“Who would want a house like this?” I reply. “It's too damn big. It would suck to have to clean this.”
“Pretty sure that if you can afford this house you can hire someone to clean it.”
“Still, what would be the point? I don't see you all day because you're working and I’m working. When I get home I can't see you either because the house is too damn big. We’ll have to text each other from opposite ends of the table.”
He smothers a laugh and then turns to place his big hand around the back of my neck. I lean into his touch and he plants a big wet kiss against my lips.
“What was that for?” I ask when he breaks away.
“I love you. Now let's do some breaking and entering.” A flash of white from his grin gleams in the night as he pushes the door open. The garage is large enough to hold three cars but there’s only one and so it feels empty.
Along the back wall there are two garbage cans. One of them is brown and the other green.
Wrecker flips open the tops of both. The green is nearly empty but the brown one is full and smells of rotted food and other crap.
“Fuck this stinks.” Wrecker pulls the garbage bag from around his waist and gestures for me to do the same. We drop them on the cement floor. I hold one of the bags open. After pulling off his winter gloves and donning plastic ones, he swiftly transfers the contents of the full trash bin into our plastic bags. Four white kitchen trash bags fill one of our plastic bags. “That’s it,” he says but doesn’t pull off the plastic gloves.
He runs his tongue across the bottom of his lip as he contemplates the back door—the one that leads from the inside of the garage into the house.
I hold my breath waiting for him to come to a decision.
“Wanna go inside?”
“You know I do.”
He pulls another pair of plastic gloves out of his pocket. “In for a penny, in for a pound. Not going to make a difference if we get caught in the garage or the house.”
I tug on the gloves and follow him up the three steps from the garage floor to the back doors. He turns the knob and the door opens without a sound. We listen for sound inside—an alarm, a person, a dog but there’s nothing. The house, like the garage, feels empty. The kitchen is cavernous. There's a big gas stove and two ovens set into floor-to-ceiling cabinets. Marble and granite gleam in the dark. The cloud-covered skies prevent even the moon from providing much interior lighting.
My eyes have adjusted to the dark and a couple of household appliances like a coffee machine provide a tiny bit of illumination. Neither of us is sure what we’re looking for so we move from one room to another taking in a big screen television, wilted flowers in the front entry, and a dining room table long enough to seat twelve. The front door is a double one with open sidelights. Police tape is strung across the front. How ironic that they don’t have anything on the back at all. It just confirms my belief that this investigation is half assed.
“One of the cops said that the Trainor woman was shot in her bed,” Wrecker whispers. In the big silent house, his quiet words seem too loud. Even he must feel uncomfortable because instead of telling me we’re going upstairs, he taps my shoulder and points. I nod to let him know I understand.
He takes my hand and we creep up the carpeted stairs. We move silently from one room to another. At the end of the upstairs hall are two double doors. One of them is ajar. Wrecker sidles up to the door and pushes me to the side. He toes the door open and it swings in. Not a sound is made but our heavy breathing.
He darts around the corner and then calls for me in a soft tone. “All clear.”
Inside I see the four poster bed, pale linens and stains on the bed and the carpet.
“She gets shot on the bed and then collapses on the floor? Or maybe it’s the other way around. She’s shot on the carpet and stumbles backward and lands on the bed?” I try to make sense of the blood stains. I’m no forensic analyst but the trail is from the edge of the bed to about four feet beyond.
“Looks like it. Confirms what they said when I was spending the night in lockup. Shot twice. First in her heart and then in her head.”
“That’s very precise.” I frown. Too precise for a crime of passion. Two shots and both of them hit the body? Unless the shooter used handguns on a regular basis, it’s unlikely that both shots would have connected. When Judge first took me to the shooting range I had a hard time hitting the target from ten feet away. He told me not to feel bad because most folks are terrible shots even at close distance. New gun owners aren’t prepared for the recoil, or the trigger pressure surprises them. Unless a shooter is going to the range on a regular basis, hitting both bullets into a target is really, really good luck.
