Authors: James Lilliefors
T
W
O HOURS AFTER
the incident, Belasco still heard the police sirens, racing with false urgency through the night. Belasco had watched the official activity from a distance for a while, and then returned home, confident that tonight's event would become nothing more than it seemed: an unfortunate accident.
It was a warm, breezy evening, with a trace of fog coming in over the water. Belasco was driving into town, still feeling a spike of adrenaline, and the lingering thrill. Killing, done right, could be an art form, an activity that aroused the higher emotions. Belasco had nearly forgotten that. Tonight's work, which had been carried out quickly, with purpose and precision, but also with passion, had been a reminder. Kepler would appreciate that. There had been a sense of inevitability to it, as well: Susan Champlain's recklessness had become a threat to everything they had planned. Belasco had confirmed that tonight in going through her cell phone.
Normally, Belasco was better at killing men than women; but tonight's incident had unfolded with a surprising ease, as if guided by some divine force. There had been just one small mistake, a hitch that Belasco should have anticipated; but it wasn't likely that local law enforcement would pick up on it. Belasco wasn't going to mention it to Kepler when they spoke in the morning. What would be the point? There were far more important, and practical, things to discuss. And anyway, Belasco had a knack for making mistakes disappear. This one was already beginning to seem insignificant, an undetectable flaw in the finished work.
Â
S
usan Champlain's husband, Nicholas, was upstairs in the interview room at the Public Safety Complex, wearing a royal blue golf shirt, his eyes lowered, his right hand over his left on the tabletop. John Dunn and Kyle Samuels, the sheriff's investigator, were with him.
“Two questions?” Hunter said to state police troop commander Gary Martin. They were standing in the adjoining room. Martin was a blond, round-Âfaced man with a rosy complexion.
His eyes turned to Champlain through the one-Âway glass. Champlain was gesturing now, looking surprisingly put together.
Okay
, he nodded. “He'll probably enjoy the change of scenery, anyway.”
Hunter decided to let that one go.
Pick your battles
, her father used to tell her.
She took a seat and waited, watching through the glass as Nick Champlain fielded questions. It didn't take long to see that, for whatever reasons, investigators weren't pushing him as hard as they should be. Part of it was the fact that he had an alibi. But some of it was his manner: Champlain was cool and sort of interesting to watch. Hunter was reminded that he'd been a politician, a one-Âterm city councilman in a small town in central Pennsylvania, not far from where she had been raised. Maybe the donations he'd made to the local FOP had something to do with it.
“You're up,” Martin said seemingly arbitrarily, coming in and gripping one of her shoulders.
Hunter walked in and John Dunn came out. She took a seat at the table beside Kyle Samuels, the sheriff's detective, and nodded hello.
“Mr. Champlain, Amy Hunter, Maryland State Police. I'd just like to ask a Âcouple of follow-Âups.”
His face softened with cordiality even as his eyes gave her a quick once-Âover. It was warm in the room. Hunter caught a trace of expensive cologne. She glanced at her notes.
“Sir, I just want to clarify, we need to ask these questions: You said it didn't surprise you that your wife had gone to the bluff at Widow's Point to watch the sunset this evening. She went there frequently, you said?”
“Sporadically.”
“Sporadically. And she would take pictures of sunset there?”
“Sometimes. Sometimes the Bay. Or the trees. That's correct.”
“Okay. And you're aware there's no evidence of a camera or a cell phone at the scene.”
“No, they just asked me that,” he said, his eyes turning, with a flicker of annoyance, to the other detective. “I'm guessing it fell in the Bay.”
“In fact, your wife didn't normally use a camera, did she? She used her cell phone as a camera, isn't that right?”
“That's correct.”
“And as I understand it, a lot of her artwork came from photos she'd taken on her phone, isn't that right?” His eyes gave her another quick up and down. Hunter cleared her throat and checked to make sure her shirt was buttoned properly. “And sometimes, she'd take pictures of Âpeople when they didn't know it.”
There was a tiny delay in his response. “Sometimes.”
“Was that ever a source of friction between you?” Hunter asked.
“Was thatâÂ?” Crinkles formed around Champlain's eyes and then he smiled; for an instant she saw something he didn't want her to see. “I don't understand the question.”
“Didn't you argue earlier this week about a particular photo she'd taken on her cell phone?”
The other detective squared up his papers perpendicular to the table.
“Say that again,” Champlain said.
Hunter felt her heart accelerate. She said it again.
“No.”
