boy who had been living with his parents in Spring Valley at the time of his disappearance. He drove away from the house around ten p.m. on May 29 and never came home again.
It wasn't like I actually expected any kind of connect-the-dots pattern to jump out at me. This was more like building the haystack . Tomorrow, we'd start looking for the needle. That meant fieldwork, and lots of it, following up on every one of these tawdry files. If just one of them showed a connection to Caroline, it could be huge. This was the kind of homicide that used to make me wonder page 18
why I keep coming back for more, year after year. I knew that on some level I was addicted to the chase, but I used to think that if I figured out why, then I'd stop needing it so much, maybe even turn in my badge. That hadn't happened. Just the opposite.
Even if Caroline hadn't been my niece, I still would have been standing in my attic at two in the morning, staring at that terrible board, as determined as ever to find out who had killed her and maybe these other young people — and why.
Remains.
That was the single word, or maybe the concept, that I couldn't get out of my head, couldn't shake if I wanted to.
Chapter 13
I FELL ASLEEP hard that night and woke up the same way, diving into sleep and having to be ripped out of it. I ate breakfast with Nana, Bree, and the kids, but when I left the house I still wasn't completely awake. It didn't augur well, if you believe in auguring.
The one appointment I needed to keep that day was my meeting with Marcella Weaver. Three years earlier, the breakup of her high-priced escort service had made national headlines and earned her the nickname "Madam of the Beltway." An alleged client list had never surfaced but still had power brokers all over town shaking in their Florsheims.
Since then, she'd bounced back Heidi Fleiss–style, with a syndicated radio show, a couple of lingerie boutiques, and a speaking fee reported to be five thousand. An hour, ironically enough. I didn't care about any of that. I just wanted her insight into the possible murders of escorts. Once I'd agreed to have her lawyer present, she said she'd meet with me at her apartment.
The place was a gorgeous duplex not far from Dupont Circle. She answered the door herself, looking casual and refined in jeans and a black cashmere sweater. She also wore diamond earrings and a diamond-studded cross.
"Is it Detective or Dr. Cross?" she asked.
"Detective, but I'm impressed that you asked."
"Old habits die hard, I guess. I'm careful. I do my research." She smiled easily, way more laid back than I'd expected her to be. "Come on in, Detective."
"In the living room, she introduced me to the lawyer, David Shupike. I recognized him from a couple of highprofile cases around town. He was a dour, balding stereotype of a lonely guy; it was easy to imagine how he and Marcella might have met.
She poured me a tall glass of Pellegrino, and we sat down on a leather couch with a view of the city.
"Let me get this out of the way." I slid a picture of Caroline across the coffee table. "Have you ever seen her before?"
"Don't answer that, Marcella." Shupike started to push the picture back, but Ms. Weaver stopped him. She stared at it, then whispered something in his ear until he nodded.
"I don't recognize her," she said to me. "And for whatever it's worth, if I had, I wouldn't have taken David's advice. I really do want to help if I can."
She seemed sincere to me, and I chose to believe her.
"I've been trying to figure out who Caroline was working for when she was killed. I wonder if you could point me in any direction," I said.
She pulled her small bare feet up onto the couch while she thought about it.
"How much rent was she paying?"
"About three thousand a month."
"Well, she certainly wasn't making that on the street. If you haven't already, you should check and see if she had a profile with any of the services. Almost all of them are posted online