Authors: David Rosenfelt
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #FIC022000
Childs is up and at him like a cat, showing frightening quickness for a man his size. He lands two more punches, one to the
side of Marcus’s head and another that glances off his shoulder. Marcus backs up a few more steps.
I can see Willie’s grip tighten on the gun to the point that I’m afraid he’s going to shoot himself. But we keep our positions;
it seems too soon to intervene.
Suddenly we see a slight movement, and Childs screams in pain. The punch from Marcus was so quick and short that it was hard
to detect, but it leaves Childs holding his stomach and gasping in pain on the floor.
Marcus moves toward him and Childs somehow summons the strength to punch at him again. This time it’s done with far less force,
probably because it’s difficult to punch and wretch at the same time.
Marcus leans down and grabs Childs, lifting him off the floor and over his head as if he were a rag doll. He throws him halfway
across the room, and Childs lands in a heap. It is the most astonishing thing I have ever seen in my life.
Marcus walks across to Childs, who is unsuccessfully trying to get up. Marcus pulls his fist back and lifts him halfway up
by his collar, preparing to hit the defenseless man in the face. There is no doubt in my mind that it will kill him, and even
though I have a great desire to look away, I can’t.
I’m cringing, waiting for the blow to be delivered, when Marcus thinks better of it. He relaxes his hand and lets Childs go,
and watches as he crumples to the floor.
Willie looks at me, and I just nod. We turn and go down the stairs. I think Marcus can handle the rest of this on his own,
and I sure as hell don’t want him knowing we stayed to see what happened.
Laurie is sleeping when I get home. I’m certainly not going to wake her, so I don’t get to tell her about the events of the
lovely evening spent with Marcus and Childs. It’s probably just as well: She needs a lot of rest, and dealing with this lunacy
can’t help.
She’s still sleeping when I get up in the morning, and only wakes up after I shower and have coffee. She wants to be updated
on the evening’s events, and I take her through it. She’s anxious to hear from Marcus to learn if he got Childs to talk, as
am I, but thinks I did the right thing by leaving when I did.
Two off-duty policemen show up, whom I am hiring to guard the house while Laurie is in it. They will alternate with two other
cops, so that the house will always be covered, at least until we decide it’s no longer necessary. Even though Marcus has
been able to deal with Childs, the fact is that he was hired to shoot her, and whoever did the hiring can find someone else
to attempt the job.
Laurie’s daytime nurse and two physical therapists show up a few minutes later. I make a note to stock the refrigerator; these
people are going to have to eat and drink. I have seemingly overnight gone from hermit to host, and it’s not a role I’m used
to.
Satisfied that Laurie is well taken care of, I head for the office, where Kevin and Edna are waiting for me. Edna has taken
to coming in relatively on time since Laurie was shot; she seems to want to be around to help if she can. It’s a side of her
I haven’t seen before, mainly because it hasn’t existed before.
Laurie sleeps late and Edna is coming in to work early. I have undoubtedly entered the bizarro world.
Kevin has characteristically analyzed our case and laid out the things we need to do to really get started. First on the list
is a trip down to the Walter Timmerman murder scene. He knows that I always like to start at the beginning and get a feel
for myself what happened. I know I’m not going to magically find some evidence that the police missed, but it helps me feel
grounded.
We still haven’t heard from Marcus, and I’m starting to get a little worried. I also haven’t heard from Pete Stanton, though
Marcus was supposed to bring Childs to the police when he was done with him.
Kevin and I arrive at the murder scene, and my guess is that if you had given friends of Walter Timmerman’s ten thousand guesses
as to the location where he might someday die, this actual place in downtown Paterson would have placed behind Mozambique
and Mars.
I’m sure the feeling Kevin and I have is different from what we would experience if we came here at night, which is when Timmerman
took the bullet. At this hour of the day the feeling is dreary and hopeless; it seems as if all available energy has been
sucked out of the neighborhood. The unemployed, many of them probably homeless, get through the day talking on the corners
and reclining on the curbs. For some reason I think of the line in the Simon and Garfunkel song, “A good day’s when I ain’t
got no pain. A bad day’s when I lie in bed and think of things that might have been.” By that standard, these people seem
to be experiencing a good day, but their lives have surely long ago started “slip-sliding away.”
Were we here at night, we would likely be afraid. It would be a threatening, dangerous environment. Of course, the only way
Kevin and I would come here at night would be in an army tank, encased in a bulletproof bubble, guarded by a marine battalion
and Marcus.
I can’t stop thinking about Marcus. What if Childs somehow prevailed after we left? Maybe he hit Marcus over the head with
a pipe when he wasn’t looking. Marcus is not invulnerable; even Luca Brazi sleeps with the fishes.
Timmerman was shot in an alley behind a convenience store.
Kevin and I enter the store, which seems to only sell items identified by their Spanish name, and we talk to the clerk behind
the counter. He’s about eighteen years old, and watches us approach with obvious indifference.
“Hi. We’re investigating the murder that took place in that alley awhile back. We’d like to look around, if that’s okay with
you.”
He doesn’t say a word; I can’t tell if he doesn’t understand English or is just not interested in the way we are using it.
“So we’ll just look around, all right?”
Again not a word.
“Kev, you want to jump in here?” I ask.
“No, you’re doing great.”
“Thanks.”
I reach for a package of Mentas, which looks and sounds like it must be mints, and hand the clerk a twenty-dollar bill. “Keep
the change,” I say, and for the first time I see a flicker of understanding.
“We’ll be out back,” I say, and Kevin and I leave the store.
“Out back” is little more than a few Dumpsters and some garbage that didn’t make its way into one of them. It is no longer
a protected crime scene, but there remains the faint outline of a chalk mark that identified where Timmerman’s body was found.
