Harper was protecting someone else. At first, Jess thought it had been Mandy, but with the girl dead, he had no more reason to guard her identity. His reticence had something to do with where he was living now, but she had no idea why.
After leaving Harper, Jess drove to Harrison Station to see Sam. When she got there, her friend met her on the first floor and they walked to a nearby coffee shop to talk, away from prying eyes and ears.
“They took a blood sample on Seth and thanks to Ray Garza, the lab is gonna do a more extensive analysis, not just the standard screening. Ray thought Harper looked more drugged than drunk,” Sam said. “But I doubt the final analysis will be back in time for Seth’s bail hearing.”
“That’s too bad, but if Ray is right, the tox screen should help our boy, right?”
“Let’s hope so. Harper couldn’t remember anything other than heading for a bar, then waking up at that motel room. It would be nice if we had more of a timeline of what he did that night…and the name of that bar.”
Good boy
, Jess thought. Harper had held out with the cops, but the face of the bartender flashed in her mind. As much as she wanted to pin something on the bastard—to wipe the smirk off his arrogant face—anyone in the bar that night could have slipped a roofie into Harper’s drink when he wasn’t looking. And the tattooed Good Samaritan who had hauled Seth from the bar would be at the top of the suspect list.
“Well, maybe your guys didn’t say ‘pretty please,’” Jess said. “…’cause Harper gave me the name of Dirty Monty’s, a bar on the South Side. And I did a little recon last night.”
Sam didn’t act surprised to know Harper had withheld information.
“And?” her friend prompted.
“Harper didn’t remember making it to the bar, so he didn’t exactly lie to the police, but he told me he was supposed to meet Mandy there. She’d set it up.” Jess pinched a corner off her Danish and popped it in her mouth. “The bartender remembered seein’ him, but Mandy never showed. According to him, she knew better than to walk through the door. He’d kicked her out for conducting business outside with bar patrons.”
“But why would Mandy arrange to meet Seth there if she knew she wouldn’t be welcomed? That doesn’t make sense.”
“Yeah, I thought the same thing. The bartender’s a big talker. He was coverin’ his own ass about the money she gave him for lettin’ her operate down the street. The guy’s a real jerk wad.”
Jess told her what she knew about Mandy hooking near the bar to feed her crank habit. And she shared the news about the mystery man with a tattoo who helped Harper out of the bar.
“That’s good stuff, Jess, but we need more.” Sam lowered her voice so no one else would hear. “If Harper’s blood test comes back positive for some drug and not just alcohol, the DA won’t be happy; but that bit of news won’t exactly kill her case. It would put a major dent in it depending on time of death, but Seth’s not out of the woods. Right now, the DA’s probably working a plausible timeline and gathering more evidence against our boy to solidify her charge. If she thinks she’s got a strong enough case, she may go ahead with it.”
Sam leaned forward after a peek over her shoulder, keeping her voice low.
“As it stands, Harper’s got an uphill battle for bail. With his sketchy background and lack of cooperation on where he’s living, the judge will probably hold him over, given the nature of the crime. But if we can show someone else had motive and that Harper was a convenient scapegoat, the charges might be dropped.”
“Then you may want to find out why Nadir Beladi and his muscle-for-brains sidekick Sal Pinzolo pulled a knife on me outside Dirty Monty’s. Apparently, me asking questions about Desiree got Beladi’s tidy-whites in a bunch. And the guy seemed to know about the murder before it hit the paper.” Jess pulled two driver’s licenses from her pocket and tossed them on the table. “Pinzolo let his blade do the talkin’ for Beladi. And he wasn’t above using it on a defenseless woman.”
“You, defenseless? You’re friggin’ Rambo with ovaries.” Sam fought a smile as she got a closer look at the licenses. “And I’m not gonna ask how you got these. Tell me what happened.”
Jess started talking, leaving out the minor detail of the stun grenade and finishing with her car chase in the boonies.
“You’ve been busy.” Sam leaned forward, elbows on the table. “Any idea who was in the sedan?”
“No, it was too dark, but the guy flew solo, and he definitely had a gun. Plus he’s now got a pretty big scrape on the driver’s side of his vehicle. Kissing an embankment tends to do that.”