“Hadn't you and your wife been arguing in recent days, sir? And hadn't one of those arguments been about a photo on her cell phone?” Champlain watched her evenly. He said nothing. “And during one of those arguments, hadn't you said that if you wanted to, you could make her disappear and no one would ever find her?”
He looked at the other detective, who was making a subtle sound in his throat. “No,” he said.
Hunter was about to ask him about the necklace when Martin came into the room, waving a folder as if something had just come up. He handed it to Kyle Samuels and touched Hunter's shoulder. Meaning she was relieved.
She looked back before closing the door. Champlain gave her a shrewd, wide-Âeyed look. It could've meant anything.
“ âTwo questions'?” Martin said. He looked like a dad about to upbraid his teen daughter. “Can you put that in writing, about the photo?”
“Of course.”
Gerry Tanner came into the room a few minutes later and sat down. The three of them watched the interview in silence for a while, jotting notes.
“If he's not guilty, he's a good actor,” Tanner said, to Hunter.
“Even if he
is
guilty,” she said. In fact, the whole thing resembled a performance, Hunter was thinking. When Champlain let his guard down, his wife's death seemed an inconvenience more than anything elseâÂthan a tragedy or a personal loss.
“He's cooperating,” Tanner said, after Martin left the room, “but he wouldn't turn over his phone. Did you hear that?”
“Why?”
“Claims confidential business transactions. He gave Dunn his business manager's name.”
“What is it?”
Hunter wrote it down and filed a mental note to ask Dunn about this. She stayed for the remainder of the interview and then, after Tanner left, she stayed while state police investigators recorded interviews with Joseph Sanders, Elena Rodgers, and Sally Markos, all of whom had worked for Champlain.
Sanders, Champlain's driver and “assistant,” was a large, gruff-Âspeaking man with a beat-Âup-Âlooking face who seemed to struggle with some of his sentences. He had been out fishing alone in his runabout that afternoon, he said, then stopped at a bar called the Harbor Loon, at about 7
P.M
., to have “a Âcouple” beers. He was “off duty” today, he said three or four times.
Elena Rodgers, a personal assistant to Champlain, was an athletic-Âlooking woman in her late thirties, wearing a dark windbreaker and a slightly sullen expression. She had been in her room at the Old Shore Inn all afternoon reading, then joined her boss in the private dining room at Kent's Crab House several minutes past nine. It was a “business meeting slash dinner,” she said. Rodgers was terse and businesslike and several times flashed a look of impatienceâÂan upside-Âdown smileâÂas if disgusted that the detectives had found it necessary to interview her.
Sally Markos, Champlain's house cleaner, was a dark, waifish-Âlooking woman with frizzy shoulder-Âlength hair. She couldn't get through more than a few words without crying, a response that became almost theatrical at times, Hunter thought. She'd been home with her husband, she said, watching television tonight. She named the shows:
Wheel of Fortune
, followed by
Jeopardy
and back-Âto-Âback episodes of
Forensic Files
.
None of the interviews was very useful, although something about Sanders's story felt off. The detectives picked up on that, Hunter noticed. Some of it may've been that he was drinking and had to sober up to talk with them. But there was a discrepancy in his recollection of timesâÂwhen he'd arrived at the bar, when he'd leftâÂthat sounded as if he was spontaneously trying to invent an alibi. And when this discrepancy was pointed out, his face colored and he said, “I can't remember exactly.”
It was past midnight when Amy Hunter swiped her badge into Homicide. Inside was a reception desk and four small officesâÂone for Tanner, one for Fischer, one for her; the fourth was open, used as a conference room and sometimes by their supervisor, Henry Moore. She was surprised to see that Tanner and Fischer were both still here. Tanner's door stood wide open, Fischer's about two inches. It was only a Âcouple of minutes before Tanner was in her office.
“The alibi seems to check,” he said, resting a hip on a corner of Hunter's worktable and opening his worn-Âout leather notebook. “We're pulling highway surveillance.”
“Alibis are sometimes overrated, though.”
“Yeah.” Tanner studied her. “Why, what are you thinking?” Hunter shrugged. “You think the husband did this.”
“I think it's possible he was involved. Whether he was here or not.”
Tanner waited for more, staring with his long wooden face. He had a spiel he gave about how cheap opinions were.
My daddy used to say you ought to have a license before they allow you to carry an opinion
. It was ironic considering how much he liked to hear other Âpeople's opinions.
“Sanders's story had problems.”
“I know,” she said.
“You think he was involved?”
