The Guilty Plea (2 page)

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Authors: Robert Rotenberg

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BOOK: The Guilty Plea
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Greene read the front page of the newspaper on the porch. “Divorce from Hell trial,” he said.

His father picked up the paintbrushes and the stir stick.

“Lover Boy’s dead. This morning the Filipino nanny found him stabbed in his kitchen.” Denise sounded excited to deliver the bad news. “His four-year-old boy was asleep upstairs. Doesn’t know what happened yet.”

“On my way,” Greene said after she gave him the address.

“I’ll clean up,” his father said.

“Call you tonight.” Greene bent down and kissed his dad on his forehead, then jumped into his car and slapped the emergency light on the roof.

Ten minutes later he pulled his ’88 Oldsmobile behind a police cruiser in front of 221 Hillside Drive and stepped out into the morning sunlight. Taking his time, he looked up at the house, which was elevated well above the street.

“Hello, Detective,” a young policewoman at the front door said when he got to the top of the stairs. She was a thin East Indian woman with a slender nose. “P. C. Mudhar. I’m the first officer on scene.”

“Detective Greene.” He shook her hand. It was sweaty. “Your first homicide call?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Where’s the little boy?”

“Upstairs with the nanny.” Her voice was thin. “I told her to keep him in the room.”

“You see him?”

“For a second. He was waking up. The nanny says she found
Mr. Wyler in the kitchen when she came to work this morning.” Mudhar had a palm-size police notebook, and she flipped it open. “She said that was about seven-thirty. I checked the body. There are no vital signs.”

“You call for backup to cordon off the street?”

Mudhar shook her head. “Not yet, sir.”

“Don’t worry,” Greene said. “I called it when I was driving over. Cars will be here any minute. Send someone to Tim Hortons to get a chocolate milk and a doughnut with sprinkles.”

“Yes, sir.”

“I told dispatch to hold off the ambulance until we get the boy out of here. Anyone else in the house?”

“No, sir. I checked. It’s clear.”

“Good work.”

Mudhar smiled and closed her notebook.

“What’s the nanny’s name?” he asked.

She opened her notebook again. “Arceli Ocaya. Says the boy’s mother has been acting strange the last few weeks.”

As he’d driven to the house, Denise the dispatcher had briefed Greene on the recent police occurrences involving the wife. Samantha Wyler had been harassing her soon-to-be ex-husband with nasty voice messages and angry e-mails that were close to the line, but not actual threats. A pair of rookie police constables had warned her to stop. The usual stuff.

With four murders on the go, there’d be a scramble among the homicide detectives to grab good officers to work their cases. Greene called Daniel Kennicott, a smart young cop who’d worked with him on his last murder. Kennicott had his cell phone set so if Greene called it had a special ring tone.

“Detective Greene?” Kennicott said.

“Where are you?” Greene asked.

“On patrol. Started my shift about half an hour ago.” Kennicott sounded sleepy. “First day back. What’s up?”

The two men had a complicated relationship. Kennicott’s older brother, Michael, was murdered five years earlier. At the time Kennicott was a lawyer at one of the top downtown firms. Twelve months later when the investigation stalled, Kennicott quit his law job and joined the force, determined to make the homicide squad in record time. It was Greene’s only unsolved case.

“A new murder.” Greene gave him the address. He was going to start Kennicott off with the toughest assignment of the day: informing the family of the murder.

“Be there in ten minutes,” Kennicott said.

Greene turned to Mudhar. “What’s the name of the boy upstairs?” Beads of perspiration pooled on the side of the young policewoman’s face. The reality of homicide work was that usually it was the greenest of the green cops who were the first to arrive.

This time Mudhar didn’t need her notebook. “Simon.” Her bottom lip began to quiver. “It’s gruesome.”

Greene put his hand on her shoulder. “Stay here and cover the door.” He looked at the cloudless sky. There was a smell of mint in the air. He must have crushed some coming up the steps.

“Yes, sir.” The wash of relief across Mudhar’s face was palpable.

Greene walked through the front hall and opened the kitchen door with his elbow. Already knowing what he’d see inside didn’t make it any less disturbing. Wyler’s fit, trim body was splayed out on the tile floor, arms flung to the sides, apparently helpless in the face of a knife attack that had lacerated his chest, the top of his shoulders, and his neck.