“No shit.” He circles around the room. “No other bullet holes that I can see. Whoever did shoot her knew his way around a gun. Let's go downstairs.”
As we walk down the stairs, I can’t shake the weird feeling that has set in. A big city executive whose favorite thing to do is play golf doesn’t seem the type to be able to shoot a person in the head and the chest. That takes some marksmanship even at close distance.
Wrecker finds the basement stairs by the kitchen. It doesn’t look like a basement. There’s a pool table, a bar, and a big screen set in front of a leather sectional that looks like it could fit the entire Death Lords club. Along the exterior walls are sliding glass doors that lead out to the patio we saw earlier.
“Does this area seem small to you?” Wrecker says. He starts counting off long strides as he walks from one end of the space to the other. I turn in a circle.
It is smaller down here. “Maybe there’s a missing storage area.”
Other than a bathroom, though, we don’t find any doors. Wrecker pulls a small penlight out of his pocket and starts shining it along the baseboards.
“What are you looking for?”
“False wall. This basement space is too small for the structure.”
The walls all have a fancy wood trim that makes it look like big picture frames decorating the sheetrock only it’s just paint and wood.
“You smell that?” Wrecker asks. He kneels down and runs his fingers up part of the wood trim.
“No, what is it?” I sniff but smell nothing.
“It smells like smoke and look here.” He points the light at the edge of a piece of painted trim. “This is smoke damage.”
Wrecker pushes on the wall but nothing happens. He rises slowly putting pressure along the trim piece and half way up, we hear a slight snick as if a latch has been released. Even though it’s dark, I can see his eyes widen and his eyebrows shoot up.
“What’s in there?” I ask in a hushed whisper.
He shakes his head and presses an ear to the hidden door. “Oh shit!” he says abruptly tugging me toward the basement’s glass sliders.
“What is it?” I ask running behind him. He fumbles with the latch and then throws open the door. He doesn’t even take the time to latch it shut. “What about the garbage.”
“No time. Keep running,” he hisses and moves forward, nearly dragging me behind him. There’s a whooshing sound behind me. I don’t recognize it but I know it’s not good. I put my head down and run. We make it to the cart path before the whole world turns bright orange and a boom reverberates all around us. The ground shakes and debris starts flying. I stumble but Wrecker pulls me upright and keeps running. I can’t help but look back. The Trainor house is one big ball of smoke and fire.
“What was that?”
“Meth lab,” he pants out. We run past the security car, the maintenance building, and all the way to the back gate of the country club where the service vehicles enter. Sirens are blaring and lights are turning on everywhere. “Climb,” he orders. The fence is about ten feet high but there isn’t any barbed wire at the top. I hook my hands into the open links and start climbing. Wrecker is up and over the fence before I reach the top. He grabs my waist and helps me down the last few feet and then we’re off and running again.
When we’re about a quarter mile from the golf course, Wrecker stops and pulls out his phone. He texts something and then turns to me. “You up for another mile?”
“No,” I shake my head but start running anyway because while I’m exhausted from our scamper from the Trainor’s house, I don’t want to get caught by the police.
He pats me on the ass and we silently run down a gravel country road for what seems like two more miles before a dark truck appears out of nowhere. It’s Michigan. He throws the passenger door open and Wrecker shoves me inside. Michigan has the truck speeding away before the door is closed.
“When the hell happened?”
“Trainors had a meth lab in their basement. I must have triggered a booby trap when I tried to open a hidden door. The whole thing exploded.”
“You two okay?”
I nod, but I’m having a hard time catching my breath and I feel really cold despite having run all that distance and the heaters inside the truck being on full blast.
“She’s getting shocky,” Michigan says. His voice sounds like it’s at the end of a long tunnel.
“Shh, baby. You’re going to be fine. We’re both fine.” Wrecker pulls me onto his lap and hugs me close. “Drop us off at the apartment. I’ll swing by tomorrow and give Judge the rundown.”
“Don’t wait too long,” Michigan warns.
“We won’t.”