The Husband. Dean Koontz
“No. I didn’t. Once I saw he had to be dead, I didn’t want to look too close.”
“And there was blood on the face,” Taggart said. “We swabbed it off before this photo was taken.”
“The blood, the brains, that’s why I didn’t look too close.”
Mitch couldn’t take his eyes from the photo. He sensed that it was prophetic. One day there would be a photograph like this of his face. They would show it to his parents: Is this your son, Mr. and Mrs. Rafferty?
“This is Jason. I haven’t seen him in eight years, maybe nine.”
“You roomed with him when you were—what?—eighteen?”
“Eighteen, nineteen. Just for a year.”
“About ten years ago.”
“Not quite ten.”
Jason had always affected a cool demeanor, so mellow he seemed to have surfwaxed his brain, but at the same time he seemed to know the secrets of the universe. Other boardheads called him Breezer, and admired him, even envied him. Nothing had rattled Jason or surprised him.
He appeared to be surprised now. One eye wide, mouth open. He appeared to be shocked.
“You went to school together, you roomed together. Why didn’t you stay in touch?”
While Mitch had been riveted by the photo, Taggart had been watching him intently. The detective’s stare had the sharp promise of a nail gun.
“We had … different ideas about things,” Mitch said.
“It wasn’t a marriage. You were just roommates. You didn’t have to want the same things.”
“We wanted some of the same things, but we had different ideas about how to get them.”
“Jason wanted to get everything the easy way,” Taggart guessed.
“I thought he was headed for big trouble, and I didn’t want any part of it.”
“You’re a straight shooter, you walk the line,” Taggart said.
“I’m no better than anyone else, worse than some, but I don’t steal.”
“We haven’t learned much about him yet, but we know he rented a house in Huntington Harbor for seven thousand a month.”
“A month?”
“Nice house, on the water. And so far it looks like he didn’t have a job.”
“Jason thought work was strictly for inlanders, smog monsters.” Mitch saw that an explanation was required. “Surfer lingo for those who don’t live for the beach.”
“Was there a time when you lived for the beach, Mitch?”
“Toward the end of high school, for a while after. But it wasn’t enough.”
“What was it lacking?”
“The satisfaction of work. Stability. Family.”
“You’ve got all that now. Life is perfect, huh?”
“It’s good. Very good. So good it makes me nervous sometimes.”
“But not perfect? What’s it lacking now, Mitch?”
Mitch didn’t know. He’d thought about that from time to time, but he had no answer. So he said, “Nothing. We’d like to have kids. Maybe that’s all.”
“I have two daughters,” the detective said. “One’s nine and one’s twelve. Kids change your life.”
“I’m looking forward to it.”
Mitch realized that he was responding to Taggart less guardedly than he had previously. He reminded himself that he was no match for this guy.
“Aside from the drug-possession charge,” Taggart said, “Jason stayed clean all these years.”
“He always was lucky.”
Indicating the photo, Taggart said, “Not always.”
Mitch didn’t want to look at it anymore. He returned the photo to the detective.
“Your hands are shaking,” Taggart said.
“I guess they are. Jason was a friend once. We had a lot of laughs. All that comes back to me now.”
“So you haven’t seen or spoken to him in ten years.”
“Almost ten.”
Returning the photo to the envelope, Taggart said, “But you do recognize him now.”
“Without the blood, seeing more of the face.”
“When you saw him walking the dog, before he was killed, you didn’t think—Hey, don’t I know that guy?”
“He was across the street. I only glanced at him, then the shot.”
“And you were on the phone, distracted. Mr. Barnes says you were on the phone when the shot was fired.”
“That’s right. I wasn’t focused on the guy with the dog. I just glanced at him.”
“Mr. Barnes strikes me as being incapable of guile. If he lied, I expect his nose might light up.”
Mitch wasn’t sure if he was meant to infer, by contrast to Iggy, that he himself was enigmatic and unreliable. He smiled and said, “Iggy’s a good man.”
Looking down at the envelope as he fixed the flap shut with the clasp, Taggart said, “Who were you on the phone with?”
“Holly. My wife.”
“Calling to let you know she had a migraine?”
“Yeah. To let me know she was going home early with a migraine.”
Glancing at the house behind them, Taggart said, “I hope she’s feeling better.”
“Sometimes they can last all day.”
“So the guy who’s shot turns out to be your old roommate. You see why it’s weird to me?”
“It is weird,” Mitch agreed. “It freaks me out a little.”
“You hadn’t seen him in nine years. Hadn’t spoken on the phone or anything.”
“He was hanging with new friends, a different crowd. I didn’t care for any of them, and I didn’t run into him anymore at any of the old places.”
“Sometimes coincidences are just coincidences.” Taggart rose from his chair and moved toward the porch steps.
Relieved, blotting his palms on his jeans, Mitch got up from his chair, too.
Pausing beside the steps, head lowered, Taggart said, “There’s not yet been a thorough search of Jason’s house. We’ve only begun. But we found one odd thing already.”
As Earth rolled away from the slowly sinking sun, afternoon light penetrated a gap in the branches of the pepper tree. A dappled orange glare found Mitch and made him squint.
Beyond the sudden light, in shadow, Taggart said, “In his kitchen there was a catchall drawer where he kept loose change, receipts, an assortment of pens, spare keys…. We found only one business card in the drawer. It was yours.”
“Mine?”
“‘Big Green,’” Taggart quoted. “‘Landscape design, installation, and maintenance. Mitchell Rafferty.’”
This was what had brought the detective north from the coast. He had gone to Iggy, guileless Iggy, from whom he’d learned that indeed a connection existed between Mitch and Jason.
“You didn’t give him the card?”