“Dad’s on the porch,” the woman said. Nothing Asian about her accent. She sounded like she might have come from milking the local cow. “Come in.”
Not pretty, he thought, but attractive. Tough upper lip; soft brown eyes.
On the way through the apartment, she chattered away, friendly, loose: “Virgil Flowers. I like that. Classical and corny at the same time-like way out in the country. Do all the cops here wear cowboy boots? They don’t in Madison… Did you ever go undercover as a singer or something? What does your shirt say? WWTDD? Is that a music group?”
“I can’t talk about it, ma’am,” Virgil said.
“Some kind of cop thing?”
The condo had a glassed-in back porch, looking out on a square of lawn, and Sinclair was out there, a lanky older man with still-blond hair, gray stubble on his chin. Women of a certain age would go for him in a big way, Virgil thought. He looked a little like the actor Richard Harris, in a loose white cotton dress shirt, the sleeves turned up, a gold tennis bracelet glittering from one wrist. He was sitting at a table, clicking at a laptop, with a glass of lemonade next to his hand.
When he saw them coming, he stood up and offered a soft, scholarly hand: “Mr. Flowers.” He was six-three, Virgil thought, a couple inches taller than he was, with broad shoulders and a still-narrow waist.
“Mr. Sinclair,” Virgil said. Virgil turned to the woman and said, “You never mentioned your name.”
“Mai.”
“ Mai Sinclair?” Virgil asked.
“Yes. Not married. Unlucky in love, I guess,” she said.
“Well, good,” Virgil said. Sinclair was smiling at them, sat back in his chair, pointed Virgil to the other one.
“Do you handle homicides on a regular basis, Mr. Flowers?” he asked.
“Call me Virgil,” Virgil said as he sat down and stretched out his legs. “Most of my homicides are pretty irregular. Damnedest thing. I’d give anything for a good old beer-bottle domestic. I sometimes get so confused, I don’t know what to do next.”
“Well… Consider what each soil will bear, and what each refuses,” Sinclair said.
Virgil laughed and clapped his hands. “You looked that up before I got here. You didn’t just pull that out…”
Mai had lingered, and asked, looking between them, “What?”
“He’s quoting Virgil at me,” Virgil said. “That’s never happened before, and I’ve talked to some pretty smart fellas.”
Sinclair, surprised that Virgil had recognized the line, said, “Well.”
Mai said to Sinclair, “He won’t tell me what his T-shirt means. The ‘WW’ is ‘What Would,’ and the last ‘D’ is ‘Do,’ but he won’t tell me the rest.”
“We can’t talk about it,” Sinclair said. “That’s the first rule.”
“The first rule of what?” she asked.
“Can’t talk about it,” Virgil said, nodding to her father.
“What?” Hands on her hips.
“Can’t talk about it,” Sinclair repeated, looking up at his daughter, shaking his head.
She took them in for a moment, then said, “Well, poop on you both. I’ll go iron my underwear.”
“You wrote a paper, about twenty years ago, about Agent Orange, and how the Vietnamese tried to refoliate with kudzu,” Virgil said.
“So you looked up my vita on the Internet,” Sinclair said.
“I did,” Virgil said. “But I also read the paper in my senior seminar-I majored in ecological science-and I remembered it when I looked it up. We talked about it for quite a while; about the unexpected effects of good intentions.”
Sinclair was pleased. “The paper was controversial, but shouldn’t have been-it was a good piece of work,” he said. “But we were coming out of the Reagan years, and the triumphalism, and nobody wanted to hear about the collateral damage we’d caused around the world with these crazy military adventures.” He leaned forward, intent now, jabbed his finger at Virgil in a professorial, mentor-to-student way. “I’ll tell you, Virgil, what this country needs more than anything in the world-more than anything-is a sane energy policy. That’s what I’m writing about now. Energy, environment, it all ties together. Instead, we get wars, we get military adventures, we spend two years fighting about whether a president got a blow job, a little squirt in the dark? I mean, who could really care? This country does everything but take care of business. We just… ah, that’s not what you’re here for…”
He settled back, looked tired. “So. What’re you here for?”
“I mostly agree with everything you just said, to get that out of the way,” Virgil said. “But. Robert Sanderson got himself killed in a pretty unpleasant way, and his body was dropped on a veterans’ memorial…”
Virgil detailed the Sanderson killing, and then the Utecht murder, pointing out the similarities, and how, two nights before the killing, Sanderson was seen arguing with two men in the street outside his house.
“At least one of them was Ray Bunton. We’re looking for him, but haven’t found him yet. When we went down to the vet center to inquire, they told us that you’d been sitting in on their therapy sessions, the talk. And that you’d spoken to Bunton and Sanderson afterward. We’re wondering if they might have said anything that would cast some light on this murder.”
Sinclair made a moue and, after a moment’s consideration, said, “I have to tell you, Virgil, it runs against the grain to talk to the police about people who aren’t around to defend themselves.”
“This is not a political deal,” Virgil said.
“Well, it probably it is, at some level. The veterans’ memorials and all.” Sinclair leaned back in his chair, hands behind his head, fingers interlaced. “But I recognize what you’re saying. I can tell you that there was something strange, something… tense going on between Sanderson and Ray Bunton. Did you… do you know if Sanderson ever went to Vietnam? Was he in combat?”
“Not unless he was some kind of special forces guy, undercover. As far as we know, he worked in a headquarters company in Korea as a mechanic. I can’t believe… I mean, he was pretty young at the time. I don’t see how he could have gotten trained enough, important enough, to have a heavy cover that would have been kept all these years. So I don’t think he was there. His records say Korea, and that’s what he told his girlfriend. On the other hand, he was at this vets’ session…”
“And he said something about the Viets being a bunch of frogs… meaning Frenchmen… that made me think he’d been there,” Sinclair said. “He said it in a way… I don’t know. Anyway, at that point, Bunton was staring him down, and Sanderson saw it and shut up. On the street, I was just coming out the door, and they were already out there, and I heard Bunton say something about ‘keeping your mouth shut.’ I was curious, I dug around, but they told me to take a hike. I’d let that Fonda shit out…” He grinned wryly. “Some of those guys’ll never forget. If Jane doesn’t outlive them, her gravestone’s gonna have urine stains all over it.”
“Huh,” Virgil said.
“Are you going to ask me where I was last night?”
Virgil yawned and said, “Sure. Where were you last night?”
“Asleep.” He laughed. “Mai and I ordered out, ate in-around eight o’clock-and I did some correspondence on the Internet, and Mai and I had a little talk about my health… and then we went to bed.”
“Your health?”
Sinclair tapped his chest. “Had a nuclear stress test yesterday morning. Starting to show what the cardiologist calls ‘anomalies.’ I eat eggs, I eat bacon, I drink milk. They want me to eat air with some plastic spray on it.”
“So how bad? Bypass?” Virgil asked.
“Not yet-but that could be down the road. We’re gonna do an angiogram and figure out what to do. They could put a stent in,” he said. “That’s why Mai’s up here-she’s trying to get me to go home to Madison, where she can keep an eye on me.”
“Hmmph. Makes me nervous just hearing about it. I do like my bacon,” Virgil said. Then he asked, “Why are you here, anyway? In St. Paul? You’re a big shot in Madison.”