“I’ll look into these two boneheads and let you know what I find out.” While the waitress refilled their coffee, Sam palmed the licenses in her hand until the woman left. Once they had their privacy, Jessie had something more on her mind.
“Okay, I gotta ask. What’s this about Ray Garza getting involved? Isn’t he the detective who tried to pin Baker’s murder on me a few months back? He works out of Harrison Station like you, not Pullman. What’s his interest?”
Sam smiled, a familiar expression Jess had come to recognize lately.
“Oh yeah, there it is.” Jess pointed a finger and chuckled. “That goofy grin you get whenever you talk about Mr. Macho.”
“Let’s just say that I’ve got a bet going with Ray on who’ll figure this out first. Harper can use the extra help, and if I play my cards right, I may get noticed by the brass. Homicide is where I’d like to be.”
“I know you’ve been wanting out of Vice, but it probably doesn’t hurt that a gorgeous Hispanic hunk works Homicide.” Jess sipped her coffee. “But just remember, when your best friend makes a believable murder suspect, lesser men might hold it against you.” She smirked. “So what about this bet? Spill it.”
“Oh no, that’s between him and me. Let’s just say he’s a good resource I can use.”
“Yeah, I’ll bet. Real good.” Jess winked over the rim of her cup. “Does he know you’re stacking the deck against him? Hell, you’ve got him and me both workin’ the case with you having the inside track and poised to make the collar. Has he figured that out yet?”
“Nope.”
“Oh Sammie, you make me proud, girl.” Jess crooked a lip. “Hey, one more thing. Harper told me about Mandy having a boyfriend. Some guy named Jason. Did he mention that little detail to the cops?”
“Yeah, he did. We found out the guy’s name is Jason Burke. And Burke’s got a record of using his fists on a woman.”
“That’s great.” Her quick grin shifted to a grimace. “I mean, not great like…great great.”
“I know what you mean, but don’t get your hopes up. Burke’s got an alibi. He was out in Lombard at a bar. And his I-PASS confirms he wasn’t anywhere near downtown when the medical examiner fixed time of death.”
Sam gave her the rundown on Jason Burke. The guy was the same age as Mandy and worked hourly as a journeyman subcontractor doing on-site construction and repair wherever he was assigned. He’d been arrested once, two years ago, on charges of domestic abuse against his live-in girlfriend at the time. There had been more beatings, but the girlfriend never pressed charges.
“Are there any witnesses to corroborate his alibi? ’Cause I-PASS is only an electronic toll system. It proves his car was in the burbs, not that he was in it.”
“I know, Jess. We’re checking his story, but his toll pass trumps Harper’s ‘I forgot’ defense.”
She sighed, knowing Sam was right.
“You said Burke has an arrest record. Can you send it to me via e-mail?” Jess’s e-mail was set to forward to her cell phone. Normally, that service allowed her to keep moving and not be tied to an office, but reading an arrest record would require a download to print. Once she got the word Sam had sent the document, she’d retrieve it from home.
“Yeah, I can. What are you thinking?”
“Jealousy. Harper said the guy got bent about him seeing his girl. Seth tried to clean her up, maybe that didn’t sit well with Romeo. He could be the guy who drugged our boy and took him off the premises. If the bartender at Dirty Monty’s can ID Burke from his booking photo and place him at the bar that night, we’ll know he lied about Lombard, and his alibi is for shit.”
“Yeah, that’d be worth a shot. I’m jammed with my caseload, but I’ll send his booking record as soon as I get back to the station.”
“And if that report had his work and home address listed, that would be great. I might need to talk to him, too,” she added, looking a little sheepish. “…to see if he’s got tattoos.”
Sam cocked her head and stared at her for a moment before opening her mouth.
“Talk to him? I know you, Jessie. You have no intention of just talking. And so you know? Checking him for tattoos doesn’t require a full body-cavity search.” Sam winced. “God, this better not come back to bite me in the ass. And if CPD gets wind of this, you wouldn’t be doing Harper any favors either.”
Jess tried to act insulted. “Hey, I can be discreet.”
“Yeah, you and Paris Hilton.” Sam shook her head. “Call me if you need anything. I’ll keep you in the loop from my end. You do the same.”
Her friend left her with a lot to think about—and the tab.