Greene bent close to the body without touching it. There were no obvious cuts to Wyler’s fingers or forearms. Forensics would look for skin or DNA under his fingernails, but at first blush there were no defensive wounds. The smell in the hot room was overpowering.

Scanning the kitchen, Greene saw a half cantaloupe on the counter, fruit flies swarming all around it. The rest of the room was as spotless as the hallway had been. All the cupboard doors were closed. Greene put his hand inches from the dishwasher. It was cool. Same with the stove, where he noticed three dish towels draped over the handle. The first was red and white, and the second was green and white. There was a gap the width of a towel and then another green one. A wooden block near the sink held a number of black-handled knives. The widest groove was empty. No sign of a knife on the floor or the counter.

There was nothing else Greene could do here until the forensic officer arrived. He had a sudden urge to be out of this room of death. He had to go upstairs to talk to a boy who no longer had a father.

3

Ted DiPaulo opened the door to his law office and stared at his desk. What a fucking mess. Damn, he hated paperwork. Even more, he hated a boring week like the one coming up. Today nothing was doing, and he’d be stuck pushing that pile of paper around. Tomorrow he had a guilty plea for a drunk driver, Wednesday a sentencing on a fraud case, Thursday a meeting with a new client charged with stealing from his employer. Friday zip. He could do all this in his sleep.

If there was one thing DiPaulo couldn’t stand, even more than dishonest prosecutors or incompetent judges, it was not having enough to do. Not having a big case on the go. Not getting into court to cross-examine a witness. Not having the press lapping up his every word.

Bloody summer. His law practice was too damn slow, as if everyone were on holiday. Even his best criminals.

DiPaulo needed to be in court the way an actor needed to be onstage. That’s why he’d started his career as a Crown Attorney, where prosecutors were on their feet all day long. With his love of doing trials and his great capacity for work, he had risen through the ranks fast. Became the youngest-ever head Crown of the Toronto office at the age of forty-one.

He’d thrived in the job. Couldn’t get enough of the pressure. The profile. Then, five years ago, his wife, Olive, was diagnosed with liver cancer. She died in three months, and in the blink of an eye he had to take care of his two teenage kids. All those years before that, he’d been a part-time parent, practically living at the office. That was no longer an option. He quit and went into private practice so he’d have more time.

At first Kyle, then fourteen, and Lauren, twelve, clung to him. Wanted him home every night for dinner. Funny thing. Just as he got used to it and started to crave their company, they turned into full-fledged teenagers. On the go all the time. And perhaps they knew their dad was much easier to live with when he got his daily dose of the courtroom. Soon he was back to doing big cases, sleepless nights and crazy hours, with the added bonus of a new closeness to his children. But that was time-dated, like a container of yogurt in the fridge. Kyle was away on a six-week canoe trip and would be off to university in September. Lauren was home, taking a summer school course. Another year and she’d be gone too.

He stopped for a moment at the credenza near his office door and picked up a framed photo. Olive died four months after their twentieth anniversary. On the first Mother’s Day after her death, the kids gave him this picture of the two of them on top of Ayers Rock. They had taken the hiking trip to Australia to celebrate their forty-fifth birthdays, which were one week apart. Ted was very tall, over six feet six. And big. Olive was quite short, fine and delicate.

It was his private ritual to look at the photo every time he entered and exited the office. In a job where the demands on his time and emotions were so extreme, he was determined to keep this piece of his own life intact. Half a decade. He’d never forgotten.

He settled behind his desk and the phone rang. DiPaulo smiled. On Saturday night he’d been invited over to some friends’ house for dinner and they’d introduced him to a woman named Chiara. She was an orthopedic surgeon, a few years older, smart and independent, Italian even, though a dark beauty from Sicily in contrast with his blond northern Italian blood. They’d joked about who started work earlier on Monday mornings, and as he was leaving, he gave her his card and said, “Call if you want. Earlier the better.”

After Olive died, DiPaulo had waited a few years before he started dating. At first he made the predictable mistakes—talked incessantly about his late wife, his children, or his career as a criminal lawyer. Lessons learned. He wasn’t going to blow this one.

He leaned far back in his chair. “Hi there.” His voice was warm. Even sexy.

