96

blond hardwood floor

Lewis and Wolfrom step out of the elevator and onto the gleaming golden hardwood floor. The word “MARKETING” has been spelled out with a range of ornate hand carved wooden letters affixed to a stark white wall behind the wide reception desk.

Crafted from darker shades of wood, the massive desk almost looks as though it’s growing into the space, dwarfing the tiny receptionist. She eyes them warily as they approach the desk. “Can I help you?”

Lewis raises an eyebrow and proffers her ID wallet. The receptionist accepts it, making a show of examining the badge before passing it back across the wide expanse of wood. Lewis tells her, “I see you’ve been expecting us. We’re here to see Neil Molony. If you can just point us …”

The woman shakes her head, no, but Lewis smiles and says, “That’s alright. I’m sure I’ll be able to find our way,” and heads for the exceptionally dark wood panel door.

The receptionist realizes there isn’t any way out of it, so she comes out from behind the desk. “I’ll take you back,” she says, slipping in front of Lewis, hurrying to get through the door ahead of them. Wolfrom and Lewis exchange glances as they follow along the elegantly appointed corridor. The corridor is lined with plain slab doors, differentiated by the objects affixed to their smooth surfaces rather than numbers.

Lewis notes a Kewpie doll, a tambourine, and a shimmery guitar-clutching frog interspersed with unlikely objects like gears and tire pumps framed and mounted on the walls. Stopping just short of the end of the hall, the receptionist knocks on a door distinguished from all the rest by the representation of a hand tooled cowboy boot. As she pushes open the door to admit them, Lewis realizes that the cowboy boot is actually a real leather boot that’s been sawn in half and somehow attached to the door. Glue maybe.

What a waste, she thinks, as she gets a whiff of rich leather as she steps inside. Old fashioned venetian blinds cover the window, admitting bright stripes of sunlight into the room. The contrasting shadow seems all the darker because the sunlight is so bright. A drafting table leans against one wall, a desk and several file cabinets against the other with a long desk in between.

The young man seated there looks up from the video game he’s playing. He’s hard to see in the harsh strips of light, so Lewis moves to the window and adjust the blinds. The young man watches her warily. Wolfrom pulls the door behind him closed and extends a hand with a badge.

“Mr. Molony, I’m Detective Wolfrom, and this is Detective Lewis. We have a few questions for you.” Molony nods, waving away the badge after a cursory glance, and Wolfrom perches on a corner of the desk. There are no other chairs in the room, so Lewis leans up against the cabinet beside the window.

“What can I do for you, officers?” asks Molony haughtily.

“You own a late model red Schwinn bicycle.”

Molony nods, not sure where this is going. “It’s more of a burgundy, but yes, It’s a 2009 Classic Seven Deluxe.” He looks at them and frowns. “What happened to it? It hasn’t been stolen, has it?”

“No,” Wolfrom tells him, folding his arms across his chest, “But it was spotted on the Christie campus.”

“At Christie?” Neil Molony goes very still. Then, “But that doesn’t make any sense.”

“It was seen there Mr. Molony. It’s a very distinctive bicycle.” Wolfrom watches him.

Neil splutters, “I never went there. That school is for losers. I went to UCLA. Even my bike wouldn’t be caught dead at a dive like Christie.”

Very softly, from behind, Lewis leans in and says into his ear, “It was used by a flasher, Neil.” Molony has almost forgotten she’s there, and nearly jumps out of his skin. Twisting around to face her, he insists “It wasn’t me. Wasn’t my bike. It had to be somebody else.”

Wolfrom asks in a neutral tone, “When were you in college Mr. Molony?”

Molony swivels back to face him. “Uh, oh about five, no six years ago.”

“And that prepared you for this job here, did it?”

“Uh, well, no, actually. I decided to help out here until I can find a suitable job in my field. This is really just a stop gap, just until I can put something better together.”

“And your job here is?”

“I pull press clippings and keep the publicity files.” Wolfrom nods, glancing around the spacious office. Although somewhat sterile, this office is far too grand for the job description. The guy is connected.

Again from behind Lewis asks, “What did you take?”

Without jumping this time, Molony swivels back to look at her. He’s starting to feel more confident now. “I majored in film. That’s where Spielberg and Lucas went too.”

Wolfrom looks suitably impressed. “Wow, I’ll bet that’s hard work to find.”

Neil haughtily explains “I’m an auteur, I don’t work for some schmuck doesn’t know from nothing. I intend to direct, which entails putting together a project and packaging. I’m not sure why you’re here, though. I do have work to do, you know.” Neil is trying for an imperious dismissal.

“Well,” says Lewis as she comes around the desk, crossing her arms authoritatively. “What we want is for you to come downtown for a line-up.”

