The room Gabriela had been found in wasn’t much bigger than a walk-in closet. Twenty square feet at most and, as advertised, untouched by the fire-if, that is, you didn’t count the burn mark in the middle of the linoleum floor.
It was hard to miss. Impossible, in fact. And the moment Callahan saw it, she thought she understood the reason for Martinez’s mood.
The mark hadn’t, however, been among the dossier photos. What was left of Gabriela’s body had apparently been covering it. Yet it was the only real sign that anything unusual had taken place in the room, which was empty except for a few stacked boxes full of toilet paper, paper towels, seat covers and a mop and bucket tucked into a corner.
Callahan gestured. “Why wasn’t this photographed?”
Martinez didn’t seem to want to look directly at it. “I think that’s obvious.”
“It’s potential evidence. All evidence needs to be photographed and catalogued. It wasn’t even mentioned in the crime-scene summary.”
“Our photographer was gone by the time the body was removed, and I saw no reason to call her back. There are certain . . . sensitivities involved.”
“Sensitivities?”
“You saw the crowd outside. If something like this were to be released, there’s no telling how they’d react. And if there are no photographs, there’s no chance for a leak.”
Callahan couldn’t quite believe what she was hearing. “Did you actually work your way up through the ranks, or are you some kind of political appointee?”
Martinez’s eyes went cold. “You’re here to help us investigate, Agent Callahan, not impugn my integrity.”
“Then investigate, for Christ’s sake. Evidence is evidence, and you seem more concerned about public relations than solving a crime.”
Martinez opened his mouth to speak, then closed it again. Then he said, “If you’re trying to make me look foolish . . .”
“I just want to figure out what happened here. And this is a sign of possible foul play.”
“Foul play?” he said. “I think it’s much more than that.”
Ignoring him, Callahan pulled out her smartphone, took several quick shots of the floor and added them to Gabriela’s dossier. She stared soberly at the mark, which was quite small but looked as if it had been seared into the linoleum with a blow torch:
Callahan was no expert, but she knew this was an occult symbol. The kind you often found spray-painted on high school lockers by rebellious teenagers. If she remembered correctly, the A stood for “Anarchy.”
But this was no high school prank. Far from it.
And the question was, who had put it here?
Gabriela?
Was she some kind of secret Devil worshipper who had burned the mark into the floor before setting herself on fire? And, if so, how exactly did she do it?
Considering the lack of tools, she’d have to be a magician to pull it off. And while Gabriela may have been a talented entertainer, it was doubtful she knew sleight of hand.
Which brought Callahan back to scenario number three.
Murder.
Despite the pop star sheen, Gabriela had managed to become a vaunted religious icon here in Sao Paulo and around the world. A phoenix who rose from the ashes, an inspiration to those who felt their lives were hopeless, especially amidst the turmoil they’d been witness to these last several months. So it was only natural that people flock to the one thing that gave them any sense of calm.
Faith.
Was it possible that someone had done this to Gabriela in retaliation for her rising popularity and influence? Some wack job who somehow saw her as a threat to his existence? Who wanted to show the world that no one is immune to the final call, no matter how devout she may be?
Was this his signature? His mark? His fuck you?
A sudden uneasiness stirred inside Callahan, and she once again wondered why Section had sent her here.
What had they expected her to find?
This?
She could contact Section and ask, of course, but she doubted she’d be given an answer. She wasn’t sure they even had one.
She turned to Martinez, who had wandered back out into the hallway, as if he were afraid to be in close proximity to the mark. He had lit a cigarette and was shakily lifting it to his lips to take a drag.
Callahan approached him. “So what do you make of all this?”
He exhaled noisily. “Now you want my opinion?”
“I wouldn’t be asking if I didn’t.”
“I think I made my point of view clear when we first arrived.”
Callahan frowned. “That thing you said about Gabriela being in league with the Devil?”
He nodded. Took another drag.
“You can’t be serious.”
“What other explanation is there? We’ve witnessed the impossible, Agent Callahan. And the impossible can only be explained by supernatural means.”
“Neither of us has really witnessed anything, Detective, and I lean toward the school of thought that says there’s always an explanation just waiting to be found. All we have to do is look for it.”
“You don’t believe in demons?”
“As much as I’d like to throw my hands in the air and blame this on some dark supernatural entity, I can assure you that if any demons are involved, they’re all too human. I’m afraid I’ll have to go with psychopath instead. So why don’t we set the woo-woo stuff aside for a while and do some real police work?”
Martinez said nothing, and she knew she hadn’t dissuaded him. But that was his problem, not hers.
“According to the inventory sheet, you found a cell phone in the room.”
He nodded. “On the floor. Near the mop and bucket.”
“I assume it was Gabriela’s?”
“Yes.”
“And I assume you went through the calls?”
Martinez looked for a moment as if he wanted to slap her, but held himself in check. “There was only one recent outgoing call, shortly before her death.”
“To who?”
“Her manager. Alejandro Ruiz.”
Callahan remembered the name from the dossier. “He’s the one who smelled gasoline.”
Martinez nodded. “That’s what he told the responding officers, yes.”
“I only saw his preliminary statement in the file. Did you ever follow up? Ask him about that phone call?”
“Why do I suddenly feel as if I’m on trial?”
“Look,” Callahan said, “I know you don’t like me much and I know you didn’t ask for me to be here. But we have a mystery to solve and I intend to do my best to solve it-so just answer the question, all right?”
Callahan was acutely aware that she’d made an enemy for life. But in a contest of who has the bigger balls, it’s best to assert yourself quickly and aggressively and without mercy, and she couldn’t let this man’s fear get in the way of her investigation.
“Well? Did you follow up or not?”
Martinez stared at her a moment. “Ruiz is in seclusion and I decided to leave him alone for now, out of respect. He and Gabriela were very close.”
“All the more reason to question him,” Callahan said. “Where do we find him?”
“He has a suite of private rooms in her penthouse.”
Callahan raised an eyebrow. “I guess they were close.”
10
When Callahan stepped through the doorway of Gabriela’s penthouse, the first word that popped into her mind was museum.
She had half expected to find a sleek, postmodern, glass and chrome showroom, and there was certainly some of that. But what surprised her were the collection of artifacts Gabriela had amassed, a juxtaposition of her two worlds-music and religion.
There were enough guitars mounted on one large wall to fill a goodsize Hard Rock Cafe, each one accompanied by an identifying placard: Gibson Les Paul, Paul Reed Smith Golden Eagle, pre-FMIC Strato-caster, Gibson SG, Martin D-28, Taylor 810ce. Callahan couldn’t play these instruments, but she appreciated their beauty. The majority of them were signed by well-known rock stars, which meant this wall was worth a mint.