Scott stepped over to the desk. A phone, a pad, and a pen sat at the ready. There was a vacant space front and center.
"Laptop was right there." Hank pulled the desk drawers open for Bobby to film. He opened a lower drawer and said, "Trey kept this one locked."
"Why?"
"See for yourself."
Bobby aimed the camera down and whistled. "Chocolate milk wasn't the only thing Trey had a taste for."
Scott came around the desk. Inside the drawer were dozens of DVDs with naked girls on the covers and titles like
Fleshcapades
and
Virgin Territory
. Scott's eyes met Bobby's, and he knew they were thinking the same thought: all-American boys don't watch pornography. Bobby couldn't restrain a smile.
"Got porn?"
They weren't shocked; porn was part of the culture now. They were excited—not by the porn—but by the crack in the "good Trey" they had seen on TV. Was Trey Rawlins another star athlete whose perfect public image belied a dark private life? Nothing excites a criminal defense lawyer more than a victim's dark side revealed—it takes the jury's focus off the defendant and puts it on the victim. A savvy defense lawyer puts the victim on trial. Would Scott put Trey on trial to save Rebecca's life?
"Aw, hell," Hank said, "you can rent this stuff at the family video store. Stay at the best hotels and you can get room service and hardcore. Myself, I'd rather watch football—less violent."
"Maybe so, but porn doesn't exactly fit his golden boy image."
"Everyone's got their secrets," Hank said.
"Question is," Bobby said, "did Trey Rawlins have any other secrets?"
They pondered that possibility for a moment, then Hank said, "Let's do it."
They followed Hank downstairs and to the door leading into the master bedroom. Hank stopped and reached to his back pocket then handed a small plastic trash bag to each of them.
"What's this for?" Scott asked.
"So you don't contaminate the crime scene."
Hank opened the door, and Scott stepped inside a dark space that smelled like his mother's bedroom the day she had died. Death had its own smell.
"Brace yourself, boys."
Hank hit a switch, and bright lights illuminated the room like an OR.
"
Jesus
."
The blood took Scott's breath away.
The bedroom was stark white—white bed, white walls, white tile floor, white furniture, white curtains. The blood offered the only color. It was everywhere. It didn't seem possible that one human body contained that much blood.
"Didn't take luminol to find the blood at this crime scene," Hank said. "Knife cut his aorta, heart pumped till it gave out."
Scott stared at the bloody bed where his wife had had sex with another man … and where that man had died. He thought he had long ago come to terms with the fact that his wife had lain with another man. He was wrong. He was just now coming to terms with that fact—with that image—of Rebecca and another man—in that bed—having sex … and then someone stabbing that butcher knife into his chest while he slept. Had Rebecca been that someone? His face flashed hot. He couldn't seem to get a breath in the stale air.
"Scotty, you don't look so good."
"Use the bag!" Hank said.
Hank opened the French doors. The sea breeze blew in and freshened the air. After a few minutes, Scott could breathe again. He tried to block the image of his wife and Trey from his mind and to think like a lawyer instead of a man. But he couldn't help thinking,
What the hell am I doing here?
"Bad time to quit smoking," Bobby said.
"Okay," Hank said, "here's the lay of the land." He walked over to the bed, stepping carefully to avoid the blood on the floor. "Trey was found lying on the far side of the bed, away from the deck doors."
Scott turned the pages of the murder book until he found the photos of the victim: Trey Rawlins lying naked in that bed, the butcher knife embedded in his chest, his body soaked in blood. Scott looked up from the photo to the bed. Nothing had changed, except the blood seemed a darker shade and Trey's body was gone.
"Your wife slept on this side, near the doors. Said she woke at three-forty-five Friday morning with a chill, said the doors leading to the deck were open. She got up to close the doors but went out onto the deck."
"Any blood on the doors or the door handles?"
"Nope."
"So the doors were open?"
"Yep."
"Prints?"
"His and hers." Hank motioned to them. "Come on … watch out for the bloody footprints. Hers."
They followed Hank out the doors and onto the white wood deck, stepping around more bloody footprints, and over to the far railing. Scott inhaled the sea air. Seagulls circled above the surf in search of fish. A shrimp boat headed into port with that day's catch, and an oil tanker headed out to sea. From the judge's house down the street came the sounds of Spanish and hammers. A lone jogger ran past on the beach below and gave them a wave. Little egrets darted after sea life stranded out of water as if they could care less that a human being had died in this house just five days before.
"Said she stood here at the railing," Hank said, "looking out to sea. Spray hit her, she wiped her face, felt wet, looked at her hands. Saw something dark, ran inside and turned the lights on." Hank turned to Scott. "You ready?"
"For what?"
"To go back in."
He wasn't. He did not want to confront the blood again. But he took a few more deep breaths and followed Hank back inside. Hank pointed at blood on the white curtains and the wall around the light switch.
"That's when she saw Trey. She called nine-one-one."
He pointed at the white phone. More blood.
"Cops came up the back stairs to the deck and through these doors, found her standing right here, holding the phone."
"She talked to the dispatcher the entire time?"
"Yep. Nine-one-one call's in the book. On a CD."
"She didn't do anything after she called?"
"Nope. Just before."
Scott viewed the photos of his ex-wife from that night, standing there in a short white nightgown soaked in blood and looking like a frightened child.
"Detective came out, questioned her, arrested her, took her to jail. They collected a blood sample and her clothes. It's all in the book."
"All the bloody prints—on the floor, the wall, the phone," Scott said, "they're hers?"
"Yep."
"No other prints in the entire room?"
