Covenant (38 page)

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Authors: Dean Crawford

BOOK: Covenant
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“Where did you get that name from?”

“Interpol,” Cain murmured with a sly grin. “I did in fact read your report properly, and I also checked our data on Dr. Sheviz’s whereabouts. Turns out he was liberated from a terrorist cell in the Gaza Strip barely an hour ago, where he’s been held for several days. The chances of him being your supposed deranged surgeon would appear somewhat diminished, Detective.”

Before Tyrell could reply, Cathy Devereux made her decision.

“I suggest that we close the proceedings forthwith.”

“Close the proceedings?” Tyrell uttered as the commissioner stood from her seat.

“Yes, Detective. This case has grown disproportionate to the value of its potential convictions.”

“You think I’m exaggerating the extent of the crime?” Tyrell demanded.

“And not for the first time.”

“The surgeon we believe is involved has dual Israeli and American citizenship and hasn’t been seen or heard of in the District for several weeks, until now.”

Cathy Devereux sighed heavily, searching the ceiling as though for inspiration.

“You’re connecting yesterday morning’s case with abductions halfway across the world.”

“No surgeon in the United States would dare carry out a procedure like this unless the patient was at death’s door,” Tyrell insisted. “If I was this guy and I wanted to both escape a murder charge and continue my work, I’d go somewhere that would have me.”

Powell rubbed his temple with one hand.

“You realize that if you’re right, then this is indeed an international crime and an FBI matter?”

“If it’s crossed international borders,” Tyrell said, “then it can go to Interpol first. Extradition could follow.”

Devereux chuckled out loud and shook her head.

“From Israel? Do you honestly think they’ll give up one of their own, especially a respected surgeon, on a charge as thin as this?”

“The charge isn’t thin,” Tyrell insisted.

“It’s all circumstantial,” Devereux shot back. “You won’t get extradition.”

“The file says he was working in a charitable position for the American Evangelical Alliance,” Lopez cut in, “who have strong links to the Israel lobby in Washington and to the government of Israel itself. The AEA owns the hospital that he worked for and where we found our survivor. Not only that, but according to our research, the AEA’s owner Kelvin Patterson has a long-standing interest in using experiments on humans to prove the existence of God.”

Commissioner Devereux leveled Lopez with an uncompromising gaze.

“Do you have any idea how it would look if I put that in front of the district attorney? I’d be laughed out of the damned office. Do you even have a witness to any of this?”

“We have a single witness, Daniel Neville, under assessment now,” Tyrell replied, deciding not to elaborate on the patient’s mental capacity. “Hopefully, we’ll be able to—”

“Would Daniel Neville be an inmate at the hospice in Ivy City?” Powell asked.

Tyrell blinked in surprise. “Yeah. How’d you know that?”

“I can’t give you any more resources,” Powell said quietly, almost apologetically.

“Why the hell not?”

“Because your witness is lying in the city morgue.”

Tyrell felt his world tilt as he processed what he had heard. “The morgue?”

“Suicide,” Powell said. “Little over an hour ago.”

“That settles it then,” Commissioner Devereux said with brisk finality. “Whatever case you may have can wait until forensic evidence is available.”

Tyrell stared at Devereux, well aware that his own jaw was hanging open. “It could take months for forensic tests to be completed.”

“Time that can be spent pursuing more viable cases,” Devereux snapped, turning away from the table and casting Tyrell a final glance. “You’re to close the case. That’s an order.”

Tyrell and Lopez both remained silent as Commissioner Devereux strode out of the briefing room, a smirking Cain following her. As they left and closed the door behind them, Captain Powell retook his seat and regarded the two detectives.

“I’m sorry, Tyrell, but it’s gone cold, just let it go for now.”

“Doesn’t the fact that a key witness has just died in a secure institute, and the key perpetrator has conveniently reappeared with an alibi, strike you as just a tiny bit goddamn suspicious?”

