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Will had always known they had the wrong man, despite the fact that the semen matched. Departments made mistakes with DNA every day. Chambers had seemed right for many reasons. But one was especially powerfuclass="underline" what woman would automatically open her door at night for a stranger, particularly after an unsolved murder had happened nearby? A woman who was reacting to a police officer, standing there under the “burned out” porch light, showing his badge. But they had never run across the tracks of a male nurse named Judd Mason, not once. Maybe he had been so wrong because he had never seen the case objectively. But right at that moment, burning his mouth with expensive coffee, it was a thought through whose threshold he didn’t dare pass. He pulled out his cell phone to call Dodds. Then he put it away. What was the point?

He raised his head just in time to see Cheryl Beth walking purposefully toward him. She was wearing street clothes, jeans, a turtleneck and carrying a heavy coat. He couldn’t help noticing how nicely she filled out those clothes. He managed a smile-she had to be relieved at the news. But she had a look of wild fear in her eyes.

“I’ve got to talk to you.” She pulled a chair close.

“Did you see?” Will indicated the newspaper.

“It’s not right. Mason may be a little creep, but he didn’t kill Christine.”

“How…?” Will barely got the word out before she continued in an agitated voice.

“Somebody broke into my house last night. I’ve stayed the last couple of nights with my friend Lisa. I was just too creeped out to stay at home. Yesterday afternoon, around six, I stopped off at home to get some clothes. Everything was fine. Today I drove by just to check on things and my front door was open. I called the police. Somebody had broken in.” She leaned in close. “My bed, the comforter and the pillows, had been sliced up. Somebody went up to my bedroom and did that. There was a computer and a stereo and a TV, and they’re all fine. But somebody sliced up my bed, and they threw everything out of my desk drawers.”

“Mason would have already been in jail.”

“Exactly.” She bit her lip. “There’s something else.” She hesitated then recounted her ambush by Gary Nagle of the day before. Will listened carefully, listened as a simple case fell apart.

“Could it have been him?” Will asked.

“I don’t know. I used to think I knew him, now I’m not sure about anything. He just seemed like a wild man yesterday. But your former friend Dodds doesn’t care. He’s not interested. He would barely talk to me.”

He could almost detect she was shaking. He wanted to reach out to her but didn’t. He said, “I don’t know how else to push this. I wish I could get out of here.”

She didn’t miss a beat. “I can get you out.”

Chapter Twenty-four

Half an hour later, Cheryl Beth wheeled Will out to the drive-up entrance to the neuro-rehab wing. She had signed him out for the day with the ward’s patient coordinator-usually it was a privilege given for family members, so patients could spend a few hours outside the hospital. She made sure to take along all of Will’s meds and some extra, just in case. The cold hit them when they came out the door. The temperature was in the low thirties, the gusts making it feel colder. Cheryl Beth had draped a blanket over Will because he didn’t have a coat among his things. They would stop by his place and pick one up.

“Here’s how we’re getting you in the car,” she said, opening the door and pulling out a thin board that measured about two and a half feet long. “This is a transfer board. I lied and said you had been trained in how to use it.”

“Whatever it took to spring me.” He smiled.

She instructed him on the use of the plastic transfer board, pushed his wheelchair close to the open car door, and removed the arm side closest to the car. She asked him to raise up while she positioned one end of the board under the seat of the wheelchair and the other end on the car seat.

“This might not work,” he said. “I’m pretty big, and I don’t know if I can scoot that way.”

She leaned down to him. “Do you trust me?”

He nodded. “Yes.”

Cinching the gait belt around his waist, she coached him to move across the board and into the car seat. She wasn’t a physical therapist and had never done this before. But it worked well enough. She held the belt from behind and he did the work. One inch out onto the board, then half his butt was on it, then he was moving into the car. He fell into the bucket seat and used both hands to lift his left leg in. Then he swung his right leg inside and pulled down the seat belt.

“Okay?” she asked.

He nodded, short of breath. Then she took the chair and transfer board and stowed them in the trunk. The newer wheelchairs folded with amazing ease and were not that heavy.

“Drive me around for a minute.” He added: “Please.”

It was not a demand. She could see the wonder in his face at actually being out of the hospital for the first time in almost three weeks. So she drove out of the maze of Pill Hill and into Clifton, around the university.

“I went to school there,” she said. “I never thought I’d stay in Cincinnati. I thought it was very smug and insular-and I came from a small town. And it is all that. But I fell in love with it and stayed.”

“Lots of people who come here say that,” he said. “I always thought I’d leave, but I never did.”

“So you’re a native?”

He said he was.

“But you don’t seem like one of those Cincinnatians whose families have been here for one hundred and fifty years and nobody else can really be accepted.”

“No,” he laughed. “They revoked my membership to the Queen City Club, and great-great-granddad didn’t come from Germany.” It was almost that simple among the establishment: the old English stock that settled after the American Revolution and the Germans that came in huge numbers in the nineteenth century. And the blacks. Will was working class. His father had been a cop. His mother had been a striver of sorts, or at least a dreamer for him, and she wanted him to go to college and not follow in the family business.

They drove and talked. She learned that he had gone to college, a rarity among Cincinnati cops of his generation and one that didn’t exactly endear him to the old guard. He talked about that stereotype: the fat blond boys who grew up in Price Hill and went to Elder High School. There was always some truth to stereotypes. And what about her? She recited the thumbnail bio she reserved for first dates-thinking about it that way seemed strange. She had grown up in little Corbin, in the hills of southern Kentucky, where her father had worked for the L &N Railroad. She had been a fish out of water, couldn’t wait to get out. Even so, she had married her high school sweetheart and he came with her when she took the scholarship to nursing school. But he had never liked Cincinnati, never felt accepted. They had divorced and he went back to Corbin.

“Any kids?”

“No.” She was conscious of how her voice changed. “What about you?”

“A grown son.”

“Really? Does he live here?”

“No.”

The way he said the word told her she had scratched something raw. Family was usually a safe topic for conversation. But not always-she of all people should know that.

Will stayed quiet for several blocks. When he spoke, he was looking away. “He’s not really part of my life now. He was a baby when I met Cindy, and I adopted him. We decided…well, she decided that she didn’t want more children. But he had a rough time as a teenager. Drugs. The wrong crowd. And I was the bad guy, just from the job I do every day. Anyway, he was in Portland, the last I heard. I just wish he would call his mother once in a while.”