Part 8 (1/2)

”Did the custodian see anything else?” Jordan asked without much hope. Meghan shook her head again and fingered her cameras. ”We're almost done here,” she said. ”Then it's all yours.”

”You're not staying?”

She gave him a sunny grin. ”If it's a homicide, we'll be back. Obvs. But until you're sure it's not some drunk dude who fell down...” She drifted back to her car. ”Holiday weekend, you know?”

”Got it.” Jordan spoke briefly to his patrolmen, reviewing the procedure for securing a crime scene. Then he headed over to the custodian.

”Morning,” he said, extending his hand. ”Jordan Novick. Pleasant Ridge chief of police. You found the, uh...” Effects? he wondered. ”Effects” didn't sound quite right.

”The belt,” the other man said. He was in his late twenties, with brown hair and pale eyes. He had a high, rough voice, an Adam's apple that bobbed and jerked when he swallowed, old acne scars pitting his cheeks, and a fresh zit blooming on his chin. ”I got here at five a.m. First tee time's at six, so I come at five. I was carrying the trash to the Dumpster when I kicked something. I thought it was a bottle or something, but then I looked down and saw the belt and the blood, and I thought, okay, this isn't right. I went back inside and called 911. Didn't touch anything. Didn't want to contaminate the crime scene.” He nodded at Jordan, one professional to another. ”I watch CSI.”

”Excellent,” said Jordan.

”So what are you guys gonna do now?” asked the custodian, scratching at his chin. ”DNA testing on the blood? You got that luminol?”

”I thought,” said Jordan, ”that we'd start by seeing if anyone who was here last night is missing a belt.” The kid's zit had started to bleed. He pressed one khaki sleeve against it as he thought this over and finally grunted his approval. ”Any trouble here lately?” Jordan asked. ”Any ideas about what might have happened?”

The other man lowered his eyebrows and ground his teeth. ”Vegans,” he finally p.r.o.nounced.

For a moment Jordan thought that he'd heard him wrong, or that the man was speaking something other than English. ”Vegans?”

”Because of the leather,” the man said. ”The belt's leather. You notice that?” He shook his head. ”Vegans are f.u.c.ked up. I saw some of them on the news trying to liberate the bees. I mean, vegetarians are one thing. No meat, okay, animals got feelings. I get that. But no honey?” He cleared his throat and spat onto the gravel.

”Have you had trouble with vegans here before?” I'm still asleep, Jordan thought. I'm asleep and this is a dream.

The custodian shook his head. ”Nah,” he said. ”But I watch out for them.” He tapped the side of his eye with one finger, then went back to working the pimple.

Jordan wrote the word ”vegans,” which made as much sense as anything else. Then he took down the custodian's contact information, his name and address, his cell phone and social security numbers, thanked him for his help, and walked over to his patrol-people. One of them, Devin Freedman, was finis.h.i.+ng up his law degree at Loyola. The lady patrol-person, Holly, had studied sociology and trained for Olympic-distance triathlons in her spare time. The third, Gary Ryderdahl, a Pleasant Ridge native like Jordan, had worked for the department for three years and had just moved out of his parents' house and into his first apartment (Jordan had spent a Sat.u.r.day helping him load, then unload, a U-Haul). None of them was older than thirty, and the three of them, plus Jordan, were all that stood between Pleasant Ridge and le deluge. ”Gentlemen,” said Jordan. ”Lady. What've we got?”

Gary Ryderdahl glanced at his colleagues, pulled a notebook out of his back pocket, and stepped forward, squaring his shoulders like a batter approaching the plate. Ryderdahl had a round pink face and an unruly ruffled crest of white-blond hair that made him look like Snoopy's tweety-bird friend, Woodstock. ”It's a Kenneth Cole belt. They sell them lots of places. Department stores, and, uh...” He took a quick glance at his notebook. ”Freestanding boutiques nationwide.”

”Good work,” said Jordan, straight-faced. ”What was going on here last night?”

”There was a cla.s.s reunion. Pleasant Ridge, cla.s.s of 1992,” Holly Muoz said. ”D.A.'s office is taking the blood, and they're gonna see if there's any fingerprints we can use on the belt, but Meghan said probably not. I spoke to the banquet manager. There were two hundred people here last night-a hundred and eighty-seven who'd preregistered, and thirteen walk-ins.” She reached through her patrol car's open window and came out with a Dunkin' Donuts cup, which she extended to Jordan. ”I got you a coffee. Light and sweet, right?”

