And found it.
Over there, in the nearest row of the parking lot, maybe a hundred feet away, right where it would provide the best view, a small bronze-colored sedan was parked. And through the windshield, something winked at me; sunlight off the lens of a camera.
Still so very careful-casual, even though the darkness was roaring through me with a knife edge blossoming, I took a step toward the car. Across the distance I saw the bright flash of the camera coming down, and the small pale face of a man, and the black wings rattled and crashed between us for one very long second—
—and then the car started up, backed out of the parking spot with a small squeal of rubber, and disappeared out of the lot and away into traffic. And although I sprinted forward, the most I could see of the license plate was the first half: OGA and three numbers that might have been anything, although I thought the middle one was either a three or an eight.
But with the description of the car, it was enough. I would at least find the registry of the car. It would not be registered to Weiss, couldn’t be. Nobody is that stupid, not in this day of nonstop police drama in all the media. But a small hope flickered. He had left quickly, not wanting me to see him or his car, and just this once I might have some small bit of luck.
I stood there for nearly a minute, letting the wild wind inside me settle back down into a neatly coiled and steadily purring thing. My heart was pumping as it seldom did in the light of day, and I realized that it was a very good thing that Weiss had been just a little bit shy and had taken off so readily. After all, what would I have done otherwise? Pulled him out of the car and cut him into a dozen neat pieces? Or had him arrested and flung into a squad car so he could begin to tell everyone who would listen all about Dexter?
No, it was just as well that he had escaped. I would find him, and we would meet on my terms, in the suitable dark of a night that could not come soon enough for me.
I took a deep breath, plastered my best phony working smile back onto my face, and walked back to the pile of decorative meat that had been Cody’s scoutmaster.
Vince Masuoka was squatting by the body when I got there, but instead of doing something useful, he was simply staring at the stuff shoved into the cavity and frowning. He looked up as I approached and said, “What do you think it means?”
“I’m sure I have no idea,” I said. “I just do blood spatter. They pay detectives to figure out what it means.”
Vince cocked his head and looked at me as if I had told him we were supposed to eat the body. “Did you know that Detective Coulter is in charge of the investigation?” he said.
“Maybe they pay him for something else,” I said, and I felt a small surge of hope. I had forgotten this detail, but it was worth remembering. With Coulter in charge, I could confess to the murder, hand him videos of me performing it, and he would still find a way not to prove it.
So it was with something approaching good cheer that I went back to work—tempered with very real impatience to get it finished and get back to my computer to track down Weiss. Happily, there was very little blood spatter on-site—Weiss appeared to be the kind of neatnik I admired—and therefore there was almost nothing for me to do. I finished up shortly and begged a ride back to headquarters with one of the squad cars. The driver, a large white-haired guy named Stewart, talked about the Dolphins the whole way, apparently not really caring if I responded.
But by the time we got back to headquarters, I had learned some wonderful things about the approaching football season and what we should have done during the off-season but had somehow, inexplicably, managed to bungle once again, which would certainly lead to another season of ineptitude and shameful losses. I thanked Stewart for the ride and the vital information and fled for my computer.
The database for automobile registration is one of the most basic tools of police work, both in reality and in fiction, and it was with a slight sense of shame that I went to it now. It really seemed just too easy, straight out of a rather simpleminded television drama. Of course, if it led to finding Weiss, I would somehow overcome the feeling that this was almost like cheating, but for the time being I really kind of wished for a clue that would call for something a little more clever. Still, we work with the tools we are given, and hope that someone asks us later for constructive criticism.
After only fifteen minutes I had combed the entire Florida state database, and found three small bronze-colored vehicles with the letters OGA on their license tag. One of them was registered in Kissimmee, which seemed like a bit of a commute. Another was a 1963 Rambler, and I was reasonably sure that I would have noticed something that distinctive.
