This Side of Midnight
By
Al Lamanda
Copyright by Al Lamanda
Also by Al Lamanda
Dunston Falls
Walking Homeless
Running Homeless
The John Bekker Mystery Series
Sunset
Sunrise
First Light
This Side of Midnight
With Six You Get Wally (Oct 2016)
One
There are some mornings where the Pacific Ocean is as blue as Paul Newman’s eyes. This was
one of those mornings.
Eighty-four
degrees with a slight salt-sea breeze that filled your lungs and clung to your
skin like mist. The tide was rolling in and the waves were dotted with surfers
and a few sailboats off in the distance.
I wore shorts, a
tee shirt and jogging shoes. I carried five-pound ankle weights. I removed the
jogging shoes and wrapped a weight around each ankle. Then I removed the tee
shirt and tossed it on top of the shoes.
I broke into a
slow jog for about a quarter of a mile to allow my legs to adjust to running
barefoot in wet sand. After a while I warmed up and my muscles loosened.
Then I turned it
up a bit.
*****
I
lit a cigarette as I walked. This high up, the breeze off the ocean was cool
and filled with salt sea air. I walked about a half-mile when I saw Melissa
Koch power-walking toward me.
She held weights in each hand.
*****
I knew I was approaching the one-mile
mark into my run by the house high on the cliff to my left. I opened my stride
a bit, tuned out the sounds of the ocean and entered a zone of silence.
*****
She
saw me and didn’t break stride until the gap between us narrowed to twenty feet
or so. Then she slowed to a stop.
I kept walking and stopped in front of her,
blocking her path.
We looked at each other.
Her eyes were defiant.
“I should have had Herb just shoot you and
be done with it,” Melissa said.
“Why?”
“Because my idiot husband can’t keep his
dick in his pants,” Melissa said. “Because I’ve invested too much time and
trouble in his career to let him piss the White House away on some stupid bitch
with a schoolgirl crush on him. Stupid girl goes and gets herself knocked up
and I’m supposed to suffer and give it all up because of it. I think not.”
“So you made her disappear?” I said.
“Yes.”
“Where?”
“I don’t know.”
*****
Around a mile and a half into my
run I passed a young woman walking her dog along the shoreline. I’d seen them
before. She wasn’t much older than my daughter, Regan. The dog, a male, was a golden
retriever just out of the puppy stage. He pranced out of the water and ran
toward me. The woman called him back and he made an immediate U-turn.
*****
“And
Handler?”
“He’s nothing.” Melissa showed me a tiny
grin. “Although he proved very useful there at the end, didn’t he?”
“Herb kill him?”
“Herb hoisted his unconscious body, but as
you figured out, I tied the knot in the noose,” Melissa said. “Now, as you have
no proof of any of this and never will, I will ask you this once to leave my
property. After that, I will call 911 and tell them I have an intruder.”
She accented her point by holding both
weights in her right hand, pulling a tiny cell phone from her waistband with
her left.
“Sun’s coming up,” I said.
“So it is,” Melissa said.
“The White House that important you’d kill
for it?”
“Yes, and it’s been done before,” Melissa
said. “Now get out of my way before I call the police.”
*****
About a mile up ahead I caught a
glimpse of the palatial mansion belonging to Senator Oliver Koch of Maine, a very rich and
powerful member of the Senate.
I turned up the
heat and raced the mile to the side of the cliff where the mansion stood some
one hundred feet-plus above it.
*****
I
stepped aside.
She looked me in the eye. “Speak one word of
this and my attorneys will take away all that you have and all that you ever
will have, including that girlfriend of yours and your pretty little daughter.
Understood?”
“Yes.”
The grin reappeared. “Good day, Mr. Bekker.”
I took a deep breath and filled my lungs
with salt-sea air.
The breeze was cool on my face.
Off on the horizon just a tiny sliver of
sunlight brightened the dark sky.
The first light of a new day gave the
promise of hope and potential.
I had regained my soul not yet a year ago
and I wasn’t prepared to lose it again. Third chances are few and far between.
I closed my eyes for a brief moment. My inner voice told me what the right
thing to do was.
My eyes opened.
The look in Melissa Koch’s eyes told me I
was already dismissed.
*****
At the three-mile marker of Koch’s
mansion, I turned right and entered the water about a foot deep, and started
the return run. Almost immediately the ankle weights took on water and doubled
in weight.
*****
I
took a step to my right to allow her to pass.
*****
Waves from the rising tide crashed
against my legs and the run grew increasingly difficult. About a half mile into
the return trip the muscles in my thighs started to ache and burn from lactic
acid buildup. I fought through it and tried to keep the same pace despite
fifteen pounds of weight around each ankle.
*****
As
Melissa Koch stepped around me her left foot brushed my left ankle. She
stumbled forward, lost her balance and tumbled to her left. I turned to catch
her, but her forward momentum carried her to the soft dirt at the edge of the
cliff where she landed with a thud.
I spun around.
“Are you all right?” I said.
“Yes, you buffoon, I am all right and no
thanks to you.”
“Let me give you a hand.” I started walking
to the edge.
“I don’t need your help,” Melissa Koch said.
*****
I was a mile from completing the
round-trip. My back hurt from having to lift my legs high out of the water. The
ever-rising tide and waves pushed at me with each stride.
My arms and
shoulders ached.
My legs burned.
My lungs were on
fire.
*****
I
stopped about six or seven feet from her.
Slowly, Melissa Koch stood up. The soft, rain-soaked
dirt started giving way under her weight. She looked at me with fear in her
eyes.
“Jump!” I yelled.
She placed her weight on her left foot as if
to jump. The dirt at her feet crumbled and she slipped backward and fell again.
I started toward her. The dirt beneath my
feet slid forward, almost taking me with it, and pushing Melissa Koch even
further toward the vanishing cliff edge.
“For God’s sake help me!” she screamed as
gravity took her over.
