The Dead Room (26 page)

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Authors: Chris Mooney

Tags: #Fiction, #Crime, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Mystery & Detective, #General

BOOK: The Dead Room
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57

Darby jumped to her feet, hand reaching for her sidearm. Coop, leaning against the wall near the foot of the stairs, peered through a window overlooking the front street.

His body relaxed. He let out a long sigh.

‘It’s Jackie.’ He tucked the nine in the back waistband of his jeans, covered it with his tank and threw back the deadbolt.

He ran to the sofa and picked up his niece. ‘Stay here.’

Darby stood wobbly on her feet and watched as Coop ran barefoot through the rain pounding the streets and parked cars. He opened the back door of the car and placed the baby in the child seat.

Jackie rolled down the window. Darby could tell that the woman had been crying.

She looked around the street as Coop talked to his sister. Lots of parked cars. She couldn’t see anyone behind the windows.

Coop ran back inside the house. He didn’t shut the door and Jackie didn’t drive away. The woman’s face was pale, frightened.

‘She wants me to go with her,’ he said, picking up his sneakers. Water dripped down his face. ‘She thinks she’s seen some guys watching her house.’

‘I’ll call some people, have them guard her until –’

‘Until what? Don’t tell me you think this is going to blow over.’

‘The commissioner’s head of Anti-Corruption has taken over the case, this guy named Warner. He can –’

‘No police. I don’t want them involved – I don’t want anyone involved. Guys like King don’t work in a vacuum, Darby. They always have help.’

‘Warner knows I came over here to speak to you.’

‘Tell him you couldn’t find me.’

‘He’ll come looking for you.’

‘Let him come looking. Better yet, buy me some time. Tell him I called you and promised to speak to you later, say, around eight. I’ll already be at the airport.’

‘And what if they go looking for you there?’

‘Then I’ll figure out a way to handle it.’

‘Stay here, Coop. We can figure out a way –’

‘I’m not staying here. I can’t. I need to do this. I can’t risk having anything happen to Jackie or my mother.’

‘Your mother’s in Florida.’

‘Not for long,’ he said. He straightened, gripped her lightly by the shoulders. ‘Please let me do this my way, okay?’

‘What can I do to help?’

‘Lock up my place before you go.’

‘I will as long as you keep your mobile phone on and promise to pick up when I call.’

‘I promise. Make sure you do the same. I’ll call you later, after I get Jackie squared away.’

Coop stepped into the rain. She wanted to go to him but her feet felt nailed to the floor.

He turned and rushed back to her. Grabbed her gently by the face and then leaned forward and kissed her hard on the lips. She kissed him back, just as hard, not wanting to let go.

He let her go. He swallowed back tears.

‘I’d stay here if it would make a difference, I swear to God I would, Darby. But these guys are slick. They never go to jail. They always have inside help. How the hell do you think they managed to slip a bomb inside the house and on the Explorer?’

‘I’ve got to see this through, Coop. I can’t walk away.’

He closed his eyes for a moment, then swallowed. ‘Take care of yourself, Darb. Be careful.’

‘You too.’

Darby watched him get inside the passenger seat.

Get out
, she wanted to say.
Come back.

The Honda tore down the street and disappeared. She shut the door and turned back to the empty house, water dripping down her face and back.

Bono had stopped singing. Her eyes roamed across the boxes, the pictures still hanging on the walls, the dishes still piled in the kitchen sink. She stood there and took in the room, wanting to preserve it in her mind, wanting to try to hold some piece of him, knowing, right then, that this was it. Coop was leaving. He wasn’t coming back.

Darby locked the front door and checked all the downstairs windows. She took the stairs to the first floor, reminding herself to go into the basement and double-check the hatch doors to make sure they were locked.

She was heading back downstairs when her phone rang.

‘You’re a genius,’ Randy Scott said. ‘Mark fumed the inside of the binoculars and found a print – a damn good one. It rang the cherries in the database, but here’s where it gets weird. The print belongs to another dead person, only this guy’s named Daniel Russo from Wellesley.’

‘What happened?’

‘He died in some sort of home invasion five years ago. The database doesn’t give all the details. I have a case number but I don’t have access to our computer system – I don’t have the authorization. I know you do.’

‘Is Warner still there?’

‘No, he’s gone. They’re all gone, as a matter of fact.’

He’s probably still with the computer guy
, she thought. ‘I’m on my way back to the lab. I’ll see you in a few.’

Darby hung up and dialled Warner’s number.

‘Warner.’

