His office was about the size of her cubicle at the paper, but at least it had a door and a window. His furniture was not as good as hers, though. His desk was an old wooden one that looked as if it had been used as a carpenter's workbench. There were hunks out of the top, and the varnish was so scratched it absorbed the fluorescent light as if thirsty.
He tossed a file at her before sitting down. "She was found behind a bunch of trash cans. Most of her blood ended up in the sewer, but the coroner thinks he found traces of heroin in her system. She'd had sex that evening, but that's not exactly news."
"Oh, my God, this is Mary," Beth said, looking at a gruesome picture and sinking into a chair.
"Twenty-one years old." Butch cursed under his breath. "What a fucking waste."
"I know her."
"From the station?"
"Growing up. We were in the same foster home for a little while. Afterward, I'd run into her sometimes. Usually here."
Mary Mulcahy had been a beautiful little girl. She'd been in the home with Beth for only about a year before she'd been sent back to her birth mother. Two years later she was back in state custody after having been left alone for a week at the age of seven. She'd said she'd lived on raw flour after the rest of the food had run out.
"I'd heard you'd been in the system," Butch said, getting thoughtful as he looked at her. "Mind if I ask why?"
"Why do you think? No parents." She closed the file and slid it onto the desk. "Did you find a weapon?"
His eyes narrowed, but not unkindly. He seemed to be debating whether to take her lead and let the subject drop.
"Weapon?" she prompted.
"Another throwing star. Had traces of blood on it, but not hers. We also found some powdered residue in two different places, as if someone had lit off flares and put them on the ground. Hard to imagine the killer'd want to draw attention to the body, though."
"You think what happened to Mary and the car bomb are related?"
He shrugged, a careless lift of his broad shoulders. "Maybe. But if someone was really doing a payback on Big Daddy, they'd have hit higher up the food chain than her. They'd have gone after the pimp himself."
Beth closed her eyes, envisioning Mary as a five-year-old, a headless Barbie doll in a tattered dress tucked under her arm.
"Then again," Butch said, "maybe this is just getting started."
She heard his chair move and looked up as he came around the desk to her.
"You got any plans for dinner tonight?" he asked.
"Dinner?"
"Yeah. You and me."
Hard-ass was asking her out? Again?
Beth stood, wanting to be on an equal footing with him. "Ah, yes-no, I mean, thanks, but no."
Even if they didn't have a professional relationship of sorts, she had other things in mind. Imagine that. Keeping her calendar open just in case the man in leather wanted to see her tonight as well as this morning.
Damn, one good lay and she thought they had a thing going? She needed to get real.
Butch smiled cynically. "Someday I'm going to figure out why you don't like me."
"I do like you. You don't take shit from anyone, and even though I don't approve of your methods, I can't pretend I didn't like the fact that you broke Billy Riddle's nose again."
The harsh planes of Butch's face softened. As his eyes bored into hers, she thought she must be crazy for not being attracted to him.
"And thanks for sending your friend over last night," she said, putting her bag up on her shoulder. "Although I have to admit, he scared the hell out of me at first."
Right before the man had showed her exactly what the highest and best use for the human body was.
Butch frowned. "Friend?"
"You know. The one who looks like some kind of Goth nightmare. Tell me, he's vice, isn't he?"
"What the hell are you talking about? I didn't send anyone over to your place."
All the blood drained out of her head.
And the growing suspicion and alarm on Butch's face kept her from trying to jog his memory.
She headed for the door. "My mistake."
Butch grabbed her arm. "Who the hell was at your apartment last night?"
She wished she knew.
"No one. Like I said, my mistake. I'll see you later."
She rushed through the lobby, her heart beating triple time. As she burst outside, she winced when the sun hit her face.
One thing was clear: There was no way she was going to meet that man this morning, even though 816 Wallace Avenue was in the best part of the city and it was broad daylight.
By four that afternoon, Wrath was about to explode.
He hadn't been able to get back to Beth's the night before.
And she hadn't shown this morning.
Her failure to come to him meant one of two things: Something had happened to her or she was blowing him off.
He checked the braille clock with his fingertips. Sundown was still hours away.
Goddamned summer days. Too long. Way too long.