I was trapped. Another step forward and I
would join her. I removed my belt and got down on my belly.
“Grab my belt and hold on!” I said.
*****
I could see my tee shirt and
jogging shoes several hundred yards ahead. I pushed past the aches and burn,
opened my stride as much as possible and went into a full-blown sprint.
My lungs burned
for air.
*****
Just
her upper body was visible now as gravity worked its magic.
I stretched out and tossed the belt toward
her. It fell about two feet short of the mark.
“You have to reach forward and grab it,” I
said.
Melissa Koch stared at the belt, paralyzed
by fear.
“I . . . can’t,” she said.
“Yes you can,” I said. “Grab the goddamn
belt.”
The dirt was crumbling quickly now. She sank
under her own weight.
“Now! Do it now!” I shouted.
I saw her reach for the belt just as the
soft dirt gave way completely. There was a split second of eye contact between
us and then she was gone.
Just like that.
In the blink of an eye.
*****
I raced the final thirty yards,
collapsed to the sand and rolled over next to my tee shirt and shoes.
I sucked air and
looked up at the blue sky dotted with milky white clouds.
Battery
acid ran through my veins.
Bright sunlight
peeked through the clouds and I closed my eyes.
*****
For
a moment I couldn’t believe what I had just witnessed.
Slowly I stood up and stepped backward to
the hiking path. The sky was light now, that first light of the new day was
warm on my face.
It seemed forever ago that I stood on Koch’s
yacht where Melissa Koch gave me her warning. Watch your step, she said.
That was good advice.
She should have followed it.
*****
When my breathing returned to
normal I sat up, wrapped my arms around my knees and looked at the ocean.
The incident with
Melissa Koch took place six weeks ago. A powerful senator’s wife doesn’t trip
and fall to her death off a hundred-foot high cliff every day of the week, so
it was major news. An accident heard around the world, so to speak.
For two weeks I
was the guest of the Hawaiian State Police, known as Five-0 in popular culture.
The FBI joined in on the fun. I was sliced and diced while they gathered
evidence from the cliff where Melissa Koch did her swan dive and after many
statements, written reports, reenactments, and the arrest of her lover and
henchman, a slug of a man named Herb, they declared her death officially an
accident.
Senator Oliver
Koch left the Senate and flew to Hawaii
the day after his wife’s death, and put on his game face for the world of the
media. Melissa Koch was buried in Hawaii for
reasons unknown to me and then Koch flew back to Washington.
I was free to go
home.
I didn’t.
I wanted to,
needed to, have a face-to-face sit down with Koch.
After the
incident, my girlfriend, Janet, and daughter, Regan, wanted to fly to Hawaii, but there was
nothing they could do. I told them to stay put. I needed some time before I
returned.
Time to think.
Time to analyze
what happened.
Time to accept
that a woman was dead because I confronted her in the course of doing my job.
But mostly to ask
myself if Melissa Koch’s death was an accident or murder.
At the moment she
ridiculed and threatened me, threatened Regan and Janet, I wanted that woman to
vanish off the face of the Earth. Did she trip over my foot in a clumsy
accident on her part, or because of my subconscious desire to retaliate?
In all honesty, I
didn’t know.
What I did know
was that if in my heart I believed I murdered Melissa Koch, I would make one
lousy husband and father and human being.
So I put off going
home and leaned on my closest friend, Police Captain Walt Grimes, to track down
Koch and tell him I wanted a meeting. To my surprise Koch agreed and told Walt
he was planning a trip to his Hawaiian home after the Senate recessed for the
summer. Word was that he would be flying in late tonight and would meet me at
his home tomorrow afternoon.
For the past four
weeks I’d called home every other night and spoken with Regan and Janet. I told
them I loved and missed them and they told me the same, but in the past couple weeks
I detected a coldness in Janet’s voice that I had never heard before.
Not quite anger,
but definitely cold.
Could I blame her?
After I met with
Koch I would grab the first available flight home and make it up to her and to
Regan. I wasn’t sure how, mostly by being the kind of man Janet needed in her life
and the kind of father Regan deserved.
I put on my
jogging shoes and carried the ankle weights off the beach to the string of
white bungalows where I’d rented one for the month. They were small, a single
bedroom with bath, a tiny kitchen, a backyard balcony with grill and the use of
the fresh water pool.
I removed the key
from the pocket in my shorts, let myself into Bungalow 21 and immediately put a
pot of coffee to brew in the four-cup capacity coffeemaker. When it was done, I
took a mug and a cigarette out to the balcony.
No one was in the
pool.
By now the
temperature was close to ninety, but Hawaii
was an ocean kind of a place so the pool was rarely used by guests. Since most
people have cell phones nowadays, the rooms were not equipped with a land-line
phone. There were four pay phones on the grounds, but I never saw anyone use
one.
That included me.
After consuming coffee
and cigarette, I checked my cell phone for messages. There were none. With the
time difference it was late afternoon or early evening back home so I wasn’t
expecting any.
I changed into
swim trunks and walked to the pool. There was no need to step in to get
acclimated to the water. The temperature was around eighty-six or so and I dove
right in and swam the first lap underwater. A sixth the size of an Olympic
pool, it required a lot of laps to equal a mile so I didn’t count and just swam
until I was tired.
As I did laps I
allowed my mind to wander. That’s not necessarily a good thing. Sometimes your
thoughts wander into places you’d rather not go and stir up old hurts you’d
rather not remember. I thought about all those wasted years spent drinking
myself to sleep after my wife’s murder and all those years of being an absentee
father to a little girl who desperately needed a real one.
I don’t drink
anymore. Two plus years without a drop, but I can’t get back the lost time.
Nobody can.
