"Yeah. I'm thinking there couldn't have been many of those. Wish I had the original damn file. I'm probably reinventing the wheel."
"Are DMV registration records kept that long?"
"I'll let you know."
"Any mention of the car in Eddie's notes?"
"That's where I plan to start."
I told Slidell about Larabee's autopsy results. And about the abrin found in Wayne Gamble's coffee.
"What the hell's abrin?"
I provided a quick overview. Slidell saw the connection right away. "Like the shit what killed the landfill John Doe."
"We don't know if the man died of ricin poisoning. He'd also suffered head trauma."
"Guess you could say that about Gamble."
"But it's not just the abrin," I said.
I told Slidell about Gamble's calls to me, about his anxiety, and about his decision to confront the person tailing him.
"So the FBI's thinking Wayne Gamble got iced. Why?"
"I don't know. But there's more."
I relayed what Williams had shared concerning Ted Raines.
"The feebs are fingering Raines?"
"No one's suggesting that Raines killed Gamble."
"Then what's the link?"
"I don't know."
"You're saying that a lot."
I hesitated, decided it was better to have everyone on the same page. Leaving out the part about the shotgun, I described the encounter with Eugene Fries.
"I'm telling you. Galimore is a snake."
"Let it go."
Angry air whistled in and out of Slidell's nose for several seconds. "Who would have threatened this guy Fries?"
"I've no clue. But they made an impression."
"Who's wrong? Fries or Winge?"
"Yes."
A beat.
"You think one of them lied?"
"I don't know. But I think Owen Poteat may have."
I walked Slidell through my interpretation of Rinaldi's coded note.
"Sonofafrigginbitch," he said.
"Sonofafrigginbitch," I agreed.
GALIMORE ARRIVED BEARING CHICK-FIL-A. HIS SHIRT WAS wrinkled and sweat-stained under the arms. His eyes were puffy, his cheeks unshaven. Not the sexy unkept look Bruce Willis sometimes features. The up-all-night-and-grungy version.
Though the food was good, Galimore's mood was not.
We ate in tense silence.
When I asked our destination, I got one word. Weddington.
As I bunched and rebagged my sandwich wrapper and waffle-fries carton, I considered briefing Galimore on the autopsy, the abrin, and the other info obtained from Williams and Randall.
Not yet.
"What does Bogan do?" I asked.
"I already told you."
"Indulge me."
"He grows vegetables."
"You look like you didn't get much sleep."
"I'm fine."
"I spoke with Slidell this morning."
"Always reason for rejoicing."
"He questions your motive for looking at the Gamble-Lovette case after all these years."
Galimore snorted.
"It wouldn't hurt to talk to him."
"I'd rather take a punch to the balls."
Okay, then.
Galimore turned from Providence onto Weddington Road, which soon veered southeast. Through my window I watched malls and subdivision entrances slide past. I pictured the pretentious homes beyond the flawlessly quaint signs, each trying to be Tudor, or Tuscan, or Provencal. A few years back the area had been farmland. Where had all the countryside gone?
Eventually we entered a stretch of woodland. Galimore made a right, then another, then a third into a driveway. An engraved wooden placard announced our arrival at CB Botanicals.
Through a stand of pines, I could see a bungalow, beyond it a greenhouse. Beside the greenhouse was a small pond.
The bungalow was old but well kept. The siding was blue, probably the kind that never needed painting. The door was red, the gutters and window trim white.
The gardens bordering the house were lavish with color. I recognized some flowers. Phlox, daisies, lilies, begonias. Most I didn't.
A kid was up on a ladder, pulling leaves from a gutter along the house's right side. He had wires coming from both ears and didn't look up at the sound of our car.
Galimore and I got out and followed a walk bisecting a luxuriantly green lawn. The air smelled of jasmine and fresh-cut grass. From somewhere, I heard the tic-tic of a sprinkler.
Galimore thumbed the bell. A muted chime bonged inside the house.
Seconds passed. Galimore was reaching out again when the door swung inward.
The woman was tall and weighed approximately the same as my purse. She wore black spandex shorts and an oversize tee atop a black sports bra. Which was not needed. She held a plastic water bottle in one hand.
"Yes?"
Galimore flashed some sort of badge, quickly jammed it back into his pocket.
"Sorry to disturb your workout, ma'am. We're looking for Craig Bogan." Sunny as could be.
"Why?"
"I'm afraid that's confidential."
"Then so are his whereabouts."
Galimore beamed a megawatt smile. "My bad. Let's start again." The woman took a long slug from the bottle. "You think my tits are saggy?"
"Far from it."
"Craig does."
"Then Craig needs corrective lenses."
"He needs more than that." The woman stuck out a hand. "Reta Yountz."
They shook so forcefully, Reta's bracelet jumped like a string of ladybugs doing a conga.
"Craig would be Craig Bogan?" Galimore asked.
Reta nodded.
"Your husband?"
"Jesus, no. We just live together."
Reta tipped her head to one side and opened her lips ever so slightly. Her face had a sheen of perspiration that made her cheeks shine.
"Maybe I'll get a boob job." Looking directly at Galimore.
"A totally unnecessary expenditure." Looking straight back.
I fought an impulse to roll my eyes.
As Galimore worked his charm, I studied Reta. Her hair was pulled carelessly up and held back by an elastic band. I guessed her age at around forty.
"We'd like to ask your boyfriend a few questions." Galimore was oozing charisma. "Nothing big."
"You'll come back and see me afterwards?" Reta used the hem of the tee to wipe her throat, exposing a rock-hard midriff.
"You can count on it."
"He's in the greenhouse."
The greenhouse was one of those glass and metal affairs that, from a distance, look like the skeleton of an actual building. This one was much larger than I'd expected, big enough to accommodate a couple of small planes.
When we entered, the heat and humidity felt like a living thing. The air was heavy with the smells of fertilizer, loam, and compost.
Overhead, the glass walls arched into a high dome. Underfoot, the ground was covered with gravel.
Rows of wooden planters shot the length of the building, each outfitted with pipes that ran upward into more pipes that I assumed were a central irrigation system. Baskets hung from hooks. Pots sat on the floor.
There was so much flora I could almost hear the photosynthesis going on around me. I knew some easy ones. Basil, impatiens, ferns, geraniums. The rest were a leafy green mystery.
We both looked around. Bogan was nowhere in sight.
Galimore called out, got no response.
When he called out again, a voice bellowed from beyond an open door at the greenhouse's far end. We walked toward it between stands of toddler azaleas. Already my hair was lank and my shirt was sticking to my back.
The owner of the voice was in a small room that appeared to function as some sort of prep area. He was kneeling beside a barrel and, on hearing our approach, swiveled, trowel in one hand.
Bogan's hair, once red, was now salmon-gray. Rosacea made it hard to tell where his pink face ended and his scalp began.
From Bogan's greeting, I guessed the greenhouse had few walk-in customers.
"Who the hell are you?"
Galimore did the quick badge-flip thing. "We have a few questions for you, Mr. Bogan."