Hunter shrugged. “What do
you
think?”
“Maybe Champlain
arranged
it?” he said. “Made sure he was out of town when it happened?”
“Why, though?” she said.
“The usual, I guess. Maybe he saw the writing on the wall. D-ÂI-ÂV-ÂO-ÂR-ÂC-ÂE?” He spoke each of the letters, like in the song. Tanner's voice had a wide, expressive range, but his face never changed. The effect could be slightly comical. “Save him a ton of money if she had an accident before that happened.”
“Maybe,” Hunter said. “Except I don't know that they were at that stage in their marriage. I don't think they were.”
“Speculation.”
“I know. It's too early for that. We'll know more when we hear from the M.E. There was a broken nail,” she added. “Something under her other nails, might be skin cells.”
“Lump on the back of her head, too, right?”
“Yes. Although she may have just hit her head on the way down.”
“That's what the sheriff's saying,” Tanner said. “Of course, maybe it
was
an accident.”
“Maybe.” Hunter gave him a cursory smile. “But I don't think so.” Tanner stared, expecting her to say more. But Hunter wasn't ready to do that yet.
Several minutes after Tanner left for the night, giving her his “Hasta la Vista,” Fischer emerged. He filled his coffee cup with cooler water and then leaned against Hunter's doorway.
“How's Geronimo?” he asked. Gerry Tanner's real name was, in fact, Geronimo, although no one called him that. Hunter shrugged, knowing better than to get between them. Fischer was a fitness and organic food nut, half Cuban, half African-ÂAmerican. He was one of the most meticulous and focused investigators Hunter had known. But, unlike Tanner, he wasn't a Âpeople person. He was great at sorting through information, finding a story in piles of data.
“What can I do?” he said.
Hunter had been waiting for him to ask; she was as pleased to give Fischer an assignment as he was to receive it. Fischer readied his pen to write on his steno pad.
“I'd like to know more about Champlain's whole setup here.”
“ 'kay.”
“Who he's with and why. Backgrounds on everybody. Sanders is his bodyguard, supposedly, Elena Rodgers his personal assistant. There's a part-Âtime housekeeper named Sally Markos. Where are they from? Can we run checks on all of them?”
“ 'course.” Fischer was writing.
“I'd like to pull security tapes, too, anything we can find for the past week.”
“M'kay.” Where Tanner would've asked “Why? What're you thinking?” Fischer just listened and jotted notes.
Hunter told him then about the necklace she'd discovered on the beach. “It's possible she was fighting with someone and, in the process, the perp ripped off her necklace. There seemed to be scrapes on Susan's neck and upper right arm. I didn't have a chance to ask her husband about the necklace, but I will. In the meantime, let's see if it turns up in any surveillance pictures.”
“M'kay.”
Afterward, Hunter sat at her desk, trying for some time to fit the details of Susan Champlain's death into some kind of pattern that made sense. She couldn't. She printed out a photo of Susan, the only one she'd found online: taken four years ago, at a fund-Âraiser, with her new husband, “Philadelphia developer Nicholas Champlain.” Hunter cut Nick Champlain from the picture and tacked the image to her corkboard. She printed a second one to take home. Something maybe to replace the one in her headâÂSusan Champlain's body contorted on the beach, in front of a gallery of onlookers, before the partition went up.
She was driving out of the parking lot at last when Henry Moore's number came up on her phone.
“Wow,” she said. “Surprised you're calling so late.”
“I wouldn't be, except I just saw you leave the building.”
“Oh. You're still there?”
“Getting ready to leave.”
That
was odd.
“Why so late?”
Moore sounded tired. He was a brusque man with a soft center, who often skipped over the niceties. “I was talking with Dunn. I'm told we're not getting directly involved in this one. They're going to push that it was an accident.”
Hunter felt her heart begin to beat faster. “Not surprising, I guess.”
“Not surprising.” She suspected Moore had talked, too, with State's Attorney Wendell Stamps; Stamps was the silent arbiter in Tidewater County, where too many competing agencies worked the same turf. “Except,” he said, “I think we probably should be involved.”
“I do too,” Hunter said.
Good
. She listened to him breathing. There was a saying she'd heard years ago: homicide investigation is God's work. It came back to her at times like this. “Why, what are you hearing?”
“Nothing specific. I think there's another shoe that's going to drop.”
“Literally,” she said.
“What?”
“I mean, there's literally another shoe,” Hunter said. “They only found one of Susan Champlain's sandals.”