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Chapter 33
D
ANNY INSISTED ON RECIPROCITY. THOUGH HE DOUBTED THE scheme would succeed, he’d call Nickie if I’d take one more run at Plato.
I agreed.
Back in the squad room, I gave Lô and Hung a thumbs-up.
We chatted a moment, then Ryan and I left. Everyone said they’d keep in touch.
Little did we know how quickly we’d reconvene.
Ryan and I stopped for dim sum at the Chinatown Cultural Plaza Shopping Center. As Ryan made selections from an armada of carts, I called Plato Lowery.
“When will you people give up? I told that French guy and I told that army guy. No. N. O. This is harassment.”
“I’m sorry you feel that way, sir.”
“I do.”
“We don’t mean to offend. We’re just puzzled by your refusal to cooperate in a small way.”
“You’re barking up the wrong tree.”
“My colleagues and I want to get it right.”
“Then send my boy home and leave us be.”
Conversation hummed around me. Glassware clinked.
“Mr. Lowery, may I ask why you won’t submit a sample for DNA testing?”
“No. You may not.”
Through a window I looked across at the statue of Sun Yat-sen. He looked as unbending as Plato sounded.
“The process isn’t painful,” I said.
“Painful? I’ll tell you what’s painful. Having someone tell you your boy ain’t your boy. That’s painful. That’s painful as hell.”
“Sir, that’s not—”
“You people got no idea the hurt you can cause.”
Lowery was growing more strident with every word.
“All these years I’ve been telling myself the past is past. Those doctors and nurses with their needles and probes and fancy words. It was crazy. They were crazy. Those fools and their tests nearly cost me my family.”
The old man’s voice sizzled through the handset pressed to my ear.
“And the damndest part? They all died anyway. Spider. Tom. Harriet. In the end, all that science didn’t make one spit of difference.”
I looked over to see Ryan studying my face.
“Now the army comes along wanting to churn the whole mess up again. I didn’t believe nothing then, and I don’t believe nothing now. It’s done. Spider was my boy. He died in the war. That’s it. Done. You got it?”
I found myself listening to empty air.
“He sounded a bit overwrought.” Ryan placed a dumpling on my plate.
“A bit. That’s the largest number of words I’ve ever heard him connect.”
“Why so distressed?”
“I’m not really sure.” I set Ryan’s phone on the table. “Half of what he said didn’t make sense.”
“Like what?”
I tried to reconstruct Plato’s outburst in my mind.
“Basically, he doesn’t trust doctors or science.”
“I gather he won’t be submitting a swab.”
“Definitely not.”
“Now what?”
I raised frustrated hands. “We work with what we’ve got.”
Danny rang as Ryan was paying the bill.
His task had gone far better than mine.
Nickie Lapasa wanted answers concerning his brother. He and his attorney would concoct a convincing scenario. The attorney would contact Al Lapasa. Nickie would phone when he had news.
I was pleased. But stunned.
So was Ryan. Did Nickie have reasons other than closure on Xander?
That night the clouds and mist gave way to rain. Rivulets ran down the glass doors opening onto my balcony. Now and then a gust snuck in and rattled the frame.
Danny phoned at nine.
“Al Lapasa bit.”
“You’re kidding.”
“He’ll arrive in Honolulu tomorrow afternoon.”
“Get out!”
“Avarice is a wonderful thing.”
“You think that’s it?” I asked.
“Who knows,” Danny said.
I told Ryan, then called Lô.
He reacted as I had, though in somewhat more colorful prose. He’d talk to Hung, let me know when they had a plan.
Finally, I brought Hadley Perry up to speed.
Her surprise was delivered in hues as vivid as Lô’s. As we spoke, I also detected a note of annoyance. Because I was in and she was out of the loop on her case? Because I was with Ryan and she was not? Because the court testimony in which she was engaged was not yet finished and she would remain on the sidelines? Answering Perry’s questions, I felt a smug sense of satisfaction. Petty, but there you have it.
That night sleep refused to come. My mind kept chewing on the two recent shockers.
Harriet Lowery’s DNA was not a match for the Hemmingford floater.
Xander Lapasa might be alive.
Had Danny and I made too great a leap when comparing the antemortem and postmortem dental X-rays? The partial filling? The mandibular fractures?
Why had Nickie Lapasa gone along with my plan? What did he hope to gain from Al Lapasa’s presence in Honolulu? Did he actually believe the man was his brother?
Xander Lapasa went missing in Vietnam in 1968. Had he survived? Lived all those years as Al Lapasa? If so, why had he never contacted his family?
