Chapter 27 Match
The Hertzberg-Davis Forensic Science Center was an unremarkable white, five-story office building at the corner of State University Drive and Paseo Rancho Pastilla, just off the El Monte Busway plus the San Bernardino Freeway and the Christopher Columbus Transcontinental Freeway, otherwise just known as the I-10. It was east of Chinatown, south of Pasadena, west of El Monte and north of East LA. It was only seven miles from Shane and Jenny's house. Lauren took the 101 to the 10 to get there.
The facility housed the LAPD's Forensic Science Division and Cal State LA's Criminalistics Program as well as the LASD's crime lab. The facility was surrounded by a tall red brick wall and on the University Drive side it said "California State University Los Angeles" in huge brushed metal letters. Ivy covered some of the walls. Carmen thought Lauren was heading back to her headquarters when she took the Eastern Avenue exit instead.
"Where we going?" Carmen asked. "I thought Marybeth wanted us back ASAP?"
"She did, but I want to drop this jar off at the Scientific Services Bureau. Crime lab to you."
"Can't you drop it off at your own building?"
"Yes, but it would a couple days just to get from there to here, and I'm in a hurry."
"Isn't it, like, only a mile away?"
"Yep. Welcome to the real world. Evidence travels from one facility to another at the speed of about a third of a mile a day, unless you hand-deliver it. And anyway, I know some people here, and I want to try to get it expedited." Lauren pulled into the parking area behind the building. "If you stay in the car I can leave it running," Lauren said, "and that'll keep the A/C running."
"Got it," Carmen said.
"I'll hurry," Lauren said, jumping out and taking her evidence envelope into the building with her. She blew Carmen a kiss.
Carmen sat in Lauren's car and checked her e-mail on her cell phone. She wondered if Lauren was a good kisser. She'd bet serious pesos and her mother's chimichanga recipe on it.
When they got back to the office Lauren led them directly to Marybeth's office. "Hey," she said.
Marybeth looked up from her paperwork, glanced at her wristwatch, picked up her phone and punched in a number. "I've got Jack on standby, and he's got an ADA he wants briefed."
"We're nowhere near ready for that," Lauren said.
"I know," Marybeth said, "but it won't hurt anything. They just want to know what's coming down the pike at them. According to you guys, we're now looking at four murders. I can't blame them for wanting into the loop."
"Okay, I guess I see their point of view. When areβ"
"Jack?" Marybeth said into the phone. "They're here. Ready to rock and roll? Okay." She hung up the phone. "Conference room, five minutes. Go pee, get coffee."
"Shane here?"
"Yes, she's been here all morning. She asked me what she could do. I told her to read through the files again, see if anything popped out. She seemed skeptical, but I told her it wasn't busywork, that sometimes on the ninth or tenth pass all of a sudden you see something you didn't see before. You've got four minutes now."
Carmen and Lauren hustled to the woman's bathroom then the break room for coffee. By the time they got to the conference room Marybeth, Jack and a tall woman in her fifties had joined Shane around the table.
"Carmen," Marybeth said, "I think you're the only one who hasn't met Jack, who was Lauren and my old boss in the homicide division, and this is LA County Assistant District Attorney Deirdre Collins."
Deirdre stood and leaned over the table to shake hands; Carmen leaned over, too.
"Heard a lot about you," Deirdre said.
"Good, I hope?" Carmen asked.
"Oh, yes. And your mother's cooking came up a couple of times."
"Shane and I spent some time this morning bringing Deirdre and Jack up to speed," Marybeth said.
"And mom's cooking came up?"
"That was me," Shane said quietly.
Carmen looked at her, thought about what to say, then decided to drop it.
"Sit. Talk," Marybeth said.
They did. "First things first," Lauren said. "I couldn't sleep last night, so I came in here early. I'd been thinking about Niki's testimony that she and Jenny had talked about hiring a private detective to find out who was blackmailing them."
It took Lauren half an hour to describe her early morning search for Jenny's credit card payment to Spade and Archer, and then her early morning phone call to Carmen (minus the juicy parts and the sex banter), Carmen's theory about the Creep being a smoker, and their visit to the Scofield's home, a.k.a. the Creep House, behind Shane and Jenny's place, and Carmen finding the cigarette butts in the jar in the camping chair arm rest pocket. Deirdre and Jack took notes on legal pads.
"I dropped it off at the crime lab on our way in," Lauren said. "I asked for fingerprints and of course DNA."
"Did they give you any hope for a quick turn-around? Marybeth asked.
"My friend at the lab thought they could have something in two or three days."
"Today's Friday. Does three days mean Monday, or next Wednesday?"
Lauren seemed to blush, Carmen thought.
"I didn't think to ask," Lauren said. "I was so happy they'd expedite it I didn't want to push my luck."
Just then a face appeared at the door. It was Richard, the older civilian Shane and Carmen had met the first time they visited Marybeth. They'd become well acquainted with him since then.
"Sorry to interrupt, Lieutenant," he said. "We got a small emergency downstairs. Could Miss McCutcheon come down?"
Shane sat bolt upright. "What's the matter?"
"Nothing real serious," Richard said. "One of the cruisers, he was pulling out kind fast, and he tapped your bumper. He don't think he did any damage, but he needs you to look. And your alarm went off, you know, and it's making a racket in the parking lot."
"Oh, shit," Shane muttered. "I'll be back soon as I can." She followed Richard down the corridor to the elevator.
Everyone stayed silent until they were sure Shane was gone.
"You guys set that up," Carmen said.
"I can neither confirm nor deny," Marybeth said in a way that made everyone grin.
"She'll know," Carmen said. "Five bucks on it."
"You think? Okay, I'll play," Lauren said. "Five bucks." They fist-bumped.
Deirdre ignored them. "Lauren said you think it could be Shane's father. We need to talk about that. Lauren, what have you got?"
"Gabriel McCutcheon, age about 53 or thereabouts. Last known address about six or seven years ago was Oregon. This theory is only a few hours old, and I haven't had time to plug his name into any data banks, so I have nothing official. Ask me again in two hours. As for the rest, I'll let Carmen tell you about him. She actually met him, once."
"We have to credit Marybeth with an assist," Carmen began. "Something she said gave me the idea. She said blackmailers and extortionists are predators like sharks that return time and again to their favorite feeding grounds. That got me thinking about Gabe McCutcheon, because he was a predator who struck the group once before. I thought, what if he's back for a second bite? A much bigger bite, at that."
It took Carmen 10 minutes to tell Jack, Deirdre and Marybeth about the aborted wedding in Whistler, and how Gabe had conned Helena out of $10,000. She made no attempt to disguise her own role as Shane's once-upon-a-time fiancΓ©.