Somebody else said, "When Rick was doing that last cut, I flashed on this thing, I mean, we were pulling them apart. Like, if there was some psychic connection between them, what would be going through their brains when we actually finally moved them…?"
Virgil took one of the Snowstorms out of his coat pocket, flipped the top off, took a hit, leaned close to Weather and said, quietly, "You heard the doc was killed?"
She turned, said, "What?" a smile dying on her face.
He told her about the discovery of Shaheen. "So he was kind of like an Arab-he was Lebanese, a Muslim, and he did have an accent."
She frowned. "What'd he look like?"
Virgil said, "You know-dark-complected, dark hair, worn a little long, a black mustache."
"Oh my God," she said. "I saw him. The day of the robbery. He was in an elevator with me, when I was coming down from the parking ramp. I completely forgot about it."
"Huh. Then you got lucky. He didn't know that you'd seen the other guys," Virgil said.
"Oh my God," she said, hand to her chest. "He was so polite. And good-looking. Like Zorro."
Virgil said, "Good-looking. Like Zorro."
"Yeah, you know. Zorro."
"I went down to take a look at him. He didn't look like Zorro. He looked like Sancho Panza. He was about five-six and chubby."
She said, "Oh. Then he's not the man I saw. The man I saw was more than six feet. As tall as Lucas, but thin. Like you. But dark-complected, black hair, a mustache."
"A doc?"
She nodded. "He was wearing a physician's scrubs. But maybe… I'm misremembering. I didn't expect to see anybody there at that time in the morning, and we were alone in the elevator. Maybe it was this Shaheen man. Maybe he seemed larger to me."
"And thinner? And better-looking?"
"That doesn't seem likely, does it?"
Virgil stood up. "No, it doesn't. Don't let any of these French people take my beer. I gotta call Lucas." LUCAS THOUGHT about it for a minute, then said, "Shaheen getting killed was pretty convenient, huh? An Arab-looking doc, who didn't keep any of the good stuff around his apartment, but did keep the cheap stuff and a bunch of packaging."
"That's what I'm thinking," Virgil said.
Lucas told Marcy about it, and she said, "I suppose it's possible. Not likely, though."
"Not likely, but Weather's got a good eye. And that part of the hospital is about empty-it's mostly equipment storage, mechanical systems, all that. Why would a doc be there, in scrubs, at that time in the morning?"
"I'll get some photos of Shaheen; she can check him out. Maybe when she sees a photograph, she'll recognize him."
Lucas sat alone and thought about it. And he thought:
If Weather could identify nobody but Joe Mack, and if Joe Mack was long gone in Kansas, and if they were going to get him for some involvement with the kidnapping and murder of Jill MacBride-and Lucas still thought they would, when the DNA came back from traces taken from the driver's seat of MacBride's van-then why was somebody still looking for Weather? Weather was no longer Joe Mack's big problem.
And the answer was, Weather had seen the doc.
The doc needed to kill Weather. And he would continue to need to kill her. SHRAKE CALLED. "Guess what?"
"What?"
"I got something," he said.
"Did you hurt him bad?"
"Who?"
"Whoever you beat up," Lucas said.
"Hey-this was purely brain work. There's a skinhead who used to hang out with Chapman and Haines from time to time," Shrake said. "The guy I talked to said his name is Cappy. At least, that's what people call him. Rides a big BMW, might have come from California. That's all I got, but I think if I go around and hammer on people a little, I might be able to break out more. All we need is a license number, a last name…"
"Tell you what, I think you got him," Lucas said. "Push it. Something else: I think the doc is still running around loose."
"Whoa."
"Yeah. Take it easy out there." LUCAS SAT SOME MORE, eyes closed, tried to visualize the moment he saw the skinhead in Joe Mack's office. Ran through the scene several times: he'd recognize Cappy if he saw him, Lucas thought, but really couldn't describe him for a sketch. The problem with a sketch was, it was the details that counted, not the generalities.
What had they talked about? Joe had said something about insurance? Back through the scene. Get insurance? The skinhead said his was good for thirty days. Then Joe said something about boxes? Could that be right?
Then he remembered something else. Honey Bee Brown had gone into the office ahead of them, to shout at Joe Mack about not telling her that Haines and Chapman had been killed. The skinhead had snapped something at her that shut her up. Would that work with somebody you didn't know?
He took out his cell phone and notebook and called Honey Bee Brown. She answered on the third ring.
"This is Davenport. Who is Cappy?"
"Cappy? Who is Cappy?"
"You've got this bad habit of trying to bullshit me, Harriet, and it makes me not like you," Davenport said. "Cappy is the skinhead who told you to shut up, after we told you that Haines and Chapman were murdered. He was in Joe Mack's office, buying Joe's van."
"Cappy. Okay, I got him," Honey Bee said. "He was a friend of Shooter's, from California. Uh, he didn't hang around that much, he mostly just rode."
"Big BMW, right?"
"Yeah. That's what everybody noticed. The other guys ride Harleys, but Cappy didn't care. He rode his Bimmer."
"You know where he lives?"
"No idea." She said it so quickly and solidly that Lucas believed her.
"How about where he works?" Lucas asked.
"That… I'm not sure about, but I know he always had to leave the bar early, before it closed. He worked nights. He doesn't have any skills-I heard that from somebody. Taking crappy jobs. Never graduated from high school… he's only about twenty."
"He looked older than that, to me," Lucas said.
"He does look older, but Lyle once told me that if the cops came in, get Cappy out of sight. He wasn't legal yet."
"You think he might kill somebody?" Lucas asked. She seemed to think about it for a long time, and he said, "Harriet?"
She said, "Yeah. I do. He is one scary little motherfucker. He's got eyes like a snake on Animal Planet." So LUCAS SAT on the hospital couch, with troops of cops still moving through, and thought, Boxes.
A crappy job, no skills, after midnight. Boxes.
He thought, UPS. FedEx. Post office.
He took out his phone and called Sandy, a part-time researcher for the BCA. She was off, at her apartment, listening to what sounded like a Branford Marsalis disc, and she said she could have the relevant numbers in ten minutes.
Lucas put his phone back in his pocket.
What about the doc?
20
CAPPY LAY ON THE FLOOR in front of the television, tuned it to Channel Three, for the news, put his foot up on a couch pillow. He'd done what Barakat told him, and most of the bleeding had stopped. He hit the cocaine, once, but that seemed to make his mind focus on his toe: the pain grew worse. He stopped with the cocaine, tried to focus on the television: the cops were all over the hospital. A thrill here-he'd done this. He'd caused this chaos. People were paying attention. He was still lying, watching, there when Barakat got home.
"How bad?" Barakat asked.
"Not so bad, really. Mostly my little toe. But that's wrecked. I can't put any weight on it," Cappy said.
"Let me get some things," Barakat said. He went into his bedroom, did a twist, and another, and went back to Cappy with a brown leather bag that looked like a small briefcase. He popped it open, put it on the floor next to Cappy's foot, dragged a reading lamp over, and started unwrapping the foot. "Did you take the oxycodone?"