“Maybe I just had to use the john, Detective. Ever think of that?”
“I did, actually. ’Cause if you’ve got these tiny pieces of paper coming out your ass, you ought to see a doctor.”
Something had been ripped into shreds and it looked like Mike had picked up a few damp remains and spread them on the countertop, on paper towels, to dry.
“Daniel, you’ve got to be candid with us. We’re at square one on Naomi’s case. If there’s something about her lifestyle we need to know, if that’s evidence you’re trying to destroy or conceal—”
“I know what you people are going to do.” He was staring at the torn bits of paper. “You’re going to rip every inch of her private life apart and hang her out in public, like she asked for this.”
“Nobody asks for this. We’re in here because we’re looking for something that might connect her to the man — to the people — who did this to her,” I said. “What did you try to hide?”
Daniel turned to the sink and put out the butt of his cigarette under the kitchen faucet. “She’s got nobody, man. You understand that? Even I let her down.”
“How do you mean?”
“She wanted me to help her. When things happened.”
“What things?”
“Trouble. Not big trouble, but — I don’t want to go there.”
“Like her arrests?” Mike asked.
Daniel reached into the cupboard over the sink for a glass and filled it with water. “You already know about that?”
“Yeah. That’s how she was identified, and that’s the reason we got to you as next of kin. She listed you on the arrest papers.”
“Naomi called me from jail,” he said with a half laugh, not intended to be funny. “I was the only family she had. She needed me to go to the bank and get some money, and agree to be her contact in the city, even though I’d been here only a few weeks less than she had.”
“But you’d spoken to her not long before that?”
“E-mailed. That’s mostly how we stayed in touch.” Daniel twisted his long hair into a knot at his neck, working his spindly fingers around one another while Mike wrote down both their e-mail addresses.
“Is her mother still in Israel?” I asked.
“Rachel?” Daniel put the glass down and looked at me. “She was blown to bits by a suicide bomber on a bus in East Jerusalem. Two, maybe three years ago.”
I’d never thought of a possible terrorist angle to Naomi’s murder. When Daniel said that she had no one close to her, he wasn’t exaggerating.
“Did Rachel live in one of the settlements?”
“Yeah. Naomi gets all her activist energy from her mother. Lucky she was in London that time when the bomb went off.”
“What do you know about your sister’s religious beliefs, Daniel?” I asked. Now I wondered if there could be any kind of connection between her mother’s violent death and her own.
“Very little.”
“Your father — was he Jewish?” I asked.
“Raised as a Jew. But my mother’s agnostic and so was he. That’s why Naomi and I didn’t talk about it much.”
“But the arrests, Daniel, were they because of her religious beliefs?”
He thought for a few seconds and reached into his back pocket for another cigarette. “Less religion than over her feminist views. That’s what all her preaching was about. Always rubbing certain people the wrong way.”
Certain people. “Like your mother, for one?”
“Yeah. You could say that.”
“So why was she arrested?” I asked. “Do you know?”
“I had to sit through the arraignment, so I heard most of the facts, and then Naomi told me more of it when they let her out.”
“What’s the organization?”
“It’s called Women of the Wall,” Daniel said. “It’s a group that Rachel helped start up twenty years ago, in Israel.”
“For what?” Mike asked, moving the tiny bits of paper around like figures on a chessboard, trying to form words from the letters written on them.
“Naomi said that ultra-Orthodox Jews didn’t allow women to pray at the Wailing Wall, didn’t allow them to dress in traditional prayer shawls. Stuff like that.”
“You know anything about this, Coop?” Mike asked.
Daniel walked across the room to take a matchbook from the pocket of a jacket he had thrown on one of the chairs.
“A bit. Tallith — that’s the ritual prayer shawl. I know that some of the extreme factions of Judaism consider it wrong — arrogant, and against biblical commands — for women to wear these garments and pray publicly at places like the wall.”
“Hear that, Daniel? We’ve come to the right place. Coop’s got all her feminist ducks in a row.”
I turned my back as Daniel lit up and whispered to Mike, “Wrong time to make fun of it, Mike. You’ve got to look into this,” I said. “Discrimination against women sheltered under the wings of religion — every religion — is a really serious problem. It’s been that way for centuries. It’s excluded us from education and social opportunities, from positions of authority. You want me to go on?”
“Later for that,” Mike said, cocking a finger at me like he was pointing a pistol. “After I calm you down with some Dewar’s.”
“What else do you know about the demonstration?” I asked Daniel as he rejoined us.
“That it was supposed to be a day of solidarity with the women in Jerusalem. Naomi said the first protest brought out some real animals. Guys who spit at her and threw things. Then their women actually joined in, too, doing the same.”
That fact didn’t surprise me. Sadly, women often were the worst jurors in cases of sexual assault and domestic violence, far too judgmental about the conduct of their peers. The sisterhood wasn’t always the friendliest group in town.
“I take it Naomi resisted arrest,” Mike said.
“That was the whole point, Detective. She figured the only way to get press about the issue was to be a little outrageous. She wasn’t exactly a novice.”
“Sure, kick a cop. Spit at him like the bad guys did at her,” Mike said.
Daniel held up both hands like he was surrendering to Mike Chapman. “Hey, I’m not defending what she did. My mother didn’t want me to have anything to do with her. Naomi might as well have been a leper, the way she lived.”
“What do you mean — a leper?” I asked.
“She’d been an outcast for so long, it made it easy for her to embrace that over-the-top conduct, whatever the cause of the day. Fling herself down on the ground, refuse to move on when the cops broke things up. Yeah, I’m sure she did some fine kicking and spitting. She’s had lots of experience with it.”
“Not just once, here,” I said. “In December and then again in January. She must have believed deeply in this cause.”
“Or maybe she just liked the attitude,” Mike said, playing with his paper chips.
“A pariah, Ms. Cooper. That’s what my mother liked to call Naomi. She was the perfect pariah.”
ELEVEN
“YOU want to make sense of this alphabet soup for me?” Mike asked Daniel. “These are the bits that were clinging to the inside rim of the toilet bowl. Didn’t go down with the rest. You mind telling me what you were trying to get rid of?”
I walked to the countertop and looked at the scraps of paper. Daniel’s expression was glum, but he didn’t respond.
“Is this Naomi’s handwriting?” I asked, nudging a few pieces toward him.
“Yeah.”
“Can’t you understand how important it is that we learn everything there is to know about her?”
Mike’s displeasure was palpable. “So far there’s not a whit of evidence to connect a killer to Naomi’s body. I just came from the autopsy and there’s nothing. No seminal fluid, so no DNA inside her—”