‘It’s Darby. I’ve –’

‘Your computer guy still hasn’t broken through the password protection. The commissioner is here, and she wants to know if you spoke to –’

‘Listen to me for a moment.’ Darby moved across the living room, heading for the basement door to lock down the bulkhead. ‘I’ve come across some information regarding the binoculars we found in the woods. A fingerprint. It –’

A shadow moved in the corner of her eye. She turned to the dark hall and caught sight of the butt end of a shotgun as it slammed against the side of her head.

58

‘It was one of those wrong place, wrong time kind of things,’ Father Humphrey said.

Jamie’s eyes fluttered open. He was still lying on her bed, still holding the glass against his stomach and staring up at the ceiling. The bottle of Johnnie Walker, she noticed, was almost empty.
How long have I been out?

‘Danny was doing this home extension for a… mutual friend, I guess you could say. This gentleman was looking to fix up a house rather quickly, turn it around and put it back on the market – he’s an absolute genius when it comes to property, this man. He’s made a fortune. I knew Danny was struggling to get his business off the ground so I gave him Danny’s name.

‘And your husband jumped at the opportunity, Jamie. I mean he jumped through
hoops
when he found out this gentleman was willing to pay cash to get the job done fast. No receipts, nothing to report to the IRS. You should have seen the look in Danny’s eyes. It was like I handed him a winning lottery ticket.’

Humphrey grinned, proud of his magnanimous gesture, and took a long sip of his drink.

Jamie managed to lift her head. It took some effort but not as much as before. That warm, blissful feeling from what seemed like hours ago had started to trickle away. Pain had started to seep through the cracks. She could feel a dull throb from where her head had hit the wall, the scratching and soreness around her throat from the priest’s fingers.

‘The gentleman who hired your husband was very impressed by the quality of your husband’s work. Danny had a gift, no question – and by God, what a work ethic! He cleaned up the work site at the end of each day no matter how late it was, no matter how tired he felt, just in case this gentleman I mentioned decided to swing by and take a look around. Danny knew this was a big job for him and he wanted to impress. He probably should have just headed home instead of turning around to go back and clean up.’

She forced her head back, then let it roll to the side so she could see the hall.

‘So your husband goes back to the house to clean up and he finds this man’s wallet sitting on this half-finished kitchen worktop. Danny calls the man and leaves a message on his mobile. Your husband wants to impress, wants to show what a good guy he is, and you know what he did?’

Jamie didn’t answer. She swallowed, tasting blood.

Michael pulled back the valance. She saw Carter. He was scared but no longer crying. He turned and whispered something to his brother.

‘Your husband,’ Humphrey said, ‘remembers that his client spends most of his time on his boat at the Marblehead Yacht Club. It seems the two of them had several conversations about boats, Danny being some sort of yachtsman-in-training. So instead of pocketing the wallet and going home, your husband, the kind and generous soul that he is, gets back in his car and drives an hour north to deliver the wallet to the marina, finds the boat and guess who he sees sitting on the deck or whatever it’s called drinking beers along with his client?’

She wanted to hold Carter. Wanted to hold him and Michael in her hands and press their cheeks up against her and tell them how sorry she was for letting them down. Again. Wanted to scream the words so her boys could hear them, hear her hurt. Her guilt.

‘Danny hands over the wallet,’ Humphrey said, ‘and his client tells him to stay for a beer. Only Danny refuses because he recognizes the man sitting on the deck – Francis Sullivan. Only Francis isn’t going by that name any more, being dead and all. And, truth be told, he doesn’t even look like Francis Sullivan, not with all the surgery he’s had, and – wait, I forgot. You already know this part, don’t you?’

Jamie watched as Michael slid his foot out from underneath the bed.


No
,’ she said.

‘Danny didn’t tell you?’ Humphrey said. ‘I thought he would have shared this with you since you were a cop.’

Michael was inching out from underneath the bed.

‘Cops,’ Jamie said. ‘Call… ah… cops.’

Humphrey propped his head up from the pillow. ‘You called the cops?’

‘No,’ she said. ‘Dan… ah… didn’t… tell. Me.’

‘Danny recognized Francis,’ Humphrey said. ‘Danny told me. I don’t know what transpired at the marina, mind you, since Danny didn’t give me the exact details when he came to confession. But I could tell your husband was having this… crisis of conscience, I guess you could call it, at having the cursed luck of actually
recognizing
Francis Sullivan. Danny did a little research on the internet, found out that Francis had died tragically at sea and felt that he should come forward with what he’d seen – he wasn’t exactly sure if the man he saw was Frank Sullivan but he looked goddamn close. I couldn’t let that happen.’

