“But if you haven't seen or heard from him in all those years, how could you know he was innocent?”
“I didn't, not until I visited him in jail. Since we had different names, I arranged it by claiming to be investigating the Louisa Childe killing in Millbrook. I'd done my homework before seeing him. Oregon authorities bought my story, and I had clearance to see and interview Towne on the basis of my FBI status. They thought-”
“You were doing research… behavioral-science aspect of his case.”
“Exactly. Then I get back home to Milwaukee, and damned if a third woman hasn't been killed in a like manner.”
“Weird coincidence all right.”
“It was so close to home this time, I thought anyone looking at it from the outside might conclude that I had something to do with Joyce Olsen's killing just to clear my brother's name. You know, throw up a red herring, a flare.”
“To make it appear the killer's still on the loose.”
“That's when I got a notion. You see, I had read your book, so I decided to get you to come and take a look at what the police had in Milwaukee.”
She ate from her salmon dinner. She drank more wine, not knowing what to say.
“Tomorrow we can go out to the prison and see Rob. I know when you meet him, you'll know he's incapable of what they're wanting to execute him for. He's just too gentle.”
“Even though your father has a history of violence and Robert didn't have the stable home you had, Darwin? Can you be so sure?”
“Yes, I have an absolute faith in Robert.”
“You just remember the older brother who threw himself between you and an abusive father.”
“No… no. I've gotten to know him. I tell you, he's innocent.”
She breathed deeply and nodded. “I trust your instincts, Darwin. I'm working under the assumption you are right on and keenly attuned to the facts here.”
“Will you come with me to the prison tomorrow? Regardless of how it goes with the governor tonight? Will you meet Robert?”
“Yes, I will, but don't we have to make petition to see him at this late date?”
“We're FBI. Besides, tomorrow I go see him as his only living relative.”
“I see.” She lifted her wineglass to him, and he lifted his beer in toast. “To success with the governor tonight.”
“To success.”
With dinner completed, they pushed from the table in the restaurant and bags in hand, they walked across the room. It felt as if every eye in the place followed them, curious and wondering if one or both had stepped from the pages of some tabloid or Hollywood gossip magazine. They checked in and located their rooms, wanting to settle in for the calm before the storm, before meeting J.J. Hughes, the single-most important man of the hour.
“I'm going to attempt a brief nap,” Jessica told Darwin as they reached her room.
“Jet lag kicking in?”
“That and ordinary fatigue. Wake me when it's time.”
“Will do. I'm not likely to sleep.”
“Perhaps you ought to. We need to be clearheaded when we see the man. Now that he's given us the slip the first go-round, I suspect he really doesn't want to talk to anyone about Towne's pending execution.”
“I know you're right, but still… don't think I can sleep. Catch the news… see what's what on CNN.”
Jessica unlocked her door and tossed her bags inside. They had booked adjoining rooms for the duration. “I have a feeling this could drag on.”
As Darwin followed suit, unlocking his door, he asked, “So, when's Sharpe going to get on a plane for here with some physical evidence?”
“I'll let you know the minute I know. I imagine he's about ready to shoot someone in Minnesota by now.”
A couple passed by staring unabashedly at them. The eyes of the couple were as large as plate-glass windows, and desperate to follow their movements.
“You get the sense we've stepped back in time?” she asked. “To a kind of puritanical period?”
“Welcome to Portland, Dr. Coran. I tell you it's a major cause why Robert was so quickly condemned, she being a white woman.”
“Get some rest, Darwin,” she pleaded. “Call the desk for a wake-up call. And I'll do the same.”
“All right… I will,” he assured her with the lie.
IN St. Paul, Minnesota, Richard Sharpe paced the Cellmark laboratory waiting room when finally a young lady, looking as if she'd just stepped off a college campus, came toward him. “Agent Sharpe?”
“Yes, and you?”
“Amanda Howland. I'm night supervisor of the lab here.”
“Really? And so young. Congratulations. Now, have you good news for me?”
“I'm afraid not.”
“What?”
“It's just impossible to run the kinds of tests you require in so short a time. I'm not sure who led you to believe we could do it in a few short hours, but that's just not going to happen without a court order.”
“A man's life is at stake.”
“I understand that, but there's no physical way we can rush such sophisticated tests within such a brief span. You say you're here on behalf of a medical examiner, a Dr. Jessica Coran… Well, sir, she should know-”
“We all know how much time it takes to do DNA tests, but in the case of the Lanark boy-the one believed to be a missing and exploited child, your offices did the DNA work in twenty four hours.”
“Not without a court order. I'm sorry.”
“God of the heavens, I can get a federal court order across town. I'll be back with it within an hour, an hour and a half at the most. In the meantime, you get your people on this full time front burner, Dr. ahhh… ahhh… Dr.-”
“Howland, Amanda Howland. I can only tell you that the blood analysis done on the nail scrapings proved conclusively to be AB-neg. So, it is not the victim's blood type, it belongs to someone she obviously scratched.”
“Her killer's blood… all this time buried with her due to some… some inanity perpetrated by the very people who are charged with speaking for the victim. Now you look here, Dr. Howland, someone… some one of you Minnesotans has to make amends… to make up for the gross inadequacy uncovered here. Is Cellmark going to step up to the plate and take its best swing at this thing or not?”
“Baseball metaphors notwithstanding, sir, we can only do what time permits, but if you are sure you can get the federal court order, then I will see to it that Cellmark bats it out of the park.”
“All the same, we need a game clincher here if we're to save a man from being executed for a crime he may well not have committed.”
“You just get me the order as quickly as you can. My superiors see the discrepancy between when we began on this project and when we got the order… Well, it's my job, sir.”
“All right, but promise me you'll go out on that limb and waste no more precious time.” “I've already started the ball rolling, but I'll stay myself to oversee until it gets done. Now get me the paper.”
“I'll send word to Oregon that the Millbrook killer is AB-negative. That may be enough to clear Towne.”
“Unless he, too, is AB-neg. In which case…”
“Yes, well, apparently authorities in Oregon are so entirely convinced of this man's guilt that such a match could get him the chamber a day earlier, I suppose.”
Amanda Howland's eyes and forehead narrowed at this, creasing as she mulled it over, and then her eyes went wide. “Ahhh, one of those subtle English deliveries is what you have. That was a joke, right?”
Even as he rushed away from Dr. Howland, Sharpe pulled out his cellular phone to call Jessica, waking her with the news that at least they had a blood typing on the killer, that he was AB-negative. “So, what is Robert Towne's blood type?”
“I don't… I don't know, actually. Let me get Darwin on that. He can find out more readily than I can. He has had access to Towne. In fact, we go to see him tomorrow on death row. Turns out that Darwin is Towne's biological half brother, Richard.”
“What?”
“You heard me right.”