“Sorry, Mark. I was thinking. I don’t know what to make of this. There’s too much unexplained stuff, and I hate unexplained stuff.” He pushed away from the wall, setting his thoughts in order. “We have to act as if this is a missing-person case, because if Rouse did somehow wander off, we have a chance of finding him alive if we move fast. So I’ll call out the volunteer fire department search team as well. They’ll get there faster than the mountain rescue team.”
“Okay.”
“On the other hand, when the statie gets there with the CSU kit, I want every print that can be lifted off Rouse’s car. We’ve already got Debba Clow’s prints on record, so we won’t need to get a warrant to check for a match.”
“Hang on a sec.” There were sounds over the line, someone talking, muffled. Mark came back on. “We’re in luck. The crime scene guys are here.”
“That’s a land speed record.”
“They were taking the shortcut along the Old Lake George Road, coming back from a demo at the Troop C barracks.”
“Look, what I said about Debba Clow’s fingerprints? Don’t mention we’ve already got a suspect. I can think of some scenarios where somebody else might have whacked the doctor, and I don’t want those guys taking shortcuts because they think we’ve got it all sewn up.”
“You mean, like the unknown girlfriend idea?”
“Or the fact that he had access to major amounts of prescription drugs.”
“I don’t know.” Mark sounded doubtful. “Seeing as how Clow admitted she was here with the guy…”
“I know, I know. But I don’t want to miss anything just because it’s less likely than Debba doing it.”
“Debba does doctor,” Mark said, sniggering. “Has a ring to it. So what are you going to do with her?”
Russ glanced over his shoulder and made a snap decision. “I’m bringing her out there with me.”
“Why?”
“If he’s gone missing, she might be able to remember a detail that she’s overlooked.”
“Or she might be able to invent something that jibes with the physical evidence once she’s back out here.”
“I’m aware of that. Mostly, I want to keep her out of her car until the staties have a chance to sweep it.”
“Why not just impound it?”
“I intend to. But I’d like her permission to search it. I have a feeling if we go to Judge Ryswick with what we’ve got-most notably, what we haven’t got, a body-he’ll laugh at a warrant request. That man’s enough to make me yearn for the good old days, when we could just look for whatever we wanted.”
“Chief, the Miranda rules went into effect before you became a cop.”
“I know. But I can dream.” He brought himself back to the subject. “If she’s out at Stewart’s Pond and her car’s back here, it’ll be easier to get her to say yes. Her attention will be split, and she’ll be thinking more about what we might find out there, not about trace evidence in her vehicle.”
“If she just dumped him out here, there might not be anything in her car anyway.”
“That’s right. And in that case, bringing her back to the scene might just sweat something out of her.”
“Okay. I’ll see you when you get here. Make sure you got your boots on. It’s colder’n a witch’s tit out here.”
Russ laughed as he hung up. He skipped Harlene and called John Huggins, the volunteer fire department chief, directly. He explained the situation and asked John to turn out his men in their cold-weather gear for a search.
“I’ll call Glens Falls and tell them to take any calls we might get,” Huggins said. “This’ll be good for my boys. We been practicing turning out for lost hikers and whatnot. Nighttime work’ll be a challenge. See ya there in twenty.”
“Drive carefully-,” Russ said, but Huggins had already hung up. Sometimes Russ suspected the main reason John Huggins had devoted years of his life to the squad was because it gave him a legal excuse to drive like a bat out of hell.
He hung up the phone and walked back into the living room. Clare was down on one knee in front of the fireplace, nudging a log into place with an iron poker. Debba was sitting where he had left her, tucked into the corner of the sofa, arms wrapped around her knees. “Dr. Rouse’s car is still there, but he’s nowhere to be found. The fire department search team and the mountain rescue folks are on their way, and I’d like you to come back there with me, Debba.”
“Me?”
“You’re the last person known to have spoken to the doctor. You may be able to help the searchers in some way.” Clare rose, looking at him suspiciously. He was willing to bet that the next words out of her mouth would cut right though that bit of tissue paper he had just hung up, so he went right for her weak spot. “If he got confused and wandered off, there’s a chance we can still save him. But we don’t have much time. The mountains are a bad place to be lost on a bitter cold night.”
As Clare knew firsthand, having narrowly escaped hypothermia and frostbite last winter. He could see the unpleasant memories flicker behind her eyes, erasing, at least for the moment, her doubts about Russ’s motives in bringing Debba along. He felt a twinge of guilt, but absolved himself with the thought that it might, after all, be true.
Debba uncurled from her protective position and stood up.
“Do you want me to make you a thermos of hot coffee?” Clare asked her. “To take in your car?”
“We’ll take my truck,” Russ said. Both women looked at him. This time, it was Debba who frowned.
“It’ll be a lot simpler for me to go home from the reservoir,” she said. “Unless you don’t think I’ll be going home?” Her voice held a challenge.
He tucked his thumbs into his belt. “Your tire tracks are already part of the scene. No need to add confusion by having another set around.”
Clare frowned, too. No wonder. That sounded lame, even to him.
“I don’t feel comfortable with that,” Debba said.
“I’m sorry about that. But I need your car to stay here, away from the scene.” He kept his tone even, glossing over the fact that he had almost said “the crime scene.”
Debba looked at Clare. “I’ll drive you,” Clare said.
“Wait a minute-” Russ began.
“Are you sure?”
“It’s no problem.”
“I have a problem with-”
“Okay, I’ll hit the bathroom and then we can go.” Debba vanished upstairs.
“You can’t-,” he tried again.
“I don’t know what you’re up to,” Clare said, rounding on him, “but I don’t entirely trust you.”
“This is police business, Clare-”
“This is human business, Russ,” she said, mimicking his tone. Her voice softened. A little. “I know you’ll stay meticulously within the law. But you wouldn’t see anything wrong with manipulating that woman into getting whatever you need out of her.”
“A life may be at stake.”
She jerked her chin up. “Tell me you think Dr. Rouse is still alive. And make me believe it.”
He was silent.
“If he is alive, another pair of eyes won’t hurt. And if he’s dead, and you’re planning on pinning it on Debba, well, then she’ll need a friend.”
He felt his hands clenching and forced them to relax. “God save me from do-gooders.”
She grinned. “Not a chance. God has plans for you.”
He shook his head. “Keep out of the way. Do not talk to anyone at the scene. And for God’s sake, put something warm on.”
Chapter 14
Well, she thought, two out of three’s not bad. She might not have been prepared for her first North Country winter, but she was a fast learner, and thanks to last spring’s sales and this year’s Christmas presents, she was as well protected from the cold as any of the men clumped around the hood of the volunteer fire chief’s Jeep Cherokee.
The chief, who had introduced himself as “Huggins-John Huggins,” was scoping out her qualifications. “You ever done anything like this before?” He was a short, well-braced two-by-four of a man, wearing a hat with flaps that fell to his chin and a suspicious expression. He reminded her of a crew chief she had met on her first posting, a lifer who had called her “girly.” One of the guys handing out equipment from the Jeep looked over at her, and she felt uncomfortably like the shaky second lieutenant she had been back then.