Speaking in Tongues
headquarters.
But the information wasn’t as helpful as he’d hoped. Most of the sales receipts included the manufacturer of the customer’s car and the tag number. Some had the model number but virtuallynone had the color. The list kept growing. After an hour he had copies of 142 records of the sales of that model of Michelin in the past twelve months to people who owned Mercedeses.
He looked over the discouragingly lengthy list of names.
Standard procedure was to run the names through the outstanding warrants/prior arrests database. But a net like that didn’t seem to be the sort that would catch this perp—he wasn’t a chronic ’jacker or a shooter with a long history of crime. Still, Konnie was a cop who dotted his i ’s and he handed the stack to Genie. “You know what to do, darling.”
“It’s seven forty-two on a Saturday night, boss,” the assistant pointed out.
“You had dinner at least.”
“Lemme tell you something, Konnie,” the huge woman said, nodding at the KFC bags. “Throw those out. They’re starting to stink.”
Dutifully, he did. As he returned to his desk he grabbed his ringing phone.
“ ’Lo?”
“Detective Konstantinatis, please?”
“Yeah.”
“This is Special Agent McComb with the FBI. Child Exploitation and Kidnapping Unit.”
“Sure, how you doin’?” Konnie’d worked with the unit occasionally. They were tireless and dedicated and top-notch.
“I’m doing a favor for my boss in Quantico. He asked me to take a look at the Megan McCall case. You’re involved in that, right?”
“Yup.”
“It’s not an active case for us but you know Tate Collier’s the girl’s father, right?”
“Know that.”
“Well, he did some pretty good work for us when he was a commonwealth’s attorney so I said I’d look into her disappearance. As a favor.”
“Just what I’m doing, more or less. But I’m gonna present it as an active case to my captain tonight.”
“Are you really?”
“Found some interesting forensics.” Konnie was thinking, Man, if I could turn the tire data over to the feds . . . the FBI has a whole staff of people who specialize in tires.
“That’s good to know. We ought to coordinate our approaches. Do some proactive thinking.”
“Sure.” Konnie’s thinking was: They might be the best cops in the world but feebies talk like assholes.
The agent said, “I’m up at Ernie’s, near the parkway. You know it?”
“Sure. It’s a half mile from me.”
“I was about to order dinner and was reading the file when I saw your name. Maybe I could come by in an hour or so. Or maybe—this might appeal to you, Officer—you might want to join me? Let Uncle Sam pick up the dinner tab.”
He paused for a moment. “Why not? Be there in ten minutes.”
“Good. Bring whatever you’ve got.”
“Will do.”
They hung up. Konnie stuck his head in Genie’s office, where she was looking over the warrantsand arrests request results. “Everything’s negative, Konnie.”
“Don’t worry. We got the feds on the case now.”
“My.”
He took the stack of faxed receipts from her desk, shoved them into his briefcase and headed out the door.
Konnie was feeling pretty good. Ernie’s served some great mashed potatoes.
Chapter Twenty-two
Aaron Matthews sat at a booth in a dark corner of the restaurant, looking out the window at a tableau of heavy equipment, bright yellow in the dusk, squatting on a dirt hillside nearby.
This was an area that five years ago had been fields and was now rampantly overgrown with town houses and apartments and strip malls. Starbucks, Chesapeake Bagels, Linens ’n’ Things. Ernie’s restaurant fit in perfectly, an upscale franchise. Looked nice on the surface but beneath the veneer it was all formula. Matthews stirred as the waddling form of Detective Konstantinatis entered the restaurant and maneuvered through the tables.
Watching the man’s eyes, seeing where they slid—furtively, guiltily.
Always the eyes. Matthews waved and Konstantinatis nodded and steered toward him. Matthews had no idea what official FBI identification looked like and wouldn’t have known how to fake some if he had but he’d dressed in a suit and white shirt—what he always wore when seeing patients—and had brought several dog-eared file folders, on which he’d printed FBI PRIVILEGED AND CONFIDENTIAL with stencilshe’d made from office materials bought at Staples. These sat prominently in front of him.
He hoped
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