I'm not getting a vibe from this one."

"Me neither," Johnson said, "but you never can tell."

I assumed when the car stopped in front of one of the nicer Portland

Heights spreads that we had arrived at Susan Kerr's.  As deluxe as the

place was, however, it must not have been good enough because she was

making some improvements.  There was a dumpster in the driveway and a

construction truck across the street.

I opened my door, but Johnson wasn't ready to drop the subject of

Townsend Easterbrook.  "I know you got your boss to think about,

Kincaid, but I think we need to at least consider whether we should ask

the guy to take a poly.  Far as I'm concerned, the husband's always a

suspect.  I don't care who he is."

"OK, we'll talk about it after we're done here."  I stepped into the

rain, making my way to the house as quickly as I could.

Three.

I was surprised when a maid answered Susan Kerr's front door.

Definitely not a Portland thing.  This woman had real money.

The maid led us through three rooms and told us to sit in the fourth.

Big on color-coordinated stripes, dots, and paisleys, Susan Kerr's

taste was the decorating equivalent of a Laura Ashley orgy.  And, as

far as I could tell, every room we passed was what most would consider

a formal sitting room and what I would consider useless: no bed, no TV,

no snacks.  Maybe that was the purpose of the home improvements; I

could hear construction noises coming from somewhere deep inside the

house.

I recognized Susan Kerr from the press briefing.  As I took in her

powder-blue suit, French twist, and full face of makeup, a few bars of