She cleared her throat. âDo you remember the killer the newspapers called the Handyman?â
âVaguely. You never caught him.â
Although June stated it as a simple fact, it stung like an admonition. âWe didnât have much to go on,â she said. âWe do now.â
For a moment, June stared at her. Then she shook her head. âBut what does this have to do with Sammy? I thought the Handyman killed women?â
Patti explained about the find in City Park. âSammyâs badge was in the grave.â
June gasped. âThat canâtâ¦My God, Pattiâ¦this meansââ
âThat the Handyman killed Sammy.â
The server arrived with their food. June gazed blankly at hers, then lifted her eyes to Patti. âSuddenly Iâm not so hungry.â
Patti reached across the table and covered her hand. âThis doesnât change how he died. It doesnât make it worse or more painful.â
âNo?â
âNo. But it does give me a lead. Finally.â She smiled grimly. âIâm going to get him. And Iâm going to make him pay.â
June fell silent. They both picked at their food. Patti saw that her friend was upset.
âWhat?â she asked, pushing her own plate away.
âIâm worried about you.â
âNow, thereâs something new.â
June waved off the teasing sarcasm. âYou act so tough, but I knowââ
âThe real me?â
âYes.â
âTough exterior, soft, chewy center?â Patti teased.
âYes. And itâs not funny.â
âIâm a police captain. Being soft is a liability.â
June leaned forward. âI donât want you hurt any more than you already have been. First the heart attack, then Katrina and Sammyâ¦â
âThanks, butâ¦I think closure is the only thing thatâll stop the hurt.â
June opened her mouth as if to argue her point, but closed it as Pattiâs cell phone buzzed. âCaptain OâShay.â
âAunt Patti. Itâs Spencer. We got a hit.â
âTell me.â
âEx-con. Did time for aggravated rape.â
âPick him up. Iâm on my way.â
12
Saturday, April 21, 2007
2:10 p.m.
B y the time Patti arrived back at headquarters, the suspect had been picked up. Spencer met her outside the door to the interview room.
âThat was quick,â she said.
âSent a couple of uniforms. He was climbing into his van when they pulled up. Nameâs Ben Franklinââ She cocked an eyebrow and he grinned.
âI asked. No relation. Did time for aggravated rape and assault. Served seven of his ten years.â
âHow longâs he been out?â
âJust over two years.â
Timing worked with what they had so far. âAnd heâs managed to keep his nose clean?â
âTo fly under the radar,â Spencer corrected. âThe officer who picked him up saw some suspicious-looking items in his van. Half-dozen flat-screen TVs. Light fixtures.â
He had her with the last. âLight fixtures?â she repeated.
âThatâs right. Chandeliers. Lots of sparkle. Officer White confronted Franklin about the items. Asked for receipts, which he couldnât produce.â
âBig surprise. Have an inventory yet?â
âWorking on it now.â He motioned the room. âMaybe I should do this?â
âIâm not that rusty, Detective.â She reached for the door. âYou monitor.â
Each interview room was outfitted with a video camera so interviews could be taped for later review or to be used as evidence in a trial. In addition, others could monitor the process from a room down the hall.
He caught her arm. âI donât think this arrangement is a good idea.â
She looked at him, eyebrow cocked. âAnd whyâs that, Detective?â
âIf weâre going strictly by-the-book, youâre too personally involved in the
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