You Think You Know Me Pretty Well aka Mercy (37 page)

BOOK: You Think You Know Me Pretty Well aka Mercy
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“And what happened? Did he grab it?”

Jonathan hesitated for a second and his lips twitched upward. It was nearly a smile – but not quite.

“I wish I could latch on to that excuse. But he didn’t. Instead he just demanded to know what I was doing with it.”

“And what did you tell him?”

Jonathan took a deep breath.

“I told him the truth.”

“The truth?”

“Yes. Everything. I told him I was putting the gun there so it would be out of Dorothy’s reach. And I told him why.”

“You told him about the rape?”


Yes, I told him about the rape
!” Tears were now welling up in Jonathan’s eyes. “And you know what he did? He
laughed
.”

Jonathan choked back his tears.

“Laughed?”

“And he said…” Jonathan swallowed the lump in his throat. Even after these years, the memory evidently still pained him. “He said: ‘With any luck it’ll cure that bull-dyke bitch.’”

He broke down in tears. Alex hated to press him, but he had to know the rest.

“And then what happened?”

“Then what happened? I… I just snapped at that point. I swung the gun round to his head and he turned away in fear. It all happened too quickly: I just didn’t think.” Alex said nothing. As a lawyer, he knew that this was not the time to put words into someone else’s mouth. “I … I pulled the trigger. The next thing I knew, his brains were splattered all over the wall.”

 

 

 

22:20 PDT (06:20 BST)

 

Alone in the office, Juanita was getting worried. Nat still hadn’t come back and she couldn’t reach Alex on the phone. If Nat was really trying to get the clinic to send the papers, then wouldn’t he have done it by now? What was taking him so long?

And where was Alex?

Time was running out and so were their options. One by one the doors had been slammed in their faces and it felt like they were boxed in on all sides. Unless they could come up with something fast, Clayton Burrow would be dead in less than two hours.

Juanita wanted to have another try with the medical center herself. They had evidently faxed over something, according to the journal, so someone at the center must have been cooperating with them. The problem was that she didn’t know what Nat had been doing in the meantime and she didn’t want to step on his toes. If she phoned them up and contradicted something that he said, it would be disastrous.

But the problem was she couldn’t call Nat either. If she asked him about his progress with the medical center then she would have to admit that she knew what he was doing. This would be all right if she was correct. But what if she was wrong? She still couldn’t be sure. And, if she was wrong, then she was just wasting time by holding off.

She knew what she had to do. She couldn’t wait any longer. If he had called them in the guise of Dorothy Olsen’s legal representative, it would be to tell them to give the information to Alex Sedaka’s law firm. And if that was the case, then there was no reason why she shouldn’t call them as Alex Sedaka’s secretary and ask them for the information again.

She dialed and tapped her fingers nervously while she waited for an answer.

“Finchley Road Medical Centre.”

“Hallo, my name is Juanita Cortez. I’m calling from the law offices of Alex Sedaka in San Francisco.”

“Oh hi, I spoke to you earlier.”

“Yes, you’re not Nurse White, are you?”

“No, like I told you, she’s off duty.”

“Listen, it’s not actually Nurse White I need to speak to. It’s the administration. As I explained to Nurse White, we desperately need that information about Dorothy Olsen.”

“And, as I explained to that man who called earlier, we cannot release that information without authorization.”

Juanita got angry.

“You do understand that this is a matter of life and death, don’t you? You do understand that we have a client who’s scheduled to be executed in less than two hours for the murder of Dorothy Olsen unless we can prove that she was alive after the date he’s supposed to have killed her!”

“I can’t give out that information without permission. It would be more than my job’s worth.”

“Well in that case, can you let me speak to someone in authority – someone who
can
make a decision?”

“The best person to talk to would be Stuart Lloyd. He’s the Chief Administrator.”

“So can I talk to him?”

“Well he isn’t here yet. I mean, it’s only six twenty. But he should be here by eight o’clock.”

“But that’ll be too late! Our client is scheduled to die at one minute past midnight.”

“Well that’s plenty of – ”

“I mean
our
time! That’s eight o’clock in the morning
your
time!”

“Look, there’s nothing I can do. If you like, you can give me your number and if he comes in early then he can call you.”

Juanita was about to give it, when a call came through on another line. She looked at the display and saw that it was from Nat.

“I’ll have to call you back.” She pressed another button on the switchboard. “Hi, Nat.”

“Hi, Juanita. You sound harassed.”

“I’m holding the fort alone here. Where are you?”

“I’m sorry. I went home for a change of clothes.”

“A change of clothes?”

She was incredulous.

“Yes, I was feeling uncomfortable. I’m sorry.”

“Well are you coming back now?”

“Not yet. I have something else to do.”

“I don’t suppose you can tell me what this ‘something else’ is?”

“Not right now. Look, Juanita, there was an incident at my house.”

“What sort of an incident?”

“There was a burglar.”

“A burglar? What is this, an epidemic?”

“What’s that?” he asked, apparently oblivious to Juanita’s use of humor to relieve the tension.

“Nothing. So what did this burglar get away with?”

“He didn’t get away at all. I caught him.”

“Oh my God! Are you all right?”

Juanita realized now who the burglar was – and she was worried.

“Yes, I’m fine.”

“When you say you caught him?”

