W is for Wasted
Page 169Having never heard Mary Lee Bryce’s voice, I had no idea if I was hearing it now.
Her phonemate said something that the recorder didn’t pick up. Then she said, “Not yet. I know where they are. I just can’t get to them. I’m trying to track the one guy down but it’s tough. Can’t you use the information I already gave you?”
I heard nothing while the person she was talking to said a few words. I didn’t even know if it was a woman or a man. Guess it could have been a dog. Arf, arf.
“Owen, I know that! How do you think I spotted it in the first place? The pattern’s there. What I don’t have is proof. Meantime, I’m walking on eggshells . . .”
Ah, Owen Pensky and Mary Lee Bryce. How lovely to have you here. Carry on.
She said, “I hope not. You don’t understand how ruthless he is. It’s fine as long as I’m in the lab, but I can’t get anywhere near the clinic.”
A question from Owen.
Her reply: “The lab’s in Southwick. The clinic’s in the Health Sciences Building.”
“Because that’s where the subjects are seen for follow-up.”
Whatever Owen said in answer was met with derision: “Oh, right,” said she. “Talk about a red flag.”
And a moment later, “I figured you’d appreciate the finer points.”
There was an exchange about a journal published in Germany.
I listened, squinting, but couldn’t see the relevance, so I moved past that bit and concentrated on the next.
Mary Lee said, “‘Too bad’ is right. What he’s doing here is worse. With the grant he got, he can’t afford to fail.”
Silence.
I stopped the tape again and wrote down what I’d heard. My Aunt Gin had refused to let me take secretarial courses in high school and I was royally pissed off about it now. If I’d been able to take shorthand, I could have made quick work of this. I pressed play again. I missed a garbled sentence or two, but I could have sworn she’d mentioned Glucotace.
“I have his password, but that’s it so far.”
Owen responded, silently.
“It was written on a piece of paper in his desk drawer. How’s that for clever?”
Again, a pause for her response.
“Because I saw the printout before he shredded it.”
I pressed stop and play until I heard her say, “Not Stupak’s, Linton’s. These guys are always circling the wagons. Any hint of trouble, they close ranks. Shit. Gotta go. Bye.”
What I couldn’t see was where I might go with this. Linton Reed was wily. He was a cool customer and all he had to do was sit tight. Whatever he’d been up to at work, he was never going to be caught out. If Pete was onto him and had hit him up for money, how would the facts come to light? Pete was dead. The tape would never be admissible in a court of law. Now what?
33
Late Friday afternoon, my curiosity finally got the better of me. I drove to Colgate and parked outside the apartment complex where Willard and Mary Lee lived. I knocked, this time hoping to catch her at home instead of him. She opened the door and regarded me briefly without saying a word.
She was small. Her face was a perfect oval, her features fine. Her red hair was straight, chin-length and cut jaggedly. Her forehead was high. A fine haze of red freckles gave her complexion a ruddy hue. Pale brows, blue eyes with no visible lashes. Very red lips. She was a slip of a thing, so delicately built that it made her feet look too big for her slender frame. “You’re the private detective who was here.”
“Yes.”
Her smile was pained. “You’ll be happy to know Willard told me everything. Full confession.”