I’ve traded one
addiction for two others. I can’t drink and don’t, so I work out until the urge
to open a bottle and pour a stiff one passes. I also need to work and keep
myself busy. If I’m chasing after a whodunit, my thoughts and time are occupied
with things other than my past failures and bourbon over ice. Janet wants me to
retire my private investigator’s license and get a nine-to-five so I can be
home every night for dinner and TV, but that won’t work for me. Janet and I
love each other. People who love each other deal with each other’s flaws and
weaknesses as part of the better or worse package.
Somewhere around the fiftieth lap I came out
of the pool. I grabbed a clean towel from a stack in a bin and swiped water off
my body, and then went to my balcony.
The grill wasn’t
propane operated, but the old-fashioned coals and lighter fluid type. I had a
bag of coals on the floor and added some to the used ones on the bottom of the
grill. I squirted on some lighter fluid, struck a wooden match and tossed it
in. The coals burst into flames.
It would take
about twenty minutes for the flames to die down and the coals to turn gray, so
I returned to the pool and used the shuffleboard court as a workout area. I got
down and did push-ups. I started with my hands close to my shoulders and then
spread them about four feet apart. I went back and forth between narrow and
wide until my chest, shoulders and arms were on fire and then I took a few
minutes’ break. Then I did several sets of one-handed push-ups, alternating
between left hand and right until I gave out and collapsed in a heap.
I rested just long
enough to catch my breath and then did some ab work. Scissor situps, crunches,
planks, leg raises. I did several sets of each until my stomach cramped and
told me to stop.
I took a few
minutes to recover and then jumped into the pool to rinse the sweat off and
cool down. I floated around for a few minutes and when I climbed the ladder out
and grabbed a towel, the young girl from the beach was standing beside the
towel bin with her dog.
She was maybe
twenty-one or two, blond and pretty. She wore a baseball cap and had her hair
in a ponytail with the tail sticking out the back of the cap.
“Do you always
kill yourself like this?” she said.
I rubbed the towel
over my hair. “Pretty much, yeah.”
“You need a
haircut and shave,” she said.
“I know.”
“I smell a grill
going.”
“That’s mine,” I said.
“I was just about to toss on some burgers.”
“I’m Joey, Joey
Fureal.”
“Joey?”
“Josephine. My
parents wanted a boy. They got me instead.”
“Want a burger,
Joey?”
“Sure. This is
Buddy. Can he have one?”
“Why not?” I said.
“Let me go put some clothes on. You and Buddy can wait on the balcony.”
*****
Joey bit into a burger and wiped
juice off her chin with a napkin. “I followed you here from the beach,” she
said. “Actually it was Buddy who found you, but I asked him to.”
“Why?”
“Curiosity
mostly,” Joey said. “You’re that private investigator who threw the senator’s
wife off the cliff.”
“That’s one way of
putting it.”
“What’s the other
way?”
“She tripped and
fell.”
“That’s what they
said on the news.”
At Joey’s feet, Buddy
licked the plate clean of the last bit of burger juice.
“They also said
you were free to go home, so I was wondering, why are you still here?” Joey
said.
“How old are you?”
I said.
“Twenty-two,” Joey
said. “Almost. My birthday is next month.”
“Remember first
grade when your teacher gave you a time-out?” I said. “I’m taking a time-out.”
“You’re hiding,”
Joey said. “I live in the next mansion down from the senator. My dad is a
hotshot lawyer and my mom is what you would call a socialite. That’s a code word
for boozer. I know when somebody is hiding something. What are you hiding
from?”
“Are you always so
direct with your elders?”
“I’m dying from stage
one Hodgkins’ lymphoma, so I don’t have time to pitty-pat around,” Joey said.
I just looked at her.
“Hey, it’s all right,”
Joey said. “It is what it is and I’m not going down without a fight. In two
weeks I’m going to Sloan Kettering for treatment, me and Buddy. I’ll stay in a hospice
so Buddy can sleep in my room. He wouldn’t leave my side anyway.”
My appetite was
gone, but I took a bite of my burger and washed it down with some coffee.
“So what are you
hiding from?” Joey said.
“Myself.”
“How does that
work?”
When a kid tells
you they’re dying and then asks you a question, you answer it.
I started with
when Regan was five years old and witnessed her mother’s murder, covered the
decade of drinking and recovery at the hands of mobster Eddie Crist, and ended
with Melissa Koch on the cliff.
Joey listened and
took it all in while eating a second burger. When I was done, so was she and
she used another paper napkin to wipe her chin and fingers.
“Know what I
think?” she said. “I think you’re not the type to murder someone in cold blood,
especially a woman. You’re that old-fashioned type of guy who would let a woman
beat him to death before he raised a hand to her.”
“You base that
on?” I said.
“Buddy likes you.
Buddy is never wrong about people. If he sensed the slightest bit of bad in you
he never would have allowed you to get this close to me.”
I looked at Buddy.
He looked at me like he wanted another burger. There was one left and I gave it
to him.
“Feel like sitting
by the ocean for a bit?” Joey said. “I’ve got nothing better to do and nobody
to do it with.”
“Why not?” I said.
“Want something cold to drink?”
“Sure.”
I grabbed a couple
of cold sodas from the fridge, tucked my smokes in my shirt pocked and we
walked the hundred yards or so to the sand and took seats facing the waves as
the tide started to roll out.
“So here’s what’s
going to happen to me when I get to Sloan,” Joey said as Buddy sat beside her
and placed his head on her lap. “I’m going to receive chemotherapy every two
weeks for several cycles and hope that it works. If it doesn’t, then comes
radiation therapy. Either way I’m going to feel sick all the time and will
probably lose most of my hair. If it’s necessary I’ll have a bone marrow
transplant from a relative or matched donor. I’m told they’ve done something
like five thousand transplants of marrow at Sloan, but I’m hoping it won’t come
to that.”
I opened my can of
soda and washed some down, and then pulled out my cigarettes and lit one.
“You shouldn’t
smoke,” Joey said.
“I know.”
“It’s really bad
for you.”
“I know.”
“You exercise like
some kind of freak on a sugar high and then light up a cigarette,” Joey said.