It is covered by an overhang from the building, which is why it hasn’t been completely washed away by summer rains. There
are also what appear to be faded bloodstains on a cement wall nearby.
There is not going to be anything for us to find here, and I can’t imagine Walter Timmerman felt any differently that night.
From what I know about him, there does not seem to be a possible reason for him to have come here willingly. In the unlikely
event he was out for drugs, or sex, he could have found a much better venue.
It seems far more likely that he was brought here for the purpose of being killed.
“He had to have been forced to come here,” I say.
Kevin nods. “That’s how I see it as well. Especially at night.”
“Why don’t you come back here tonight and check it out?” I ask.
Kevin smiles. “You don’t pay me enough, boss.”
On the way back to the office, I’m feeling somewhat rejuvenated. Going to the murder scene is primarily responsible for this;
it has focused me on the case, and at the same time made me more optimistic about its outcome. Nothing like the bloodstained
scene of a brutal killing to cheer up Andy Carpenter.
I can see a son like Steven, who perhaps felt wronged his whole life by a domineering father, flipping out and murdering that
father in a momentary rage. But I can’t see him bringing Walter down to the area we just visited and committing the murder
in cold-blooded fashion. It’s possible, I know, but I just can’t see it.
Laurie’s ongoing recovery has also enabled me to concentrate on the case in a way I couldn’t while I was in fear for her.
It was beyond distracting to be worried about her twenty-four hours a day, and I know now that I could not have continued
on the case were she not doing so well.
She is in capable hands, and well protected, and while I will think about her a lot, I won’t obsess about it.
My only distraction now is Marcus, and the fact that more than sixteen hours have passed since Willie and I left him with
Childs, and I have not heard a word. It’s ludicrous to consider myself responsible for Marcus’s protection and physical well-being,
but if last night somehow ended badly, I don’t know that I’ll ever forgive myself for leaving him there.
I decide to call Laurie and see how she’s doing, only to realize that I neglected to bring my cell phone with me. It was a
stupid thing to do: With all that is going on I need to be reachable at all times.
I borrow Kevin’s cell and call home, and Willie Miller answers. “Where the hell you been?” he asks.
I’m worried, so I decide I prefer asking questions to answering them. “Is Laurie all right?”
“Yeah, she’s fine, but we’ve been trying to find you.” “Why?”
“Marcus is here.”
L
AURIE IS DOING PHYSICAL THERAPY
when Kevin and I get home.
Willie is in the den with Tara and Waggy, feet up on the coffee table, drinking a beer and watching ESPN. Tara is working
methodically on a rawhide chewie, while Waggy’s front legs are going a mile a minute as he furiously tries to burrow a hole
in the carpet.
Willie tells me that Marcus is in the kitchen getting something to eat. I have seen Marcus eat once before, and it is seared
into my memory. While I have stocked the refrigerator because of all the people in the house, Marcus will clean it out by
himself. Then, if memory serves, he will belch once and start hunting for more food.
“What happened after we left last night?” I ask Willie.
“Laurie said to wait for her to finish her therapy. She wants to be there when we tell you. She’s almost done.”
“I don’t want to wait,” I say.
Willie shrugs. “You can always ask Marcus.”
“I’ll wait.”
Laurie is finished in ten minutes. During that time I hear noises coming from the kitchen, but I am not about to go in there
to see what is going on.
She calls us to the bedroom; she is back in bed and obviously exhausted from her efforts. I have seen her run five miles without
breathing heavily, and now a few minutes of exercise wipes her out.
“We talked to Marcus and learned what happened after you left. It’s not good news.”
“What do you mean?”
She nods. “Marcus asked Childs the questions you and he had discussed. He is confident that Childs had an incentive to tell
the truth.”
“Who hired him?”
“Childs didn’t know; nor did he know why. It was all done in secrecy, and he had no personal contact with the man. He was
paid two hundred fifty thousand dollars, with the promise of another two fifty when the jobs were completed.”
“Five hundred thousand dollars?” I repeat. It’s an amazing figure. Then I realize that Laurie said “jobs.” “There was more
than one job?”
“Yes. Andy, Childs killed Diana Timmerman. He planted the explosives in the house.”
“What?” I look at Kevin, and he is as bewildered as I am. None of this makes any sense; it’s connecting two different things
that I thought had no connection at all.
“Why the hell would someone want to kill you and Diana Timmerman?”
“Andy, Childs wasn’t after me. He was told to shoot the dog. He was told to kill Waggy.”
“Waggy?” I point to him. “This Waggy?”
“Yes.”
“That doesn’t make any sense. Somebody paid a hit man five hundred grand to shoot a dog?”
“Marcus was positive about it,” Willie says.
I have no idea what to make of this. It simply does not compute. “Where is Childs now?”
“That’s the bad news,” Laurie says, and she turns to Willie.
“He went for a swim,” Willie says. “But I don’t think he got very far, because he has a broken neck.”
“Marcus killed him?”
Laurie nods. “He was going to turn him in to the police, but Childs took another run at him, and Marcus got a little carried
away. He said he dropped him in the river.”
“Damn.” Hearing that Childs is dead doesn’t exactly bring me to tears, and I’m not likely to reflect that his untimely demise
“really puts things into perspective.” The problem is that now I have a million more questions to ask him, with no ability
to do so.
The truth is that I am defending someone against a charge of double homicide, and I had the real murderer in my hands and
let him get away. And thanks to Marcus, he’s not coming back.
Had I realized that the shooting of Laurie and the Timmerman murders were connected, I would have gotten all the information
out of him that I could, and then turned him in as the real murderer. And I should have realized that the shootings might
be connected; as Willie had pointed out, both Diana Timmerman and Laurie were connected to Waggy when they were victimized.