“But she could be. If you wanted her to be, she could be. In some ways she’s perfect for this.”
“I’ve barely spoken to her in the past few days,” he protested. But I tapped her phone! And yours … and LaMoia’s!
“But if you wanted her to, she could help you on something like this.”
A high-voltage spike struck him; his fingers tingled. He had misconstrued everything she had said. “Captain …,” he began. “Sheila … what the hell are we talking about here? Me? Matthews?”
“I’m thinking it’s a reporter. You know: exclusive rights for a little cooperation. Book deal. TV movie. It happens,” she added with a strong twinge of regret.
“Are we talking the same thing?”
“A hundred grand? Two hundred?” she added quickly. “I’m thinking a reporter is buying inside stuff and supplying it back to the Pied Piper in exchange for exclusive rights. One of the tabloids.”
Boldt took a long deep swallow. “Just to clarify,” Boldt said dryly, “you’re asking me to flush out an insider?”
She cautioned, “One of the Feds would make the most sense. Hell of a source. A little cash under the table. Happens all the time.”
“You want me to flush the insider?” He felt giddy, he nearly laughed aloud at the irony: She was asking him to trap himself.
She said, “Yes. How else has this person gone undetected for so long? Inside information. Has to be.”
“We sting the Feds with disinformation,” Boldt proposed, “and see who surfaces.”
“Whatever you can come up with.” Unknowingly, Sheila Hill had just provided him the justification for the wiretaps he had ordered.
He would need to go through with something-no matter how poorly conceived-to placate her. Maybe use Daphne, maybe not.
“I think you’re onto something, Captain. It makes sense.”
“You’re damn right it does. We get this insider out of play-we keep our efforts from being sabotaged-and we just might collar the Pied Piper.”
“Right,” Boldt agreed. It was all he could think of.
CHAPTER 27
Boldt parked outside the Shotz house shortly after 8:00 P.M. that same Thursday. The warm evening air carried the scent of a budding earth-rich, black, wet soil pushing up life after months of sponging up the sky’s discharge. Boldt recalled an early winter evening when just he and Sarah had been home. He had put a Scott Hamilton CD on the stereo, a cup of hot tea on the table and little Sarah warmly into his lap. Flipping pages of The Lovables-he remembered the book so clearly-he had been pointing out the pictures to her when suddenly she had wheeled her head around and up and had met eyes with him, her father, so absolute a connection, so strong, this little person making contact, real contact with him, and then the long, sustained smile, gradually forming and then occupying her entire face, and an overwhelming sense of love choking his heart, filling his throat and unleashing from his eyes. Father crying, baby smiling, the book slipping to the floor, its pages slowly shutting.
Daphne’s red Honda arrived a few minutes later, and she joined him in the front seat of the Chevy. She smelled of lilac and her face carried worry poorly. For a moment they sat in silence, and he knew she was mad at him for not explaining his moving Miles out of the city. But there wasn’t any explaining to do; he wasn’t going to start now. He had dug himself in too deeply.
“I’ve had time to go over the files, found some interesting coincidences.” Everyone, including Daphne, knew he abhorred the word. “Take a look at these,” he said, handing her a stack of lab prelims from the task force book. She would not question his being in possession of these. Boldt worked evidence-it was his lot.
“The parents’ statements,” she observed, reading.
“One is Shotz,” he explained. “The other is taken from a report the Bureau provided. It’s Portland … the Portland kidnapping.”
“You want me to read these?” she said impatiently.
“Skim is okay.”
“Portland is in interview form,” she noted.
“All right. Here!” he said, pointing, “… swaddled in a receiving blanket at the time of the abduction. The mother calls it a ‘custom’ blanket.”
“All mothers think that,” Daphne said.
“No, no, no! She calls it a custom blanket. No one asks anything more. Here!” he said, rearranging the pages. “Doris Shotz says her baby was wearing ‘an outfit with her picture on it.’ Her words.”
“Custom,” Daphne said, following his logic.
“Custom,” he agreed.
“Weinstein?”
“No mention I can find. No reference. But that’s why we’re here,” he informed her. “Doris Shotz is organized. She’ll know what we’re after.”
“And me? What’s my role in this?”
“Downplay it. I don’t want it going to the press. I need this to be a conversation, not an interrogation. She’s a wreck.”
“You don’t look so swift yourself. You setting a record on that shirt or what?”
“He picks his victims somehow.”
“Custom blanket?”
“Why not?”
“Just asking.” She informed him, “The Bureau is pursuing magazine subscriptions and catalogs. It came up in the four o’clock.”
“No kidding,” Boldt said, hoping to sound surprised.
She knew him too well. “I won’t ask,” she said. “I promised not to ask. But I sure as hell hope you know what you’re doing.”
“Me too.”
Doris Shotz answered the door with her three-year-old son clutched in her arms. Boldt had seen her only a few hours earlier outside Davidson’s office and knew of her vigils over the past two weeks. In an environment that could and did cast humor onto any subject no matter how grim, Boldt did not know of a single joke that had been voiced about Doris Shotz. Each day she returned, unwilling to give up on her daughter. She was admired by captain and patrol officer alike.
A woman in her thirties, she had the look of an old lady on her deathbed, wan and thin. She admitted Boldt and Daphne, but they were not welcome. Doris Shotz had quickly developed a deep-seated hatred for the police.
The kitchen table held two empty place mats from an earlier dinner. Shotz never let go of her boy while preparing coffee and tea, even though she looked as if she might snap under the weight. Boldt and Daphne took tea. Paul Shotz poured himself a cup of coffee laced with rum, despite his wife’s protests. He had the unfocused glass eyes of a taxidermied rat. He had shaved carelessly, a day or two gone by, lending him a worn and beleaguered look. His shirt had been slept in, on the living room couch if Boldt had it right. Sitting at the table with them, Paul Shotz stared beyond Boldt-right through him-so that the detective had the feeling that someone was standing right behind him.
“What is it you want?” Doris Shotz asked impolitely. Two weeks earlier she would have done anything to help; but now she had little room left for hope. The Pied Piper claimed far more lives than just the children he abducted.
Daphne said, “We’re making headway-real headway-in the case, Mrs. Shotz. Police work is about fitting pieces together. We’re here in search of more of those. We need to seize chances when they arise. That’s why we’re here. Some of what we’d like to discuss has been brought up before, perhaps so many times that you’re sick of it, that you think we already have the answers. If we did, we wouldn’t be here. What we need to do, all of us,” she said, including the dazed husband, “is do our best to imagine that none of this has been discussed before. Erase the slate. Allow things to rise to the surface through the grief and pain of your loss. We all want Rhonda back home. As much hostility and anger as you feel toward us, it’s important you believe that, trust that, because it is the truth: We’re in this together.” She shot Boldt a look-this last statement aimed at him.
Losing her patience, Doris Shotz said, “We have been over all of it a dozen times. You take notes. Don’t you read them?”