“As we speak,” Worley said. “I’ve got two uniforms working it.”
DeeDee said, “Maybe you should have used plainclothes-men.”
“In that neighborhood it wouldn’t matter,” Duncan said. “Whoever we sent would be marked for cops.”
Without saying it, the three veterans knew that the canvass would be a waste of time and manpower. In that part of town, anyone who was friendly with cops today could be the victim of a seemingly random drive-by shooting tomorrow. No one was going to talk to two uniforms going door-to-door asking questions.
Gerard’s desk phone rang. He answered with a brusque, “Gerard.” He listened for a moment, then said, “I’ll tell ’em, thanks.” He hung up and said, “ Dothan ’s ready to perform the autopsy on Napoli.”
“I’ll go,” Duncan offered. If Napoli ’s corpse produced any of his assailant’s DNA, he wanted to be the first to know. Carefully he picked up the transponder and returned it to the evidence bag. “I’ll drop this at forensics.”
Gerard said, “Worley, let’s get the names of residents for each address on the street where Mrs. Laird’s car was found. See if we can connect her to anyone.”
“I’ll get somebody on it. Then I’ll pay the judge a visit. Tell him about the transponder, hint that in all probability his old lady was being followed by Napoli, see what his reaction is.”
“Good. Take DeeDee with you. She’s good at reading people.” Gerard paused, then added, “It wouldn’t hurt to check out resident names on the surrounding streets in that neighborhood, too.”
As they filed out, Duncan was hoping that the unnamed owner of the ramshackle house where he’d met Elise wouldn’t easily be flagged as an acquaintance of hers.
One good thing, running down information like that was tedious and time-consuming. It could take days before a comprehensive list of homeowners and current lessees was compiled, especially in that neighborhood, where aliases were as commonplace as cockroaches. Finding the connection to Elise would take even longer. Weeks, perhaps.
Surely she would be found before then.
Surely.
But one week crawled by. The fervor with which everyone began the search for Elise Laird waned a little each day that passed without uncovering a single clue to her whereabouts.
Napoli ’s autopsy proved the initial guess correct: he had died of internal hemorrhage due to the puncturing of several major organs. “Even if he’d made it to a trauma center alive, I don’t think a surgeon could’ve saved him. Blood loss was too quick and too significant,” the ME told Duncan. “The shooter knew where to aim to make it deadly.”
Just like Gary Ray Trotter’s shooter.
Lost in that thought, Duncan almost missed Dothan telling him that the bullet he’d removed was from a.22-caliber pistol.
“You mean a twenty-five,” Duncan said.
“I mean a twenty-two.”
“ Napoli carried a twenty-five.”
The medical examiner shrugged as he handed Duncan the evidence bag containing the bullet. “Not my job.”
“What about his hands? Did you scrape anything from under his nails?”
“They were clean as a newborn’s.”
Back at the Barracks, Duncan shared these two discrepancies with DeeDee and Worley. She said, “I was hoping for some tissue for DNA testing later, if it was needed.”
“None there,” Duncan said.
“Damn! I was sure he’d been shot with his own twenty-five,” Worley said.
“Well, he wasn’t.”
They were stockpiling questions without answers.
They plodded through several more unproductive days.
The public information office issued periodic statements to the press, but only after they were approved by the chief of police and Judge Laird. In every news story printed or broadcast, Elise Laird was portrayed as the victim, Meyer Napoli as her armed abductor. Suggested motives for his forcing her to stop her car on the Talmadge Bridge included extortion, kidnap for ransom, rape, and vengeance for an unnamed grievance.
Worley and DeeDee questioned the judge at length about keeping Napoli on retainer to follow his wife. He denied it. Then Duncan had a heated session with him. Duncan used every interrogation maneuver he knew to try to shake Cato Laird, but at the end of the session, the judge remained steadfast: His dealings with Napoli had ended months earlier, and if Napoli had continued to follow Elise, he had been doing it on his own, and obviously with criminal intent.
“There’s something else,” Duncan said at the conclusion of the taxing interview with Cato Laird. “We requested an inventory of your gun collection.”
“All are accounted for except an old twenty-two-caliber pistol.” Reading Duncan’s reaction, he said hastily, “I’m sure it’s only been misplaced.”
“When do you remember last seeing it?”
“A while back. It was in a box of outdated hunting gear I put up in the attic.” Becoming increasingly agitated, he said, “Surely you don’t think…Look, Detective, Elise didn’t even know I owned that gun.”
“Okay,” Duncan said, feeling anything but okay about this development. “Let me know if you run across it.”
In addition to the department’s press releases, the judge called a press conference nearly every day. They were brief and emotional. His appeals for information into his wife’s disappearance produced nothing except the usual crank calls and chronic confessors.
Then, toward the end of the first week, he surprised the media as well as the PD by offering a fifty-thousand-dollar reward for information that would lead to his wife’s rescue. That increased the number of nuisance calls into the VCU, but yielded nothing useful.
By day seven the investigation had completely stalled.
Then two things happened that recharged it.
Early that morning a maintenance man working on the dock of the Westin Resort spotted Elise’s missing sandal among flotsam sloshing against the pilings.
He recognized it for what it was, because the sandal found on the bridge had been described in detail in every press account. He fished it from the water with a wire coat hanger, but had sense enough not to handle it and called the police immediately.
Duncan and DeeDee felt they should personally convey this portentous news to the judge. He’d been staying at home, within reach of the telephone, surrounded by friends and supporters, waited on by the vigilant Mrs. Berry.
It was she who answered the door. Duncan asked her to notify the judge that they were there and that they needed to see him immediately and in private. She led them into the study where Gary Ray Trotter had died two weeks earlier. Duncan noted that the bullet hole in the wall had been patched. There was a new rug on the floor. Nothing else in the room had changed except for the unopened mail stacked on the judge’s desk.
Cato Laird rushed into the room, breathless and anxious. Their somber expressions brought him to an abrupt standstill. He frantically searched their faces for a hint of why they were there, but he couldn’t bring himself to ask.
“As far as we know your wife is still alive,” Duncan said, eliminating his primary fear. “We don’t have any news of her whereabouts.” Then he told him about the workman finding the sandal.
“Where was it?” Cato Laird’s mellifluous voice sounded raw.
When Duncan told him, his face drained of color. “That’s where…last year…that fisherman who fell out of his boat into the river…”
The man had drowned in the current even as people watched helplessly from the riverbank. His body had disappeared, then surfaced a few days later near the resort’s dock.
“It’s only a sandal,” DeeDee said quietly. “That doesn’t necessarily mean that Mrs. Laird was in the river when it came off her foot.”
Duncan cleared his throat, but it still hurt to say the words. “Nevertheless, the search-and-rescue operation has been reclassified. It’s now a…a recovery mission.”