The Mercedes Coffin Faye Kellerman The Mercedes Coffin Faye Kellerman For Jonathan—for now and forever And welcome to Lila Contents Chapter 1 TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO, they were called nerds. Chapter 2 THE CONVERSATION WENT like this: ‘The case is fifteen years… Chapter 3 THE DRY FACTS of the homicide played out like this. Chapter 4 TOOLING THROUGH THE Santa Monica canyons with the windows opened… Chapter 5 WHEN HOMICIDE DETECTIVES were a hair shy of a solve,… Chapter 6 CALVIN VITTON AND Arnie Lamar had turned in their guns… Chapter 7 BY SIX IN the evening, most of the detectives had… Chapter 8 THE NUMBERS WRITTEN on Decker’s notepaper matched a small stucco… Chapter 9 WHAT?” MARGE SHRIEKED. Chapter 10 MELINDA LITTLE WARREN was not surprised by the detectives at… Chapter 11 A NUGGET POPPED INTO Decker’s mind. Chapter 12 AFTER WRITING COPIOUS notes on two packs’ worth of index… Chapter 13 WHILE THE MORNING coffee was brewing, Decker turned on the… Chapter 14 THE MESSAGE POPPED onto the machine after ten rings, giving… Chapter 15 THE STOREFRONT WAS old but spotless with Formica tubular tables… Chapter 16 MARGE LANDED WITH a half hour to spare, just about… Chapter 17 RINA POURED THE coffee. “Who were you talking to in… Chapter 18 ALTHOUGH DECKER HAD never met Rip Garrett, he recognized him… Chapter 19 THE ELEVATOR STILL wasn’t working, and the stairwell hadn’t gotten… Chapter 20 THEY CLEARED THE table, piling the china and silver into… Chapter 21 THE SHELL OF a 240Z took up valuable driveway space. Chapter 22 BANKS’S CELL HAD gone immediately to voice mail. It was… Chapter 23 IMRY KERIC WAS a spectral figure. Decker could see veins… Chapter 24 THE SUNSET WAS on the right, a fiery ball spewing… Chapter 25 JARED AND AMY Little were home by 9:45. There were… Chapter 26 STRAPP SCRATCHED HIS head. “Whatever you did to calm her… Chapter 27 BETWEEN THE MEMORIAL and his impromptu meeting with Genoa Greeves… Chapter 28 DECKER HANDED MARGE a slip of paper on which was… Chapter 29 DRESSED IN WHITE pants, a yellow polo shirt, and a… Chapter 30 WENDERHOLE STROKED THE arms of his wheelchair. Chapter 31 THE CALL WAS from Marge. Chapter 32 BY THE TIME Decker arrived home, Rina was dressed in… Chapter 33 VENICE BEACH SPANNED the socioeconomic spectrum in a ten-block radius:… Chapter 34 THE HOLLYWOOD SUBSTATION of the LAPD was a cinder-block bunker… Chapter 35 BY THE TIME Decker made it over to County Jail… Chapter 36 DECKER HAD BEEN operating on casino time—protracted periods under artificial… Chapter 37 THE WOMAN LOOKED as if she had just stepped off… Chapter 38 DECKER TOSSED MARGE the keys to the Crown Vic. “You… Chapter 39 DECKER LEANED BACK in his desk chair and regarded his… Chapter 40 PATIENCE WAS NOT only a virtue, it was a necessity. Chapter 41 WHO THE FUCK is this?” Chapter 42 IT TOOK A full week for Rina to even speak… About the Author Other Books by Faye Kellerman Credits Copyright About the Publisher CHAPTER 1 T WENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO, they were called nerds. Today, they’re called billionaires. Even among outcasts, Genoa Greeves suffered more than most. Saddled with a weird name—her parents’ love for Italy produced two other children, Pisa and Roma—and a gawky frame, Genoa spent her adolescence in retreat. She talked if spoken to, but that was the extent of her social interaction. Her teenage years were spent in a self-imposed exile. Even the oddest of girls would have nothing to do with her, and the boys acted as if she’d been stricken by the plague. She remained an island to herself: utterly alone. Her parents had been concerned about her isolation. They had taken her through an endless parade of shrinks who offered multiple diagnoses: depression, anxiety disorder, Asperger’s syndrome, autism, schizoid personality disorder, all of the above in comorbidity. Medication was prescribed: psychotherapy was five days a week. The shrinks said the right things, but they couldn’t change the school situation. No amount of ego bolstering or self- esteem-enhancing exercises could possibly counteract the cruelty of being so profoundly different. When she was sixteen, she fell into a deep depression. Medication began to fail. It was Genoa’s firm opinion that she would have been institutionalized had it not been for two entirely unrelated incidents. As a woman, Genoa had definitely been born without feminine wiles, or any attributes that made girls desirable sexual beings. But if she wasn’t born with the right female qualities, at least Genoa did have the extremely good fortune to be born at the right time. That is, the computer age. High tech and the personal computer proved to be Genoa’s manna from heaven: chips and motherboards were her only friends. When she spoke to a computer—mainframes at first and then the omnipresent desktops that followed —she found at last that she and an inanimate object were communicating in a language that only the blessed few could readily understand. Technology beckoned, and she answered the summons like a siren’s call. Her mind, the primary organ of her initial betrayal, became her most welcome asset. As for her body, well, in Silicon Valley, who cared about that? The world that Genoa eventually inhabited was one of ingenuity and ideas, of bytes and megabytes and brilliance. Bodies were merely skeletons to support that great thinking machine above the neck. But even growing up at the cutting edge of the computer age wasn’t a guaranteed passport to success. Achievement was surely destined to elude Genoa had it not been for one individual—other than her parents—who believed in her. Dr. Ben—Bennett Alston Little—was the coolest teacher in high school. His specialty was history with a strong emphasis on political science, but he had been so much more than just an educator, a guidance counselor and the boys’ vice principal. Handsome, tall, and athletic, he had made the girls swoon and had garnered the boys’ respect by being tough but fair. He knew everything about everything and had been universally loved by the twenty-five hundred high school students he had served. All that was good and fine, but virtually meaningless to Genoa until that fateful day when she passed him in the hallway. He had smiled at her and said, “Hi, Genoa, how’s it going?” She had been so stunned she hadn’t answered, running away, her face burning as she thought, Why would Dr. Ben know my name? The second time she passed him, she still didn’t answer back when he asked “how’s it going?” but at least she didn’t exactly run away. It was more like a fast step that converted into a trot once he was safely down the hall. The third time, she looked down and mumbled something. By the sixth time, she managed to mumble a “hi” back, although she still couldn’t make eye contact without her cheeks turning bright red. Their first, last, and only actual face-to-face conversation happened when she was a junior. Genoa had been called into his office. She had been so nervous that