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“Look at the facts, Kitt. Your ex-husband was Buddy Brown’s employer.”

“So that makes him a killer?”

M.C. ignored that. “While you two were married, your husband did not hire ex-cons. Your words.”

“I said I didn’t think so. He may have.”

“While you were married, magic tricks were simply a hobby. Now he entertains sick children with them.”

“Please! It was a logical next step. He saw how his magic helped kids while Sadie was in the hospital.”

“Highcrest Hospital rang a bell. So I spent some time digging through the case files. Three months ago, Julie Entzel’s cousin Sarah was a patient there. She spent a full week in the pediatric ward.”

“You think Joe’s the Copycat?” The utter disbelief in her voice would have been comical in another situation.

“And your caller. Yes.”

“But I know this man,” Kitt argued. “I grew up with him, was married to him for nearly twenty-five years. What you’re suggesting is simply not possible.”

M.C. leaned toward her. “Why, Kitt? That’s what I’ve wondered all along. Why involve you? This makes sense.”

“Not to me.” Kitt grabbed at straws, thoughts whirling. “What about the clown at the leukemia event? He gave me the balloon, called me later. But Joe was there. He couldn’t-”

“He saw the clown give you the balloon.” She held up a hand, stopping the denial. “And don’t ask about not recognizing his voice, we both know that anyone who can access a computer can buy a voice altering device online. And some of them are damn good.

“He’s punishing you,” she went on. “For leaving him. For focusing on the case instead of him. For caring about the little girls more than him or your marriage. Choose any one to fill in the blanks; they all work.”

Kitt spun away from the other woman. Joe knew everything about her. Her hopes and fears. He knew about her falling and hitting her head; that she had been drinking.

He knew everything about her.

No. This wasn’t possible.

“I called Julie Entzel’s mother.”

Kitt looked over her shoulder at M.C.

“They saw Joe’s magic show. Little Julie was quite taken with it.”

My God.

It couldn’t be how it looked.

“Can you do this?” M.C. asked. “Or shall I keep the sarge in?”

“I can do this, dammit. Give me a minute.” M.C. didn’t comment. Kitt heard the interrogation room door click shut. She closed her eyes. How did she get her arms around this? How did she even muster enough objectivity to go in there and ask the important questions?

How the hell did she look Joe in the eyes?

She flexed her fingers. Everything M.C. said was true. If the man sitting in that room was anyone else, she would have been in his face.

Kitt sorted through the points M.C. had presented to her. He was a physical link to Buddy Brown. And between her and Brown. Now there was a connection between him and one of the victims. M.C. had provided a plausible motivation for the calls to her.

He could have seen the clown as an opportunity to throw suspicion away from him.

When she’d warned him that Tami might be in danger, she’d told him about the clown. The balloon. The clown’s call.

He hadn’t said a word about having bought the child a balloon.

The truth of that rushed over her in a chilling wave. No, none of it made sense to her. None of it jibed with the man she knew-and loved.

But how often did family of the accused express shock, astonishment and disbelief over their loved ones’ actions?

More often than not.

Kitt drew in a deep, fortifying breath. It didn’t change her feelings about the way M.C. had gone behind her back. But she had a job to do, and she meant to do it. Although, if this went any further she would be out of it. With personal connections to a prime suspect, she would be pulled from the case. At this stage, however, she could be a big asset in the interrogation process.

She crossed to the door, pulled it open. “Taking over, Sarge,” she said.

He nodded and stood. On his way out, he squeezed her arm reassuringly. She wondered if he had been a party to M.C.’s deception and hoped he hadn’t been.

“Hello, Joe,” she said, taking a seat across from him at the table.

“Kitt?” She cringed at the relief in his voice. “What’s going on here?”

“Just some questions. That’s all.”

“You already asked me questions. Why here? I would have answered anything you asked at the office.”

“Riggio here likes things official.”

The bad cop, obviously.

She smiled reassuringly, feeling like a fraud. “Everything’s going to be fine.”

“Okay.” He nodded. “So let’s get this going, I’ve got a crew waiting for me.”

Riggio began. “Your fiancée told us you met at the hospital where she works.”

“That’s right.”

“What were you doing in the pediatric ward, Mr. Lundgren?”

He frowned. “Valerie didn’t tell you? I perform magic tricks for the kids. I was there doing one of my shows.”

Kitt stepped in. “When did you start doing that, Joe?”

“A year or so ago. I was lonely…missed Sadie and-” He cleared his throat. “I had a lot of free time. To fill it, I worked on my magic. I remembered how the kids at the hospital had enjoyed it and approached the hospital about performing for the kids every couple of weeks.”

“Is Highcrest the only hospital you visit?”

“No. I go to The Ronald McDonald House. Children’s Hospital. I even performed at a couple of nursing homes.”

Kitt saw M.C. make a note. She would check those places and see if any of the other victims had a connection to them.

“Seems like all this philanthropy would take a lot of time away from work,” M.C. said.

“Work isn’t everything, Detective. Life is about giving back.”

“How would you respond if we said you had met one of the Copycat’s victims?”

He looked from Kitt to M.C. “I’d say you’re mistaken.”

“Julie Entzel. She saw one of your magic shows.”

“At Highcrest Hospital.”

The color drained from his face. “I didn’t know. I saw the picture in the paper…but I didn’t recognize her as one of the kids who…”

His voice trailed off. Kitt recalled how he had said the Entzel girl “meant nothing to him.” That he didn’t even “know her.”

He looked ill. M.C. changed direction. “Let’s talk about Buddy Brown.”

He didn’t comment, just nodded. “How did he come to be working for you?” she asked.

“He contacted me. And he had some experience. So, I hired him.”

“He was up-front with you about his past?”

“Yes.”

“That didn’t worry you?”

“Look, somebody’s got to hire these guys. How can they go straight if they can’t support themselves?”

“So you consider it your civic duty?”

He frowned. “Not really. I still expect a full day’s work for a full day’s pay. I’m not a charity.”

“Where were you the nights of March 6, 9 and 16?”

“May I consult my planner?”

She said he could, and he pulled out his PalmPilot. After navigating through the menu, he said, “The night of the ninth I was with Valerie.”

“All night?”

Kitt didn’t look away, though she wanted to. He shifted in his seat, clearly uncomfortable. “I don’t normally. But Tami spent the night at her grandmother’s.”

“What about the other two nights?”

“Nothing. Valerie, Tami and I went to dinner on the sixth. I had a homeowner’s association meeting on the sixteenth.”

“You were home by what time?”

He thought a moment. “Both nights, 10:00 p.m. No later.” Joe looked at her. “Do I need to get a lawyer, Kitt?”

Riggio answered for her, quickly. A fact that once again proved the other woman didn’t trust her. “A lawyer is your right, of course. Only you know if you need one.”

A trick used to make a suspect feel as if he was incriminating himself if he lawyered-up. She had certainly used it enough.

So why did it feel so wrong now?

M.C. stood. “I’m sorry, but could you give us a few minutes?”