Some other little kid-some woman, man, hell, it don't matter-is going to be in the wrong place at the wrong time when Gault gets another itch."
"And you really think he's still there?"
He tapped an ash.
"Yeah, I really think he is."
"Why?"
"Because the fun's just begun," he said as Benton Wesley walked in.
"The greatest goddam show on earth and he's sitting back watching, laughing his ass off as the Black Mountain cops run around in circles trying to figure out what the hell to do. They average one homicide a year there, by the way."
I watched Wesley head for the salad bar. He ladled soup into a bowl, placed crackers on his tray, and dropped several dollars in a paper plate set out for customers when the cashier wasn't around. He did not indicate that he had seen us, but I knew he had a gift for taking in the smallest details of his surroundings while seeming in a fog.
"Some of Emily Steiner's physical findings make me wonder if her body was refrigerated," I said to Marino as Wesley headed toward us.
"Right. I'm sure it was. At the hospital morgue." Marino gave me an odd look.
"Sounds like I'm missing something important," Wesley said as he pulled out a chair and sat down.
"I'm contemplating that Emily Steiner's body was refrigerated before it was left at the lake," I said.
"Based on what?"
A gold Department of Justice cuff link peeked out of his coat sleeve as he reached for the pepper shaker.
"Her skin was doughy and dry," I answered.
"She was well preserved and virtually unmolested by insects or animals."
"That pretty much shoots down the idea of Gault staying in some tourist trap motel," Marino said.
"He sure as hell didn't stash the body in his minibar." Wesley, always meticulous, spooned clam chowder away from him and raised it to his lips without spilling a drop.
"What's been turned in for trace?" I asked.
"Her jewelry and socks," Wesley replied.
"And the duct tape, which unfortunately was removed before being checked for prints. It was pretty cut up at the morgue."
"Christ," Marino muttered.
"But it's distinctive enough to hold promise. In fact, I can't say I've ever seen blaze orange duct tape before." He was looking at me.
"I certainly haven't," I said.
"Do your labs know anything about it yet?"
"Nothing yet except there's a pattern of grease streaks, meaning the edges of the roll the tape came from are streaked with grease. For whatever that's worth."
"What else do the labs have?" I asked. Wesley said, "Swabs, soil from under the body, the sheet and pouch used to transport her from the lake." My frustration grew as he continued to talk. I wondered what had been missed. I wondered what microscopic witnesses had been silenced forever.
"I'd like copies of her photographs and reports, and lab results as they come in," I said.
"Whatever's ours is yours," Wesley replied.
"The labs will contact you directly."
"We got to get time of death straight," Marino said.
"It ain't adding up."
"It's very important we sort that out," Wesley concurred.
"Can you do some more checking?"
"I'll do what I can," I said.
"I'm supposed to be in Hogan's Alley." Marino got up from the table as he glanced at his watch.
"In fact, I guess they've started without me."
"I hope you plan to change your clothes first," Wesley said to him.
"Wear a sweatshirt with a hood."
"Yo. So I get dropped by heat exhaustion."
"Better than getting dropped by nine-millimeter paint bullets," Wesley said.
"They hurt like hell."
"What? You two been discussing this or something?" We watched him leave. He buttoned his blazer over his big belly, smoothed his wispy hair, rearranged his trousers as he walked. Marino had a habit of self-consciously grooming himself like a cat whenever he made an entrance or an exit. Wesley stared at the dirty ashtray where Marino had been sitting. He turned his eyes to me, and I thought they seemed uncommonly dark, his mouth set as if it had never known how to smile.
"You've got to do something about him," he said.
"I wish I had that power, Benton."
"You're the only one who comes close to having that power."
"That's frightening."
"What's frightening is how red his face got during the consultation. He's not doing a goddam thing he's supposed to do. Fried foods, cigarettes, booze. " Wesley glanced away.
"Since Doris left he's gone to hell."
"I've seen some improvement," I said.
"Brief remissions." He met my eyes again.
"In the main he's killing himself." In the main, Marino was and had been all of his life. And I did not know what to do about it.
"When are you going back to Richmond?" he asked, and I wondered what went on behind his walls. I wondered about his wife.
"That depends," I answered.
"I was hoping to spend a little time with Lucy."
"She's told you we want her back?"
I stared out at sunlit grass and leaves stirring in the wind.
"She's thrilled," I said.
"You're not."
"No."
"I understand. You don't want Lucy to share your reality, Kay." His face softened almost imperceptibly.
"I suppose it should relieve me that in one department, at least, you are not completely rational or objective."
I was not completely rational or objective in more than one department, and Wesley knew this all too well.
"I'm not even certain what she's doing over there," I said.
"How would you feel if it were one of your children?"
"The same way I always feel when it's my children. I don't want them in law enforcement or the military. I don't want them familiar with guns. And yet I want them involved in all of these things."
"Because you know what's out there," I said, my eyes again on his and lingering longer than they should. He crumpled his napkin and placed it on his tray.
"Lucy likes what she's doing. So do we."
"I'm glad to hear it."
"She's remarkable. The software she's helping us develop for VI CAP is going to change everything. We're not talking about that much time before it's possible for us to track these animals around the globe. Can you imagine if Gault had murdered the Steiner girl in Australia? Do you think we'd know?"
"Chances are we wouldn't," I said.
"Certainly not this soon. But we don't know it's Gault who killed her."
"What we do know is that time is more lives." He reached for my tray and stacked it on top of his. Both of us got up from the table.
"I think we should drop in on your niece," he said.
"I don't think I'm cleared."
"You're not. But give me a little time and I'll bet I can remedy that."
"I would love it."
"Let's see, it's one o'clock now. How about meeting me back here at four-thirty?" he said as we walked out of the Boardroom.
"How's Lucy getting along in Washington, by the way?" He referred to the least-sought-after dormitory, with its tiny beds and towels too small to cover anything that mattered.
"I'm sorry we couldn't have offered her more privacy."
"Don't be. It's good for her to have a roommate and suite mates not that she necessarily gets along with them."
"Geniuses don't always work and play well with others."
"The only thing she ever flunked on her report card," I said.
I spent the next several hours on the phone, unsuccessfully trying to reach Dr. Jenrette, who apparently had taken the day off to play golf. My office in Richmond, I was pleased to hear, was under control, the day's cases thus far requiring only views, which were external examinations with body fluids drawn. Blessedly, there had been no homicides from the night before, and my two court cases for the rest of the week had both settled. At the appointed time and place, Wesley and I met.
"Put this on." He handed me a special visitor's pass, which I clipped to my jacket pocket next to my faculty name tag.