"Not in blood. But we lifted the maid's prints and two other sets, both unidentified. Not in the system."
"Where?"
Hank pointed. "One set on the headboard, about middle of the bed—"
"Film this, Bobby."
—"like someone was holding on."
Bobby raised an eyebrow to Scott.
"No other prints?"
"Nope. And we dusted damn near every inch of this room."
"What about the other set?"
"In the closet."
Hank led them into the master bathroom. The center room featured a glassed-in shower and a Jacuzzi tub. Scott imagined Rebecca reclining in a bubble bath with a glass of wine after a hard day at Neiman Marcus, as she often had in their bathroom. Leading off each side were separate his and her vanities and dressing rooms.
"This one was Trey's," Hank said.
They followed Hank into a spacious dressing room with wood shelves and drawers, a leather sofa and chair, a full-length mirror, and a flat-screen TV on the wall. The racks were filled with men's clothes, mostly golf apparel and golf shoes.
"Right there," Hank said, "two full palm prints on the mirror. Probably female, from the size."
Hank was pointing at the mirror about six feet up. The prints were aligned in a way that suggested the person was leaning into the mirror with her hands spread out above, as if being frisked by a cop or …
Another raised eyebrow from Bobby.
"These unidentified prints," Scott said, "the ones on the kitchen counter, the bed headboard, and this mirror—they're all from different persons?"
"Yep."
"And no matches?"
"Nope. They're not in the FBI database. You get fingerprinted once, you're in the database forever."
"So we know at least three different people other than Trey and Rebecca and the maid were in this house at some time and none of them has ever been arrested?"
"Or worked in child care or as a school bus driver or a federal employee."
"What do you mean?"
"You want to work for the federal government or do anything with kids, you gotta get printed and pass a criminal background check first."
"Really?"
"Yep. When I started with the Bureau, I did background checks for federal agents, attorneys, judges … Pretty damn boring, so I transferred to the Drug Task Force, over in El Paso."
"When did you say the maid came?"
"Mondays and Thursdays."
"So she was here that same day?"
"Yep."
"Did she clean the surfaces where the prints were found?"
Hank frowned. "Good question."
"If she wiped those surfaces Thursday, then the prints would have been made between the time she left and when the cops arrived and sealed off the house as a crime scene Friday morning."
"Cops' prints are in the system, and everyone who entered the house wore gloves."
"Hank, those prints might belong to the murderer."
"Except only your wife's prints are on the murder weapon."
"You got the maid's number?"
"In the book."
Hank took the murder book from Scott and turned to the witnesses section. He pulled out his cell phone and dialed. After a moment, he said, "Rosie Gonzales? … Hank Kowalski, with the district attorney's office … That's right, we spoke Friday. Rosie, when you cleaned the Rawlins house last Thursday, did you wipe the island counter in the kitchen? … With soap and Clorox and Pine-Sol? … Okay, what about the headboard in the master bedroom? … Unh-huh … And what about the mirror in Mr. Rawlins' closet? … Was anyone else in the house that day? … When did you leave? … Okay. Thanks."
Hank ended the call and turned to Scott.
"She cleaned the kitchen counters Thursday, finished at noon, so those prints were put there sometime after she left and before the murder."
"What about the other prints?"
"She didn't clean the headboard or the mirror that day. Does that once a month."
"So those prints could have been put there in the last month?"
"Yep."
They returned to Trey's bathroom. Hank opened the cabinets, and Bobby filmed the contents, the usual male paraphernalia and several bottles of prescription pills.
"What was he taking?" Scott asked.
Hank held up one prescription bottle. "Viagra."
"Porn and Viagra," Bobby said with a smile. "Trey Rawlins endorsed more than just golf clubs and chocolate milk."
"CIA's bribing Afghan warlords with these blue pills," Hank said. "Most of the agents I worked with at the Bureau took them. Hell, most men I know take 'em."
"We don't. Do we, Bobby?"
"Well, uh …"
Scott turned to Bobby. "You take Viagra?"
Bobby shrugged. "I'm married to a woman ten years younger than me. There's a lot of pressure."
"What about all that 'I'm bald because I'm loaded with testosterone' stuff?"
"Hey, my first two wives left me. I'm not taking any chances with Karen."
Scott turned back to Hank. "What about the other pills?"
"One's a beta-blocker, blood pressure medicine. The other's Prozac."
"Isn't that for depression?"
Hank nodded. "My wife takes it. Says being married to me is depressing."
They followed Hank into Rebecca's dressing room, every square inch of which was packed with dresses, shirts, slacks, shorts, coats, sweaters, scarves, hats, and shoes—a lot of shoes.
"She sure likes shoes," Hank said.
"You should've seen her closet when we were married."
"A woman is an expensive habit."
"Why would she kill Trey and give all this up?"
"Maybe he was giving her up."
"He proposed to her that night."
"So she said."
"Rex said we could take her clothes."
Hank nodded. "I gotta watch what you take."
Scott stepped to a dresser and opened several long flat drawers. All contained lingerie. The sexy stuff. As if this were a Victoria's Secret showroom instead of a closet. In the top drawer were complete sets with the price tags still attached, apparently from her shopping trip that Thursday. He held one set up: black lace bustier … matching garter belt … black sheer hose with a seam up the back … and a matching black thong. Scott stared at the undergarment, imagining Rebecca wearing this outfit for Trey. He wasn't sure how long he had been staring before he snapped to the fact that he wasn't alone. He turned and saw Hank and Bobby staring at the tiny thong he was holding up. He felt his face flush. He dropped the thong into the drawer.