“That doesn’t make sense.”
“I know.”
“I sound like an
old nag, don’t I?”
“You sound like my
daughter and girlfriend,” I said.
“Saying girlfriend
sounds funny when you’re . . .”
“What?”
“Being someone’s
girlfriend is usually reserved for someone under thirty.”
“Then let’s call
her my lady friend.”
“What does she
call you?”
“Annoying.”
Joey cracked a
smile, opened her can of soda and took a sip.
A few seconds of
silence passed.
And then just like
that the dam burst and she started to cry.
“Oh damn,” Joey
said in between sobs. “It’s not fair . . . I just graduated college, for God’s
sake.”
I stuck my
cigarette in the sand and wrapped my arm around Joey’s shoulder. “I know it’s
not fair,” I said. “Very few things are.”
“Listen to me,”
Joey said. “I sound like a spoiled brat, don’t I?”
“You sound like a
young woman who’s afraid to die before she’s had a chance to live. And that’s
perfectly normal for anybody.”
Joey sniffled and
sobbed for a bit longer and then regained control. She rubbed Buddy’s ears and
he responded by licking her fingers.
“I’m tired,” she
said. “I take two naps a day. I used to do gymnastics four hours a day and
right now I can’t even toss a Frisbee with Buddy.”
“Right now,” I
said, “you have to believe that you will, or you won’t. Sometimes failure is
not an option.”
Joey nodded and
stood up. “Walk me home?”
“Sure.”
Joey’s home was a
few hundred yards past the Koch mansion, a mile and a half down the beach. We
didn’t hurry. Buddy stayed by Joey’s side even though I could see the young dog
wanted to bust loose and run.
“I’m scared, you know,”
Joey confessed, “of having to go to Sloan for treatment and of what happens if
the treatment fails.”
“When the time
comes you won’t be afraid,” I said.
“How do you know?”
“Back when I was a
cop there wasn’t a day I didn’t think today could be the day I have to draw my
gun and today could be the day I die of a bullet from a crazed criminal,” I
said. “And then you leave the house and go do your job, and if and when the
time comes you do have to pull your weapon, those thoughts go away and you do
what you have to. That’s what will happen to you. You’ll be afraid right up
until the time you have to do what you have to do, and then you won’t be afraid
at all.”
Joey looked at me.
“Promise?”
“Yes.”
We arrived at the
five-hundred-step wooden staircase that went from the beach to Joey’s home on
the cliff. We were so engaged in conversation that I didn’t realize we’d
strolled right past the Koch mansion. The handrail had a motorized chair on it.
“My dad had that put in a few years ago for my
mom,” Joey said. “He worries she’ll trip and fall after happy hour. I never
used it until recently.”
Joey took the
chair and Buddy jumped on her lap.
“Hold on, boy. We
go for a ride now,” Joey said and pushed a button.
The chair slowly
ascended the stairs. When it was around twenty feet high, Joey said, “Hey, meet
me on the beach tomorrow. I’ll bring Buddy’s Frisbee.”
“After I see Koch,
come by the bungalow,” I said.
Joey took hold of
Buddy’s front paw and waved to me. “Bye-bye,” she said.
*****
I returned to my bungalow, sat on
the balcony, drank coffee and smoked a few butts.
Joey made me long
for Regan.
I grabbed my cell
phone and punched in the number for Janet’s home, where Regan was staying.
“Dad?” Regan said.
“Is something wrong? Are you coming home?”
“No and yes,” I
said.
“When?”
“Two days at the
most. I have to book a flight. I’ll let you know the number and time.
Everything okay on your end?”
“Mark decided to
take summer school classes,” Regan said. “I’m helping him with homework. Oz is
in the kitchen cooking something.”
“Oz?” I said.
“Where’s Janet?”
“Working a double
shift at the hospital,” Regan said. “She’s going to Chicago
for a month day after tomorrow and wanted to catch up on paperwork.”
“Chicago?
What for?”
“She’s getting a
promotion at the hospital,” Regan said. “She’s going for some kind of training
to run the post-op ward.”
“Ask her to call
me when she gets in.”
“It will be late.”
“Not here it
won’t.”
“That’s right.
Okay, I’ll tell her.”
We chatted for a
bit and when I hung up I felt very alone and lonely for my family.
Even for Oz.
Sometimes trying
to do the right thing is a lonely business.
At least it was
for me.
Two
It bothered me a bit in the morning
that Janet hadn’t returned my call, but she probably got in late and was tired
and had to pack for her trip to the Windy
City, and it slipped her
mind.
I occupied my
thoughts with what I was going to say to Senator Koch. It’s not like you can
walk up to someone after causing his wife to trip and fall off a hundred-foot
high cliff and say, “Oops, my bad,” and that would be the end of it.
I shaved, showered
and then put on the lightweight suit I’d worn the morning I confronted Melissa
Koch. I hadn’t brought a lot of clothing with me to Hawaii as I wasn’t planning on more than an
overnight stay, though I was allowed to buy what I needed while being held for
questioning.
I skipped
breakfast and settled for three cups of coffee and an equal number of
cigarettes. It wasn’t exactly the breakfast of champions, but I lacked an
appetite and there was no sense fixing something I wouldn’t eat.
I walked the mile
and a half from the bungalow to the Koch mansion. The tall iron gates were open
when I arrived. As a senator Koch wasn’t entitled to Secret Service protection,
but he could well afford a private army of his own.
Two men were on
duty in the guardhouse. One came out to greet me as I strolled though the open
gates. I gave him my name and he said, “The Senator is having lunch in the
backyard. He told me to ride you up when you arrived.”
Ride me up meant a trip from the gate to
the backyard gardens in a golf cart. As the distance was several acres and I
was sweated through to my shirt already, I didn’t mind riding shotgun.
