The Daphne jail was like none in his experience. It reminded Matt more of a hospital than a jail. It was spotless. The walls were of white tile. The bars on the six cells were white. The in-cell toilets were of stainless steel, and there was no graffiti on the walls.
The first cell was empty. Sergeant Kenny pointed to the second. It held a large, crew-cutted man wearing white coveralls on the chest of which was embroidered DAPHNE JAIL in red.
Matt stepped in front of the cell and looked in. Olivia stepped up beside him.
Homer C. Daniels, as if he was trying to be friendly, at first smiled-if a little uneasily-at the young couple standing with Sergeant Kenny looking into his cell.
Then the smile vanished.
"Who are you?" he asked, and when there no response, angrily demanded, "Sergeant, who the fuck are these people?"
"Watch your mouth, Mr. Daniels," Sergeant Kenny said. "You see the lady!"
"I'm Sergeant Payne, Mr. Daniels," Matt said. "And this is Detective Lassiter. We're from the Homicide Unit of the Philadelphia police department."
"What do you want with me?" Daniels asked.
"I'm sorry, sir. But that's about all I can say to you without your attorney being present."
He turned and walked toward the door through which he had entered the cell block. He stopped just inside, out of sight of the cell, and gestured almost frantically for Kenny to follow him, but Kenny waited until Olivia had turned away from the cell and started for the door.
They both looked at Matt in bewilderment.
Matt frantically silently mouthed something to Sergeant Kenny. He had to do it three times before Kenny understood, thought it over, shrugged, and then dutifully repeated what Matt had mouthed.
"You think that's your man, Sergeant?" he said, speaking a little more loudly than he normally did.
"No question about it," Matt boomed, confidently. "That's him. It all fits. The knife, the mask, the digital camera. Same modus operandi. All we'll have to do is match the DNA, and there's no challenging DNA. I'll start the extradition paperwork tonight."
Olivia shook her head in disbelief.
Matt gestured for Olivia and Kenny to go through the door. When they had, he closed it.
"Now we call the Black Buddha," he said to Olivia.
Olivia rolled her eyes.
Oh, shit! There goes my automatic mouth again.
" 'The Black Buddha' is what we call my lieutenant," Matt said, "who is an African-American gentleman slightly larger than you, Sergeant, and generally regarded as the best homicide investigator between Bangor, Maine, and Key West, Florida."
"Bigger than me?" Kenny asked.
"Bigger than you, Sergeant," Olivia said.
Kenny smiled. "How do you start the extradition paperwork? "
"I haven't a clue," Matt confessed. "I'll ask Lieutenant Washington."
"What was that business in there?" Kenny asked.
"When I saw that sonofabitch, the idea of him getting a good night's sleep, thinking he was going to bail himself out of here tomorrow, annoyed me. And then I remembered what Washington told me-"
"The Black Buddha?" Kenny interrupted.
Matt nodded.
"-about the likelihood of a suspect who has (a) time to reflect on his sins and (b) not had much sleep telling you a lot more than he would if he had had neither."
"You're not actually thinking of interviewing him?" Olivia asked.
"I'll do exactly what Washington tells me to do," Matt said.
"Hello?" a female voice said. Matt recognized it to be that of Martha Washington.
"Matt, Martha," Matt said.
"Martha Washington?" Sergeant Kenny asked, smiling. Matt smiled.
"He's in the shower, Matt. And you, I understand, are in the Deep South?"
"About as deep as you can get," Matt said. "Standing here with a sergeant who looks like your husband's twin brother. I really have to talk to him. When should I call back?"
"I'll just hand him the cellular," she said. "Hold on."
"I'm already annoyed with you for not having checked in earlier," Washington's voice came over the line. "And I dislike being interrupted when I am in the midst of my ablutions. That said, you may proceed."
"This is our doer, Jason."
"You will forgive me for asking, Matthew, but do you believe this because of something more than your intuition? "
"Sergeant Kenny showed me the knife he had. It's a twin of the one in the pictures. He had a digital camera-a new one-and a package of plastic ties. He was trying to pry open a window in a young woman's apartment when the Citizens' Watch guy caught him."
"Who is he?"
"His name is Homer C. Daniels. White male, six feet one inch, two hundred pounds, mid-thirties. He's a dealer in exotic cars, from Las Vegas, and he drives all over the country doing business."
"On what charges are they-presumably the Daphne police-holding him?"
"Peeping, a misdemeanor, and leaving the scene of an accident, which is a little heavier."
"Is there a chance, however slight, that he might be allowed to post bail?"
"Not tonight."
There was a thirty-second pause.
"I will be calling you back shortly, Matthew. May I presume your cell phone battery is fully charged?"
"You may so presume."
"Splendid," Washington said, and the line went dead.
Matt hung up the telephone on Sergeant Kenny's desk. "He's going to call me back," Matt said.
"You want to wait here?"
"I think maybe I'd better."
"We keep a pot of coffee going," Sergeant Kenny said.
Matt's cellular buzzed fifteen minutes later.
"I have just spoken with Mrs. Solomon," Washington said. "Placing what I truly hope is justified confidence in your analysis of the situation, she is dispatching an assistant district attorney-probably, if she decides Peter Wohl will just have to do without his services for a day or two, Steven Cohen, Esq. As we speak, a teletype message is being prepared asking the Daphne authorities to hold Mr. Daniels. Travel arrangements similarly are under way. You will be advised of the details."
"Yes, sir," Matt said.
"I devoutly hope this is not premature: Good job, Matt!"
"Thank you, sir."
"Please share that with Detective Lassiter."
"Yes, sir."
EIGHTEEN
[ONE] We're going to have to check out of the hotel," Olivia said, almost as soon as they got into the Mustang. "We never should have gone in there in the first place."
"The alternative would seem to be sleeping on the beach," Matt said.
"The alternative was any of the motels we saw when we turned off the interstate into Daphne."
"Every time I stay in a motel off an interstate, I am invariably denied sleep by the sounds of unbridled passion, a crying baby, or a barking dog-often all of the above-coming from the next cubicle. What's wrong with where we are?"
"An assistant D.A. is coming tomorrow," she said. "I don't want him going back to Philadelphia and saying, 'When I got down there, Payne has got his squeeze in a plush hotel.' "
"I hadn't thought about that," Matt confessed. "And the cold fact seems to be that I do seem to have my squeeze in a plush hotel. You're right, we better get out of there before our shameful secret becomes public knowledge. But in the morning. Not tonight."
Matt looked at Olivia, expecting a smile. She was not smiling.
"Is that how you think of me, as your squeeze?"
"That was your term, Mother, not mine."
Neither said anything else for the next ten minutes, until they were off four-lane U.S. 98 and driving through Fairhope.
"Hey, look at that!" Matt said, cheerfully, pointing. "Trattoria."
"What?" she asked.
"I wouldn't be a bit surprised if that was an Italian restaurant, " he said. "It doesn't sound Polish. How about it, squeeze? A little linguini, a nice bottle of red, maybe even candles romantically flickering in a bottle covered with dripping wax?"