Redemption (Amos Decker #5)(79)
“Okay, if you’re sure.”
“I am sure.”
“Then let’s just get back to this lovely meal.”
Mars finished all of his steak. Katz barely touched her food. She finished her second Dewar’s, though.
As they were leaving, they passed Marks’s table. Duncan Marks put out a hand and gripped Katz’s arm. “Rachel, I thought that was you over there.”
“Hello, Duncan.”
“The place is doing fabulous. Another home run for you.”
“Thanks.”
Marks looked at Mars. “And I don’t believe I know your friend.”
Mars put out a hand. “Melvin Mars. Nice to meet you, sir.”
They shook hands as the other people at the table stared dully at them.
“Rachel said that was your Maserati out there. Beautiful car.”
“Yes, it is. German engineering and Italian design, a match made in heaven.”
They all laughed.
They walked out of the restaurant and Katz turned to Mars.
He said, “Seems like a nice guy.”
“Yeah, look, um, I know we just had lunch, but can we have dinner tonight?”
“Okay, sure. Where?”
She hesitated. “My place. I can actually cook.”
When he looked uncomfortable, she gripped his arm. “I promise, it won’t be like that. I…I just need to have a home-cooked meal and someone to talk to. And I’d like that someone to be you.”
Mars squeezed her hand and nodded. “Sure, sounds good.”
“Seven okay?”
“I’ll be there. Anything I can bring?”
“Just yourself, Melvin, that will be enough.”
Chapter 50
DECKER AND LANCASTER WERE SITTING in the detectives’ room when the door opened. It was the ME. He had taken off his white lab coat and was now dressed in a suit. He held up some paperwork.
“Got some results for you,” he said. He joined them at Lancaster’s desk and thumbed through the pages. “First up, Meryl Hawkins had some painkillers in his system. Oxycodone.”
“Would that have incapacitated him?” asked Decker. “Could he have been unconscious when he was shot?”
“He could very well have been,” replied the ME. “And Susan Richards. She died of an overdose of fentanyl. Doesn’t take much with that drug. Nasty, powerful stuff.”
“Any sign during the post that she was a regular drug user?”
“No, nothing like that at all. She was in good shape, actually. Would have lived a lot longer.”
“And time of death?” asked Decker.
“She’d been dead a while, Amos.”
“I asked you this before. Could she have been dead from the moment she allegedly left her house that night?”
“Well, I can tell you that her probable time of death would coincide with your theory.” He paused. “So you think she was murdered at her house?”
“Something like that.”
The ME shook his head. “This case grows more complex by the minute. Glad it’s not my job to figure it out.”
After the ME left, Lancaster said, “Well, if you’re right, then someone killed her and took her body out in that suitcase and then dumped it. That means the person that Agatha Bates saw leaving that night was not Susan Richards.”
“Tall, lean, and blonde,” said Decker.
“Mitzi Gardiner or Rachel Katz, like you said before. But I checked Mitzi’s alibi for the time Richards was allegedly abducted. The restaurant verified that she was there all evening, long after Richards went missing.”
“So Rachel Katz, then?”
“Speaking of, any word from your buddy on her?”
“He emailed. They finished lunch. Said Katz was acting weird. Wants to have dinner at her place tonight. He said he thinks she’s going to open up to him. He also said he told her about Karl Stevens being killed, and though she tried to hide it, she got really freaked out.” Decker added, “Duncan Marks was also at the restaurant. Melvin talked to him. And Katz said he was involved with some of her projects.”
“I didn’t know that. But you remember Marks, surely.”
“I actually did some work for him when his daughter, Jenny, got involved with a con artist. Marks came into Burlington way back and started buying up stuff. Took a little hit with the recession, but then came roaring back, acquiring properties on the cheap. He’s made a lot of money. Had the biggest home in the area when I lived here.”
“Still does,” said Lancaster. “On that hill outside of town. It’s like the guy is looking down on the rest of us.”
“Reminds me of another guy with a big house on the hill in Pennsylvania. But he was broke, and wasn’t looking down on anyone, actually.”
“Well, Marks isn’t broke. He’s got money coming out of every pore of his skin. I heard he actually made a lot of money before coming to Burlington. Investments or some such. IPOs and other crap I’ll never understand and never make a dime off.”
“Why’d he pick Burlington? I never knew.”
“I heard that his father was from here. Worked in the old shoe factory before moving away, I believe. Marks bought that and turned it into luxury condos.”