“Ted, so glad you are in early,” a male voice said. He recognized it
immediately. It was Winston Feindel, a family lawyer who sent DiPaulo a lot of work.

“Winston, oh, hi.” He snapped straight up in his seat. “You must be on your way to court.”

Feindel was an elderly British barrister who’d moved to Canada ten years earlier. Trading on his English accent, his well-tailored suits, and his courtly manner, he had quickly established himself as a leading light in the local family law bar. His specialty was representing women splitting up from rich husbands. When a client had to testify in a divorce trial, he sent them to DiPaulo to prepare them for court. DiPaulo had been working with Samantha Wyler, a particularly difficult woman, since the beginning of July, and her divorce trial was starting this morning.

“Unfortunately,” Feindel said. “The trial has been canceled.”

This was Feindel’s style. Very British. Understated. “Canceled?” DiPaulo asked. “Why?”

“My part in this matter has ended. Ms. Wyler will now be your full-time client.”


My
client? Divorce isn’t a crime.”

“Ah. But murder is,” Feindel said.

“What?” DiPaulo said. “Who?”

DiPaulo had watched as Samantha, or Sam as she insisted on being called, had become increasingly unglued in recent weeks. What had she done?

“Ms. Wyler’s now
late
husband was found at his home this morning. Victim, it seems, of a great many stab wounds. Puts a crimp in the divorce action.”

“Oh, no.”

“I just received a phone call from a homicide detective, Ari Greene. You know the gentleman?”

“Good cop,” DiPaulo said.

“The detective was inquiring as to the whereabouts of our formerly mutual client.”

After all his years in the court, DiPaulo prided himself in his ability to take startling news in stride. But he needed a minute to absorb this. The air-conditioned office felt hot. “Where’s Sam?” The tumblers in his mind were locking into gear.

“She was sitting on the steps of my office a few minutes ago when I arrived,” Feindel said, as calmly as he’d tell a colleague where he’d gone for lunch. “She’s in my office now and most upset.”

And a dangerous client for you, DiPaulo thought. Feindel wanted to pass her off fast, like a real-life hot potato. His law chambers, as he insisted on calling his luxurious office, were in a brownstone in Yorkville, a trendy midtown location. Near all the best restaurants for his ladies-who-lunch clientele. It would be a short drive.

“I’ll get right over there.”

DiPaulo reached for his old leather briefcase, grabbed a few pens and a clean pad of paper, and rushed out. Samantha Wyler could be questioned by the police, or even arrested, at any moment.

His office was on the eleventh floor. At the elevator, the numbers above the door were at six, then five, then four. To hell with it. He headed to the stairwell. Keeping one hand on the steel railing, he skipped down the concrete steps.

It wasn’t until he got to the third floor that DiPaulo realized he hadn’t paused at the anniversary photo on his way out. He gripped the railing. Then kept going down.

4

It was a perfect room for a boy to grow up in, Ari Greene thought, closing the door behind him and grinning at the dark-eyed child nestled in the bed on the far wall. Tucked in next to him, a short woman was reading him a book called
Really Big Trains
. A large poster of Thomas the Tank Engine smiled down on them from above. On the wood floor a throw rug featured a print of Curious George forever being chased by the man with the yellow hat. In a bay window that overlooked the street the built-in sitting area was covered with a half-finished Lego construction of a tall building.

“Hello.” The boy smiled at Greene, remarkably at ease with a total stranger coming into his room. He patted a small black dog at his side.

“I bet you’re Simon,” Greene said.

“Yep,” he said. “Arceli told me someone would be coming to see me. She said my daddy had to leave early. This is my dog Billy.”

Greene kept a smile on his face. “Arceli’s a special friend.”

“When she reads about the train named Victor she says Bictor.” Simon laughed.

The nanny nodded at Greene and forced herself to laugh along.

The boy had deep, dark eyes. “Have you ever been in a fire truck?” Greene asked.

“At day care they taught us ‘stop, drop, and roll.’” Simon popped out of bed, stood erect on the carpet, dropped to the ground, and rolled over to Greene’s feet.

Greene got down on one knee. “Ever been in a police car?”

“I’ve got one.” Simon jumped up and pulled a basket out from un
der his bed. It was packed with cars and trucks and trains. He expertly extracted a black-and-white car.

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