“You betcha,” he replied.
I wasn’t convinced, but I figured Allen Lindstrom was a big boy, and I didn’t take him to raise. I had my own agenda, one that needed attending to, starting with Dr. Emma Jackson. I called her first thing.
“Detective Beaumont here,” I said. “Am I catching you at a bad time, Dr. Jackson?”
“Actually, I was on my way out the door. I have to stop by the hospital this morning for a few minutes.”
She sounded composed, businesslike. It occurred to me that a doctor’s patients don’t necessarily stop being sick just because the doctor’s child happens to have been murdered. We agreed that after her hospital visit we would meet at the Little Cheerful, a university area hangout known citywide for its homemade, onion-laden hash browns. I was halfway through my breakfast, hash browns included, when Emma Jackson showed up. She ordered black coffee and orange juice.
“Nothing else?” I asked.
“I’m not hungry.”
Emma Jackson sat there stone-faced, watching me eat and making me feel terribly self-conscious. “The funeral arrangements are all handled?” I asked, trying to make casual conversation.
She nodded. “Reverend Walters is taking care of most of it, coordinating it really. I’m just not up to it, and neither is Harmon, Ben’s father. He wanted to have a joint service.”
“How big is Mount Zion?” I asked.
She frowned. “Big enough. Why?”
“Ben was a police officer,” I explained. “There will probably be a fairly large contingent of law enforcement people from all over the state in attendance.”
“Oh,” she said. “I never thought of that. I doubt Ben’s father did either.”
I was probably way out of line asking the question, but if I did it, Big Al wouldn’t have to.
“What about pallbearers?” I asked.
“What about them?”
“Usually, when a cop dies, a contingent of fellow officers carries the casket. We consider it a duty and an honor.”
Dr. Emma Jackson’s eyes met and held mine above the rim of her coffee cup. “I don’t think so,” she said. “Not this time. Adam’s father was a cop. He was also a rat. I won’t have cops for pallbearers and neither will Harmon Weston.”
“It’ll break my partner’s heart.”
“Why?”
“His name’s Detective Lindstrom…”
“He has another name, doesn’t he?” she interrupted.
“Big Al.”
“I know about him,” she said, “and I know he was a good friend of Ben’s, but Harmon and I agreed, no cops whatsoever, no exceptions. Now let’s get down to business. I don’t have much time.”
Leaving the last few crisp crumbs of the hash browns languishing in traces of egg yolk, I pushed my plate aside. “Thanks for squeezing me in,” I said. “I more than half expected to have to take a number and get in line to talk to you this morning.”
Emma frowned, taking umbrage. “Are you being sarcastic because I’m not taking time off, Detective Beaumont? I can’t afford to. Medical school rules don’t allow for residents’ children being murdered. It’s not supposed to happen that way.”
I flushed in confusion. “That wasn’t what I meant at all.”
“Maybe you’d better explain.”
“I expected you’d be busy with calls from reporters and from some of the other detectives down at the department as well.”
“No. No one called except you.”
“I don’t understand that,” I said. “The other detectives should have been in touch with you the minute they got out of the task force meeting.”
There was the slightest softening in the anger-hardened contours of her face. She looked at me and shook her head, smiling sadly. “You’re really very naive, aren’t you, Detective Beaumont? You don’t understand at all.”
“Understand what?” I demanded.
“Adam was only a little boy,” she said softly, “and African American besides. His death is hardly newsworthy. And I don’t expect people down at the Seattle PD to pay any particular attention. In fact, I guess I’m surprised you do.”
For the first time since meeting her, I had the smallest glimmer of what made Dr. Emma Jackson the way she was.
“Your son was murdered,” I told her. “And I’m a Homicide detective. It’s my job to find out who did it, regardless. I care.”
She nodded. “I know,” she said. “Ask your questions, Detective Beaumont. I’ll do my best to answer them.”
The waitress stopped by and poured more coffee. The interruption gave us both a break, some emotional breathing space. Once she left I went about getting the interview on track.
“Did you check on the dog bite?”
“I tried to, but I didn’t turn up anything at all. Chances are, if the man was bitten, it was only a superficial wound, one that didn’t require stitches or medical attention.”
“I’m not surprised. A wound serious enough for stitches might have interfered with the killer’s ability to function.”
She nodded. “That doesn’t seem to have been the case, does it.”
Emma Jackson was a curious and puzzling mixture, forever switching back and forth between dispassionate professional and grieving mother. From moment to moment, it was impossible to predict which one of the two would surface.
“No,” I agreed.
“If you already had a pretty fair idea that was the case to begin with, why did you send me off on a wild-goose chase? Was the plan to keep me occupied and out of your hair?”
When it comes to dealing with difficult women, especially smart difficult women, it’s often best to fall back on some of my mother’s sage advice about honesty being the best policy.
“You’ve got me dead to rights,” I admitted. “I wanted to keep you out of my hair, but I’ve changed my mind about you.”
“How so?”
“Some things have surfaced in this investigation that make me think you may be able to be very helpful.”
Dr. Emma Jackson eyed me intently. “What kinds of things?” she asked.
“You’re going to have to bear with me, Dr. Jackson. To begin with, I’m going to ask some tough questions. Please be patient and don’t expect any answers in return, at least not right away.” She started to voice an objection, but I held up my hand to stop her.
“I’m going to ask you things about Ben and Shiree Weston’s relationship that only someone like you, only a close family friend, would have any knowledge of. Those things may or may not have some future bearing on the case. If they don’t, whatever you tell me stays between us. If they do, then I’ll do my best to protect you as the source of whatever revelations may be pertinent.”
“It sounds as though you expect some of these ”revelations,“ as you call them, to be damaging, either to Ben or Shiree.”
I nodded.
“And what’s in it for me?”
“Not much, I’m afraid. All I can hope to promise you is a better chance at catching your son’s killer.”
Her eyes narrowed. “Not Ben Weston’s killer?”
“I’m the only detective who’s been officially assigned to your son’s case,” I said quietly. “And by solving that one, we’ll automatically solve the others as well, but my primary responsibility is to you and to Adam.”
She gave me a long, searching look, and it was clear from the expression on her face that my answer to her question had been correct.
“What do you want to know?” she asked.
“Everything, Dr. Jackson. I’ll need to know every single detail you can tell me.”
“You can call me Emma,” she said.
I knew then that I had won big. Emma Jackson was going to be working with me on this one and not with Detective Paul Kramer. Maybe he and I really don’t work on the same team.
“Thanks,” I said. “My friends call me Beau.”
We spent the better part of the next two hours together, drinking cup after cup of Little Cheerful coffee. Gradually Ben and Shiree Weston’s story trickled out. At first it seemed like a fairy tale, like something too good to be true, and maybe that was part of what had gone wrong.
According to Emma Jackson, Ben and Shiree Garvey had known each other vaguely from church, but they hadn’t really become well acquainted until that critical period of time in Ben’s life when his first wife, Vondelle, was dying of cancer. With his wife sick, Ben had struggled desperately to keep all the various balls in the air-his job, his kids, the regular bills, and the medical bills. When he found himself inevitably sinking into a morass of past-due notices, Reverend Homer Walters sent him to Shiree Garvey at the Mount Zion Federal Credit Union for some much needed help and counseling.