”Thanks.” Jordan looked around. Officer Freedman, the soon-to-be lawyer, was cordoning off the crime scene with yellow tape. He stuck the tape's edge onto the Dumpster, unspooled it past the belt, and then stopped, looking around with the roll of tape in his hands, realizing there was no place else to stick it unless he walked another twenty yards to the nearest tree.

Jordan made himself stop staring. ”Guest list?”

”The cla.s.s secretary's got it waiting for us,” said Holly. Devin Freedman, meanwhile, was carefully affixing the end of the piece of tape to the ground, using a rock he'd grabbed from somewhere to hold it down. Jordan closed his eyes.

”We'll want to talk to everyone who was here last night.” Holly nodded and nudged Gary, who nodded, too. ”You two, go back to the station. Call all the hospitals, here and in Chicago. Ask if anyone's shown up with injuries, missing a belt.” He paused, thinking. ”Check out the custodian. George Monroe.” He read off George's social security number and DOB. ”Check with dispatch. See if any calls came in for missing persons.” He thought for a minute. ”Then call the body shops.”

”You think this was a car accident?” asked Holly.

”Could be,” said Jordan. ”Worth checking.”

”I hit a deer once,” Gary Ryderdahl offered. ”Bashed in the whole front of my car.”

”Here?” asked Holly. ”In Pleasant Ridge?”

”No, Wisconsin. My grandma's got a place in the Dells, and I...”

”Time's wasting,” Jordan said. ”Hospitals. Body shops.” Gary marched off. Holly looked at Jordan.

”Uh, chief?” When Jordan looked at her, she asked, ”What is this, exactly? When I type up my report, what do I call it?”

”For now, it's a lost belt,” Jordan said. And it's weird, he thought but did not say.

SEVENTEEN.

Cla.s.s secretary Christie Keogh, perky and bright-eyed and dressed in a tight tank top and fitted running pants, met Jordan at the front door of her McMansion, with a list in her hands and a frown on her pretty face. She spoke in a whisper, explaining that her husband and kids were still sleeping upstairs. ”What's this about?”

”We found a man's belt in the country club parking lot. There was also some evidence that a crime may have been committed. We need to make sure that all of your party guests are okay.”

”Evidence?” Christie's frown deepened, then vanished instantly, as if someone had snuck up behind her and hissed Wrinkles! in her ear. ”What kind of evidence?”

”Physical evidence,” said Jordan. ”Blood.”

Christie wrapped her arms around herself and led him inside, into her vast kitchen, all gleamy stainless steel and s.h.i.+ny black granite, immaculate as an operating theater. ”Would you like some green tea?”

”You guys vegans?” Jordan asked.

She looked at him strangely. ”We do eat meat, but only organic.” Christie took a seat on a rattan barstool and waited for Jordan to do the same.

”Did you see anything unusual last night?” Jordan asked her. ”Arguments? Fights?”

”Unusual.” She cupped her elbows in her hands. ”It was a high school reunion. There were a bunch of people who hadn't seen each other in years, plus an open bar, so yeah, I'd say I saw some unusual stuff. Lots of it in the ladies' room.”

Jordan raised his eyebrows, waiting. Christie tightened her grip on her elbows. ”I saw Larry Kelleher and Lynne Boudreaux, being intimate. And they're married.” She leaned in close enough for Jordan to smell her toothpaste. ”Not to each other. Oh, and Merry Armbruster was trying to convert people in the parking lot. She's born again-she got saved the summer between junior and senior year-and I guess she wants everyone else to be.”

”Any fights?”

She thought. ”I heard Glenn Farber talking with his wife about which one of them was supposed to pay the sitter, but that wasn't a fight. Just kind of an intense conversation.”

”If you had to guess...” He let his voice trail off. Christie looked at him, blinking expectantly, her eyes wide underneath the pale, unlined expanse of her forehead. Stupid, or Botox? Jordan wondered.

”As far as I could tell, everything was fine.”

”We're going to go through the list and contact everyone. Make sure that n.o.body's missing a belt.” Or bleeding to death, he thought.

Christie chewed on her bottom lip. ”My G.o.d. I just can't believe it. It was a really great party.”

He asked for the guest list, and she handed over five stapled sheets. ”That's everyone who RSPV'd ahead of time. We had thirteen walk-ins. Judy should have their names-that's Judy Nadeau.” She pointed out Judy's name and address on the sheet. ”She lives about a mile away. Elm Lane, do you know where that is?”