It was a stupid thing to say, but she let it pass. “Do you think there’s an intruder?”
“There may be. Have you seen or heard anything unusual, Professor?”
The guards assumed she was a faculty member; that was good. “As a matter of fact, I thought I heard breaking glass. It seemed to come from the floor above, although I couldn’t be sure.”
The two guards looked at one another. “We’ll check it out,” said one.
The other was less suggestible. “May I ask what you have in your pocket?”
“Some papers.”
“Obviously. May I see them?”
Jeannie was not going to hand them over to anyone; they were too precious. Improvising, she pretended to agree then change her mind. “Sure,” she said, taking them out. Then she folded them and put them back in. “On second thought, no, you can’t. They’re personal.”
“I have to insist. In our training we’re told that papers can be as valuable as anything else in a place like this.”
“I’m afraid I’m not going to let you read my private correspondence just because an alarm goes off in a college building.”
“In that case, I must ask you to come with me to our security office and speak to my supervisor.”
“All right,” she said. “I’ll meet you outside.” She backed quickly through the swing door and went light-footed down the stairs.
The guards came running after her. “Wait!”
She let them catch up with her in the ground-floor lobby. One took her arm while the other opened the door. They stepped outside.
“No need to hold me,” she said.
“I prefer to.” he said. He was panting from the effort of chasing her down the stairs.
She had been here before. She grasped the wrist of the hand that was holding her and squeezed hard. The guard said, “Ow!” and released her.
Jeannie ran.
“Hey! You bitch, stop!” They gave chase.
They had no chance. She was twenty-five years younger and as fit as a racehorse. Her fear left her as she got farther away from the two men. She ran like the wind, laughing. They chased her for a few yards then gave up. She looked back and saw them both bent over, panting.
She ran all the way to the parking lot.
Her father was waiting beside her car. She unlocked it and they both got in. She tore out of the parking lot with her lights off.
“I’m sorry, Jeannie,” he said. “I thought even if I couldn’t do it for myself, maybe I could do it for you. But it’s no use. I’ve lost it. I’ll never rob again.”
“That’s good news!” she said. “And I got what I wanted!”
“I wish I could be a good father to you. I guess it’s too late to start.”
She drove out of the campus into the street and turned on her headlights. “It’s not too late, Daddy. Really it’s not.”
“Maybe. I tried for you, anyway, didn’t I?”
“You tried, and you succeeded! You got me in! I couldn’t have done it alone.”
“Yeah, I guess you’re right.”
She drove home fast. She was anxious to check the phone number on the printout. If it was out-of-date she had a problem. And she wanted to hear Wayne Stattner’s voice.
As soon as they got inside her apartment she picked up the phone and called the number.
A man answered. “Hello?”
She could not tell anything from one word. She said: “May I speak to Wayne Stattner, please?”
“Yeah, Wayne speaking, who’s this?”
It sounded just like Steve’s voice. You son of a bitch, why did you rip my tights? She suppressed her resentment and said: “Mr. Stattner, I’m with a market research company that has chosen you to receive a very special offer—”
“Fuck off and die,” Wayne said, and he hung up.
“It’s him,” Jeannie said to her father. “He even sounds like Steve, except Steve is politer.”
She had briefly explained the scenario to her father. He grasped the broad outlines, although he found it somewhat bewildering. “What are you going to do next?”
“Call the cops.” She dialed the Sex Crimes Unit and asked for Sergeant Delaware.
Her father shook his head in amazement. “This is hard for me to get used to: the idea of working with the police. I sure hope this sergeant is different from every other detective I’ve ever met.”
“I believe she probably is.”
She did not expect to find Mish at her desk—it was nine o’clock. She planned to ask them to get an urgent message to her. But by good luck Mish was still in the building. “Catching up with my paperwork,” she explained. “What’s up?”
“Steve Logan and Dennis Pinker are not twins.”
“But I thought—”
“They’re triplets.”
There was a long pause. When Mish spoke again, her tone was guarded. “How do you know?”
“You remember I told you how I found Steve and Dennis—by searching a dental database for pairs of similar records?”
“Yes.”
“This week I searched the FBI’s fingerprint file for similar fingerprints. The program gave me Steve, Dennis, and a third man in a group.”
“They have the same fingerprints?”
“Not exactly the same. Similar. But I just called the third man. His voice is like Steve’s. I’ll bet my life they look alike. Mish, you have to believe me.”
“Do you have an address?”
“Yeah. In New York.”
“Give.”
“There’s a condition.”
Mish’s voice hardened. “Jeannie, this is the police. You don’t make conditions, you just answer the goddamn questions, now give me the address.”
“I have to satisfy myself. I want to see him.”
“Do you want to go to jail, that’s the question for you right now, because if not you better give me that address.”
“I want us both to go see him together. Tomorrow.”
There was a pause. “I ought to throw you in the slammer for abetting a felon.”
“We could catch the first plane to New York in the morning.”
“Okay.”
SATURDAY
43
THEY CAUGHT THE USAIR FLIGHT TO NEW YORK AT 6:40 IN the morning.
Jeannie was full of hope. This might be the end of the nightmare for Steve. She had called him last night to bring him up-to-date and he had been ecstatic. He had wanted to come to New York with them, but Jeannie knew Mish would not allow it. She had promised to call him as soon as she had more news.
Mish was maintaining a kind of tolerant skepticism. She found it hard to believe Jeannie’s story, but she had to check it out.
Jeannie’s data did not reveal why Wayne Stattner’s fingerprints were on file with the FBI, but Mish had checked overnight, and she told Jeannie the story as they took off from Baltimore-Washington International Airport. Three years ago, the distraught parents of a missing fourteen-year-old girl had tracked her down to Stattner’s New York apartment. They had accused him of kidnap. He had denied it, saying the girl had not been coerced. The girl herself had said she was in love with him. Wayne was only nineteen at the time, so in the end there had been no prosecution.
The story suggested that Stattner needed to dominate women, but to Jeannie it did not quite fit in with the psychology of a rapist. However, Mish said there were no strict rules.
Jeannie had not told Mish about the man who attacked her in Philadelphia. She knew Mish would not take her word for it that the man was not Steve. Mish would want to question Steve herself, and Steve did not need that. In consequence she also had to keep quiet about the man who had called yesterday and threatened her life. She had not told anyone about that, not even Steve; she did not want to add to his worries.