Michael had slid out from underneath the bed. Carter held up the valance, a finger pressed up against his lips, telling her to be quiet.

‘I’m a man of God,’ Humphrey said. ‘I don’t want you to be tortured to death. The man who’s coming here, he’s… he’ll do things to you until you tell him the truth. Tell me what you did to Francis and I’ll give you a hot shot now, have you ride a nice warm wave right up to the Lord Himself.’

Get him out of the house. It’s the only way to keep the kids safe.

‘Take… ah… you.’

Humphrey sat up and cupped a hand over his ear. ‘What’s that, love?’

‘Take you… to… ah… see, ah, him. Sullivan.’

‘Where is he?’

‘Show… ah… you.’

Downstairs a door opened and slammed shut.

‘Too late now,’ Humphrey said, sighing. ‘You had your chance.’

59

Darby drifted back to consciousness, heading towards a hot, roaring pain that covered what felt like every square inch of her head, jaw and face. She thought she smelled fried seafood and it triggered a hazy childhood memory (
or is this a dream?
she wondered) of a summer sunset at Maine’s Kennebunk Beach and her father sitting next to her on a blanket, paper plates of fried clams between them, the white, waxy paper fluttering in the soft, warm breeze blowing up from the water, where her mother walked along the shore collecting sea glass and shells that she’d later put in a glass vase inside the kitchen. Darby couldn’t remember how old she’d been or what she and her father had talked about (although, given the season, it probably had something to do with baseball), and as her eyes fluttered open she had the sense that her father had, at least during that moment in time, been truly happy.

The room was semi-dark. Hot. Her head hung forward and she saw her lap. She was bound to a chair – hands tied behind her back, thick strands of rope wrapped around her thighs and ankles. Her head was no longer throbbing; it was screaming like a fire alarm, triggering her panic.

The pain can be managed
, she told herself.
The pain can be managed.

She took in a slow, deep breath, catching the faint smell of machine oil behind the fried seafood.

‘How’s your head?’ a man asked.

Darby swallowed, tasting blood. She took another deep breath and held it as she slowly lifted her head.

To her left, large bay windows dripping with rain. They looked out to a street light, the sky dark beyond the glass. Dull yellow squares of light with shadows from the raindrops covered a pale-coloured wall in front of her and, just a few feet away, the scarred top of a wooden table littered with paper cups, green beer bottles and a box that had probably been used to carry the grease-spotted cartons of fried clams, scallops and shrimp set up in front of the man who had talked to Baxter.

The driver of the brown van – the man who’d worn the tactical vest and left the blister pack of nicotine gum – sat on the other side of the table. Special Agent Jack King, or whatever name he was going by now, wore a dark shirt, no tie. She could see a small gold cross hanging from a chain.

Darby opened her mouth, relieved to discover she could move her jaw. ‘How many times did you hit me with the shotgun?’

‘Just once,’ King said. Beads of sweat dripped down his bald head. ‘When you fell to the floor, I switched to these.’

He held up his hands. They were covered in black leather gloves. ‘They’re lined with lead powder.’

That explained how he had managed to knock loose her cheek implant. She could feel it sliding underneath the swollen, throbbing mess of torn skin. He had split her stitches.

‘My apologies for hitting you so hard,’ he said, picking up a plastic fork, ‘but I was told you knew how to handle yourself – “she’s James Bond with tits” was what I was told. So I worked you over a little extra just to make sure you’d cooperate long enough for me to tie you up and bring you to the boot.’

He speared his fork into a fried scallop, grinning as he dunked it into a container of tartar sauce. Darby took in another deep breath, her chest constricting against the rope, and held it for a count of three.

‘Nice car, by the way,’ King said. ‘Goddamn shame to ruin a car like that, but it had to be done.’

Darby exhaled slowly through her nose. Deep, slow breathing; that was the key to managing the pain, to keeping it at bay and keeping her heart rate low and her muscles relaxed.
The pain can be managed
, she told herself, taking in another slow, deep breath through her nose.
I can manage the pain. The pain can be managed. I manage the pain
.

‘You don’t mind if I eat, do you?’ King asked. ‘I’ve got a long night ahead of me and I hate working on an empty stomach.’

‘Go right on ahead, Special Agent King.’

He ate another fried shrimp. ‘How’d you find out?’

‘Sorry, but that information is confidential.’

King grinned as he chewed. Darby spotted her SIG lying next to her mobile phone on the table. She stared at the nine, which was less than two feet away.
If I could only cut through this rope I

She straightened and pressed her back against the chair, hot bolts of pain slamming through the centre of her skull and drilling their way down her spine. She gritted her teeth, hissing.

