“If he knew them, then there must be a motive.”
“You’re such a brilliant FBI agent.”
“Thanks. Pretty obvious though.”
“Yes. The motives vary. Some seem serious, others trivial. I don’t know all of them.”
“He thinks they’re serious.”
“He does.”
Allie took his right hand off her knee and scratched his chin with it. After a moment he asked, “And this one is on your desk, right?”
“No. The witness has yet to file a formal complaint against the judge. She’s too frightened. And Cleopatra told me yesterday that BJC will not get involved in a murder investigation.”
“So what happens next?”
“Nothing, I guess. If there’s no complaint there’s nothing for us to do. The judge remains untouched and goes about his business, even if it includes murder.”
“You sound like you believe this witness.”
“I do. I’ve struggled with it since Monday, the day I met her, and I’ve reached the point where I believe her.”
“Why can’t she go to the police with her suspect?”
“Several reasons. One, she’s frightened and convinced that the killer will find out and add her name to his list. Perhaps the biggest hesitation is that the police have no reason to believe her. The cops in small-town South Carolina don’t have time to worry about a cold case in south Florida. The cops in Little Rock don’t have time for a similar killing near Chattanooga, one with no forensics.”
Allie nodded as he thought. “That’s four. Where are the other two?”
“She hasn’t told me yet.”
“Who was murdered in Little Rock?”
“A newspaper reporter.”
“And why was his name on the list?”
“We’re getting away from the hypothetical, Agent Pacheco. I can’t give you any more details.”
“Fair enough. Have you discussed the FBI with her?”
“Yes, briefly, and as of now she has no interest. She’s convinced it’s too dangerous and she also has strong doubts about its willingness to get involved. Why would the FBI get excited about a string of murders they have no chance of solving?”
“She might be surprised at what we can do.”
Lacy thought about this for a few miles as they listened to the radio and zipped through traffic. Allie was a compulsive speeder and when he got nailed by radar, at least twice a year, he loved to pull out his badge and wink at the trooper. He boasted of never getting a ticket.
Lacy asked, “How would that work? Say the witness wanted to lay everything on the table in front of the FBI.”
Allie shrugged and said, “I don’t know, but I can find out.”
“Not yet. I have to go real slow with this witness. She’s damaged.”
“Damaged?”
“Yes, her father was victim number two.”
“Wow. This gets better.” His most obnoxious habit, to date, was chewing his fingernails, and only the left ones. The ones on the right were never attacked. When he began chewing he was thoroughly engrossed in something and she could almost hear his brain churning away.
After a few miles he said, frowning at the windshield, “This is pretty intense. Hypothetically, let’s say you’re in the room with the police—us, locals, state, doesn’t matter—and you say, ‘Here’s your killer.’ Name, rank, serial number, address. And here are his six victims, all strangled over the past twenty-plus years, and—”
“And there’s no way to prove it.”
“And there’s no way to prove it. Unless.”
“Unless what?”
“Unless you find evidence from the killer himself.”
“That would require a warrant, wouldn’t it? A document that would be impossible to obtain without probable cause. There’s no cause whatsoever, only some wild speculation.”
“I thought you said you believe her.”
“I think I do.”
“You’re not convinced.”
“Not all the time. You have to admit, it’s far-fetched.”
“Indeed it is. I’ve never heard of anything like it. But then, as you know, I chase a different class of criminal.”
“A warrant is unlikely. Plus, he’s probably paranoid and too smart to get caught.”
“What do you know about him?”
“Nothing. He’s just a hypothetical.”
“Come on. We’ve gone this far.”