Senator Koch was
waiting for me, drinking coffee at a patio table. He was dressed in comfortable
clothing suited for Hawaii
and appeared rested and relaxed. He stood and filled a cup for me, then waited
for me to settle into a chair before he sat back down.
“I’m retiring from
the Senate,” Koch said. “From public life altogether. I never wanted to be a
senator or run for the VP nod; that was all my wife. She had a push-push, drive-at-all-cost
mentality and I went along with her for thirty-plus years. She murdered a young
woman because I had an affair with her and then murdered my assistant to cover
up her deeds. Melissa was an evil woman, Bekker, interested only in her own
rise to fame and power, and I am not in the least bit saddened by her death.
For the first time in thirty years I feel free and alive, and I plan to enjoy
what remaining years I have left. So, what’s on your mind this fine beautiful
morning that you so want to share with me?”
“My conscience is
bothering me,” I said.
Koch set his
coffee cup down and eyed me. “Your conscience?” he said. “Why?”
“Because I’m not
sure if her trip and fall was entirely an accident,” I said. “I tried to save
her at the risk of going over myself, but in my mind I’m not sure if I caused
her to trip in the first place. She threatened me and my family, and when she
walked past me and tripped over my foot, I may have wanted her to. Maybe not to
kill her, but to humiliate her. I just wanted to tell you that.”
Koch sipped a bit
more coffee as he studied me. “Bekker, I really don’t care about your
conscience,” he said as he set the cup down again. “She got exactly what she
deserved and that’s called justice. I can tell you, based upon what I know of
you, that I don’t believe you’re capable of outright murder. For what that’s
worth, that’s what I believe. You believe what you want.”
“For what it’s
worth, thank you,” I said.
“Would you like
some lunch?”
“Sure.”
*****
We ate a three-course lunch
prepared by Koch’s chef and chatted for ninety minutes. He told me some war
stories about the Senate and I told him some war stories about being a cop.
Then we shook
hands and he offered to have one of his men drive me back to the bungalow. “A
full stomach, ninety-one degrees, a mile-walk isn’t a good combination for the
digestion,” he said.
*****
Joey and Buddy were waiting for me
poolside when Koch’s driver dropped me off at the bungalows. Buddy had a red
Frisbee in his mouth.
“You made it out
alive,” Joey said when I walked to her.
“I did,” I said.
“Give me a minute to ditch this monkey suit.”
I went in through
the balcony door and changed into shorts, tank top and sneakers. I filled a
cooler with ice and soda, tucked my smokes into a pocket and did a quick check
of my cell phone for messages.
There weren’t any.
“So are you off
the hook?” Joey said as I carried the cooler down to the beach.
“With Koch?”
“Yourself.”
“Let’s just say
I’m leaning in that direction.”
“So you’ll be
going home?”
“Tomorrow if I can
book a flight.”
We arrived at the
beach. I set the cooler down away from the waves.
“I don’t have the
energy to run much, but Buddy does most of the work,” Joey said as she took the
Frisbee from Buddy.
I walked about a
hundred feet down the beach and faced Joey. Buddy kind of just stood in the
middle and waited for Joey to toss the Frisbee to me. Buddy’s idea of a good
time was for us to toss the Frisbee to each other and for him to try to
intercept it midflight.
Buddy was
successful about fifty percent of the time.
After about an
hour Buddy needed a break from the heat and took a quick dip in the ocean. Joey
and I sat by the cooler and drank sodas and when Buddy emerged from the water,
I gave him some ice cubes to chomp on.
“I thought about
what you said yesterday,” Joey said. “About being afraid.”
I pulled out my
cigarettes and lit one.
“I’m not sure I’m
strong enough,” Joey said. “I’m scared. Really scared.”
“That’s good,” I
said. “Being scared is what makes you a good driver. Being scared is what makes
you a good cop. Being scared of losing something means you care about it and
when you care about it you’re willing to fight to keep it. Being scared is what
gives you courage. You can’t be brave if you aren’t afraid. They go hand in
hand.”
“Did you teach
that to your daughter?”
“More like the
other way around.”
“I’ll think that
one over,” Joey said.
Buddy had the
Frisbee in his mouth again.
“I think he’s
ready for round two,” I said.
*****
Around five in the afternoon I walked
a very tired Joey and Buddy to the stairs that led to her home in the cliffs.
“Will you come say
good-bye to me before you leave?” Joey said as she and Buddy took the seat.
“I will.”
Joey hit the lever
and the chair began to ascend.
“I’ll hunt you
down if you don’t,” she said.
*****
The first thing I did when I
returned to the bungalow was check for messages. Still none. I made some coffee
and took a cup and my cell phone to a chair by the pool, lit up a cigarette.
While I was
debating whether to call Janet or hold off, the cell phone rang. I checked the
incoming number. It was Janet and I scooped it up.
“Hi, I was just
arguing with myself if I should call or wait a bit,” I said.
“Regan told me
you’re coming home,” Janet said.
“Tomorrow if I
can.”
“So what did you
accomplish by staying an extra month?” Janet’s voice was cold, almost callous.
“I can’t explain
on the phone,” I said. “I’ll explain when I get home tomorrow.”
“This time
tomorrow I will be in Chicago,” Janet said.
“I’ve made arrangements for Mark to stay with Clayton while I’m away and for Oz
to stay at my house with Regan until you get back.”
“Look, I don’t
blame you for being angry, but I can . . .”
“I’m not angry,”
Janet said. “The hospital promoted me to supervisor of the ICU recovery ward.
They’re sending me to Chicago for a month of
training. I have a great deal on my mind and much to learn. There are other
things in life besides the adventures of the great John Bekker, you know.”
I wouldn’t say I
was stunned, as I had that coming, but to hear such harsh words from Janet and
in such a cold, dry tone gave me serious pause.
“Okay, I deserved
that, but at least allow me to explain why I stayed in Hawaii,” I said. “I could come to Chicago and we could . . .”
