Джеффри Дивер – The Never Game (страница 15)
“Detective, we can talk all about my livelihood at some point. But right now we need to start looking for Sophie.”
Wiley’s eyes were on the monitor. He’d probably found some articles in which Shaw was cited for helping police find a fugitive or locate a missing person. Or checking his record, more likely, and finding no warrants or convictions. Unless, of course, the powers that be at Cal had learned he was behind the theft of the four hundred pages yesterday from their hallowed academic halls, and he was now a wanted man.
No handcuffs were forthcoming. Wiley swung back. “Maybe she dropped it. Didn’t want to go home because Dad’d paid eight hundred bucks for it. She went to stay with a friend.”
“I found indications there’d been a scuffle. A rock that might have blood on it.”
“DNA is taking us twenty-four hours minimum.”
“It’s not about confirming it’s Sophie’s. It suggests that she was attacked and kidnapped.”
“Were you ever law enforcement?”
“No. But I’ve assisted in missing-person cases for ten years.”
“For profit?”
“I make a living trying to save people’s lives.”
Just like you.
“How much is the reward?”
“Ten thousand.”
“My. That’s some chunk of change.”
Shaw extracted a second bundle of tissue. This contained the small triangular shard of red reflector, which he believed had come from Sophie’s bike.
“I picked them both up with tissues, this and the phone. Though the odds of the perp’s prints being on them are low. I think after she fell down the hill she was trying to call for help. When the kidnapper came after her, she pitched the phone away.”
“Why?” Wiley’s eyes strayed to a file folder. He extracted a mechanical pencil and made a note.
“Hoping that when a friend or her father called, somebody’d find it and they could piece together that she’d been kidnapped.” He continued: “I marked where I found it. I can help your crime scene team. Do you know San Miguel Park? The Tamyen Road side?”
“I do not.”
“It’s near the Bay. There aren’t a lot of places a witness might’ve been but I spotted some businesses on the way to the park. Maybe one of them has a CCTV. And there’s a half dozen traffic cams on the route from the Quick Byte to San Miguel. You might be able to piece together a tag number.”
Wiley jotted another note. The case or a grocery list?
The detective asked, “When do you collect your money?”
Shaw rose and picked up the phone and the bit of plastic, put them back in his bag. Wiley’s face flashed with astonishment. “Hey there—”
Shaw said evenly, “Kidnapping’s a federal offense too. The FBI has a field office here, in Palo Alto. I’ll take it up with them.” He started for the door.
“Hold on, hold on, Chief. Take it easy. You gotta understand. You push the kidnap button, a lot of shit happens. From brass down to the swamp of the press. Take a bench there.”
Shaw paused, then turned and sat down. He opened his computer bag and extracted the copy of the notes he’d jotted while waiting for Wiley. He handed the sheets to the detective.
“The initials FM is Frank Mulliner. SM is Sophie. And the CS is me.”
Obvious, but in Wiley’s case Shaw wasn’t taking any chances.
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The detective’s carefully shaved face wore a frown. “The hell all this come from, Chief?”
The nickname rankled but Shaw ignored it; he was making headway. “The information?” He shrugged. “Facts from her father, some legwork of mine.”
Wiley muttered, “What’s with the percentages?”
“I rank things in priority. Tells me where to start. I look at the most likely first. That doesn’t pan out, I move to the next.”
He read it again.
“They don’t add up to a hundred.”
“There’s always the unknown factor—that something I haven’t thought of’s the answer. Will you send a team to the park, Detective?”
“Alrightyroo. We’ll look into it, Chief.” He smoothed the copy of Shaw’s analysis and shook his head, amused. “I can keep this?”
“It’s yours.”
Shaw set the cell phone and the chip of reflector in front of Wiley.
His own phone was humming with a text. He glanced at the screen, noted the word
“Oh, you betcha, Chief. You betcha.”
At the Quick Byte Café, Tiffany greeted him with a troubled nod.
It was she who’d just texted, asking if he could stop by.