That’s my girl. She’s the rational ying to my emotional yang.
I told her about Martin Grace, the murders, his psychosomatic blindness, next week’s trial. She frowned, horrified, as I recounted the ordeal in Room 507, and the conclusion I’d made as the train had rolled into the 6th Avenue-14th Street station. I needed to know who Martin Grace was. I needed more than what was in The Brink’s admittance report.
Rachael took a sip of her beer. She glanced at the laptop resting on the tiny desk in her corner of the room. Her eyes came back to me.
“If you’re going to ask me, Z, ask me.”
She’s so shrewd. I bit my bottom lip.
“I need your access to the Journal-Ledger’s research library. I want to know everything about this guy: past addresses, income, taxes, marriages, whatever I can dig up. The cops and Dad have access to all that stuff—”
“Your dad isn’t the attorney prosecuting the case, Z,” Rachael interjected. She crossed her arms; the fabric of her sweater bunched around her chest. “He’s an administrator now. Assistant D.A.s handle the cases. You know that.”
She was right. She also wasn’t through.
“You’ve had a lousy night, Z. I dig that,” she said. “But if this is about you beating your Dad, forget it. And if it’s about beating Grace, you can forget that, too. If you’ve got some vendetta working behind that very handsome, very kissable face of yours, there’s absolutely no way I’ll help. It’s manipulative, and it’s not who you are. I love you. I don’t want to resent you.”
“It isn’t,” I said. “Lookit, I’ve gotta be armed when I go back in there. I have to earn his trust, and the only way to do that is to get beyond the folder. I don’t want to beat him. I want to help him.”
She sighed.
“Zach, it doesn’t sound like he wants to be helped.”
“Maybe not,” I admitted, and this was true. Grace had confounded every therapist he’d encountered during his hopscotch through the system. He’d mocked his doctors, sniffed them over… and then snapped them over his knee. Grace was a self-proclaimed pariah, believing he deserved this fast track to Hell. Which didn’t make sense. Despite those odd, so-called visions of death, his alibis were solid.
I thought back to this afternoon. Grace had torn a chunk out of me in that room. But I’d bitten back. He had admired that.
“Yeah, maybe not,” I said again. “But I’m not going to know unless I try, unless I get some”—I thought of my father—“history. Context.”
Rachael pushed her glasses up to the bridge of her nose. She took another sip from her bottle.
“You’re not messing around,” she said. “Not placating me.”
“Not a bit.” This was also true.
“Then you can come and play,” Rachael said. She stood up, stretched, and pulled the black sweater from her body. The ink on her pale arms lanced from her shoulders, down to her elbows. I admired her for a breathless moment. Now that’s my girl.
“But on one condition,” she said. “I’m driving.”
Over the next two hours (and more Rogue Chipotle Ales), I watched my girlfriend perform high-powered sorcery on her laptop. Using the biographical information I’d culled from The Brink’s report, Rachael trolled a phalanx of governmental databases, collecting bits and bytes from the DMV, IRS, and other institutions. Since Martin Grace was under criminal investigation, some searchable information was also available in the NYPD’s computer network.
My geek goddess was no black hat. She was a cybersleuth. If it could be legally found with the resources at her disposal, she could nearly always find it.
Tonight, she did—and it didn’t make a goddamned bit of sense.
“You’re not going to like this,” Rachael said. She pulled a chewed pencil from the small bun she’d made in her hair a beer-and-a-half ago. “Look.”
She tapped the computer’s screen with the pencil’s eraser. “I’ve got tax records from 1980 right here. Says Grace worked for Music Street Elite, a music store, in Louisiana. Cross-ref this—”
Her thumb and pinky executed a maneuver on the keyboard. A new window flashed on the screen.
“—with Louisiana local business data from the same year. Guess what? No Music Street Elite.” She glanced at me, a tight frown on her lips. “Not in the Better Business Bureau, not in city or county property records—actually, they call counties ‘parishes’ down there—and not in the friggin’ phone book.”
“So he faked his taxes?” I asked.
Rachael snorted. “He faked a lot more than that.” She tapped the screen again, reaching for the beer in my hand. I surrendered it. “This is nuts, Z. Nearly every tax report is bogus. The businesses don’t exist. Even the homes he said he lived in don’t exist.”
She performed that same ninja move with her fingers, and the contents of the LCD flashed from one window to another (and then another, and another) in machine-gun rapid fire. As she did this, her pencil scratched check marks and question marks on a nearby notepad.
“Okay, I was lying,” she said. “About half all of these addresses do exist, but according to residency data, the homes—many of which are apartments—were occupied by other families at the time.”
“So he lived with friends,” I said. “Roomies.”
“Unlikely,” Rachael said. She circled something on a sheet that had belched out of our laser printer. It was an address. “Look. 1985. Providence, Rhode Island. Do you really think that the Miller family—a married couple with four kids, crammed into a two-bedroom apartment—actually let Martin Grace crash on their couch for three years?”
I cringed. Six months ago, Lucas had roomed here for two weeks, after an unexplained falling out with some of his parkour roommates. I’d wanted to kill him by the end of the third day.
“Hell no,” I said.
“Preeecisely,” Rachael said. “Bogus employment record, bogus addys, no marriage certificates, no children, no criminal record, no IRS audits. Squeaky clean. On paper, Martin Grace is incorporeal, Z. He’s a hoax. A ghost.”
She whistled the theme from “The Twilight Zone.”
“But these records here…” I began, pointing to the steamer trunk. My notes from The Brink were stacked there.
“Yeah, I’m getting to that,” Rachael said. She was buzzing, in the zone, and I was buzzing right along with her. It wasn’t the beer. I loved it when she was like this, relishing in the doing of what she did. I wanted to kiss her then. I resisted this. She was on a roll.
“This is where things get legit,” she explained. “Everything from ten years ago checks out. The jobs, addresses, tax stuff. It’s as if Martin Grace, then 46, appeared fully formed in Rochester. He stepped out of the ether and started working for, ah… Syncopation Productions, LLC. Music studio.”
She executed another keystroke, and my patient’s most recent state ID photo—from three years ago—winked on the screen.
“The folks working for your dad, they undoubtedly have access to this,” Rachael said. “If they know anything more, it’s coming from data I can’t grab. They’ll play those cards at the trial, I bet.”