Part 49 (1/2)

”Fine by us, Your Honor.” Roca said. ”Mr. Jade has been identified by his victim as a kidnapper and rapist. Additionally, the Sheriff's Office considers him a suspect in the brutal murder of one of his employees.”

”With all due respect, Your Honor, Mr. Jade can't be penalized for a crime for which he has not been

charged.”

”Yeah, I caught that one in judge school,” the Honorable Ida Green said sarcastically. Ida, a tiny redheaded New York transplant, was one of Landry's favorite judges. Nothing impressed Ida, including Bert Shapiro.

”Your Honor, the prosecution's case-”

”Is none of my business. This is a bail hearing, Mr. Shapiro. Need I enlighten you as to basicproceedings?” ”No, Your Honor. I remember vaguely from law school.” ”Good. You didn't waste your parents' money. Bail is set at five hundred thousand, cash.” ”Your Honor-” Shapiro began. Ida waved him off. ”Mr. Shapiro, your client's clients spend that much on a horse without batting an eye.

I'm certain if they are as devoted to Mr. Jade as you are, they'll help him out.”

Shapiro looked p.i.s.sed.

Roca took the inch and went for the mile. ”Your Honor, as Mr. Jade has lived in Europe and has many

contacts there, we consider him to be a flight risk.”

”Mr. Jade will surrender his pa.s.sport. Anything else, Ms. Roca?”

”We request Mr. Jade be required to submit to a blood test and give a hair sample for the purposes of

comparison to evidence in custody, Your Honor.”

”Make it so, Mr. Shapiro.”

”Your Honor,” Shapiro argued. ”This is a gross invasion of my client's person-”

”A colonoscopy is a gross invasion, Mr. Shapiro. Hair and blood samples are so ordered.”

The proceedings ended with a bang of the gavel. Trey Hughes got up, went to the front of the courtroom, wrote a check for the clerk, and Don Jade was a free man.

I rewound the tape again.

I wondered if Landry's people had found any of the other videotapes Erin had spoken of in Bruce Seabright's possession. If they had, I hoped he would be arrested and charged with something- hindering, withholding evidence, conspiracy, something, anything. Regardless of the outcome of Erin's ordeal, regardless of the origin or motive of what had happened, Bruce Seabright had exhibited a depraved indifference to human life.

I thought about the tape of Erin's beating, which I had not seen, but which Landry had described to me as brutal. An eye for an eye, Bruce, I thought.

I hit the play b.u.t.ton for the one tape I had.

How many times had I watched this? I didn't know. Enough that I should have seen every detail there was to see, yet I felt compelled to play it again and look for things I hadn't, couldn't, wouldn't see. Again and again, and still something bothered me, a feeling that nagged at the edge of my consciousness, and another I as yet could not put a finger on.

The van approaches. Erin stands there.

The van stops. Erin stands there.

A masked man jumps out. Erin says, ”No!”

She tries to run.

I hit pause, freezing the image. A thick band of snow ran across the faces of Erin and her pursuer as they ran toward the gate. Without seeing her expression or his mask, the shot might have taken on any meaning. Out of context, the two people might have been lovers chasing each other out of joy. They might have been people running from a disaster or to the rescue of others. Without expression, they were two torsos in faded jeans.

The sluggishness of Erin's reactions bothered me. Was it disbelief? Was it fear? Or was it something else?

I let the tape run forward, watching the man catch her roughly from behind and spin her around. She kicked him hard. He backhanded her across the face with enough force to knock her almost off her feet.

Horrible. Absolutely horrible. Violence that was completely real. I couldn't deny it.

I watched him shove her down from behind and drive her face-first into the dirt. I watched him jab a needle into her arm. Ketamine. Special K. Drug of choice of rave-goers, date rapists, and small animal vets.

Erin had used party drugs in the past. She herself had told Landry it was the drug that had been used on her. How would she have known that unless her captors graciously filled her in, unless she had a working knowledge of the drug herself?

I thought about the things Erin had told Landry, the things she had not told Landry, the pieces of her story that didn't all fit the same puzzle.

She was sure Jade was one of the kidnappers, but she had never actually seen him. She was sure it was him-the man she'd had a thing for, the man she had supposedly dumped Chad for. Yet, without ever seeing his face, she could believe he would brutalize her. Why? Why would she think it? Why would he do it?

And while she was dead certain Jade was one of her captors, she didn't have a clue about his partner.

Then, after raping her, beating her, drugging her, and not getting the ransom for which they had gone to such elaborate lengths, her abductors simply drove her around and let her go. Just like that. And not only had they let her go, they had given her clothes back to her, even her bracelet.

I didn't believe her. I didn't believe her story, and I would have given anything to change that gut feeling. I wanted to doubt my own instincts as I had doubted them every day since Hector Ramirez had been killed. What irony that through this case I had gained back a belief in myself, and yet, I wanted nothing more than to be wrong.

I thought of Molly and wished I could have cried.

I would have prayed to be wrong, but I have never believed any higher power ever listened to me.

Feeling ill, I rewound the tape and forced myself to watch it again, this time in slow motion, so that I might even more closely scrutinize it, looking for something I was afraid I wouldn't find.

The quality of my equipment was average. Landry would have a much better look at the tape with all the high-tech equipment at the lab. Still, as I watched the tape second by second, I had a good view. Throughout the filming, the camera had remained focused fairly tightly on Erin, she appeared to be no more than eight or ten feet away. I could see that her hair was pulled back in a clip, she was wearing a tight red T-s.h.i.+rt that showed off her flat belly. Her jeans had a little white spot on one thigh.

As her a.s.sailant caught her by the arm, I could see she was wearing a watch. But I didn't see the one thing I wanted desperately to see.