“Her daddy left her nothing. Her friends treated her like dirt. And then she started working for them.”
“She had keys to their houses,” Conklin added, “and passwords to their security systems. She also had plenty of opportunity. What did she say, Lindsay? That nobody even knew she’d been there. That her clients liked it that way.”
“She was just ten when her father was killed?” Jacobi asked.
“Right. She couldn’t have killed those highfliers from the eighties. But the fact that her father was a victim might have inspired her.”
“Copycat,” said Jacobi.
“So we think,” I said.
Jacobi slapped his desk, and dust flew up.
“Pick her up,” he said. “Go get her.”
Chapter 95
I SAT BESIDE Conklin at the table in the interrogation room, ready to jump in if needed, but he had the interview under control. Norma Johnson liked him, and Conklin was showing her what a good person he was, a guy you could trust — even if you were a freaking psycho.
“I don’t understand why you didn’t tell us that your father had been killed by a snake, Norma,” Conklin said.
“Yeah. Well, I would have told you if you’d asked me, but you know, I didn’t connect my father’s death to any of this until you said that the Baileys and Sara had been killed by a snake.”
“Brian Caine and Jordan Priestly? Did you know them?”
“Not well. I work for Molly Caldwell-Davis occasionally, and I’ve met Brian at her place once or twice. Jordan was there all the time, but we weren’t friends.”
“Did you work for Molly on the night of May twenty- fourth?”
“I’d have to look at my book, but no, wait. Didn’t Molly have a party on the twenty-fourth? Because I was invited. I dropped by, didn’t know anyone, so I said ‘hey’ to Molly and left after about ten minutes. She didn’t need me to walk Mischa.”
“And so your relationship with Molly was what? How would you describe it?”
“Um, business-casual. I met her through an ex-boyfriend of mine. You may have heard of him. McKenzie Oliver?”
“The rock star who died from a drug overdose?”
Norma Johnson played with the ends of her hair. “Yeah, that’s the one. We weren’t dating at the time.”
Conklin made a note in his book, asked, “Do you have any thoughts on this, Norma? Anybody jump into your mind who could’ve killed your dad and then, like, twenty-three years later, maybe killed a bunch of people you know?”
Johnson said, “No, but this is a very small town, Inspector. Everyone knows everyone. Grudges can last for generations, but even so, I don’t know any killers. I’m pretty sure of that.”
Johnson’s demeanor was low-key, bordering on snotty — and that was crazy. For the third time, she was in a small room with cops. She had to know she was a suspect. She had reason to be nervous, even if she was innocent.
She should have been asking if she needed a lawyer. Instead she was flipping her hair around and flirting with Conklin.
I made a mental note: Tell Claire to review McKenzie Oliver’s autopsy report.
And another: Find out if Norma Johnson had access to or owned a poisonous snake.
I excused myself, stepped outside the interview room, and stood with Jacobi behind the glass. Together we watched and listened as Norma Johnson told Conklin about her pedigree.
“I don’t know if you know this, but my father was the great-great-great-grandson of John C. Frémont.”
“The Pathfinder? The explorer who mapped out the route to California just ahead of the gold rush?”
“That’s the one. My bloodline is royal blue, Inspector. I’ve got nothing against the wannabes I work for, in case that’s what you’re thinking. John C. Frémont went down in history — and he started out life just like me. He was a bastard. Literally.”