Casey leaned back in her seat, suddenly exhausted.
“Will you be home soon?” he asked.
“Yes.”
“Good. Don’t let the rockhound thing get to you. You’ll catch him, I know it.”
That was Lou. Always optimistic and supportive; trying to make the best of things. Sometimes, deep in her heart, she wondered if she deserved him.
FOUR
ON THE SECOND FLOOR, CASEY rushed into the security department and glanced at the wall clock. Twelve-thirty, damn. She’d lost track of time researching comparative police systems for her essay, and should have had her report on last night’s fiasco finished by now. Stan would be demanding it any second. She also had to record this morning’s uneventful shift with the kids on the M10 bus.
Casey spotted a yellow Post-it note stuck to her computer screen. “Time sheet needed by 2:00 PM. No excuses! ASS.” Casey sighed. She was supposed to have done her time sheet yesterday, but after Stan’s lecture and Summer’s unexpected visit, Casey hadn’t felt like hanging around to record two weeks’ worth of shifts on a spreadsheet.
She booted up her computer and, collecting her thoughts, began to type. She’d barely finished the first paragraph when Stan’s door opened. “Casey, can you come in a minute?”
Something in his tone made her turn around. The parts of his face not covered by hair were flushed. Worse, Stan couldn’t quite meet her eyes.
“What’s wrong?”
He glanced around the room. “No one else here?”
“It’s lunch time.” When he didn’t say anything, Casey said, “I should have my report about last night finished soon.”
“It can wait.” He unloosened the knot in his mint-green tie. “Come inside.”
Oh, this was bad. She’d never heard Stan say that reports could wait.
In his office, Casey took the chair nearest the open window. Stan fiddled with the pens and pencils in the cup, and then zeroed in on his bonsai. When his lips started quivering and he wrung his hands together, she started to worry.
“Marie called a few minutes ago.” Stan tried to meet her gaze and failed. “I don’t know how to say this.” He paused, and then opened his mouth, but nothing came out.
The room started to feel hot. The only sound Casey heard was distant traffic. “What is it?”
Stan rested his elbows on the desk. “Someone shot Jasmine . . . She didn’t make it.”
“What?” A prickly sensation ran down her back. “When?”
“A little over an hour ago.”
“It can’t be.” Casey’s mind went blank. “Are you sure?”
Stan nodded. “It happened in the parking lot at her church.” He cleared his voice. “She was waiting to pick up her son from preschool.”
“For real?” Casey gripped the arms of her chair. “I don’t understand this.”
“The police found Jasmine’s Mainland ID in her purse and contacted me just after Marie called.” He cleared his voice again. “I told the corporal she has no family; that’s when he told me what happened.”
“Who on god’s earth would want to kill her?”
“I heard there were problems with the ex. She was trying to get a restraining order.”
Unable to think of anything to say about Jasmine that wouldn’t sound phony and hypocritical, Casey slipped into an investigative role. “Were there any witnesses?”
“Apparently, someone heard one shot and saw a van peel out of the lot.”
Casey’s mind raced. “The guy was either close or knew what he was doing. Did the police say if this looked like a targeted hit?”
“They wouldn’t say much of anything.”
The wood chair felt painfully hard beneath her. “Jasmine’s son wasn’t in the car, was he?”
“No, she was killed at eleven-ten. Jeremy’s class finished at eleven-thirty.”
Casey remembered Jeremy from Mainland’s company picnic last month: a chubby-cheeked boy with large brown eyes and Jasmine’s black hair. While Jasmine was flirting with Roberto that day, her son had approached Casey and showed her his toy truck.
“I don’t know why she arrived so early to fetch him.” Stan’s eyes glistened. “Jasmine lived only two blocks from the parish she belonged to. If she’d gone later . . .”
A bus entered the yard. In need of fresh air, Casey walked to the window and watched employees either returning from lunch or beginning and ending shifts. No one looked upset.
“I take it employees don’t know?”
“Just you and Marie. I called David Eisler, who’s probably telling supervisors right now. Eisler intends to have each supervisor inform his own team.”
David Eisler was the last person Casey would look to for guidance in a crisis, since his disrespect for employees was almost legendary. With the president on vacation in Europe, they were stuck with the egotistical VP. She glanced at the sky. After yesterday’s thunderstorm and rain, the sunshine was back, the sky free of cloud. A diesel engine near the building roared to life. Normally, she liked the smell of diesel. Right now, it made her queasy. She turned to Stan.
“How did Marie find out so fast?”
“The preschool phoned and asked her to pick up Jeremy. The poor woman’s devastated.”
No doubt. Marie and Jasmine had hit it off from day one.
“Jasmine was a sweet kid.” Stan booted up the PC he’d finally agreed to use as part of his restructuring program. “She made great peanut butter cookies.”
Which she’d offered to everyone but her. Casey blushed at the petty thought.
“Corporal Lundy from the Coquitlam detachment’s coming here this afternoon to go through her locker.” Stan handed Casey a slip of paper. “That’s her combination. Show him where it is.”
“Coquitlam RCMP?”
“That’s where it happened, where she lived.”
Friends had told Casey that Coquitlam was one of the safest and fastest growing suburban communities in the Lower Mainland. “Is the corporal part of IHIT?” Casey had never met anyone from the RCMP’s Integrated Homicide Investigative Team. Under the circumstances, she wasn’t sure she wanted to.
“I didn’t ask. Employees who worked directly with Jasmine will be contacted by phone,” Stan added. “Since you worked with Jasmine yesterday, Lundy might question you right away.”
What should she say if the corporal asked what kind of person Jasmine had been? Sooner or later, he’d hear about their altercation on the M10; probably ask questions she wouldn’t feel great about answering.
“Eisler’s called a mandatory meeting for everyone at four-thirty,” Stan said. “Marie’s exempt because she’s looking after Jasmine’s son and won’t be in for a couple days.”
“Jeremy won’t be with the father?”
“I hear he’s an alcoholic who had some visiting rights, but who knows?” Stan clicked the mouse. “Uh, I’ve got a lot to do, so . . .” He stared at the monitor.
“Sure.” She headed for the door. “I’ll finish my reports.”
“Let supervisors tell their people, okay? It wouldn’t seem right coming from staff.”
“No problem.”
Casey stepped outside and leaned against the wall. Her legs were too shaky to make it back to her chair. She took a deep breath, inhaling through her nose and out the same way, just like her yoga tape had taught. This time, there was no calmness. Lunch hour was nearly over. The accounting people would be traipsing in here any moment.
Shuffling back to her desk, Casey wondered if she should call Marie. After Lou’s revelation last night, Marie was her least favorite person, right now. Still, she should at least offer condolences. Casey made the call and heard Marie’s trembling voice.
“Stan just told me what happened, and I’m sorry, Marie. I know you and Jasmine were close.” Casey listened to some nose blowing. “He said the preschool called you?”