He grabbed a cab and watched the south-moving rush-hour traffic on the George Washington Parkway as weary commuters threaded their way home. The skies promised more rain, and the wind whipped through the tree-lined parkway meandering lazily on its parallel course with the Potomac. Planes periodically rocketed into the air, banking left and rapidly disappearing into the clouds.
One more battle beckoned Luther. The image of a righteously indignant President Richmond pounding the lectern in his impassioned speech against violence, his smug Chief of Staff by his side, was the one constant in Luther’s life now. The old, tired and fearful man who had fled the country was no longer tired, no longer fearful. The overriding guilt at allowing a young woman to die had been replaced with an overriding hate, an anger that surged through every nerve in his body. If he was to be, of sorts, Christine Sullivan’s avenging angel, he would perform that task with every ounce of energy and every shred of ingenuity he had left.
Luther settled back into his seat, munched on some crackers saved from the plane trip, and wondered if Gloria Russell was any good at playing chicken.
Seth Frank glanced out the car window. His personal interviews of Walter Sullivan’s household staff had revealed two things of interest, the first of which was the business enterprise Frank was now parked in front of; the second could keep. Housed in a long, gray concrete building in a heavy commercial area of Springfield just outside the Beltway, Metro Steam Cleaner’s sign proclaimed that it had been in business since 1949. That was stability that meant nothing to Frank. A lot of long-standing legitimate businesses were now money-laundering fronts for organized crime, both Mafia, Chinese and America’s own homegrown versions. And a carpet cleaner that catered to affluent homeowners was in a perfect position to scope alarm systems, cash and jewelry nests and patterns of behavior of the intended victims and their households. Whether he was dealing with a loner or an entire organization Frank didn’t know. It was more likely that he was headed toward a dead end, but then you never knew. There were two patrol cars stationed three minutes away. Just in case. Frank got out of his car.
“That would have been Rogers, Budizinski and Jerome Pettis. Yep, August 30, nine A.M. Three floors. Damn house was so big, it took all day even with three guys.” George Patterson consulted his record book while Frank’s eyes took in the grimy office.
“Can I speak to them?”
“You can to Pettis. The other two are gone.”
“Permanently?” Patterson nodded. “How long had they been with you?”
Patterson’s eyes scanned his employment log. “Jerome’s been with me five years. He’s one of my best people. Rogers was about two months. I think he moved out of the area. Budizinski had been with us about four weeks.”
“Pretty short stays.”
“Hell, that’s the nature of the business. Spend a thousand bucks training these guys and wham they’re gone. It’s not a career-type job, you know what I mean? It’s hot, dirty work. And the pay ain’t exactly going to put you on the Riviera, you hear what I’m saying?”
“You got addresses for them?” Frank took out his notebook.
“Well, like I said, Rogers moved. Pettis is in today, if you want to talk to him. He’s got a job to do out in McLean in about a half hour. He’s back loading his truck now.”
“Who decides which crew goes to which house?”
“I do.”
“All the time?”
Patterson hesitated. “Well, I got guys who specialize in different stuff.”
“Who specializes in the high-dollar areas?”
“Jerome. Like I said, he’s my best guy.”
“How did the other two get assigned to him?”
“I don’t know, we juggle stuff like that. Depends on who shows up for work sometimes.”
“You remember any of those three being particularly interested in visiting the Sullivan place?”
Patterson shook his head.
“What about Budizinski? You got an address on him?”
Patterson consulted a notebook crammed with paper and wrote on a slip of paper. “It’s over in Arlington. Don’t know if he’s still there.”
“I’ll want their employment file. Social Security numbers, birthdates, job history, all that stuff.”
“Sally can get that for you. She’s the gal up front.”
“Thanks. You got photos of these guys?”
Patterson looked at Frank like he was nuts. “Are you kidding. This ain’t the FBI, for crying out loud.”
“Can you give me a description?” Frank asked patiently.
“I’ve got sixty-five employees and a turnover rate of over sixty percent. I usually don’t even see the guy after he’s hired. Everybody starts to look the same after a while anyway. Pettis’ll remember.”
“Anything else you think might help me?”
Patterson shook his head. “You think one of them might have killed that woman?”
Frank stood up and stretched. “I don’t know. What do you think?”
“Hey, I get all kinds in here. Nothing surprises me anymore.”
Frank turned to leave, then turned back. “Oh by the way, I’ll want records of all homes and establishments cleaned by your firm in Middleton in the last two years.”
Patterson exploded out of his chair. “What the fuck for?”
“You have the records?”
“Yeah, I got ’em.”
“Good, let me know when they’re ready. Have a good one.”
Jerome Pettis was a tall, cadaverous black man in his early forties with a perpetual cigarette hanging from his mouth. Frank watched admiringly as the man methodically loaded the heavy cleaning equipment with a practiced hand. His blue jumpsuit announced that he was a senior technician with Metro. He didn’t look at Frank, kept his eyes on his work. All around them in the huge garage white vans were being similarly loaded. A couple of men stared over at Frank but quickly returned to their work.
“Mr. Patterson said you had some questions?”
Frank parked himself on the van’s front bumper. “A few. You did a job at Walter Sullivan’s home in Middleton on August 30 of this year.”
Pettis’s brow furrowed. “August? Hell, I do about four homes a day. I don’t remember them cuz they aren’t that memorable.”
“This one took you all day. Big house out in Middleton. Rogers and Budizinski were with you.”
Pettis smiled. “That’s right. Biggest goddamned house I’d ever seen and I’ve seen some bad places, man.”
Frank smiled back. “That’s the same thing I thought when I saw it.”
Pettis straightened up, relit his cigarette. “Problem was all that furniture. Had to move every damn piece, and some of that shit was heavy, heavy like they don’t make no more.”
“So you were there all day?” Frank hadn’t meant the question to come out that way.
Pettis stiffened, sucked on his Camel and leaned against the door of the van. “So how come the cops are interested in how the carpets were cleaned?”
“Woman was murdered in the house. Apparently she mixed it up with some burglars. Don’t you read the papers?”
“Just the sports. And you’re wondering if I’m one of them dudes?”
“Not right now. I’m just collecting information. Everybody who was near that house recently interests me. I’ll probably talk to the mailman next.”
“You’re funny for a cop. You think I killed her?”
“I think if you did, you’re smart enough not to stick around here waiting for me to ring your doorbell. These two men who were with you, what can you tell me about them?”
Pettis finished his smoke and looked at Frank without answering. Frank started to close his notebook.
“You want a lawyer, Jerome?”
“Do I need one?”
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