evidence. Only assumptions based on unfounded theories.”
Lacy almost said something sarcastic but let it go. They turned onto a wider street and drove for a few minutes with no conversation. Jeri turned and the streets were narrower, the houses smaller, the lawns not as well manicured. She pointed to her right and said, “Up there, the white frame house with the brown pickup. That’s where the Leawoods lived. Thad grew up there. He was fifteen years older than Ross.”
They drove past the house. Lacy asked, “Who lives there now?”
“Don’t know. It’s not important. All the Leawoods are gone.”
Jeri turned at an intersection, then zigzagged away from the residential areas. They were on a busy highway headed north. Finally, Lacy asked, “So how much longer is the tour?”
“We’re getting there.”
“Okay. As we drive around, mind if I ask some questions?”
“Sure. Anything.”
“The crime scene, up in Signal Mountain, and the investigation. What do you know?”
“Almost nothing. The killing was in an area that was popular with joggers and walkers, but there were no witnesses. According to the autopsy, the time of death was between seven and eight p.m., on a warm day in October. Leawood punched the clock at the warehouse at five-oh-five, the usual time, and left. He lived alone and kept to himself, very few friends. A neighbor saw him jog away from his apartment around six thirty, and as far as the police know, that was the last he was seen. He lived at the edge of town, not far from where the walking trail begins.”
The traffic thinned as they left the sprawl of Pensacola. A sign read: cullman, 8 miles .
Lacy said, “I take it we’re going to Cullman.”
“Yes. We’ll cross into Chavez County in about two miles.”
“Can’t wait.”
“Be patient, Lacy. This is not easy for me. You’re the only person I’ve confided in and you have to trust me.”
“Back to the crime scene.”
“Yes, back to the crime scene. The police found nothing. No hairs or fabrics, no blunt instrument, nothing but the nylon rope around his neck, tied off with the same knot, a double clove hitch.”
“And it was the same type of nylon rope?”
“Yes. Identical to the others.”
A sign informed them that they were now in Chavez County. Lacy asked, “We’re dropping in on Judge Bannick?”
“No we are not.”
They turned onto a four-lane highway and began passing the sprawl of Cullman: fast-food restaurants, travel motels, shopping centers.
Lacy asked, “So, what did the police do?”
“The usual. They dug around, went door to door, talked to other joggers and walkers, and coworkers, found a friend or two. Searched his apartment, nothing was missing, so they ruled out robbery as a motive. They did their best but got nowhere.”
“And this was 1991?”
“Yes. A very cold case with no clues.”
Lacy was learning patience and took deep breaths between questions. “I’m sure you have all of this in a file.”
“I do.”
“How do you gather this information from the police? They are notoriously protective of their files.”
“Freedom of Information requests. They’ll comply to some degree, but you’re right, they’ll never give you everything. All they have to do is claim it’s an ongoing investigation and slam the door. However, with the old cases they sometimes relax a little. That, plus I go talk to them.”
“Doesn’t that leave a trail?”
“It could.”
They turned off the highway onto an exit ramp and followed a sign pointing toward the historic downtown. “Ever been to Cullman?” Jeri asked.
“I don’t think so. I checked last night, and BJC has not had a case here in the past twenty years. Several in Pensacola, but things have been quiet in Chavez County.”
“How many counties do you cover?”
“Too many. We have four investigators in the Tallahassee office and three in Fort Lauderdale. That’s seven for sixty-seven counties, one thousand judges, six hundred