that he aids this office in obtaining a hair or some other sample from Ms. Fancelli that contains the young woman’s DNA. Perhaps he is already in possession of something along these lines.”
“This is ridiculous!” the father said, nearly coming out of his chair. “They haven’t got anything! No way this is happening.”
Hogue, without breaking eye contact with Walt, motioned for the man to remain in his chair, and implicitly, to remain quiet.
“I don’t get it,” Brian said.
The father couldn’t help himself. “He wants you to do his work for him. Let’s get out of here.”
Hogue turned on the father. “You may leave the room, or you can remain and be quiet, but that’s the last we’re going to hear from you right now.”
The father huffed, but stayed in his seat.
“Let me get this straight,” Hogue said. “You’re requesting my client’s participation and cooperation in certain aspects of your evidence collection and in keeping with the confidentiality of the current interview, you’re implying any evidence acquired as a result of this cooperation . . . ?”
“Is therefore off the books,” Walt said. “Not that we’re keeping any books. Not at the moment.”
A puzzled Hogue looked him over, still maintaining eye contact. “You’ll leave the room, please. Both of you.”
“Me?” said the father.
“Yes,” said Hogue.
The two got up and left the room.
Once the door was firmly shut, Hogue spoke. “You have another suspect.”
“I need the boy’s cooperation,” Walt said.
“You’re aware that if and when you come back for any physical evidence from my client, I will fight any reference to—”
“My case against your client, at that point, would be dicey at best. I would have prejudiced the evidence. I’d probably lose the possibility of a court case against him.”
“No probably about it.”
“What a pity,” Walt said.
Hogue sat back, rubbed his big hand against his maw and chuckled. “Never a dull moment with you, Walt.”
Walt showed no expression.
“The girl’s DNA,” Hogue said. He mulled it over. “You suspect the father.”
“Never a dull moment with you, Terry.”
“How certain are you?”
“Certain of what, counselor? I don’t believe we’ve discussed any other suspects.”
“If you want the girl’s DNA, and my client’s as well, then you must have, or have access to, the fetus’s DNA. How is it that you have the child’s DNA but not the mother’s?” Again, he was thinking aloud.
Walt’s lack of expression remained implacable.
“If you burn me on this, Walt . . . You’ve always played fair with me.”
“Can’t teach an old dog new tricks.”
“We’d be taking a big risk.”
“A risk that I would prejudice my evidence, that your client would skate. I need a hair from her. A cigarette butt. A love stain. He needs to volunteer it to me.”
“And I repeat: you’re implying you can get . . . what . . . amnio fluid but not the girl’s DNA? How’s that happen?” He took a moment. “You have a witness. You possess the means to obtain a court order to collect the amnio fluid, but are less confident you can win the DNA of a minor.”
“You don’t need to trouble yourself, counselor, with what I do or do not have. What I need is your client’s cooperation.”
“And you’ll have it.”
“I thought it might work out that way.”
A knock on the door interrupted them.
“Sorry to interrupt,” a female deputy said, leaning her head in the door. “We’ve got shots fired out Lake Creek.”
Walt immediately stood, extending his hand to Hogue. “Do what you can,” he said.
“You’ll be hearing from me,” Hogue answered.
9
“She’s not answering,” Deputy Linda Chalmers reported.
“Try again,” Walt said.
“I’ve already . . . Why do we need photography anyway? It’s a couple of shells in the grass.”
Walt answered that with a glare.
“Yes, sir.”
He was in a fix. He’d requested Fiona be called onto the scene, more out of a personal want, and now saw no way to back out of the request without making his original intentions obvious. He marched to the back of the Cherokee, as if put out to do this himself, took his camera from an emergency backpack he kept there, and walked back into the darkened lawn. He shot off a series of photos of the spent shell casings, adding his pen into the grass for scale.
Chalmers was first officer, having responded to a dispatch, the result of an Emergency Center’s receipt of a neighbor’s 911 call. Chalmers shadowed Walt to the Jeep and back to the lawn.
“Warning shots?” Walt said.
“No, sir. That’s the thing. He made no apologies. Said he was firing right