Family Ties (John Taylor Book 5) Read online

Page 4


  “You said nothing was taken from the apartment. How could you possibly tell?”

  Taylor waved his hand around the room and the piles of clutter. He had not walked the rest of the apartment yet, but he would bet the entire thing looked similar.

  “I should have said nothing major was missing. The Wisslers’ had all of their notable valuables insured, and we have been able to locate all of those items here inside the apartment. Again, I cannot rule out someone taking an item we have not been able to say was in the apartment at the time of her death, for obvious reasons.”

  “The notes all around the apartment, what do they say?”

  Taylor had seen more notes in the sitting room, similar to those by the front door. They were by lamps, by doorways, and by the fireplace, as well as all over the small table that sat next to the sitting chair.

  “They are reminders. Lock the door, turn off the light, don’t forget your keys ... things like that. Herr Wissler had a rapidly deteriorating form of Alzheimer’s. His recent death was due to complications from that illness. The notes are a common tactic for those living with degenerative illnesses to help in completing mundane but important tasks, or so I’m told.”

  “His autopsy confirmed the illness?”

  “I don’t believe he had an autopsy. I’ve only glanced over his records to confirm similar questions I’ve had, but the investigating medical examiner did a cursory exam and looked over Herr Wissler’s medical records and decided an autopsy was not necessary. From his notes, there were enough tests in his medical records to not doubt the diagnosis, and of course, what we see here also supports it.”

  “His wife didn’t seem to agree. She asked Whitaker to come look into it for her.”

  “Yes, as I said, she was very persistent to us as well. My understanding is she didn’t doubt her husband’s diagnosis, just his manner of death.”

  “Which means there’s a chance her death was connected, right?”

  “Was there a chance that a retired man with no known enemies and a fatal disease, was murdered in such a way as to go unnoticed for reasons we cannot ascertain, and his wife murdered by an intruder capable of picking the lock to her apartment, killing her confidently without hesitation or overkill, and leaving without being seen on video or by neighbors? I suppose there is a chance, but it would not be my primary area of focus.”

  “Your primary focus is on her house guest, who’s gone missing,” Taylor said, bringing his concerns out into the open.

  “As I told you and your Director Solomon, my interest in Agent Whitaker is only as a witness. While I do find it concerning she has disappeared so thoroughly, and that she visited the site around the time of Frau Wissler’s death, I am inclined to give her the benefit of the doubt. The longer she remains unaccounted for, however, the less I am inclined to offer it.”

  Taylor did not believe him for a second. Had he not known Whitaker, she would have been Taylor’s prime suspect, too. He did know her, though, and he was sure there was something he was missing that would explain her disappearance.

  Taylor bent down and picked up several pieces of paper near the side of the chair with the most dried blood on it. While the tops of the paper were covered in shoe prints, the thing Taylor found notable, was the dried blood on the side opposite the shoe print, the side that faced the floor.

  This was not a pool of blood - since most of that drained into the chair, absorbed by its cushions - but underneath the paper, Taylor could see a few dried bloodstains on the wooden floor.

  “We noticed that, too,” Graf said. “She was killed before everything was scattered around, which probably means her assailant was looking for something.”

  Taylor let out a grunt of acknowledgment but did not say anything else. Graf followed him as he walked the rest of the apartment. The place was surprisingly large with more bedrooms and bathrooms than the small house where he'd grown up. From his brief tour and a rough thought to the outside of the building, Taylor would guess the apartment took up a fourth of the top floor of the building.

  Every one of the rooms was the same as the sitting room. The contents of drawers, medicine cabinets, and closets were all emptied, their contents were strewn about. Whoever had tossed this place had been thorough.

  “You’re certain nothing was taken?”

  “As certain as we can be. Besides nothing worth insuring being missing, the fact that every room in the apartment was equally dismantled, suggests the person didn’t find what they were looking for.”

  “Why do you say that?”

  “If you find what you’re looking for, do you keep searching? It’s possible the person found what they wanted in the very last drawer or box in the very last room they searched, but that seems unlikely.”

  The reasoning was sound, and probably something Whitaker would have noticed. This kind of investigation was outside of Taylor’s expertise.

  “Which means there’s nothing here to tell us where Whitaker went.”

  “Hence our coming to you.”

  “I have a number for the place she was staying at, in case something came up involving our daughter. I think it was the plaza… something. I believe Mrs. Wissler was paying for it.”

  “Yes, we identified that off of Frau Wissler’s phone records. We have instructed the hotel staff to change the lock and notify us if she returns. We went over her room but found nothing of note.”

  “I’d like to see it for myself, if that’s ok.”

  “I thought you might. I have made sure the hotel does nothing with the room until you have had a chance to see it.”