“Jack, I have some
serious work to do and not much time to learn what I need to learn,” Janet
said. “Don’t come to Chicago. I can’t afford to
get sidetracked with this. We’ll talk when I come home.”
“Even for a
weekend or just a day?”
“It’s not the
time, it’s the distraction it will cause me,” Janet said. “I’m expected to
learn and then be able to teach life and death procedures to the nurses on my
staff. If I’m preoccupied with thoughts of you and the fantasy world you live
in I may not return to the hospital with one hundred percent of what I need to
know.”
“Fantasy world?” I
said. “What the hell are you talking about? Melissa Koch died because I
confronted her on the cliff on the Koch property, and if I need to remind you,
it was at your asking that I even took the job in the first place.”
“And I felt very
guilty about that,” Janet said. “But when I wanted you to come home and you
wanted to stay and I wanted to come there to be with you, you pushed me away.
And maybe it’s selfish of me, but I don’t feel guilty about it anymore. Now
we’ll talk when I get home in a month and that’s all I’m going to say about
it.”
“I didn’t push you
away,” I said. “I needed some time alone to come to grips with what happened.”
“And did you?”
“I think so,” I
said. “That’s why I’m going home tomorrow.”
“Good,” Janet
said. “Regan needs you.”
“And you?”
“I never needed
you, Jack,” Janet said. “A healthy relationship is based upon want, not need. I
wanted you and there is a difference between the two. We’ll talk about all this
when I get back and we’ve both had time to evaluate things. Fair?”
“Okay,” I said.
“Just let me say this. I still love you very much and I’m willing to do
whatever it takes to make this work.”
“I know that,”
Janet said. “And I love you too, Jack. Now I have to go and finish packing.”
I said good-bye,
hung up, and sat there with cold coffee and a fresh cigarette. I drank the
coffee while I called the airlines and made a reservation for a flight that
left at noon and got me home around nine at night.
I didn’t want to
think about how mad Janet was at me, so I decided to burn off my anxiety with a
workout. I went for a long run on the beach and watched the sun slowly set over
the ocean, and then exhausted every muscle in my body with push-ups, situps and
some laps in the pool. I was on empty, emotionally and physically, by the time
I found my way into my bungalow to take a hot shower.
There was still
plenty of food in the fridge and cupboards. I put on some spaghetti and
meatballs with garlic bread and busied myself at the table with a few
cigarettes.
That’s when I
noticed a message on the cell phone I’d missed earlier.
My close friend
and frequent colleague, Sheriff Jane Morgan.
I did a quick
guesstimate of the time zones and decided she would be asleep for several more
hours, so I called and left a message on her voicemail.
I ate my late-night
supper while watching a rerun of, what else, Hawaii-50 and then called it a night and tucked myself into bed.
Three hours later
my cell phone ringing woke me up. It was Jane returning my message. “Bekker,
you awake?”
I glanced at the
digital alarm clock beside the bed. It was three in the morning.
“I am now,” I
said.
“Sorry about the
time thing, but I talked to Regan yesterday and she said you’re coming home,”
Jane said. “I need a favor.”
“Jane, Janet all
but dumped me over . . .”
“Janet’s gone
bye-bye to Chicago for a month,” Jane said.
“Regan told me.”
“What favor?”
“When can we
meet?”
“It’s that
important?”
“I’m calling you
at three in the morning, aren’t I?” Jane said.
“I’ll be in around
nine tomorrow night,” I said. “First thing in the morning stop by the trailer.”
“Night-night,
Bekker,” Jane said.
“Yeah.”
Three
Since the bungalows were just a
mile from town I hadn’t bothered with a rental car, but the airport was too far
to walk so I reserved a taxi.
The drivers work
on speed, on how many round-trips to the airport they can make in a given
shift, so when you ask a driver to wait for an extended period of time they generally
have a hissy fit. I told the driver I would add a fifty-dollar bill to the
meter if he took me to the Fureal mansion and gave me a ten-minute wait.
As soon as the cab
pulled up to the house Joey and Buddy came out to greet me. Joey wore cutoff
shorts and a white tank top. Buddy wore his golden fur.
Joey gave me a
hug.
Buddy gave me a
hand lick.
“I’m off,” I said.
“Me, too, in
another ten days or less,” Joey said.
I dipped into my suit-jacket
pocket for my business card and placed it in Joey’s hand. “If you feel like
talking one day, give me a call,” I said.
“Thanks,” Joey
said. “I will.”
I scratched
Buddy’s ears. “You’ll be fine,” I said. “They know what they’re doing at Sloan.
And don’t be afraid of being afraid. Remember what I told you.”
Joey nodded,
showed me a smile and gave me another hug.
As I walked back
to the cab, she called after me. “You look good clean shaven,” she said. “Still
need a haircut, though.”
I opened the door
to the cab and smiled at Joey.
“And a new suit,”
she added.
*****
When I walked through the gate
around nine-thirty in the evening, I spotted Regan and Oz waiting for me on the
other side.
“Dad!” Regan
shouted and ran to me. She jumped into my arms the way an eight-year-old would
and a nineteen-year-old normally wouldn’t.
I didn’t mind one
bit.
“Gained some
weight,” I told her. “Must be up to a hundred pounds by now.”
After I set Regan
down she took my hand and we met Oz and walked down the stairs to baggage claim.
“You bring me a
bottle of them nuts they got there?” Oz said.
“What nuts?” I
said.
“Them Hawaiian
nuts they grow only in Hawaii,
them nuts.”
“Macadamia?” I
said. “They sell them in any grocery store.”
“I know,” Oz said.
“It’s the thought what counts.”
“I did bring you a
nifty shirt,” I said.
“Terrific,” Oz
said.
“And something for
you,” I said as I kissed Regan’s nose.
“What?” Regan said
with childlike innocence.
“It’s in my
luggage,” I said. “Can you wait until we get home?”
Regan nodded, but
I could see the excitement in her eyes.