South Chicago
Off Cicero Avenue
True to her word, Sam sent the arrest record for Mandy’s boyfriend, Jason Burke, in short order. By the time Jess made it back to her apartment and pulled into a parking spot, her cell phone signaled that she’d received the e-mail.
“Good girl.” She muttered under her breath, shoving the phone back into her pocket. “Now let’s see who you are, Burke.”
Once inside her apartment, she booted up her computer to download and print the document. With the printer working, she made a few more calls to cab companies. On the third number, she got a hit.
“Well, I’ll be damned.” She grinned and grabbed a pen and paper near her phone. “Can you give me the location where you picked him up?”
Harper had been a responsible drinker and used a cab to cart his cute tush to Dirty Monty’s that night. Part of his evening had an explanation, but more importantly, Jess felt a step closer to knowing where Harper was living these days—and whom he might be protecting.
“Yeah, I got it. Thanks.” She hung up the phone and gazed at the address she’d jotted on a notepad.
She recognized it as being in downtown Chicago off Michigan Avenue. Posh real estate, but oddly enough, by now she’d come to expect that from Harper. She’d accepted his idiosyncrasies and the mysteries that surrounded the quirky kid, but that hadn’t always been the case.
She’d first met him months ago after she hired him as a summer intern, her ploy to score cheap labor for computer research and skip tracing. Other than her immediate connection to him on a personal level, nothing about the guy raised a red flag. Her first impression had been that Harper was cute, smart, and in need of a job—not a bad combination. He’d been the only applicant for the position she advertised in a free ad and had been the original owner of the blue whale, the beat-up old van she now drove after he’d loaned it to her. The kid wore an unending assortment of Jerry Springer wear with worn jeans and sneaks. Yet in no time, the mysteries had begun to surface, compelling her to rethink her initial opinion of Seth Harper.
Off the top, he looked like a normal guy, but she soon found him living in upscale digs as if he’d been born to it—forcing her to question how he could afford such accommodations. ID theft came to mind when she caught him with a bootlegged crimeware program designed to install keystroke loggers on someone’s computer to collect sensitive login and password data. Such information could later be utilized to perpetrate a financial crime.
At the time, he’d used the software at her request for a good cause in hacking the laptop of Lucas Baker, a suspected child pornographer. But Harper never explained how he’d gotten his hands on the program. And when she confronted him with her suspicions, he acted insulted and demanded she trust him, yet never once did he offer an explanation for why he had the illegal software. And she’d been too focused on stopping Baker to press Harper for answers.
Now she wished she had…for his sake.
Downtown Chicago
In perverse fashion, life had a nasty habit of carrying on for everyone else. But since Harper’s life had been tilted off base, hers had followed like the tip of a domino reacting to gravity.
Jess pondered her domino theory as she waited for a traffic light to change, catching a glimpse of a sightseeing tour boat cruising along the Chicago River under the Michigan Avenue Bridge—the heart of Chicago’s prime shopping. She made her turn and parked her van in an underground garage beneath the building she believed Harper called home, replaying the steps in the research that had brought her here.
She hoped that by doing so, she’d get a better handle on how to proceed once she got inside to talk to someone in security or the property manager. And given the prestige of the locale, she knew that it wouldn’t be easy to pick a lock or trick her way inside, her normal mode of operation these days.
American Taxi had confirmed a call had been placed from the concierge desk on the premises the evening prior to Harper’s arrest. A cab had been ordered to pick up a fare from the downtown address and dropped someone off at Dirty Monty’s on Chicago’s South Side with no return booked. Since Harper hadn’t made the arrangements himself, that sent a clear message to her that his residence was upscale. She’d have to sweet-talk someone into giving her information on a resident who probably maintained a very low profile.
An elevator delivered her to a street-level lobby, the only option, for security reasons. And once the doors had opened, she knew she’d been right about Harper being accustomed to money. The lobby décor was stunning—only the best—furnishings gilded in gold and chic fabrics, huge displays of fresh flowers, real paintings in oil, with overhead speakers subtly playing classical music in the background. The minute she stepped into the atrium, all eyes were on her—a doorman, a maid in uniform wiping down windows to the revolving front door, and an older man in a fancy suit retrieving a newspaper.