Chasing Tomorrow
Page 85
Elizabeth threw back her head and burst into gales of laughter. Milton Buck felt his anger returning.
“Oh dear.” Elizabeth wiped away tears of mirth. “Is that the best you can do? I think I might re-exercise my right to remain silent. If it’s all the same to you.”
Milton Buck stood up, quivering with rage.
“Interview suspended.”
He stormed out.
OUT IN THE CORRIDOR, Milton took a few moments to compose himself.
This was not going according to plan. What should have been a night of celebration, the greatest triumph of his career so far, was turning into a fiasco.
Milton Buck blamed Jean Rizzo.
The irritating, sanctimonious little Canadian had been a thorn in Milton’s side ever since he showed up in L.A. this past summer, spewing out his preposterous theories about prostitutes and homicides and Tracy friggin’ Whitney. Now, after months of work tracking Elizabeth Kennedy, Rizzo had popped up like the proverbial bad penny, making a mockery of Elizabeth’s arrest and point-blank refusing to accept his lack of jurisdiction, or Milton Buck’s authority. Embarrassingly, the two men had argued about it in the cab, in front of the suspect, with Rizzo insisting he had a right to interview Elizabeth and refusing to relinquish custody unless Buck allowed him access.
“Don’t get comfortable,” Milton Buck snapped as Jean helped himself to a coffee from the machine at the FBI’s field office on the twenty-third floor of 26 Federal Plaza. “You can talk to her when I’m done. Not a minute before.”
“And how long will that be?”
“As long as it takes. Days probably. You may as well go home and get some sleep.”
“I’m not going anywhere.”
Jean Rizzo had been as good as his word. Milton Buck peered through the glass into the waiting room and saw Jean sharing a Domino’s pizza with a bunch of older agents. No one ordered pizza unless they were there for the duration.
“How’s it going, Buck? You don’t look too happy.”
The head of the field office, Special Agent Barry Soltan materialized at Milton’s side. Soltan was only a few years older than Milton Buck. Milton resented his superior rank intensely.
“She’s not talking, sir.”
“I see the fellow from Interpol’s still here.”
“Rizzo. Yes, sir. I’ve asked him to leave but—”
“Let’s get the two of you into my office.”
“There’s really no need for that, sir. Interpol has no jurisdiction here. At no time have we invited them to—”
“Agent Buck,” Barry Soltan interrupted. “You just told me your witness isn’t talking. Now, I’d like to get some sleep tonight, even if you wouldn’t. Let’s hear what Inspector Rizzo has to say.”
JEAN RIZZO HAD A lot to say, to Agent Buck’s great irritation. Special Agent Barry Soltan listened, then allowed him twenty minutes to try to break Elizabeth.
“If I understand it correctly, you both want the same thing. For the young lady to give up the name of her accomplice. Right?”
Agent Buck nodded grudgingly.
“In which case, I don’t see what harm it does to let Inspector Rizzo have a crack at her.”
Jean Rizzo said, “If she doesn’t talk, there’s every chance another young woman will end up being butchered by this maniac. He always kills within two days after Elizabeth completes a job.”
“Except she didn’t complete this job,” Special Agent Soltan reminded him. “She got caught.”
“For all we know, that may make him even more desperate.”
“For all we know, there may be no connection between the two cases whatsoever!” Agent Buck failed to conceal his exasperation. “With respect, sir, Inspector Rizzo’s wasting our time.”