“Yes, it does,” Powell conceded, “but there’s nothing that I can do about it, and the kid you’re talking about was a former drug addict with a history of mental problems. You won’t get anywhere near a prosecution with what you’ve got. Go and check out what happened at the hospital, then go home and get a good night’s sleep. We’ll talk about this in the morning.”

Tyrell stared at him for a long moment, and then turned away and strode from the briefing room in disgust, Lopez hurrying after him.

 

EVANGELICAL COMMUNITY INSTITUTE
IVY CITY, WASHINGTON DC

S
uicide.”

The word fell from Tyrell’s mouth to the floor with a thud.

“Two hours ago,” a nurse said as she stood with him in the corridor. “We attempted resuscitation, but it was too late.”

Tyrell stared at the tape cordon blocking access to Daniel Neville’s room. The door was propped open by a small wastepaper bin. Inside, the bed looked recently used. There was no sign of a struggle except for the broken plastic of the door window. Nearby, a tall man with blond hair sat sullenly in a chair with his back to the wall.

“What happened?” Tyrell asked the nurse, feeling numb.

“Daniel was guarded constantly by the police officer you assigned to him. Daniel ate food that was brought here by his mother from the kitchens, and she left once he was tucked up in bed. The police officer remained at the end of the corridor after she left.”

“Who found him?” Lopez asked.

“The handyman, Casey Jeffs. He was walking down the corridor with drinks for the patients when he saw Daniel lying on his bed in a pool of vomit. He shouted for the keys to the room but the duty nurse wasn’t quick enough, so he punched through the plastic window and unlocked the door. Your police officer went with him to help, but Daniel had already passed away.”

Tyrell looked across at Casey Jeffs and recognized him as the man who had been swabbing the floors when they’d first arrived to speak to Daniel Neville. Casey’s hand was bandaged, a soft pink stain betraying where the plastic had cut into his knuckles.

“Casey is a former patient,” the nurse said softly to Tyrell. “He was kept on here as an assistant to help him get on his feet. Daniel’s death has hit him pretty hard.”

As they spoke, the young Latino beat cop assigned to protect Daniel appeared from down the hallway. Tyrell gestured him to join them.

“Officer Gomez,” the cop introduced himself as he shook Tyrell’s hand. “Listen, I don’t know how this happ—”

“Forget it,” Tyrell said. “I just need to know how you found the kid.”

Gomez pointed into Daniel’s room as he spoke.

“Right there, layin’ on his back. Looked like he’d choked on his own vomit. There were pills around him on the bed and on the floor, and one o’ those small bottles they come in. Thing is, the kid was a mess and couldn’t have smuggled anything in there if he’d tried. The staff are real strict about drugs and the patients get their meds hand-fed to them once or twice a day.”

“Who was the last person to see him alive?” Lopez asked.

Gomez thought for a moment.

“I guess I was, an’ before that you were, along with Mrs. Neville and Michael Shaw, one of the orderlies here. Michael wasn’t in the building at the time of death, as his shift had ended. We’ve checked the security cameras already and nobody entered Daniel’s room between the time he was left here and when he was found by Casey.”

“What about Casey? Where was he?” Lopez asked.

“Was just back off his break,” Gomez said, and then called out, “Hey, c’mere, Casey.”

Casey got to his feet and shuffled across to them. Tyrell judged him at about six-three and at least two hundred forty pounds. A pair of listless blue eyes shyly met his. Tyrell extended his right hand and Casey reached out for it, the shake limp and damp.

“Can you tell us what you saw, Casey?” Tyrell asked.

“Nothin’,” Casey said in a whispering Texan accent. “I just happened by, doing my drinks rounds when I saw Daniel. He’d been sick, his eyes were open but he wasn’t looking at anythin’, and there were a lot of pills around him. I couldn’t open the door, so I went in through the window instead.” He shrugged. “Din’ know what else t’do.”

“You did good, Casey,” Gomez said reassuringly.

Tyrell frowned, looking back into the room.

“How does a bedridden former drug addict in a controlled hospital gain access to enough drugs to overdose?”