Trying to hang onto imperious, “A line-up? That’s ridiculous!” he says, now visibly nervous. Clenching her jaw, Lewis pins him with her flinty-eyed stare. Neil tries to keep it up, but cracks. “Uh, when do you think we do this?”

“Right now.” Lewis holds Neil Molony’s eye, then he swallows and nods and Lewis turns and makes for the door. Molony glances nervously back up at Wolfrom, standing by the desk, immobile, waiting. Molony looks away, then stuffs the game machine into a desk drawer and gets to his feet.

Wolfrom keeps his gaze neutral as he watches the creep come around the desk. Wolfrom feels the thrill. This is a wrong guy all right. Now to find out if it’s the right wrong guy.

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97

A red and yellow taxi pulling up alongside a police car.

The taxi arrives at the police station, and Maggie looks pale as she climbs out, so Oscar says, “It’ll be fine.” He holds the door to the building open, doffing an imaginary hat for Maggie. She tries a smile, then shrugs and squares her shoulders, marching through the door and heading for the front desk.

The duty sergeant looks up from his computer monitor expectantly. “Help you?”

Maggie clears her throat. “I’m uh, here for a line-up.”

“And that would be with which officer?”

“Oh uh.” Suddenly flustered. “Oh right, Detectives Lewis and, er, Wolf.”

“That’d be Detective ‘Wolfrom’.”

Maggie nods, “Yeah.” The officer scrolls through pages of data, skimming until he finds what he’s looking for. “Just have a seat over there and I’ll get a PC to take you up.”

“Okay.” Maggie turns and follows Oscar over to the bank of plastic chairs by the window. “PC? Personal computer?”

Oscar smiles, “Police Constable”.

Maggie nods. “Ah. Makes more sense than ‘politically correct.’ ”

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98

graphic coffee beans

Nick measures coffee beans into the hand grinder then sits beside Kate, hunched groggily over a bowl of porridge. Gripping the wooden grinder between his knees, Nick steadies it with his left hand and starts turning the crank.

As the mechanical chrish-chrish-chrish fills the air, the scent of the freshly ground beans wafts up from the grinder. Kate smiles over at Nick, breathing in the aroma. Nick shakes his head, “You know you don’t have to get up this early, babe.”

“Then I’d almost never get to see you.”

“Who’re you kidding? Your eyes aren’t open yet. You’re not seeing me now.”

“I just need coffee.”

“Almost done. What’d you decide about the meeting? Is it on for tonight?”

Kate sighs, “I don’t know. Maybe.”

“Did you hear they’ve caught the guy?”

“What do you mean caught him … caught who?”

“The cops brought the guy in this morning.”

Kate says, “Yeah, but they brought Boris in too.”

“Well, they let him go again too.” Nick shrugs.

“After Natasha went down and made them let him out.”

“Well, you know it wasn’t Boris.”

“No, I don’t.”

“Well sure you do.”

“Honey, he’s your friend. I don’t really know him. It could very well be him no matter what Natasha thinks.”

Nick shrugs. “Wait and see. I doubt it, though.”

“Just ’cause you pump iron with the guy doesn’t mean he couldn’t be a rapist. I mean, come on.”

Nick says, “I don’t think … wasn’t she badly beaten?”

“She was, but Boris is her boyfriend. You know how it goes, they naturally assumed it was him. She checked out of the hospital to get him released.”

Nick shrugs. “This one’s a little different. The campus flasher apparently. Some guy lurking in the woods, Val said.”

“Maggie’s flasher?”

“Probably. Val’s taking the attack personally. He’s annoyed nobody told him about the Christie flasher.”

“You didn’t tell him about Maggie?”

“It never came up. I mean, it was just a funny story. Who knew?”

“Don’t worry babe, I won’t rat you out.”

“He’s planning on going after the board of directors for a bigger budget so he can afford to hire guards with brains.”

“It’s about time. Sounds like he’s got a handle on it, though.”

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99

Art Deco police station facade

Peering through the heavy glass at a uniformed officer flipping the pages on a clipboard, Maggie twists her hands together nervously.

“You’re sure they won’t be able to see me?”

“They won’t be able to see you,” Wolfrom assures her. “You’re behind one way glass. They’ll know somebody is here, but nobody can see who.” Maggie nods.

Wolfrom doesn’t tell her it will be different if it gets to court. He keys the mic. “Bring them in.”

The officer opens the door and a half dozen men walk in and stand in front of the backdrop. Maggie thinks this is just like something on TV. Piece of cake.

The officer lines the men up, positioning each under a number stenciled on the wall behind them.

They all look roughly the same, white guys, under six feet, brown hair, glasses, no facial hair. Gee, they all do look alike, what’s that all about.

“Try not to look at them as a group.” Wolfrom suggests, as though reading her mind. “Just look at them one at a time, focus on each one, individually.”

Maggie nods and turns her attention to the first guy.

