"It's taken care of," said the woman firmly. The person in question was Maryellen's son, Wes's age, who'd been having trouble in school because of some issues with what amounted to a preteen gang. Maryellen now relayed the news of the resolution with a look of happy malice, which told Dance that extreme measures had been used to get the offenders transferred or otherwise neutralized.
Dance believed that Maryellen Kresbach would make a great cop.
In her office she dropped her jacket onto a chair, hitched the awkward Glock to the side and sat. She looked through her email. Only one was relevant to the Pell case. His brother, Richard Pell, was replying from London.
Officer Dance:
I received your forwarded email from the U.S. embassy here. Yes, I heard of the escape, it has made the news here. I have not had any contact with my brother for 12 years, when he came to visit my wife and me in Bakersfield at the same time my wife's twenty-three-year-old sister was visiting us from New York. One Saturday we got a call from the police that she'd been detained at a jewelry store downtown for shoplifting.
The girl had been an honor's student in college and quite involved in her church. She'd never been in any trouble in her life before that.
It seemed that she'd been "hanging out" with my brother and he'd talked her into stealing a "few things." I searched his room and found close to $10,000 worth of merchandise. My sister-in-law was given probation and my wife nearly left me as a result.
I never had anything to do with him again. After the murders in
Carmel in '99, I decided to move my family to Europe.
If I hear from him, I will certainly let you know, though that is unlikely. The best way to describe my relationship now is this: I've contacted the London Metropolitan Police and they have an officer guarding my house.
So much for that lead.
Her mobile rang. The caller was Morton Nagle. In an alarmed voice he asked, "He killed someone else? I just saw the news."
"I'm afraid so." She gave him the details. "And Juan Millar died, the officer who was burned."
"I'm so sorry. Are there other developments?"
"Not really." Dance told him that she'd spoken with Rebecca and Linda. They'd shared some information that might prove to be helpful, but nothing was leading directly to Pell's doorstep. Nagle had come across nothing in his research about a "big score" or a mountaintop.
He had news of his own efforts, though they weren't successful. He'd talked to Theresa Croyton's aunt, but she was refusing to let him, or the police, see the girl.
"She threatened me." His voice was troubled and Dance was sure that there would be no sparkle in his eyes at the moment.
"Where are you?"
He didn't say anything.
Dance filled in, "You're not going to tell me, are you?"
"I'm afraid I can't."
She glanced at the caller ID, but he was on his mobile, not a hotel or pay phone.
"Is she going to change her mind?"
"I really doubt it. You should've seen her. She abandoned a hundred dollars' worth of groceries and just ran."
Dance was disappointed. Daniel Pell was a mystery and she was now obsessed with learning everything she could about him. Last year when she'd assisted on that case in New York with Lincoln Rhyme, she'd noted the criminalist's obsessive fascination with every detail of the physical evidence; she was exactly the same-though with the human side of crime.
But there're compulsions like double-checking every detail of a subject's story, and there are compulsions like avoiding sidewalk cracks when you're walking home. You have to know which are vital and which aren't.
She decided they'd have to let the Sleeping Doll lead go.
"I appreciate your help."
"I did try. Really."
After hanging up, Dance talked to Rey Carraneo again. Still no luck on the motels and no reports of boats stolen from local marinas.
Just as she hung up, TJ called. He'd heard back from the DMV. The car that Pell had been driving during the Croyton murders hadn't been registered for years, which meant it'd probably been sold for scrap. If he had stolen something valuable from the Croytons' the night of the murders, it was most likely lost or melted into oblivion. TJ had also checked the inventory from when the car was impounded. The list was short and nothing suggested that any of the items had come from the businessman's house.
She gave him the news about Juan Millar too, and the young agent responded with utter silence. A sign that he was truly shaken.
A few moments later her phone rang again. It was Michael O'Neil with his ubiquitous, "Hey. It's me." His voice was laden with exhaustion, sorrow too. Millar's death was weighing on him heavily.
"Whatever'd been on the pier where we found the Pemberton woman was gone-if there was anything. I just talked to Rey. He tells me there're no reports of any stolen craft so far. Maybe I was off base. Your friend find anything the other way-toward the road?"
She noted the loaded term "friend" and replied, "He hasn't called. I assume he didn't stumble across Pell's address book or a hotel key."
"And negative on sources for the duct tape, and the pepper spray's sold in ten thousand stores and mail-order outlets."
She told O'Neil that Nagle's attempt to contact Theresa had failed.
"She won't cooperate?"
"Her aunt won't. And she's first base. I don't know how helpful it'd be anyway."
O'Neil said, "I liked the idea. She's the only nexus to Pell and that night."
"We'll have to try harder without her," Dance said.
"How're you doing?"
"Fine," he answered.
Stoic…
A few minutes after they disconnected, Winston Kellogg arrived and Dance asked him, "Any luck at the Pemberton crime scene, the road?"
"Nope. The scene itself-we searched for an hour. No tread marks, no discarded evidence. Maybe Michael was right. Pell did get away by boat from that pier."
Dance laughed to herself. The chest-bumping males had each just conceded the other might've been right-though she doubted they'd ever admit it to each other.
She updated him on the missing files from Susan Pemberton's office and Nagle's failure to arrange an interview with Theresa Croyton. TJ, she explained, was looking for the client Susan had met with just before Pell had killed her.
Dance glanced at her watch. "Got an important meeting. Want to come?"
"Is it about Pell?"
"Nope. It's about snack time."
As they walked down the halls of CBI, Dance asked Kellogg where he lived.
"The District-that's Washington, D.C., to you all. Or that little place known as 'Inside the Beltway,' if you watch the pundits on Sunday-morning talk TV. Grew up in the Northwest-Seattle-but didn't really mind the move east. I'm not a rainy-day kind of guy."
The talk meandered to personal lives and he volunteered that he and his ex had no children, though he himself had come from a big family. His parents were still alive and lived on the East Coast.
"I've got four brothers. I was the youngest. I think my parents ran out of names and started on consumer products. So, I'm Winston, like cigarettes. Which is a really bad idea when your last name is cornflakes. If my parents had been any more sadistic my middle name'd be Oldsmobile."
Dance laughed. "I'm convinced I didn't get invited to the junior prom because nobody wanted to take a Dance to the dance."
Kellogg received a degree in psych from the University of Washington, then went into the army.
"CID?" She was thinking about her late husband's stint in the army, where he'd been a Criminal Investigations Division officer.
"No. Tactical planning. Which meant paper, paper, paper. Well, computer, computer, computer. I was fidgety. I wanted to get into the field so I left and joined the Seattle Police Department. Made detective and did profiling and negotiations. But I found the cult mentality interesting. So I thought I'd specialize in that. I know it sounds lame but I just didn't like the idea of bullies preying on vulnerable people."
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