T
HE PAIN CAN BE MANAGED
.

‘You want some Percocet?’ King asked, forking another shrimp.

I
CAN MANAGE THE PAIN
.

‘I can give you some,’ he said. ‘Percocet, Oxy, whatever you need.’

‘No.’

‘How about a beer? I’ve got Rolling Rock and Becks.’

‘Maybe later, after you’ve been arrested.’

‘You’re an original, McCormick, I’ll give you that. Your old man would be proud of you.’

‘How do you know him?’ Darby wiggled her fingers. She could feel the damp fabric of her shirt, the back waistband of her trousers. The rope didn’t have much give; she felt it biting into the skin of her wrists.

‘I never met him personally; just heard stories,’ King said.

‘Were you the one who killed him?’

He seemed to be considering the question when a mobile phone chimed. Hers. She saw the light come to life on the cracked screen.

King picked it up. Not a phone call; a text message. He read the screen and stopped chewing.

She pinched her belt between her fingers and pulled. ‘Anything good?’

‘Someone named Madeira James sent you an email, wants you to call her immediately.’

‘Great. Can I borrow my phone for a moment?’

King didn’t answer but continued reading the message.

Darby moved the belt another quarter of an inch. The buckle got caught on a trouser loop.

He read the message for what seemed like a long time. He put the phone down and grabbed a bottle of Rolling Rock. His face had changed.

‘Bad news?’ she asked.

‘Nothing we can’t handle.’ He wiped his mouth. ‘Got a proposition for you.’

‘I’m all ears.’

‘Kendra Sheppard had audiotapes, pictures and notes on certain people. Hard copy, in other words. We haven’t been able to locate it.’

‘That’s too bad.’

‘We need these files, so you have to tell me where they are. You tell me where Kendra hid these audiotapes, notes and whatever else she had, and I might be willing to answer some of those nagging questions you’ve got about your old man.’

‘You’re the one who tortured her to death – what did she tell you?’

‘I wasn’t there, I was –’

‘You were in the woods. You came there to retrieve your friend.’

‘Bingo. Kendra didn’t, ah, hand over the information that was requested. My interest –
your
interest – is these tapes and whatever else Kendra has. I need to know where they are.’

‘Small problem,’ she said.

‘And what might that be?’

‘Kendra was dead when I found her. I mean, really dead. Unlike you, she didn’t manage to rise from the ashes. How did you manage to pull off such a great disappearing act?’

‘What did Sean tell you?’

‘He didn’t tell me anything.’

‘You talked to Ezekiel.’

‘Who?’

He sighed. ‘We know Kendra visited him. And we know you talked to him.’

‘How do you know that?’

‘A little birdie told me. Problem is, the schizo shit-head did that whispering trick and we couldn’t hear so good. The listening devices we planted in there, as good as they are, there’s still a lot of interference. The conversation you had with him, we can have it enhanced, but that’s going to take some time, so I decided to bring you here and jump to the chase.’

Darby pulled on the belt – not an easy thing to do with only two fingers.

‘You can stop your fidgeting,’ King said. ‘Even if you pull some sort of Houdini act, you’re not going anywhere. You’d be dead before you reached the front door.’

‘Brought your friends with you?’

‘Yes, the whole gang is here. Now, back to Ezekiel. What did you two talk about?’

‘Ask him.’

‘No can do. He hanged himself in his cell this afternoon.’ King winked, then popped a fried clam into his mouth.

Darby pulled on the belt. ‘I take it his suicide wasn’t voluntary.’

‘We hired someone on the inside. We’ve got people everywhere.’

‘How many people are involved in your little club again?’

‘Too many, if you want to know the truth.’

‘You should have hired someone to remove your fingerprints from the database.’

The humour left King’s face.

‘That’s probably why you’re in such a hurry, right?’ Darby gave another hard tug on the belt. ‘Now that your prints and Special Agent Alan’s prints rang the cherries on the
Federal
-owned database, I’m figuring the head of the Boston office is getting a call asking why the prints of not one but
two
dead Federal agents have suddenly appeared. Oh, and a body. I forgot we have Special Agent Alan’s body in a freezer.’

‘It doesn’t have to be painful,’ King said. ‘I can make it quick.’

‘Good to know.’

‘How much longer are you going to keep up the Clint Eastwood tough-guy routine?’

‘I don’t know. How much time do we have?’

King stood. Darby let go of her belt as he came around the table. He stepped behind her and gripped the back of the chair.

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