  “Good.”

  The drive to the hotel did not take long, which made sense. If Whitaker’s aunt had booked the room, she would have picked one nearby. Had Graf not told him Wissler paid for the hotel, Taylor would have known it the moment he saw the building. Whitaker was not cheap, but she tended to choose mid-range chain hotels when they stayed somewhere. She had joked often about how much money people spent to rent swanky rooms they basically only slept in. The hotel Whitaker’s aunt picked was very upscale, with fancy carpets and fancier chandeliers in the lobby.

  Graf retrieved a key-card from the manager and lead Taylor up to Whitaker’s room, which was a stark contrast to the apartment they had just been in. Everything was neat and tidy. Not just the stuff cleaned by the hotel staff, but Whitaker’s luggage was completely squared away. Clothes had been removed from bags and put into the drawers, something Taylor had never understood. If it was just him, he would have lived out of his suitcase, but Whitaker insisted it kept clothes from looking like that’s where they had been.

  Her toiletries were all neatly returned to her traveling case, not strewn about the counter as Taylor would have left them. In short, the room felt very much like Whitaker. While his mind was already taking everything in, looking for something to lead him to her, he could not help but feel a pang of sadness as he was reminded about the foibles that just made her more endearing.

  Taylor stopped reminiscing as he looked through the drawers of clothes. Everything was neatly folded, but once he started looking, it was not exactly the way she would have done it, after all.

  “Did your people toss the room?”

  “Yes, looking for something to tell us where she went. I told my men to put everything back like they found it, so we wouldn’t scare her off if she came back. Did we miss something?”

  “Not really, you just didn’t put things back the way she would have. She’s crazy anal-retentive. All of her shirts and pants would be facing the same side up and in the same direction. Some of the stuff here is upside down or backward. It just seemed weird that someone would have taken her things and put them back. Makes sense from what you said, though.”

  “Didn’t help. We didn’t find anything in our search, and she never came back.”

  Taylor made a non-committal noise and continued his circuit of the hotel room while Graf stood off to one side, watching him. As the German officer had said, there
did not seem to be anything notable, at least in plain sight.

  Taylor, however, knew Whitaker. He stopped back at the dresser, knelt down, and pulled out the bottom left draw as far as it would go. Once it was extended almost all the way, he reached in and around, bending his arm over the back of the drawer in a strange angle until he found what he was looking for. A moment later, he pulled out a thin manila envelope, creased and crumpled but intact. He then turned the envelope upside down, letting a brass key slide into his palm.

  “What’s that?” Graf said, standing up straighter and stepping towards Taylor.

  “I don’t know. I just know that’s one of the places Whitaker likes to hide things. It won’t defeat a detailed search, but most people tearing open drawers and spilling the contents, aren’t going to reach back in and feel along the back wall of the dresser for something taped there. Since it’s the bottom drawer, you won’t see it unless you’re at just the right angle, and even then, it’s dark enough that it’s kind of hard to see.”

  “That's weird, a law enforcement officer with regular hiding spots.”

  “Don’t you ever think about this stuff? The whole ‘if I was a criminal I’d do…’ I thought that was a common cop thing.”

  “Maybe in America.”

  “I guess,” Taylor said and opened the envelope.

  Inside was a single sheet of paper that looked to be pulled off a legal pad. On it was written an address.

  “Do you recognize that address?” Graf asked.

  “No, but I don’t live here.”

  Graf pulled out his phone and typed the address in. After tapping a few more buttons on the smart phone’s screen, he looked back up at Taylor.

  “It’s a self-storage facility. I find it doubtful that’s where she’s hiding.”

  “Sure, but she didn’t hide this inside the dresser for no reason. It was clearly important.”

  “It looks like it was in the garbage.”

  “Sure, but then it was taped to the inside of a dresser. I thought you guys always followed all the clues.”

  “I plan on following this one as well. I am just not sure it is as important as you seem to think it is.”

  “We’ll see.”

  The storage facility was not far from Whitaker’s hotel. It was about halfway between there and the Wissler apartment, which made sense. Taylor did not think Whitaker had taken out the storage unit since the number on it was written in someone else’s handwriting. If Taylor had to guess, he would have put his money on Frieda Wissler at least paying for it. In her frail condition, it was unlikely she could have carried anything down to the unit, but she could have easily hired labor to take care of those details.

  The facility itself was actually fairly familiar, looking like one of the thousands of such places that had opened across America in the last decade. Even Europe could not escape its ubiquity.

  Graf got them through the gate by flashing his badge at the camera. He then drove them up and down the rows until they found the number they were looking for. Taylor hopped out as soon as they were parked in front of the numbered locker, leaning down to the lock.