Or had he?
What had Xander been doing in Vietnam?
When did Al Lapasa surface in Oakland? Where was he prior to that?
What did Nickie know?
What did Nickie want?
Why did Nickie refuse to allow a DNA comparison between a Lapasa family member and JPAC’s 1968-979, presumably his brother, Xander?
Ditto for Plato Lowery. Why did he refuse to submit a sample?
Plato’s rant suggested that his wife’s death had been wrenching. Had Harriet’s illness scarred the old man so deeply it destroyed his faith in medicine and hospitals?
What had Plato said? In the end, doctors and science didn’t make one spit of difference.
I replayed Plato’s words in my mind, trying to better understand his thinking.
One comment seemed a disconnect. Those fools and their fancy test nearly cost me my family.
What fools? What test?
Cost his family? How?
Now the army comes along wanting to churn the whole mess up again.
I’d assumed the reference was to Spider’s death. If not, what mess?
I organized what little I knew about the Lowerys.
Harriet had passed away five years earlier. She’d suffered from kidney disease all her life, eventually received a transplant. Sheriff Beasley had said that neither son was the donor.
I pictured Plato clutching his album in my car. Thumping his chest so hard I flinched. My boy!
Again, on the phone today. Spider was my boy!
Both sons had offered their mother a kidney. Spider in the sixties, Tom years later.
Why could neither donate an organ?
Harriet’s twins were obviously not matches for her. Was that what had Plato so upset? Had testing turned up something the old man didn’t like?
The thought hit me like a bullet.
Paternity.
Had Plato discovered he was not the father of Harriet’s twins? Was he desperate to keep that fact hidden?
The digits on my clock said 2:18.
Rain still swished softly in the gutter overhanging my balcony.
I was twisting the notion this way and that when a scream shattered the silence.
Heart banging, I threw back the covers and shot from my bed.
Ryan was barreling up the stairs two at a time.
Katy was flying through her door.
The three of us met in the hall.
“I saw someone!” Katy’s face was adrenaline white. “Rain was coming in. I got up to close the door and there he was.”
“Where?” Ryan and I spoke as one.
“Out on the lawn.”
“A man? A woman?” Ryan asked.
“A man. I think. He looked pretty big.”
“What was he doing?”
“Just standing there. Under a tree. When I screamed, he ran off.”
“Lily!” Ryan rushed toward his daughter’s room.
The TV was tinting the walls and furniture an eerie blue. Colors danced the glass of the open balcony door, blurry reflections of movement on the screen.
Lily stood in shadow between the bed and a highboy dresser. In the dimness, her eyes looked way too large.
Ryan rushed forward. Stopped at arm’s length from his daughter, uncertain.
“Are you all right?” Ryan’s voice sounded taut and gentle at the same time.
Lily nodded.
Ryan scanned the room, assessing. Though the bedding was tangled, Lily was fully dressed.
Katy and I watched from the doorway.
Lily stood with her back pressed to the wall.
Ryan strode onto the balcony and surveyed the landscape below.
“Who screamed?” Lily asked.
“I saw someone down by the pool,” Katy said.
Ryan stepped in and slid the door sideways. Water plumed from the track.
“Holy hell!” Katy sounded scared. “That posting. Could this be related?”
Ryan snicked the lock into place, turned, frowned at me.
Crap!
I hadn’t told him about the threatening message on Katy’s blog.
“What posting?” he asked.
I gave a condensed version.
“And you didn’t mention this little incident because...?”
“I got distracted.”
“Distracted?”
“First LaManche called with his bombshell about Harriet Lowery’s DNA.” As the excuse left my lips I knew it was lame. “Then there was the news about Al Lapasa.”
Ryan spoke to Katy.
“Was the man alone?”
“I think so.”
“Which way did he go?”
“I didn’t see. I— I’m sorry. I acted like some B-grade Hollywood heroine.”
“Can you describe him?” I recognized the altered tone. Ryan had kicked into cop mode.
Katy shook her head. “It was dark.”
Ryan walked over and placed a hand on each of his daughter’s shoulders.
“Look at me.”
Lily’s eyes rolled up.
“Why are you dressed at two in the morning?”
“I fell asleep watching TV.”
“Watching what?”
Lily shrugged. “Nothing special. Just stuff.”
“Do you have any idea who this intruder might be?”
“I didn’t see the guy.”
A few beats passed.
“I’ll double-check the gates and the house.” Ryan shot a look my way. Angry? Troubled? Disappointed? “Let’s all get some sleep.”