“What about the thing in the trees?” I ask. “The platform.”
She’s taking her shoes off now, moving toward a locker against the wall. It appears that even the half-heels were a concession to the company dress code, something used only for greeting the public. She is warming to me now, a little more casual. I take this as a sign of trust.
I ask her whether this perch in the trees is connected with the murders.
“We’re still looking into it,” she says.
I probe her on what they found up there.
She makes a face. “Some feathers, and blood,” she says.
“Animal or human?”
“Mostly animal, but there were traces of human blood as well. And some small bones, avian, we think.” There are more puzzled looks from Sellig on this. Like the loose ends just keep piling up.
“We’ve sent the bones and feathers off to the National Wildlife Forensics Lab, up in Oregon,” she says, “for analysis.”
It seems there are only two people in the country who have any background in such things. One of them is eighty-seven years old, a woman on the east coast. The other is a younger woman, her protégée, who has now been enticed away from the Smithsonian to the wildlife facility in Ashland, a kind of criminalistics lab for offenses against nature and the environment.
“They should have some answers for us in a few days,” she says.
“Your best guess?” I ask her.
“Based on the little bit we have?” she says.
I nod.
“I’d say our guy,” she’s talking about the Putah Creek killer, “had nothing to do with the blind in the trees.”
“Then who did?”
“It’s only a hunch right now. I’d rather wait till we get something back from the lab up in Oregon.”
I accept this, and back off.
“Did they find anything like this at the other two sites, down in Orange County and up in Oregon, a platform in the trees, feathers, bones?” I say.
She shakes her head. “No. And we’ve gone back to check the area again at the other two sites here in Davenport. We thought maybe we missed something. But there was nothing there either. No platform or ropes.”
She is pulling on a pair of white running shoes, the kind secretaries around the capital use for fast walks at lunch, their answer to midday aerobics.
“You didn’t happen to go up there?” I ask. “On the platform?”
She nods. Suddenly she’s all cryptic gestures.
Looking at her, somehow I knew that, after the platform was processed by the evidence tech, she could not resist going up and looking.
“Pretty good view?” I ask her.
“An understatement,” she says. There’s a sly smile. She moves toward the locker against the wall and opens the door again. I think she’s putting the half-heels away. But when she turns to face me again she’s holding a long cylindrical object wrapped in a terry cloth towel. As she unwraps this I can see metal and glass and on the side, some lettering, the words “Mirador TTB.”
“It was found on the platform,” she says. “The owner appears to have left in a hurry.” She hands this to me, to inspect.
“It’s a spotting scope. This is a good one. It would cost about a thousand dollars. Shooters use them for long-range shots, to zero their weapons, to find the strikes on a target without walking two hundred yards.”
I’m turning it over in my hands looking at it.
“It’s been dusted for prints,” she says. “We got one smudged latent, unusable, and found some traces of blood on it.”
“It makes no sense,” I say. There’s an instant of dead silence between us as I look at the scope.
“You think whoever was up in the tree had nothing to do with the murders.”
She makes a face, like this is a definite possibility.
“But they may have seen the killer?” I say.
She smiles. “Take a look,” she says. She’s motioning toward the scope in my hands.
I look through the thing, out one of the windows on the far side of the room. Across the broad verdant lawn like the gardens at Versailles, a secretary is taking lunch, seated on a bench with a brown bag. I turn the focus ring, a fraction of an inch, a view like water through crystal. There is moisture on her cheek. She is reading, a little paperback cushioned in one hand-the title clear as the morning newspaper, Erich Segal’s Love Story.
I consider for a moment in my mind’s eye the elements presented; the magic of this little cylinder I hold in my hand, the scaffold high in the trees along the Putah Creek. I conjure the sum of this equation, the thought that perhaps somewhere, out there, is an aimless spectator to death, a prime witness to the murder of Abbott and Karen Scofield.
Chapter Five
The building that houses the Davenport County district attorney’s office is classic governmentesque. It dates to the 1930s, something put up by the WPA which at the time was viewed merely as functional and built to last. It exhibits a kind of timeless grace, a classic architecture not seen in today’s public buildings. The granite exterior and its broad stairway lead to a portico capped by three-story stone columns. These speak of authority in a populist democracy, though the facade is now a dingy brown, and inside the building is littered with overcrowded offices and marked by a neglect of maintenance.
It rests on high ground across from the courthouse, among a grove of tall oaks and walnut trees planted in the city center in the last century, a break against the oppressive heat of valley summers when temperatures routinely climb into the triple digits.
The prosecutor’s office is small, only four deputies. Two of these are new, people out of law school less than two years, assigned only to misdemeanors.
And then there is Roland Overroy. Thirty years with the office, Overroy is part of the petrified forest of civil service; perennial deadwood. In this county motions to challenge the competence of counsel are called “Roland motions,” at least among lawyers who have dealt with Overroy. He has never seen a court file he has read, or had a case he has not overcharged.
His special talent is a terminal lack of preparation, and a penchant for overlooking the obvious.
Ever since Feretti demoted him two years ago as chief deputy, banished him to the doldrums of juvenile court, Overroy has searched for petty problems in the office which he could amplify. He has played these like some maestro to anyone who would listen.
This morning the small staff is not a particularly cheerful group, camped as we are around the scarred metal table in the coffee room that doubles for conferences.
While I have met them all in passing, in the day-to-day chores of the office, this is our first formal staff meeting since taking on this assignment a month ago. I would like to make a good impression.
As I survey them the only faint smiles are from Gary Boudin and Karen Samuels, the two newest additions to the office.
Overroy is trying to size me up, wondering how much opportunity lies in the chaos caused by Feretti’s sudden death. Lenore Goya’s on the phone in her office. She will join us shortly.
Overroy has appropriated the only chair close to me at the table, as if my authority, as temporary as it may be, will somehow rub off.
On paper, the chief deputy’s position has been empty for two years. Instead of firing him, which in civil service would take endless hearings and a forest of paper, Feretti with the stroke of his pen simply abolished Roland’s supervisory position. While Roland remained on salary at his current pay, Mario figured pride would in time take its toll. It was an attempt to send a message, that his career in the office was tapped out. But with Roland messages are best conveyed by Western Union, in plain English.