“Keep an eye out
for my luggage while I reserve a cab,” I said.
“No need,” Oz
said. “I drove your crap mobile.”
“My car isn’t that
bad,” I said.
“Dad, it’s as old
as I am,” Regan said.
“It’s a classic,”
I said.
“A 1956 cherry-red
Thunderbird is a classic,” Oz said. “What you drive is otherwise known as junk.
I see your bags.”
*****
Oz drove. I sat beside him and
Regan behind me. After about a mile I noticed Oz didn’t take the road to
Janet’s house but to the beach.
“This is the way
to the beach,” I said.
Oz glanced at me.
“Is there no end to your detective skills,” he said. “Ain’t that right, girl?”
“Almost like a
super power,” Regan said.
“Funny,” I said
and patted my pockets.
“Dad, do you smell
that?” Regan said.
“What? I don’t
smell anything.”
“That nothing you
smell is a lack of cigarette butts, ashes and smoke,” Regan said. “I cleaned
and washed every square inch of this car and if you think you’re lighting up in
here I’ll bite you on the back of the neck. Is that clear?”
“Yes ma’am,” I
said.
Oz grinned at me
ear to ear.
“You shut up,” I
told him.
*****
The floodlight was on when we
arrived at my trailer. What greeted me were four new beach chairs, an actual
patio table and a spanking new stainless-steel barbeque grill.
“Wait till you see
inside,” Regan said with the excitement of a kid on Christmas morning when she
knew she’d scored the gift she really wanted.
The trailer was
neat as a pin. My bedroom, the guest bedroom, bathroom, shower, kitchen and
what passed for a living room.
“How long did this
take you?” I said.
“A week,” Regan
said. “Me and Oz did it. When Aunt Janet told me she had to go to Chicago last week I decided I’d rather stay here at the
beach.”
“Hungry?” Oz said.
“A bit.”
“Good. I been
itching to try out the new grill.”
*****
“I’m stuffed,” I said after
consuming three burgers, two dogs and a plate of fries. “And now for gifts.”
I went inside for
a moment to dig out the shirt for Oz and the small box I picked up for Regan at
the duty-free jewelry store inside the airport.
Oz held the bright
yellow shirt decorated with pineapples and palm trees to the floodlight and
nodded.
“Ain’t as bad as I
thought it’d be,” Oz said. “At night. In the dark. If I squint.”
I held the small
gift-wrapped box out to Regan.
She took it and
looked at me. “What’s in it?”
“Only one way to
find out,” I said.
Regan slowly
removed the silver paper, opened the lid and looked at the one-karat diamond
earrings inside.
“Dad . . .”
“You’re a grownup
girl, you should have some grownup earrings,” I said.
My grownup girl
removed the earrings from the box and started to sniffle. “Can I try them on?”
“They’re yours,” I
said.
Regan pinned an earring
to each ear and did a spin for us. “How do they look?”
“Like a movie
star,” Oz said.
Regan gave me a
tight hug. Her face barely came to my chest.
“Why am I so
short?” she said.
“Because good
things come in small packages,” I said. “Now if Oz will take his beautiful new
shirt and go home, the jet lag is killing me and I’d like to get some sleep.”
“Just for buying
me this shirt I’m going to wear it in the daytime and make you look at it,” Oz
said.
Four
I opened my eyes when I heard
Regan’s voice through the open window of my bedroom.
“My dad’s asleep,”
she said. “Jet lag.”
“He’s expecting
me,” Jane said. “We talked on the phone yesterday.”
“He’s retired from
investigating,” Regan said.
“I know, hon, but
this is important,” Jane said. “Otherwise I wouldn’t ask.”
I heard Regan sigh
loudly.
“I’ll get him,” she
said. “I was going to get him up anyway. Have some coffee. I just made it.”
I stumbled from
the bed to the bathroom and ran the water in the sink.
“Dad, that sheriff
is here,” Regan called out to me.
“I heard,” I said.
“I’ll be right out.”
I let the sink
fill with cold water and stuck my face in it for thirty seconds. Then I brushed
my teeth and ran a brush through my shaggy hair.
Jane and Regan
were in the new chairs at the new patio table when I emerged from the trailer. “I
like what you’ve done with the place,” Jane said.
“Regan and Oz did
it while I was away.” I filled a mug with coffee and took a seat.
“Want some breakfast?”
Regan said.
“In a bit.”
“I hate to ask,
Bekker, but I need help,” Jane said.
Regan glared at
Jane. “Should I leave?”
“You can stay,” I
said.
“It’s pretty
gruesome, Bekker,” Jane said.
I looked at Regan.
“I’ll stay,” she said.
“Okay,” Jane said.
I looked around
the table for my cigarettes.
“I tossed them,”
Regan said.
I looked at her.
“The extra packs
in your luggage, too.”
I nodded. “So
what’s the emergency?” I said to Jane.
“I have a total
staff of ninety deputies to man the entire county and jail,” Jane said. “I’m
lucky I can put two cruisers on the street 24-7. I have one vacancy in my three-man
detective squad and the other two are out of their league on this. I tried to
borrow a detective or two from Walt, but he’s swamped. I asked the county
comptroller for special funds to pay your fee and they agreed. Mostly because
it’s bad for the tourist season and they don’t want this to linger on to fall
when the second round shows up to gawk at the leaves and all the pretty
colors.”
I sipped some coffee
and looked around the table again for my smokes.
“They’re gone,
Dad,” Regan said. “Get over it.”
“What is bad for
tourist season?” I said to Jane.
“Are you familiar
with Midnight Island?” Jane said.
Midnight Island
is three miles off the coast. About four miles long, a mile and a half at its
widest point, it’s home to about nine hundred year-round residents. That number
swells to three thousand during the summer months. A ferry makes eight round
trips to the mainland daily and four on Sunday.