“He was kind of old and he didn’t put up much of a fight.”

“So what happened? Did you call the police?”

“Yes. They arrested him. And I’m supposed to go to the station to make a statement.”

“Can’t it wait?”

There was a brief hesitation. Then Nat spoke again.

“Is there anything that I can do at this stage anyway? I mean … look, I don’t mean to say this, but we seem to have run out of options.”

Juanita was silent. She was trying to read his words … and his tone. Had he really given up? Had he tried to get the medical center to give the information? Had he run up against the same obstacles as she had? And what about the burglar? It must have been Lee Kelly. Alex hadn’t been able to contact him to call it off and now he had been caught red-handed. Would he snitch on Alex? Or would Nat figure it all out? He may not be an experienced lawyer like Alex, but he’d been round the block a few times.

“Okay, look, you do what you have to,” said Juanita. “I’ll see you when I see you.”

“Okay. Wait, listen, did you say you were holding the fort alone?”

“Yes, why?”

“So did Alex go back to San Quentin?”

Juanita wasn’t sure whether to answer this. If Nat had figured out that Alex had sent Lee to spy on him, then it might be better to hold back, or even lie. But on the other hand, if their suspicions were unfounded, then wouldn’t it be better to rebuild the bond of trust by telling him the truth?

“No, he went to see Jonathan Olsen.”

“What for?”

Juanita noticed the unusual intensity in his voice.

“He thinks Jonathan knows about Dorothy’s flight to England.”

“When did he go there?”

“About forty minutes ago.”

“Has he called in yet?”

“No. And I can’t call him either. It’s like his phone’s switched off.”

“Okay. I’ll be back as soon as I can.”

When Nat rang off, the feeling of desolation returned to Juanita. She wanted to do something. But they had already tried everything. She had hoped that she might get somewhere with the medical center, but had run up against the same brick wall as before.

The thing that was nagging away at her was that they had sent
something
. That meant that
someone
at the medical center was trying to help – or had at least seen fit to send them something in writing.

But the fax wasn’t there now.

So where was it? Had Nat taken it? Thrown it away? Shredded it?

Of course!

She raced over to the shredder, lifted off the grinding mechanism and began fishing out papers. She remembered reading how the Iranian students at the American embassy had spent hours sticking shredded documents together at the time of the embassy siege in 1979 after Khomeini seized power in Iran. They had hoped to find things that they could use to embarrass the United States. But most of what they found was mundane material like requisition orders for stationery.

The point was that they kept at it, laboriously re-assembling every page.

It can be done.

And if Nat
had
shredded the fax, then it would be among the strips at the
top of the pile.

 

 

 

22:24 PDT

 

Jonathan was sitting on the bed, looking down at his hands. He was no longer crying. Whatever mixture of emotions had coursed through him – guilt, regret, fear – had all passed now. All that was left was a kind of exhausted passivity, as if he could now accept anything else that life threw at him.

“Jonathan, I can’t condemn you for what you did. I think I understand the pain and torment your father put Dorothy through. And it must have pained you no end to witness it. And to see it at such a young age yourself, must have made it all the more painful. But there are some things that I need to understand. Like, how did you shooting your father lead to Dorothy running away to England?”

Jonathan looked up.

“After I shot him, I went into a complete panic. But some kind of self-preservation instinct kicked in. I wiped the gun and dropped it near the body. I wasn’t trying to stage the crime scene or anything like that. I mean, I didn’t think to make it seem like suicide. I just didn’t want to leave any evidence pointing to me. So I just wiped the revolver, dropped it and ran.”

Something in these words didn’t quite make sense to Alex.

“Wait a minute. You
didn’t
stage it to look like suicide?”

“No. I didn’t think of that at the time. I didn’t think of anything other than saving my skin. I just wanted to get out of there.”

Ordinarily, Alex would have known better than to interrupt a man when he was in the full flow of a confession. But he needed clarity.

“Okay, so what happened then?”

“I ran home, terrified. And I told Dorothy what had happened. She got me to wash my hands to make sure there was no gunshot residue and throw my clothes in the washing machine to make extra sure. She also made me take a shower.

“By the time I got out of the shower I’d already calmed down and I began to think I’d got away with it. Even though the gunshot was loud, no one had come out of their apartments to see what it was. No one had seen me leaving and no cops had come knocking on the door. I’d remembered to wipe the prints off the gun and washed away any evidence that might have been on me or my clothes. I mean, I was naïve enough to think I had. If I’d come under suspicion, they’d probably have found some evidence.

“I know now that there’s a limit to what you can wash away. There were probably traces of my father’s brains on the T-shirt. The trouble was, while I was over the hysteria, Dorothy had just hit panic mode.”

“Why?”

“Because she’d remembered that she’d loaded the revolver.
Her
prints were on the shells. And I’d left it there!”

 

 

 

22:28 PDT

 

Nat was driving frantically, trying to put it all together. Alex had decided on the spur of the moment to go to Jonathan’s place. Why? Something was going on … but what? Was Juanita holding something back? Why was she being cagey?

By this stage, Nat was panicking himself. He had to find out.

With a press of a button on his cell phone, he called Juanita again.

“I was just wondering if we’d heard any more news from David.”

A pause.

“Why do you ask?”

She sounded suspicious.

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