The doorbell interrupted her thinking. She was surprised to see Frank and Jake. Frank carried a briefcase, Jake an accordion file folder.
“I’ll just set it all down here.” Frank laid his briefcase on the dining room table and snapped it open.
Sam removed the grapevine tree trunk arrangement from the center of the table. She heard the refrigerator being opened and walked into the kitchen to find Jake setting out plates and silverware. He knew exactly where everything was which made her wonder just how many visits he had made here to see Abby.
“Let’s see, chicken, potato salad, kidney bean salad.” He looked up at her. “Anything else you’d like to eat?”
She surveyed the buffet he had spread on the island counter. “Fruit salad.”
Jake opened the refrigerator again and located the fruit salad. Sam brought out a pitcher of iced tea.
“Benny called,” Sam announced. “Seems the FBI has sent a forensics expert from their Chicago office to examine Hap’s body.”
“That’s not unusual,” Jake said.
Frank loaded his plate and followed his colleagues into the dining room. “The guy was AWOL. I guess someone in Washington would be interested.” He found an empty spot between the papers strewn around the table.
“So, why not the military instead of the Bureau?” Sam cranked open the bay windows to welcome the mild breeze. The sun was disappearing behind the trees, casting the last of its warmth on the west side of the house.
The two men didn’t respond. They ate as though they hadn’t had a decent meal in months. Abby had a way of making even leftovers taste like a two-hundred-dollar meal in an upscale restaurant.
“One thing that Benny discovered was that Hap had a bullet wound.” Sam read from a fax. “A bullet perforated the left clavicle, first rib, resulting in a depressed fracture.” She slid the printout across the table to Jake and Frank. “It’s Benny’s conclusion, and the FBI examiner was in agreement, that at one time in his life Hap had been shot in the back.”
“Any idea how long ago?” Jake asked.
“The FBI called D.C. and talked to Hap’s sister. She said he wasn’t in any gangs in his youth and never had any type of bullet wound before he went to Korea,” Sam said.
“How about a cause of death?” Jake asked.
Sam looked up from her notes. “Inconclusive. Benny said it’s difficult to determine if he died before being put into the concrete. There were ligature marks on the neck but not defined enough to point to strangulation. Neck wasn’t broken but there was a slight skull fracture. It’s possible he was hit first with a blunt instrument.”
Jake smiled smugly and said, “So much for asphyxiation.”
Chapter 24
“Why was that left out of the report?” Preston sat behind the mahogany desk in his study, the picture on the wall was pulled away, the safe opened. Preston held the gold lightning bolt pin in his fingers. He had just placed a call to Captain Murphy.
Murphy’s voice blared from the speaker phone. “It was the call of the primary on the case.”
“And who’s that?” Preston snapped his fingers and pointed toward the bar. Like a lap dog, Cain obediently rose from his seat and lumbered over to the bar.
“Jake Mitchell.”
Cain returned with two glasses of Jack Daniels, handed one to Preston, and then sat down across from him.
“He handled security for me last Saturday night, right?”
“Yes,” Murphy replied. After a few seconds, he added, “I understand from the medical examiner’s office that the FBI sent a forensics expert to examine the body.”
Preston closed his eyes and pressed his fingers to his temple. He opened his eyes again, swallowed the contents of the glass, and waved it in front of Cain to signal he wanted a refill.
“What’s the Bureau looking for?” Preston asked.
“The deceased is an alleged deserter, not to mention an African American. We’ll be lucky we don’t have the NAACP, Jesse Jackson, and god knows who else looking into this case.”
“Great, just fucking great,” said Preston. “I have to have another dead nigger screwing up my…”
“What was that?”
“Nothing. I just don’t need this grief right now. I’m leaving it up to you to play this down. He’s been identified. He was drunk, a victim of strange circumstances. Make sure the autopsy report shows a high level of alcohol, or…” he snapped his fingers, “drugs, a high level of drugs. Then just let the story die. The headlines will be filled with something else in no time and people will forget.”
“It may not be that easy.” Murphy’s voice sounded strained.
Cain eyed the contents of his glass while keeping one eye on Preston. Cain always seemed to know how to respond based on Preston’s reactions. And right now, he didn’t like the sound of Preston’s voice.
Preston’s voice softened, a sinister smile spread across his face. “Did I tell you we are creating a police commissioner post? This qualified person will be over the Board of Police and Fire Commissioners, even the Chief of Police.” Preston’s smile broadened. He had hit a hot button. “You know our city is just growing too fast and one police chief isn’t enough, yet it doesn’t make sense to have two.”
“I… yes, I agree.” Murphy was practically salivating over the phone.
“It will take someone who is tactical, efficient, who really gets the job done. And, of course, being my home town, I will have a great deal of input.”
The speaker phone was silent, except for Murphy’s breathing which bordered on panting. Cain smiled at Preston’s skillful art of manipulation.
“The only problem I foresee is the sergeant on the case. Casey may not let it die.”
Preston straightened up, stared at the phone as he repeated, “Casey?”
“Yes, Sam Casey.”
“Sam? Wasn’t he a reporter?”
“That was her father. But it may as well be her old man. She’s just as tenacious.”
Now it was Preston’s turn to be silent and breathe heavily. He regained his composure quickly, saying, “A good organizer, an excellent candidate for police commissioner, would find a way to control his people.”
Preston ended his call, leaned back in his high-backed chair, and studied the brown contents in his glass. His left hand squeezed tightly. The names Samuel Casey and Harvey Wilson pounded in his head. His temples throbbed, his jaw tightened.
The glass burst in his hand, scattering shards and spraying whiskey on his desk and the front of his blue silk shirt. He looked at the blood running down his hand.
Cain seemed unaffected, as if the scene were a frequent occurrence. Preston casually started to pull the glass shards from his hand as he told Cain, “I think it’s time to put together a plan.”
Chapter 25
“Beer?” Frank handed a can to Jake without even waiting for a reply. They sat around the table on the patio. Moths flitted through the still air. The sky was the darkest blue, one shade before total darkness. Candles glowed on tall bamboo rods standing guard at the corners of the patio.
“We didn’t really expect the major general to be alive anyway. He would have been what? Seventy-six?” Jake took a long drag from his cigarette and exhaled. “There must be a subordinate who’s still breathing.”
“I’ve left half a dozen messages. I’ll have to see how many return calls I get tomorrow.” Frank raised his head, listening for something, then shrugged. “Why don’t we just question Preston?”
“I don’t want to tip my hand. I’d rather get more information first,” Jake replied.
“I agree,” Sam said. She picked up her cellular phone and dialed. She smiled when she heard the familiar voice. “Hi, Tim. I need a favor. Have a pencil handy?” She waited a few seconds, then continued. “The dates are 1950 to 1953. Yes, the Korean War. I need information on a place called Mushima Valley. I’m interested specifically in a Private Harvey Wilson and anyone who might have been close to him. Yes, just send the information through to my printer. Thanks, Hon.”