The nurse beside them sighed softly.

“There is only one way,” she said, and gestured down the hall.

Walking toward them, flanked by two police officers, was Claretta Neville. Gone was her defiant bravado. Claretta walked with shoulders slumped, staring at the floor, her huge arms dwarfing those of the officers’ looped through hers.

“You’re kidding?” Lopez snapped. “There’s no way.”

Claretta came to a stop in front of Tyrell, looking up at him. No psychologist was needed to see that the events of the day had entirely sapped her of her will.

“You know what happened here?” he asked her simply.

Claretta shook her head once.

“I told ’em everythin’.” Glistening pools appeared beneath her eyelids. “I don’t know why he’d have done somethin’ like this. I din’ give him no pills.”

Tyrell looked into the empty room where Daniel Neville’s short life had come to an end, and then looked at the nurse and Officer Gomez.

“Daniel Neville was suicidal with pain,” he said softly before looking at Officer Gomez. “A locked room, no way of getting contraband in or out, cameras on the corridor. You’re absolutely sure all of those criteria were met by the hospital staff?”

Both Gomez and the nurse nodded without hesitation.

“Couldn’t have got in any other way,” Gomez said sadly.

Tyrell nodded, and turned to Daniel’s mother. “Claretta Neville, I’m arresting you on suspicion of first-degree murder. You have the right to remain silent, you have the right to an attorney …”

From the corner of his eye he saw Lopez’s jaw drop. Claretta Neville stared at him with drops of liquid quivering in her eyes as he read her her rights, the two officers flanking her remaining stonily silent.

Claretta held his gaze for a few seconds.

“This one’s for real,” she hissed at him.

One powerful arm snapped free and whipped across Tyrell’s face with a sharp crack.

Bright pain stung his face but he did not respond, watching silently as Claretta was brusquely handcuffed by the officers and led away down the corridor.

“Go with them,” Tyrell said to Gomez, gesturing after the other officers. “Keep an eye on Claretta for me back at the station.”

As Gomez moved off with Casey and the nurse, Lopez moved to stand in front of Tyrell. “The hell d’you think you’re doing?” she whispered.

“Buying us some time,” he said quietly.

Lopez pointed abruptly down the hall. “You just booked her, for Christ’s sake! This isn’t a mercy killing, she wanted us on Daniel’s case!”

“I know,” he replied. “Daniel might have overdosed but he still had to get hold of the pills somehow.”

Lopez eyed Tyrell testily, but he saw her forcing herself to consider the possibilities.

“They said the cameras saw nobody enter or exit the room,” she said, “so he was definitely alone. The security door at the end of the hall was locked, Officer Gomez was beside it and Daniel couldn’t even feed himself let alone overdose. So if Claretta didn’t provide him with the pills, who could have?”

“Call the morgue,” Tyrell said quietly. “I want Daniel Neville’s body tested for foreign DNA samples: hair, skin, blood, anything. There was one thing we never learned about Daniel: why he alone survived these experiments.”

“Even if forensics found DNA samples, there’s no guarantee that they belong to a murderer, and how could the perp have gotten into the room without being seen on camera? Even if we could find a way, it doesn’t mean that they were in the room at the time of death.”

Tyrell nodded.

“I know, but we need everything we can get.” He hesitated, looking thoughtfully back down the corridor. “Find everything you can on Casey Jeffs, Michael Shaw, and Claretta Neville just in case.”

“What for?” Lopez asked.

“Just do it,” Tyrell said as they started walking. “Anyone who’s a witness is a suspect right now. Then I think that we need to pay a visit to the great pastor himself.”

“If he’s involved in this, he’s not going to just open up,” Lopez pointed out as they walked down the corridor. “And Claretta’s arrest might not be enough to let them drop their guard, whoever
they
are.”

“We’ll play it as though it’s just a routine questioning,” Tyrell said. “He’s bound to be expecting something along those lines after what’s happened here.”

“If Powell finds out about this, he’ll hit the goddamn roof.”

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