For a moment, Malik’s own troubles seemed not worth worrying about.
Sally began describing her case, trying to flatten her voice so the parts that were true sounded as sincere as the parts that weren’t. “I received an anonymous tip about six months ago. The caller said I should look into Sam Coyne. He didn’t say why. I did, and I didn’t find anything, but I did notice he was a gamer. Like me.”
“Shadow World?”
“Right.”
“When I didn’t run anything about him in the paper, my tipster called back. He said to check out Sam Coyne inside the game. So I did.”
“You were investigating Coyne’s life, inside a video game? How would you do that?”
“Same way you’d investigate him out here. Shadow World has records, and sources, and streets and alleyways.”
“So what did you find?”
“That Coyne is a killer.”
“Inside the game?”
“Right. He kills other players in the game, all female, and in ways remarkably similar to the Wicker Man.”
Malik had a bad feeling, the kind he usually had right before he had to fire someone. “Which is sick, but not illegal.”
“But then I checked Coyne’s killing in the game against the Wicker Man’s killings out here.”
“And?”
“When Coyne is killing in Shadow World, it’s like the Wicker Man doesn’t even exist out here. All quiet.” This wasn’t exactly true, of course, but Sally didn’t want to go into Justin’s theories explaining the anomalies in his chart.
“Proves nothing.”
“True. So I called a cop I know from the Wicker beat, a detective in homicide, and I casually dropped Coyne’s name.”
“What did he give you?”
“A long, long silence.”
“So you still got nothing.”
“So I call him every day for two weeks. And he tells me, way off the record, that Coyne is a person of interest in the Wicker investigation.”
“Along with how many other interesting persons?”
“God, I don’t know, Stephen. None that also turned up in an independent investigation by the city’s top newspaper.”
“What do you want to do?”
“What do you think? I want to run with the story.”
“With what story, Sals?” He moved his hand in the air, typesetting a mock front page. “Reporter Accuses Man She Has Personal Beef with of Being Infamous Serial Killer.”
“It’s a good thing you don’t write headlines,” she said with a friendly snort. “And I’m not accusing him because he attacked me, he attacked me because I accused him. I want to run with the story that Sam Coyne is a suspect in the Wicker Man killings.”
This is a joke, Malik thought. “With all the problems I’ve got, what makes you think I want to take on the entire partnership of Ginsburg and Addams in a libel suit?”
“It’s only libel if I’m wrong about Coyne. And I’m not wrong.”
“So you actually think he won’t sue?”
“No, I’m betting he will. I’m betting, in the course of the widely publicized civil trial and the ensuing high-profile police investigation, that we’ll discover evidence proving he’s a killer. The Tribune will get credit for capturing one of the most notorious serial murderers in American history, and your job will be saved in the process.”
“Sweetheart, if I went along with a stunt like that they’d have my office cleaned out before you could mix strawberries in your morning yogurt.”
“It’s risky, I know. But risky journalism wins awards.” She added, “And saves jobs.”
“It’ll be the newspaper world’s first posthumous rehire,” Malik said. “If the Trib ’s lawyers don’t kill me, or that serial killer of yours doesn’t slit my throat, my wife will shoot me dead. We’re a newspaper, not a clearinghouse for personal vendettas.”
“So we’re just supposed to sit around and let a killer walk the streets?”
“What killer, Sally? It’s like I don’t even know you. Bring me evidence. Solid reporting. Show me this guy is who you say he is and not just a big jerk.”
“That’s what I’m trying to do. But he’s smart. He might have killed twenty people, and he hasn’t left any evidence behind yet. We have to smoke him out. Or smoke out someone close to him who might know the truth.”
“Fine. Bring me something besides anonymous sources.”
Sally inhaled a lungful of stale, recirculated air. “Coyne tried to break into my house, Stephen. While I was inside. There’s only one reason why he’d do that: because he suspects I’m on to him.”
“I trust your instincts, Sally,” Malik said. “Bring me an actual story and I’ll print it. But I won’t go to press on your theories and cross my fingers they’ll be proven true.”
At lunch, from her desk, Sally met Justin at the Shadow Billy Goat.
“It was worth a try,” Sally said. She didn’t tell him she knew he’d been regenerated from one of Sam Coyne’s cells – almost like a plant clipping, Sally thought in her most cynical moments. Justin would be horrified if he knew she’d found out, and after her confrontation with Coyne (which she had described to him minus that most important detail), her sudden change of heart on Justin’s Wicker Man theory needed no explanation.
“Yep,” Justin said.
“We’ve got to catch Coyne in the act, somehow. In real life this time. I think it’s the only way.”
“I graduate in a couple weeks,” Justin said. “I’ll have some time after that. Maybe stake him out for real. I’m getting my license this summer, too.”
Barwick said, “You’re graduating? I had no idea. Congratulations. Where are you going to school next year?”
“I’m not. Taking a year off. My grades and SATs are good enough to get me in just about anywhere I want. But I’m too young for college.”
“What are you going to do?”
“Read,” Justin said. “The stuff I want to read. Not the books they give you in school. Maybe go see my dad.”
Sally tried to remember those late-night conversations through the computer and across the car seat outside Coyne’s Shadow apartment. “In New Mexico, right?”
“Right. Spend some time thinking about who I am. Who I’m supposed to be. What I’m supposed to do. I need to pursue that. This other stuff – school – gets in the way.”
“What? You mean, like, find yourself?” She couldn’t disguise a laugh.
“Something like that.”
“I don’t know that we’re supposed to do anything, Justin. Except be.”
“Maybe you’re not,” he said.
Barwick couldn’t tell if the remark was meant to be insulting or if it was just self-absorbed. She decided generously on the latter.
Back in his office, with a day’s worth of stories and assignments to approve, Malik began looking up everything he could on Samuel Coyne of Ginsburg and Addams. He found pictures of the man in a tux at charity dinners, and some for-the-record denials on behalf of his clients in the business page archives. He looked a little bit like a handsome asshole. Not at all like a killer. But then, what’s a killer look like before you know he’s killed? Coyne didn’t look like a murderer, but that didn’t mean he wasn’t one. Only that Malik had been unconvinced.
The Wicker Man, he thought. Is there any way she could be right?
– 84 -
Alone at home, Martha opened a bottle of expensive Cabernet she’d grown tired of saving. She poured wine into a deep glass up to the widest part of the bowl and let it sit on the kitchen table until the surface became still, staring into and through it as if it were a ruby crystal ball. Finding no answers there, she grabbed the glass by the stem, painted the back of her tongue with the Cab, and closed her eyes.
Justin was out. For the third time this week. Some nights he didn’t come home. There were things she knew, things she suspected, things she feared, and almost nothing she could talk about with him.
It was after nine o’clock and he could be anywhere. He didn’t have a car and his bike was still here, but his friends – what friends he had – were older and most had their own cars, fast cars with poor safety ratings. Plus, there were enough places to find trouble within a few minutes’ walk. The least of which was not the home of Dr. Davis Moore, just six suburban blocks away.