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“Ten.”
“Ouch,” Walt said. He leaned down and set the plaster cast on the table with a thump. It was enclosed in a large plastic evidence bag marked as he’d instructed Brandon. Then he pulled out the small evidence bag containing the blue contact lens. He spread Fiona’s crime-scene photographs out like fa
“Fuck you.”
“Me? What’d I do? You’re the one who killed her.”
“Fuck that.”
“We’re taking plaster casts of your shoes right as we speak. By the time they dry and are compared to this,” he said, patting the bag again, “any opportunity to plea-bargain is gone. Tell that to Holms’s attorney. Gamble all you like.”
“I’m not talking to you,” Guyot said.
“Then what do you call it?”
Guyot stared back with a stoic face.
“He promised you a ton of money, didn’t he? Promised you he’d get you out on appeal if anything went wrong and that you’d be rich as Croesus when you got out. The thing is, he was talking about the Shaler thing. Trevalian. And maybe he’s right. Maybe he could get you out of that at some point. He’s a powerful man, as I understand it.”
“You have no idea. He’ll have you chasing traffic tickets before this is through.”
“No. It’s through already. It’s over, Emil.” He held up the blue contact lens. “You know what that is? The lab uses fumes to develop prints on certain surfaces. They can develop prints on human skin, on fabric-on things you wouldn’t believe. Contact lenses, for instance.”
Walt pushed back his chair, poured himself some more coffee, and sat back down, making a point of his fatigue.
“You guys heard about us going into the pound, didn’t you? Word got out-it’s a damn small valley and people can’t keep their mouths shut, and that doesn’t help me any, I’ll tell you what. Once we made that co
“You been smoking contraband from the evidence room, Sheriff? You better watch out for that.”
Walt went absolutely still. He let a minute pass. Then another. To both men it seemed much, much longer.
Then he took a deep breath, let out a long sigh, and let his true emotions color his voice. “You picked the wrong car, asshole.” He waved the bag containing the contact lens in the man’s face. “Da
Guyot had lost all his color and found it impossible to sit still. His upper lip held a sheen of nervous sweat, and his eyes could no longer risk finding Walt’s.
“He’s in the other room, right now, hearing about this same evidence. He’s being offered a deal, a plea bargain. Now, who do you think is the better deal maker, you or Stuart Holms? Who do you think is going to come out on the short side of this one? When you found that contact lens, you should have just thrown it out. Those are your prints on it, right? We’ll be comparing them in the morning. They sure as hell aren’t his. Hers, if you’re lucky-but I don’t think you’re all that lucky, Emil. And forget about him ever springing you for this. You go down in this state for capital murder, they throw away the key. Welcome to the Wild West.”
The man was breathing hard. Like a ru
“Never follow the wishes of a jealous husband,” Walt said. He thought of Brandon and Gail.
He waved in one of his deputies to keep an eye on the man, but stopped at the door and jiggled the bag holding the contact lens and the other one holding the plaster cast. “You think either of these is going to implicate Stuart Holms? No. And he knows that. He was counting on that. That, and the power of your greed. He knows all about greed, Stuart Holms. All he needs is for your greed to buy your silence through the trial. Then he’s home free, and you’re the one in the orange suit.”
Four
F iona ran off a series of photographs as Stuart Holms, Emil Guyot, and Milav Trevalian were walked out of the Sheriff’s Office in orange jumpsuits and wearing manacles. Some stragglers from the First Rights gathering, including Bartholomew, were contained across the street by the new city hall, chanting and waving their fists. Walt couldn’t make out their slogan.
Several of the national reporters had remained in town for the 3 P.M. news conference conducted by the assistant United States attorney. There would likely be even more press by the time the convoy reached Boise, a good two-hour drive.
“He confessed about two minutes after Holms’s attorneys arrived,” Walt told Fiona. “This was around three A.M. They walked right past him and went in to talk to Holms, and Guyot had a total meltdown. Lousy customer service, it’ll get you every time.”
“But you said Holms will get off?”
“I said guys like him always get off. Who knows?”
“His poor wife.”
Walt had a couple of things to say to that, but he kept them to himself. Tommy Brandon was one of the deputies helping to get the two into the waiting vehicles-the suspects were being driven down separately in their own Suburbans. The feds had bigger budgets. Dryer and his men were part of the escort. None of the three would have any further contact with one another until the various trials. If there were trials.
“And Trevalian?” she asked.
“A lot of this is still up in the air. We caught Trevalian shortly after my own people tried to arrest me outside of Liz Shaler’s. He’s no newcomer to this. He thought he knew the location of the person who’d hired him, and he parlayed that into a quick deal with the AUSA.” He answered her bewildered look, “Assistant U.S. attorney-and was promised a maximum of eight years if he cooperated, which he then did. He led us to Stuart Holms.
“He and Guyot,” he continued, “will both do time. Either one could benefit from further plea-bargaining. There are a lot of stories to tell.”
“I’d like to hear your story. The one you wouldn’t tell me,” she said.
He wondered about asking her out for di
Brandon caught them standing together, maybe caught a glint of the spark Walt had felt, because he looked quickly away when Walt busted him for staring.