D is for Deadbeat
Page 15"Is your uncle coming down?"
She shook her head. "I said I'd do it. There's no doubt it's Daddy, but somebody has to sign for the body so the mortuary can come pick it up. Of course, they'll autopsy first. How did you find out?"
"Through a cop I know. I'd told him I was trying to get a line on your father, so he called me when they got a match on the fingerprints. Did you manage to locate him yesterday?"
"No, but it's clear someone did." She closed her umbrella and gave it a shake, then glanced at me. "Frankly, I'm assuming somebody killed him."
"Let's not be too quick off the mark," I said, though privately, I agreed.
The two of us moved through the inner door and into the corridor. The air was warmer here and smelled of latex paint.
"I want you to look into it for me, in any event," she said.
"Hey, listen. That's what the police are for. I don't have the scope for that. Why don't you wait and see what they have to say first?"
"Oh come on. Cops don't have to care," I said. "If it's homicide, they have a job to do and they'll do it well."
When we reached the autopsy room, I knocked and a young black morgue attendant came out, dressed in surgical greens. His name tag indicated that his name was Hall Ingraham. He was lean, his skin the color of pecan wood with a high-gloss finish. His hair was cropped close and gave him the look of a piece of sculpture, his elongated face nearly stylized in its perfection.
"This is Barbara Daggett," I said.
He looked in her direction without meeting her eyes. "You can wait right down here," he said. He moved two doors down and we followed, pausing politely while he unlocked a viewing room and ushered us in.
"It'll be just a minute," he said.
He disappeared and we took a seat. The room was small, maybe nine by nine, with four blue molded-plastic chairs hooked together at the base, a low wooden table covered with old magazines, and a television screen affixed, at an angle, up in one corner of the room. I saw her gaze flick to it.
"Closed circuit," I said. "They'll show him up there."
I couldn't think of a reason not to tell her at this point, but I noticed that I censored myself to some extent, a habit of long standing. I like to hold something back. Once information is out, it can't be recalled so it's better to exercise caution before you flap your mouth. "He wanted me to find a kid named Tony Gahan," I said.
That remarkable two-toned gaze came up to meet mine and I found myself trying to decide which eye color I preferred. The green was more unusual, but the blue was clear and stark. The two together presented a contradiction, like the signal at a street corner, flashing Walk and Don't Walk simultaneously.
"You know him?" I asked.
"His parents and a younger sister were the ones killed in the accident, along with two other people in the car with them. What did Daddy want with him?"
"He said Tony Gahan helped him once when he was on the run from the cops. He wanted to thank him."
Her look was incredulous. "But that's bullshit!"
"So I gather," I said.
Barbara stared at him, her lips parting, her face diffused with pink. Tears rose in her eyes and hung there, captured in the well of her lower lids. I looked away from her, unwilling to intrude any more than I had to. The morgue attendant's voice reached us through the intercom.
"Let me know when you're done."
Barbara turned away abruptly.
"Thank you. That's fine," I called. The television screen went dark.
Moments later, there was a tap at the door and he reappeared with a sealed manila envelope and a clipboard in hand.