Wolfrom keys the mic again. “Number one step forward please.”

As he does, Maggie looks at him. Tries to see a person. Okay, wide broad face. Looks a little like Boris maybe, only shorter. Not as built. The uniformed officer signals to the man to turn and he does. Maggie shakes her head. Not him.

Wolfrom speaks into the mic again. “Thank you. Number two step forward please.”

Maggie looks at this guy.

Beyond the superficial average white guy looks these men all share, this one has sallow skin, lank hair hanging limply. The glasses reflect a wicked glint in the overhead light, making it difficult to see his eyes. Could it be this one? Or is it just because he doesn’t look as clean cut as the first one.

“Turn please number two.” As the man turns Maggie gets a good look at his profile. From this angle his nose is much more prominent. Pointy.

“Not him,” she says softly.

Wolfrom nods, and tells the mic, “That’s fine number two. Number three please. Step forward.”

Maggie watches as number three looks around nervously.

Okay, this guy is acting guilty. The question is, is it the guy? He steps forward. Another clean cut one, a hint of beard along the jawline. One of those guys needs to shave three times a day. If it was me, I’d grow a beard, she thinks.

“Turn please.”

Maggie purses her lips. Who the hell knows. He just looks like some guy. Like every other guy. So he’s acting guilty. But she doesn’t know him. She thinks. God. This is harder than she thought. Wolfrom is looking at her. She shrugs. “I don’t know.”

Wolfrom nods before keying the mic. “Thank you number three. Number four step forward please.”

Oh god they all look the same. Like they were stamped out of the same mold. Wait. This one walks differently. There’s something funny about him. Like he was assembled from parts. Wound tight. The way he walks. Tense. Lopsided. Does he look like the guy? Does anybody? Does she even remember after all this time?

“Turn please number four.”

As number four turns he clenches his jaw, and Maggie can see that his jaw is out of alignment somehow. Is it because he’s clenching it or is he clenching because it’s out of alignment. There’s something. Meh.

They need an artist or somebody who knows how to look. She doesn’t know how to look at people. Or at least not how to see them. Or their parts, anyway.

What’s wrong with this picture? This guy’s glasses are a bit smaller than the others. His eyes are glittery. Is she imagining this? Is she trying to make it be one of these guys so it will be all over? Maybe.

“I don’t know about this one either.” she admits.

“Thank you number four. Number five step forward.”

Gee, where do they get these creepy guys, she thinks as she takes in the half smirk on this one’s face. Pointier chin. Glancing back at number four’s chin for a comparison she thinks, gah, after that one anybody’s chin would look pointy.

Okay okay. Look at him. Number five, Really look at him. But Maggie doesn’t want to look at him.

He’s making her feel uncomfortable. Look at him. Some wave in his hair. She doesn’t remember his hair at all, it was under the panythose. No beard, not even stubble. Perfectly round glasses like Harry Potter. Looks a bit younger than the others. He’s glancing around when Wolfrom says, “Turn please” and the guy startles. She sees the way he moves and she knows. It’s him. Chills run down her back and she starts to shake.

“That’s him. That’s the one.”

“Are you sure? Take your time.”

“That’s him that’s him that’s HIM.” Wolfrom draws back, Maggie feels suddenly light headed, dizzy even, thinks maybe she’s maybe gonna faint but then she feels bile rising, so she grabs the waste paper basket just in time.

Wolfrom looks away as she throws up. When she’s done he passes her the box of tissues, then keys the mic.

“Thank you number five. Number six step forward please.”

Maggie looks at him wanly. “But it’s number five. I made the identification.”

Wolfrom says, “Procedure.”

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100

an orange and greed taxi cab heading toward the camera

Oscar’s arms are protectively wound around Maggie’s shaking form as they ride home in the back of a cab. He feels a little guilty because he’s enjoying it so much as Maggie snuggles in closer.

It would be near perfect if the ruddy cabbie wasn’t watching them in the mirror almost as much as he’s watching the road. Oscar is going to say something, but then the taxi driver clears his throat, and says, “Don’t worry, lady. You’ll get through this. Look, I know this lawyer can probably help. I can give you his card, you want.”

Oscar feels the difference in the timbre of Maggie’s shaking, as she pulls her face away from his neck. Her eyes are red rimmed and her face is streaked with what used to be make up, but her lips are tightly clenched together to keep the giggles in.

“No, that won’t be necessary, thanks.” Oscar assures the cabbie as the cab pulls up in front of Fyfield House.

Oscar pays the guy and opens the cab door. Giggling, Maggie takes Oscar’s hand for help getting out of the car. She slams the door and watches as the cab pulls away. Turning back to Oscar she says, “Look Oz, I’m sorry I’m such a mess. I don’t know why this is getting me so bad.”

“It’s fine Maggie. You just have too much imagination. Come on up, I’ll buy you a drink.”

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