With that, he and his crew trailed out.
Duncan advanced into the room. The victim was lying on the floor, faceup, between a desk that was larger than Duncan’s car and a bookcase filled with leather-bound books and knickknacks that looked rare, old, and expensive. The rug beneath him was still wet with blood.
The man was Caucasian, appeared to be around thirty-five, and looked almost embarrassed to be in his present situation. Duncan had been taught by his parents to respect the nobility of life, even in its most ignoble forms. Often his father had reminded him that all men were God’s creation, and he’d grown up believing it.
He had acquired enough toughness and objectivity to do the work he did. But he never looked at a dead body without feeling a twinge of sadness. The day he no longer felt it, he would quit. If the time ever came when he felt no remorse over a life taken, he would know his soul was in jeopardy. He would have become one of the lost. He would have become Savich.
He felt he should apologize to this unnamed person for the indignity he had undergone already and would continue to be subjected to until they got from him all the answers he could provide. No longer a person, he was a corpse, evidence, exhibit A.
Duncan knelt down and studied his face, asking softly, “What’s your name?”
“Neither the judge nor Mrs. Laird claim to recognize him,” Dothan said.
The ME’s statement jerked Duncan out of his introspection and back into the job at hand. “ ‘Claim’?”
“Don’t read anything into that. I’m just repeating what the judge told me when I got here.”
Duncan and DeeDee exchanged a significant look, then he searched the dead man’s pockets, hoping to find something that perhaps Baker had overlooked. All the pockets were empty.
“No car keys. No money. No ID.” He studied the man’s face again, searching his memory, trying to place him among crooks he’d come across during the investigations of other homicides. “I don’t recognize him.”
“Me, neither,” DeeDee said.
Standing, Duncan said, “Dothan, I’d like to know the distance from which the fatal shot was fired. How close was Mrs. Laird when she shot him?”
“I’ll give you my best guess.”
“Which is usually pretty damn good.”
“Baker’s reliable, but I’ll take my own measurement of the distance between the door and the desk,” DeeDee said, pulling a tape measure from her pocket.
“Well, unless y’all need me, I’m off,” the ME said, tucking his damp handkerchief into his pants pocket. “Ready to get him out of here?”
“DeeDee?” Duncan asked.
“Sixteen feet.” She wrote the measurement in her notebook, then took a look around the room. “I think I’ll do my own sketch of the room, too, but you don’t have to hang around,” she said to the ME.
“Then I’ll send in the EMTs.” He glanced around, his expression turning sour. “Money sure gets you nice stuff, doesn’t it?”
“Especially old money. Laird Shipping was started by the judge’s grandfather, and he’s the last of the line,” DeeDee informed them. “No other heirs,” she said, raising her eyebrows.
“This place probably isn’t even mortgaged,” Dothan grumbled as he turned to leave. “Think I’ll find a Taco Bell open this time of night?” He was panting hard as he lumbered off.
As DeeDee sketched in her notebook, she said, “He’s going to keel over one of these days.”
“But he’ll die happy.”
Duncan’s mind wasn’t on the ME’s health. He was noting that the victim’s clothing and shoes appeared new, but cheap. The kind a con would wear when he was released from prison. “First thing tomorrow, we need to check men recently released from prison, especially those who’d been serving time for breaking and entering. I bet we won’t have to dig too deep before we find this guy.”
EMTs wheeled in a gurney. Duncan stood by as the unidentified dead man’s body was zipped into the black bag, placed on the gurney, and rolled out. He accompanied it as far as the front door. From there he could see that a larger crowd of gawkers had gathered on the far side of the median. More news vans were parked along the street.
The flowers in the vase on the foyer table shimmied, alerting him to Sally Beale’s approach. “I had her go through it all again,” she said to Duncan, speaking in an undertone. “Didn’t falter. Didn’t change a word. She’s ready to sign a statement.”
He surveyed the divided street, trying to imagine it prior to becoming a crime scene. Without the flashing emergency lights and the onlookers, it would be serene.
“Sally, you were first on the scene, right?”
“Me and Crofton were only a couple blocks away when we got the call from dispatch.”
“Did you see any moving vehicles in the area?”
“Nary a one.”
“Abandoned car?”
“Not even a moped, and other patrol units have been canvassing the whole neighborhood looking for the perp’s means of transportation. Nothing’s turned up.”
Puzzling. Something out of whack that demanded an explanation. “Are the neighbors being canvassed?”
“Two teams are going door-to-door. So far, everybody was fast asleep, saw no one, heard nothing.”
“Not even the shots?” He turned to face the policewoman, who was shrugging.
“Big houses, big yards.”
“Mrs. Laird showered?”
“Said she felt violated,” Beale said. “Asked would it be okay.”
It was a typical reaction for people to want to wash after their home was invaded, but Duncan didn’t like it when a bloody corpse was just downstairs. “Did she have blood on her?”
“No, and I was with her the whole time upstairs. All she had on was her robe. I got it from her, gave it to Baker. No blood on it that I saw. But the judge, the hem of his robe had blood on it from when he checked the body. He asked permission to dress. Baker’s got his robe, too.”
“Okay, thanks, Sally. Keep them separate till we’re ready to question them.”
“You got it.”
He returned to the study, where DeeDee was examining the judge’s desk. “All these drawers are still locked.”
“Mrs. Laird must have caught the burglar early.”
She raised her head and gave him an arch look. “You believe the burglar scenario?”
“I believe it’s time we asked just how this went down.”
Chapter 4
“WHO FIRST, HER OR THE JUDGE?”
Duncan thought about it. “Let’s talk to them together.”
DeeDee registered surprise as well as a trace of disapproval. “How come?”
“Because they’ve already been questioned separately by Crofton and Beale. Sally Beale told me Mrs. Laird’s second telling didn’t vary from the first and that she’s prepared to sign a statement.
“If it really is a matter of her shooting a home intruder, and we continue badgering them, it’s going to look like we doubt them, and that will seem like reprisal for my contempt charge. The only thing it will accomplish is to piss off the judge. Gerard will have my ass if I have another run-in with him.”
“Okay,” DeeDee said. “But what if it isn’t a case of her protecting herself from a home intruder?”
“We have no reason to disbelieve them, do we?”
He left DeeDee to mull that over and followed his nose until he located the kitchen, where Sally Beale and Elise Laird were seated at the table in the breakfast nook, talking quietly. When he came in, the policewoman, in the manner of a heavy person, pushed herself to her feet. “We’re finished here.” She closed the cover of her spiral notebook. “I’ve got it all down.”
None of the color had returned to Elise Laird’s face. She looked at him inquisitively. He sensed unspoken apprehension.
“We’re ready for you in the living room, Mrs. Laird.”
He made his way back to the formal room, where Crofton and Judge Laird had been joined by an austere, gray-haired woman who was pouring hot liquid from a silver pot into china cups.