“You know, we got another hiring freeze here. We haven’t been able to get permission to replace Glory. Since we haven’t done that, I doubt we’ve cleaned out her locker.”
McCaleb felt a little jump. Maybe it was a break.
“Then is there a key? Can we look at it?”
“Uh, sure, I suppose so. I have to go get the master from the maintenance supervisor.”
Neff left them in his office while he went to get the master key and to find Nettie Stapleton. Since Glory’s locker was obviously in the women’s locker room, Neff had said before leaving that Nettie would escort Graciela in to search its contents. McCaleb would have to wait in the hallway with Neff. This did not sit well with McCaleb. It was not that he didn’t think Graciela capable of searching a locker. It was just that he would look at and treat the locker in its entirety, taking in the subtleties of what he saw the way he studied crime scenes and crime scene tapes.
Soon Neff was back with Stapleton and introductions were made. She remembered Graciela and offered seemingly heartfelt condolences. Neff then led the entourage downstairs to the hallway leading to the locker rooms. McCaleb was going to make one last offer, that if the locker room was empty, he be allowed in. But as they approached the door to the women’s locker room, he could hear the sound of the showers running. He knew he was going to be left out.
McCaleb had run out of things to ask Neff and was short of small talk. While they waited, he slowly sauntered away from the man so that he could avoid idle conversation and personal questions. There were more bulletin boards affixed to the wall between the locker room doors and he acted as though he was reading some of the posted notices.
Four minutes of silence went by in the hallway. McCaleb had moved from one end of the side-by-side bulletin boards to the other. When Graciela and Nettie finally came out, he was staring at a hand-drawn rendering of a liquid drop on a poster attached to the board. The drop was half shaded in with red, indicating that the employees were halfway toward their goal in an ongoing blood drive. Graciela walked up to him.
“Nothing,” she said. “Just some clothes, a bottle of perfume and her earphones. There were four pictures of Raymond and one of me taped to the door.”
“Earphones?”
“I mean ear protectors. But nothing else.”
“What kind of clothes?”
McCaleb was still staring at the poster as he spoke.
“A couple of fresh uniforms and a top from home and a pair of jeans.”
“You check all the pockets?”
“Yes. Nothing.”
It hit him then, with the impact of an armor-piercing bullet. He leaned forward and put his hand up against the bulletin board for support.
“Terry, what is it?” Graciela said. “Are you okay?”
He didn’t respond. His thoughts were racing. Graciela put her hand to his forehead to feel for fever. He brushed it aside.
“No, it’s not that,” he said.
“Is there a problem?” Neff chimed in.
“No,” McCaleb said, a little too loudly. “We just have to go. I need to get to the car.”
“Is everything all right?”
“Yes,” McCaleb said, again too loudly. “I’m sorry, but everything’s fine. We just have to go.”
McCaleb nodded his thanks to Annette Stapleton and headed down the hallway toward what he believed was the entrance lobby. Graciela followed and Neff called after them, telling them to take their first left.
McCaleb was walking quickly toward the car. He felt that maintaining velocity would somehow help keep the growing dread he was feeling from entirely overtaking his thoughts. Graciela had to trot to keep up.
“The blood.”
“The blood?”
“They both gave blood. Your sister and Cordell. It was right there in front of me all the-I saw that poster and I remembered I saw a letter at Cordell’s house… and I just knew. Do you have your keys?”
“Listen, slow down, Terry. Slow down.”
He reluctantly slowed his pace and she came up next to him, digging the car keys out of her purse.
“Now tell me what you are talking about.”
“Open the car and I’ll show you.”
They reached the car. She unlocked his door first and started around to her side. He slipped in and reached across to open her door. He then leaned forward and started going through the bag on the floor. It was so jammed with paperwork, he had to pull the gun out and place it on the floor mat just so there was room to look through the documents. Graciela got in the car and started watching.
“You can start it,” he said without turning his attention from his task.
“What are you doing?”
He pulled out the Cordell autopsy.
“I’m looking for-shit, this is just the preliminary report.”
He flipped through the protocol to make sure. It was incomplete.
“No toxicology and blood.”
He shoved the autopsy report back into the bag and then the gun. He straightened up.
“We’ve got to find a phone. I’ll call his wife.”
Graciela started the car.
“Fine,” she said. “We will-we’ll go to my house. But you have to tell me what it is you’re thinking, Terry.”
“Okay, just give me a minute to think first.”