Part 34 (1/2)

”I can stay another night?”

”Stay until you're comfortable going home. However long it takes.”

”I laid awake a long time.” With her fork she pushed the food around on her plate. ”I thought you might come to me.”

I took another bite of eggs and said nothing.

”Malcolm, are you gay?”

I smiled and shook my head. ”Lately, I'm not even happy.”

”Then, why?”

I decided to turn her lie back on her. ”How could I even think that way about a woman who just survived a rape attempt?”

She stood abruptly and gathered the dishes. She carried them to the kitchen sink and began to rinse them off. I thought she might be scrubbing them a little more forcefully than necessary. She stopped all of a sudden and put both hands on the countertop on each side of the sink.

She turned to look at me over her shoulder. ”You're too good to be true.”

I shrugged. ”I don't think it's smart to do things the wrong way.”

”Don't I get a say in it?”

”Olivia, you're in no condition to start a thing with me. It's obvious you're into something way over your head. You need help, but for some reason you won't admit it.”

”Is that why you called the police?” She was looking past me through the window at my back. ”I thought you weren't going to do that.”

I turned to follow her gaze. Outside the window I saw Tom Harper. He had parked his Crown Victoria in the driveway. He stood talking to Teru with his sports coat draped over his arm and his shoulder holster in plain sight. His freshly scrubbed young partner stood a few feet away from them, watching the boats in the harbor. A rainbow had formed in the arc of water Teru aimed at a bed of freshly planted lilies. Rainbows were always following Teru around when he watered the flowers, at least it seemed that way to me, but then I couldn't trust myself when it came to seeing colors.

Teru laughed at something Harper said. His laughter sent a little puff of smoke up from his pipe. Harper grinned toward the guesthouse. I had the feeling he could see me through the window.

Turning back toward Olivia, I said, ”He's with the police, but he's not here about you. At least, I didn't call them about it. Maybe you should get dressed.”

Harper knocked a few minutes later. I opened the door and said, ”Hi, Tom.”

”Malcolm.”

”Come on in.” When Harper walked inside alone, I said, ”Your partner's welcome too.”

Harper said, ”We need a private talk. Besides, Andre likes to watch the boats.”

I closed the door behind him, went into the kitchen, poured him a cup of coffee and topped off mine. We took our cups into the living room and sat down, me on the sofa and him in a chair beside it. He saw Olivia's shoes where she had kicked them off the night before.

He raised one eyebrow. ”Am I interrupting something?”

”If you were, I wouldn't have invited you in. What's on your mind?”

”Couple of things.” He took a sip of coffee. ”Guy I know with the Newport PD has been keeping me informed on the bomb investigation. Turns out the C-4 explosive and the detonator were part of a truckload of gear stolen from Camp Pendleton a year ago. Stuff has been showing up here and there ever since.”

”Here and there?”

”A bank job in Cincinnati. A narcotics related car bomb a.s.sa.s.sination down in Mexico. Nothing political.”

”You checked with NCIS on the theft?”

”Sure. The truck was found on a dirt road outside of Temecula a day after. The perps did an excellent job of wiping it down. No prints. No DNA.”

”That's it?”

”Not hardly. Yesterday a kid up in Silverado Canyon blew his hands off, playing with the stuff. Kid bled out before the paramedics arrived, so we got nothing from him, but we did find a couple more bricks of C-4 from the same batch, among other things. One of the other things was a note pad with this address on it.”

”Who was this guy?”

”A William Ronald Jawarski.” Harper looked at me. ”Ring a bell?”

”Never heard of him.”

”You sure? He was nineteen. Dishonorable from the Corps six months ago for conduct unbecoming. Threatened to frag a Captain.”

”No...but maybe he had something against me, too. Something from my days in the Corps.”

Harper shook his head. ”Doubtful. You were already discharged when he joined up.”

”How about a connection to the case I'm working?”

”Be a lot easier to know if you'd come clean about the case.”

”We've been over that. I've told you everything I can.”

”All right. In that case all I can say is there doesn't seem to be a link between this kid and the URNG, or the government of Guatemala. He was twelve years old and living in a foster home in North Carolina when Delarosa murdered Toledo, so there's not much chance of a connection to that, either.”

”Maybe he was working a contract for the guys who tried to kill me in the mountains.”

”Maybe. But there's one more thing, and you're not going to like it.”

”I haven't liked much of anything for a long time.”

”We found a photograph in the house with him.” He pulled a snapshot from his short pocket and handed it to me. ”That's copy.”

I saw it was a candid shot of Haley and me, standing together near the entrance to the guest house. There was an x over her face, and a circle around mine. The photo in my hand began to shake. I put it on the coffee table and looked away from Harper, working hard to stay calm. I said, ”You think he's the one who killed Miss Lane?”

”No way to know. It's a different MO, poisoning and bombs, but there are some psychological connections. The perp has distance from the victim. And both methods demonstrate a disregard for collateral damage, since it's easy for bystanders to get killed along with the target.”

I said, ”You were in Jawarski's house?”

”That's right.”

”Did it stink?”

”What do you mean?”