That left number three, a 1995 Honda, registered to a Kenneth A. Wimble on Northwest Ninety-eighth Street in Miami Shores. The address was in an area of modest homes, and it was relatively close to the place in the Design District where Deborah had been stabbed. It really wouldn’t even be a terribly long walk—so that, for example, if the police came to your little nest on Northeast Fortieth, you could easily hop out the back door and amble a few blocks over until you found an unattended car.
But then what? If you are Weiss, where do you take this car? It seemed to me that you would take it far away from wherever you stole it. So probably the very last place on earth that he would be was the house on Northwest Ninety-eighth Street.
Unless there was some connection between Weiss and Wimble. It would be perfectly natural to borrow a friend’s car; just some casual butchery, buddy—back in a couple of hours.
Of course, for some bizarre reason, we don’t have a National Registry of Who Your Friends Are. One would have thought that they would have made that a vital part of the Patriot Act, and rammed it through Congress. It would certainly make my work easier now. But no such luck; if Weiss and Wimble were indeed chums, I would have to find out the hard way, by a personal
visit. It was merely due diligence in any case. But first I would see if I could uncover anything at all about Kenneth A. Wimble.
A quick check of the database showed that he had no criminal record, at least not under that name. His utilities were paid, although payment on his propane bill had been late several times. Digging a little deeper, going into the tax records, I discovered that Wimble was self-employed, and his occupation was listed as video editor.
Coincidence is always possible. Strange and improbable things happen every day, and we accept them and simply scratch our heads like rubes in the big city, and say, “Gollee, ain’t that somethin’.” But this seemed to be stretching coincidence past the breaking point. I had been following a writer who had left a video trail, and now the trail had led me to a video professional. And since there comes a time and place when the seasoned investigator must accept the fact that he has stumbled on something that is probably NOT coincidence, I murmured, “Aha,” very quietly to myself. I thought I sounded quite professional saying it, too.
Wimble was in on this in some way, tied up with Weiss in making and sending the videos and, therefore, presumably in arranging the bodies and finally in killing Roger Deutsch. So when Deborah came knocking at the door, Weiss fled to his other partner, Wimble. A place to hide, a small bronze-colored car to borrow, and on with the show.
All right then, Dexter. Mount up and move out. We know where he is, and now is the time to go get him—before he decides to put my name and picture on the front page of the Miami Herald. Up and away. Let’s go.
Dexter? Are you there, buddy?
I was there. But I suddenly found, oddly enough, that I really missed Deborah. This was exactly the kind of thing I should be doing with her—after all, it was bright daylight out there, and that was not truly Dexter’s Dominion. Dexter needs darkness to blossom into the real life-of-the-party that he is deep inside. Sunlight and hunting did not mix. With Deborah’s badge I could have stayed hidden in plain sight, but without it… I was not actually nervous, of course, but I was a little bit uneasy.
But there was no choice at all. Deborah was lying in a hospital bed, Weiss and his dear friend Wimble were giggling at me in a house on Ninety-eighth Street, and Dexter was dithering about daylight. And that would not do, not at all.
So stand, breathe, stretch. Once more into the breach, dear Dexter. Get up and be gone. And I did, and I headed out the door to my car, but I could not shake the strange feeling of unease.
The feeling lasted all the way over to Northeast Ninety-eighth Street, even through the soothing homicidal rhythm of the traffic. Something was wrong somewhere and Dexter was headed into it somehow. But since there was nothing more definite than that, I kept going, and wondering what was really chewing at the bottom corner of my brain. Was it really just fear of daylight? Or was my subconscious telling me that I had missed something important, something that was getting ready to rear up and bite me? I went over it all in my head, again and again, and it all added up the same way, and the only thing that really stuck out was the thought that it was all very simple, perfectly connected, coherent and logical and right, and I had no choice but to act as quickly as I could, and why should that be bothersome? When did Dexter ever have any choice anyway? When does anyone really have a choice of any kind, beyond occasionally being able to say—on those very few good days we get—I choose ice cream instead of pie?