  Turning his head to make a comment at Graf, three men caught his attention. They were four or five lockers down and walking towards Graf and Taylor with a sense of purpose. Taylor had not heard a car and did not see one anywhere near the three men, who were also not looking at any of the lockers as they closed the distance between them and Taylor. On top of everything else, all three men wore heavier than needed jackets, which further triggered warnings in Taylor’s head.

  “Graf,” Taylor started to say in warning when the first man’s hand went into the mostly closed coat. Taylor did not think, he just moved, pushing off the ground and catching Graf around the mid-section, pulling both of them down, putting the car between themselves and the three men.

  Graf had a look of surprise on his face as the two of them hit the ground, right up until the first gunshot rang out.

  “What …?”

  “Three men, armed, about thirty feet that way,” Taylor said, pointing through the car to the position he had seen the men.

  Graf reached to his waist and pulled his own gun out of its holster. Taylor silently cursed the fact that he had been forced to leave his own weapon at home but was silently happy that at least Germany was not one of those countries that did not force the police to go around unarmed.

  Bullets continued to slap into the car and the closed storage locker door. Graf pushed himself off the ground into a crouch and lifted his pistol into a raised two-handed grip while Taylor slid as far to one side while still protected by the body of the car as possible to give him room. Since Taylor did not have a weapon of his own, all he could do was watch Graf protect the two of them.

  Graf pushed himself up just enough to squeeze off two shots in return before popping back down. Turning to say something to Taylor, Graf instead dropped his weapon and grabbed his arm, falling to one knee.

  Blood began seeping through Graf’s fingers, darkening his grey suit jacket. Since he had been behind the car, Taylor assumed it must have been a ricochet that hit him.

  “Scheiße,” he said through gritted teeth.

  Taylor reached over and picked up the dropped weapon.

  “Can you call this in?”

  Graf nodded and pulled his now blood-stained hand off his arm, reaching into his pants pockets for his phone. Taylor ducked his head down to look under the car, checking where each assailant was. The few shots Graf had gotten off had gotten the men to stop their forward advance. Had Taylor been in their shoes, he wouldn't have started a firefight in what was essential an alleyway, stuck between two walls of closed storage bay doors, with effectively no cover. Especially if his target was still next to a giant chunk of metal in the form of a car they could use as their own cover.

  Admittedly, their plan had probably been to catch himself and Graf by surprise. The gunmen probably were not looking to kill them either, since the corner where this row of storage bays ended was close enough to still be in effective range.

  They were also showing themselves to not be total amateurs, either. Once Graf had begun returning fire, the three men had stopped their advance and were retreating under a base of fire, with one almost to the edge of the row and cover.

  Instead of popping up and firing over the hood of the car as Graf had done, which would have put him directly in the line of fire, Taylor duck-walked sideways and leaned out, Graf's service weapon already up and aiming roughly in the area where he had seen the legs of the man furthest away.

  One of the men was still putting rounds in the car as the other two backed away quickly. Taylor ignored the man firing for the moment since, in his current position, the guy had a bad angle on Taylor. Pulling the trigger four times in rapid succession, Taylor managed to hit both men who had been retreating for cover. The one furthest away went down like a marionette with his strings cut, a sure sign of a solid and possibly fatal hit.

  The other man spun as he was shot, rolling over as he hit the ground and pulling up his own weapon, forcing Taylor to duck behind the car again to avoid getting hit. Bullets began ricocheting off the pavement as the gunman tried shooting under the car to get Taylor, who was forced to move further back to put a wheel between himself and the shooter.

  The men were firing in synchronization, timing each’s need to reload, and still keep up a steady stream of bullets. An impressive feat, even when one of the shooters was not wounded. Taylor hunkered down and tried to work out his options. Sticking the gun up and taking some blind shots would make him feel like he was doing something, but he did not know if Graf had any magazines ready as reloads and even if he did, he would not have very much.

  The shooters, on the other hand, had obviously come prepared. Since he had taken out one of the three shooters, the other two had already reloaded once and did not seem prepared to slow down any time soon.

  Taylor leaned down and took a shot from under the car, roughly in th
e shooter's direction. What he needed was to just keep them at bay until Graf's reinforcements arrived, which could be in two minutes or twenty. Taylor was forced to retreat behind the wheel again as the gunmen redirected their fire towards the bottom of the car, sending bullets skipping across the asphalt.

  That was the response Taylor was waiting for. He popped up and assessed the situation quickly, bringing his weapon to bear on the first person he saw. That turned out to be the man still standing. The injured gunman had picked himself off the ground and was rounding the corner as Taylor drew a bead on his friend.