your boy today."
"David Beck?"
"Yeah," Flannery said. "He paid me a visit."
"Why?"
Flannery kicked back his BarcaLounger. "Maybe you should put me through to Fein."
Chapter 35
When night fell, Tyrese found me a room at the apartment of Latisha's cousin. We couldn't imagine that the police would unearth my connection with Tyrese, but why take the chance?
Tyrese had a laptop. We hooked it up. I checked my email, hoping for a message from my mysterious mailer. Nothing under my work account. Nothing under my home account. I tried the new one at bigfoot.com. Nothing there either.
Tyrese had been looking at me funny since we'd left Flannery's office. "I ask you something, Doc?"
"Go ahead," I said.
"When that mouthpiece said about that guy being murdered-"
"Brandon Scope," I added.
"Yeah, him. You look like someone hit you with a stun gun."
I had felt it. "You're wondering why?"
Tyrese shrugged.
"I knew Brandon Scope. He and my wife shared an office at a charitable foundation in the city. And my father grew up with and worked for his father. In fact, my father was in charge of teaching Brandon about the family holdings."
"Uh-huh," Tyrese said. "What else?"
"That's not enough?"
Tyrese waited. I turned to face him. He kept his eyes steady and for a moment I thought he could see all the way to the blackest corners of my soul. Thankfully, the moment passed. Tyrese said, "So what do you want to do next?"
"Make a few phone calls," I said. "You sure they can't be traced back here?"
"Can't see how. Tell you what, though. We'll do it with a conference call to another cell phone. Make it that much harder."
I nodded. Tyrese set it up. I had to dial another number and tell somebody I didn't know what numbers to dial. Tyrese headed for the door. "I'm gonna check on TJ. I'll be back in an hour."
"Tyrese?"
He looked back. I wanted to say thanks, but somehow it didn't feel right. Tyrese understood. "Need you to stay alive, Doc. For my kid, see?"
I nodded. He left. I checked my watch before dialing Shauna's cell phone. She answered on the first ring. "Hello?"
"How's Chloe?" I asked.
"Great," she said.
"How many miles did you walk?"
"At least three. More like four or five." Relief coursed through me. "So what's our next-"
I smiled and disconnected the phone. I dialed up my forwarding buddy and gave him another number. He mumbled something about not being a goddamn operator, but he did as I asked.
Hester Crimstein answered as though she were taking a bite out of the receiver. "What?"
"It's Beck," I said quickly. "Can they listen in, or do we have some kind of attorney-client protection here?"
There was a strange hesitation. "It's safe," she said.
"I had a reason for running," I began.
"Like guilt?"
"What?"
Another hesitation. "I'm sorry, Beck. I screwed up. When you ran like that, I freaked out. I said some stupid things to Shauna, and I quit as your attorney."
"Never told me," I said. "I need you, Hester."
"I won't help you run."
"I don't want to run anymore. I want to surrender. But on our terms."
"You're not in any position to dictate terms, Beck. They're going to lock you up tight. You can forget bail."
"Suppose I offer proof I didn't kill Rebecca Schayes."
Another hesitation. "You can do that?"
"Yes."
"What sort of proof?"
"A solid alibi."
"Provided by?"
"Well," I said, "that's where it gets interesting."
Special Agent Carlson picked up his cell phone. "Yeah."
"Got something else," his partner Stone said.
"What?"
"Beck visited a cheap mouthpiece named Flannery a few hours ago. A black street kid was with him."
Carlson frowned. "I thought Hester Crimstein was his attorney."
"He wasn't looking for legal representation. He wanted to know about a past case."
"What case?"
"Some all-purpose perp named Gonzalez was arrested for killing Brandon Scope eight years ago. Elizabeth Beck gave the guy a hell of an alibi. Beck wanted to know all about it."
Carlson felt his head doing a double spin. How the hell...?
"Anything else?"
"That's it," Stone said. "Say, where are you?"
"I'll talk to you later, Tom." Carlson hung up the phone and pressed in another number.
A voice answered, "National Tracing Center."
"Working late, Donna?"
"And I'm trying to get out of here, Nick. What do you want?"
"A really big favor."
"No," she said. Then with a big sigh, "What?"
"You still have that thirty-eight we found in the Sarah Goodhart safety-deposit box?"
"What about it?"
He told her what he wanted. When he finished, she said, "You're kidding, right?"
"You know me, Donna. No sense of humor."
"Ain't that truth." She sighed. "I'll put in a request, but there's no way it'll get done tonight."
"Thanks, Donna.