panels, tumbled forward, landed on his back, slid a couple feet on the smooth concrete, and came to a stop next to a pair of strappy high heels.
Groaning and rubbing his head, he stared up. The light hit him in the eyes. He put up a hand to deflect the glare.
“What the hell are you doing down there, Roy?” asked Mace, who was holding a work light in a cage that she’d snagged off the floor.
“Coming to save you,” he admitted sheepishly. “Gee, that was sweet. I’ll just take it as dumb luck that I didn’t actually need you to save me, since we’d both be like dead if I had.”
She helped him up.
“I heard a scream and a thud. What’s going on?”
She pointed her light downward again. Roy’s gaze followed the shaft of illumination. The Captain was lying on the concrete, his big body still shaking.
“What the hell did you do to him?”
“Zap knuckles.”
“What?”
She held up a pair of black-coated brass knuckles. “Nearly a million-volt pop. He’ll be okay. But right now his nickname is Twitchy.”
He pointed to the knuckles. “Aren’t those illegal?”
Mace copped an innocent look. “Why, Roy, I don’t think so. But just in case they are, don’t mention them to anyone.”
“You know I am a lawyer and thus an officer of the court.”
“But there is such a thing as attorney-client confidentiality.”
“I’m not your lawyer.”
She slipped a buck from her pocket, slapped it in his hand, and then jabbed him in the side with her elbow. “You are now.”
“Why’d you zap the Captain?”
“Twitchy is the Captain? You know him?”
“Yeah, ex-vet who’s now homeless.”
She ran the light over the Captain’s rags and filthy face. “I zapped him because he’s a big guy, and I’m just a helpless girl.”
“You’re not helpless and I’m not even convinced you’re a girl.” He looked around. “So the Captain must’ve been the one stealing food and tools.”
“Maybe more than that, Roy. Maybe a lot more than that.”
“What do you mean?”
“How about killing female law partners?”
“The Captain? No, that’s nuts. He wouldn’t.”
“How do you know him?”
“This is sort of his turf around here. I give him stuff. Money. Food.”
“And shoes.” Mace pointed her light at the Captain’s feet. “I remember seeing those in your car.”
“The poor guy was wearing cardboard for his shoes.”
“So you only know him from the streets?”
Roy hesitated. “Well, not just from the streets.”
“How else?”
“Does it matter?”
“It all matters, Roy.”
“I defended him once.”
“From what?”
“Assault charge. But that was three years ago.”
“Yeah, and I can see that things have really looked up for him since then.”
“I’m sure he came here just for food and to get off the streets. It’s dangerous out there at night.”
“Apparently it’s dangerous in here too.”
“He couldn’t have killed Diane.”
“Sure he could.”
“How?”
“On Friday he snuck in through the garage after the hammer and nail crew left. A guy like him coming in the front door would have aroused too much attention. Old Ned was probably in the back hooked to a milkshake IV or else he waited until he was gone too. He times his movement across the lobby and hits the stairs. He hides out in that oh-so-convenient broom closet until your friend the day porter does his thing and leaves. Then, when things quiet down, he goes to the fourth floor, which he has direct access to from the fire stairs, and beds down for the night. On Monday he either pops awake when he hears the elevator coming up early in the morning or else he’s already up because he knows he has to get back out before people start coming in. He hits the button over there to make the car stop on this floor. The doors open. Tolliver can’t see him, but he can see her, a lone female trapped in a metal box, easy pickings. He grabs her and that’s it.”
“But if he knew Ned comes in at six why wouldn’t he have already been gone?”
“You think it’s all that difficult to slip past Ned?”
“Or maybe he doesn’t have a watch.”
She knelt down and lifted up the Captain’s left sleeve, revealing a watch. She hit it with the light. “And it’s got the right time.”
“You said something about a case you worked?”
“Same M.O. Bandit hid in buildings where construction was going on. He’d hit the elevator button when he heard the car coming up or down late at night. If the doors opened and it was a chick all by herself, he’d pounce.”