“My men have rights too, Judge Varney,” said the man in khaki. “Sheriff Nathan Bean,” Naomi whispered.
“And Mr. Tate has infringed upon those rights,” said the woman, who turned out to be district attorney Delilah Strong. “Assaulting two jailers is not something we want to be rewarding.”
“Since when is due process a reward?” Naomi demanded. “It’s a right guaranteed every citizen under the Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments.”
The blue-uniformed man — “Police chief Randy Sherman,” Naomi informed me — said, “Your client put two deputies in the ER.”
“So put him in chains,” I said. “Put him in solitary, but you’re obligated to let him be seen by counsel.”
“We know who you are, Dr. Cross,” said Strong. “But you have no jurisdiction here.”
“No, I don’t,” I said. “I came down here as a private citizen to lend a family member a hand. But from the day I started as a police officer and through all my years with the FBI’s Behavioral Science Unit, I’ve known that you can’t deny someone the right to a fair trial. If you push this, you might as well send this case straight to an appeals court. So put him in chains or in a straitjacket and let us see him, or, as a concerned citizen, I will contact friends of mine at the Bureau who investigate civil rights violations.”
Sheriff Bean looked ready to blow a fuse and started to sputter, but Varney cut him off.
“Do it,” he said.
“Your Honor,” the sheriff said. “This sends a—”
“It sends the right message,” the judge said. “Though I didn’t see it that way at first, Dr. and Ms. Cross are correct. Mr. Tate’s right to a fair trial supersedes your right to maintain a safe jail. Restrain him as you see fit, but I want him made available to counsel within the hour.”
“What that sonofabitch did to that boy?” Chief Sherman snarled at me as he left. “You ask me, your cousin lost all his damn rights that night.”
The pretty little four-year-old girl with the golden curls wore a pink princess outfit and knelt on one side of a low table. She picked up a pot.
“Do you want some tea with your cookie?” she sweetly asked the older man sitting cross-legged on the floor across from her.
“How could I say no to such a kind offer from such a darling young lady?” he replied, smiling.
He knew he looked ridiculous in the crown she’d made him wear. But he was so entranced by the girl that he didn’t care. Her skin was the color of fresh cream, and her eyes shone like polished sapphires. He watched her pour the tea into his cup so delicately it made him want to cry.
“Sugar?” she asked, setting the pot down.
“Two lumps,” he said.
She dropped two cubes in his cup and one in her own.
“Milk?”
“Not today, Lizzie,” he said, reaching for his cup.
Lizzie snatched up a pink wand, reached out, and tapped his hand with it. “Wait. I have to make sure there are no evil spirits around.”
His brow knit and he drew back his hand. The little girl closed her eyes, smiled, and waved her wand. His heart melted to see her caught up in fantasy the way only a four-year-old can be.
Lizzie opened her mouth — to deliver a spell, no doubt.
But before she could, there was a knock behind him.
Irritated at the interruption, the man turned, and the crown fell off his head, irritating him further. A muscular bald white guy in his thirties stood in the doorway, fighting not to show his amusement.
“Can this wait, Meeks?” the man asked. “Lizzie and I are having tea.”
“I can see that, boss, but you’ve got a call,” Meeks said. “It’s urgent.”
“Grandfather, you haven’t had your tea and cookie,” the little girl protested.
“Grandfather will be back as soon as he’s done,” he said, groaning as he got to his feet.
“When will that be?” she demanded, crossing her arms and pouting.
“Quick as I can,” he promised.
Grandfather walked to Meeks, who was still smirking, and said, “Fill in for me.”
The smirk disappeared. “What?”
“Sit down, have some tea, and eat a crumpet with my granddaughter. But you can’t wear the crown.”
“You’re kidding, right?”
“Do I look like I’m kidding?”
Acting like he’d rather put a fishhook through his thumb, Meeks nodded and went to the table, where Lizzie was grinning brightly.
“Sit down, Mr. Meeks,” she said graciously. “Have some tea while you’re waiting for Grandfather to come back.”
Lizzie’s grandfather grinned for all sorts of reasons as he walked down a long hallway and into a richly furnished library office. He ignored the books that filled the shelves. They were all his wife’s idea. He hadn’t read a tenth of them, but they looked good when guests came by.
He picked up a cheap cell phone sitting on the desk, said, “Talk.”
“We have problems,” said a man with a deep, hoarse voice.
“Tell me.”
“She’s not listening to reason,” he said. “She’s talking.”
Lizzie’s grandfather squinted, calculated. “You’re sure?”
“Yes.”
“How do you want it handled?”
“We’ll take care of it.”
This surprised him. “Are you sure? There are others we can turn to.”
“Our mess. We’ll handle it.”
Grandfather accepted the decision, set it aside, said, “Other problems?”
“Naomi Cross threw in a wild card. Brought in her uncle. Alex Cross. Google him. Ex — FBI profiler, now a homicide detective in Washington, DC.”
“Reputation?”
“Formidable.”
Grandfather factored that into his thinking. “We’re clean otherwise?”
“As it stands, yes.”
“Then we don’t have a choice. Take care of that situation as you see fit.”
A moment passed before the man on the other end said, “Agreed.”
“Talk to me when it’s done.”
Grandfather hung up and destroyed the phone. Then he left the office and walked back down the hallway, eager for tea with little Lizzie.
Part two
A fashion statement
Palm Beach, Florida
“‘I feel pretty, oh so pretty,’” Coco sang softly as he looked in the mirror, aware of the dead woman in a black nightgown hanging by her neck from the chandelier behind him but much more focused on assessing the new outfit.
The tangerine linen skirt hugged his hips sublimely. The matching jockey coat was snug through the shoulders, but workable. The Dries van Noten high-heeled sling-backs were a bit toe-crunching. The Carolina Herrera silk taffeta blouse was simply remarkable. And the pearl earrings and choker? Just the right air of sophistication.
All he needed now was the right do.
Coco reached into the box and came up with a lush, shoulder-length, radiant amber wig. It was old, early 1970s, if he remembered correctly. His mother would have known the exact date, of course, but no matter. Once settled on the two-sided tape with the last strands of hair combed into place, the wig made Coco look like another person altogether.
Mysterious. Sexy. Alluring. Unreachable.
“I name you Tangerine Dream, Queen of the Garden Party,” Coco cooed to the woman staring back at him. “A vision of...”
He turned and looked at the petite dead woman dangling by a drapery cord from the chandelier. “Ruth? What would you say? I’m thinking a cross between Julianne Moore in Boogie Nights and Ginger on Gilligan’s Island — the haircut, anyway. Am I right, or am I just a foolish little girl?”
Coco giggled ever so softly before picking up the Prada shopping bag and other goodies pilfered from Ruth’s collection. He started to leave the master suite, then paused to listen. Though he knew that the staff had been given the day off and that Ruth’s husband, Dr. Stanley Abrams, aka “the Boob King of West Palm,” was in Zurich attending a medical symposium, it still paid to be careful.
Читать дальше