“I’ve been there
once or twice,” I said. “A long time ago. I had lunch with Carol at this old
hotel restaurant.”
“The kid from the
high school,” Regan said. “That’s what this is about, isn’t it?”
Jane nodded.
“What kid?” I
said.
“Bekker, we should
really bring this to my office,” Jane said.
“Oz is coming,”
Regan said.
Wearing the bright
yellow shirt, Oz strolled from his trailer to mine.
“What are you
supposed to be?” Jane said when Oz arrived.
“Ask Bekker, it’s
his shirt,” Oz said.
“Want some
breakfast?” Regan said to Oz as he took a chair.
“Let’s all have
some breakfast,” I said. “Then I’ll get dressed and go to the office with Jane.
Oz, you hang around. Okay?”
“Where I gonna go
looking like Tweety Bird?” Oz said.
*****
I rode with Jane in her cruiser and
left Oz the keys to my car. After checking me in as a guest at the desk, we
went to her office. She called the dispatcher and asked to have her calls held.
“Want some coffee
first?” Jane said.
“Sure.”
Jane called
somebody on her phone and a female deputy showed up with two containers of
coffee from the break room.
“You need to see
this,” Jane said as she removed a DVD from a desk drawer and inserted it into
the player where it rested on top of a television to the right of her desk. With
a remote, Jane turned on the monitor and hit the play button.
“Deputy Spears
arrived on scene first, closely followed by Deputy Andrews,” Jane said. “They
activated their mounted cameras on the cruisers and mini-cams on their uniforms
immediately upon arrival at the County
Regional High
School. This shot came from a mini-cam.”
The monitor
brightened as the high school came into view. The recording time in the right-hand
corner was 2:33 in the afternoon.
“There!” I heard a
deputy shout.
In the background,
a man screamed, “Motherfucker, I’ll kill you!”
The POV of the
mini-cam showed the deputies rushing around a fence onto the football field.
“Freeze!” a deputy
screamed.
“That’s Spears,”
Jane said.
“Put down the
fucking bat!” another deputy screamed. “Put it down now!”
“That’s Andrews,”
Jane said.
The angle of the
POV shifted again and a large man with a baseball bat was beating a kid on the
ground in the head and face with it.
“Motherfucker!”
the man screamed.
“That is Mr.
Norman Felton, a resident of Midnight Island,”
Jane said.
“Down, down, put
down the bat and put your hands on your head!” Andrews yelled. “Now!”
Felton turned and
looked at the deputies. His face was a mask of insane fury. He raised the bat
and charged the deputies. There was a loud thud followed by a gunshot.
As Felton fell
from view, Andrews yelled, “Fuck. You shot him! Fuck!”
“He broke my arm,”
Spears said.
The POV shifted
again and Felton was on the grass, bleeding from a gunshot to the head. Next to
Felton, a teenage boy was unconscious, beaten to a pulp.
Jane hit the pause
button.
“Deputy Spears
suffered a broken forearm when Mr. Felton hit him with the bat,” she said. “The
mini-cam shows the shooting was clearly accidental and caused by the bat
striking Spears on the left arm. The gun went off on impact. The kid is Ubaldo
Montero, an eighteen-year-old exchange student from the Dominican Republic.
His father has applied for an emergency visa to come to the States. It hasn’t
gone through as yet, but it should within a few days.”
I pulled out my
cigarettes, lit two and gave Jane one.
“Felton?” I said.
“In county prison
hospital in a coma,” Jane said.
“The Montero kid?”
“Three floors
below in the coma ward.”
“So what do we
know?” I said.
“We know that Mr.
Felton caught the ferry at one in the afternoon and drove straight to the high
school,” Jane said. “We know he assaulted Ubaldo Montero on the football field,
where Montero volunteers as a groundskeeper for the school and was touching up
the field when Felton attacked. We know that a school official working on
Saturday looked out her window when she heard Felton screaming and called 911.
We don’t know motive, but I would bet the farm it’s about Felton’s missing fourteen-year-old
daughter, Amanda.”
“Missing?” I said.
“For how long?”
“The day of the
incident is our best guess,” Jane said. “We have no leads or witnesses on the
island who can tell us otherwise. I entered her into the FBI databank, put out
an alert to all police and sheriff departments in the county, and established
an 800 hotline for information. Nada with a capital N.”
“And who besides
us wants her back?” I said.
“That would be
Robert Felton, older brother of Norman Felton,” Jane said. “He resides in Rhode Island. I told him
I would be bringing in a consultant to assist me. He said he will pay your
going rate with a bonus if you find Amanda alive. I checked with county lawyers
and there is no law against you taking this case unless you withhold evidence
or act in a criminal manner.”
“I thought you
said the county agreed to my fees?” I said.
“I told Felton
that he couldn’t hire you, as you would be working as an advisor to the
Sheriff’s Department,” Jane said.
“What if I turned
you down?” I said.
Jane gave me her
look that said, That would be a first.
I shrugged and
sipped coffee. “What does the county consider a criminal matter?”
Jane opened her
desk drawer and pulled out a pack of smokes. She gave me one and we both lit
up.
“Smoking in a
public building would be a criminal matter,” she said as she flared her
nostrils and blew out smoke.
“Okay, I’m in,” I
said. “Give me whatever agreement document you have and I’ll get started. God knows
I have nothing better to occupy my time.”
Jane nodded. “What
do you need from me?”
“Besides that we
work together on this, the evidence log, a copy of this DVD, statements from
the witness, hospital reports, a meeting with the arresting officers, reports
on the Felton home inspection, a list of his friends, family and the daughter’s
friends on the island and at school,” I said. “For starters.”
Jane looked at me.
“And your gut
instinct,” I said.
“The only thing my
gut has is about two inches too much around the middle,” Jane said. “There’s no
visible connection between the girl, who is in the eighth grade and enrolled at
the middle school four miles from the high school, and the Montero boy, a
senior at the high school.”
“Where does he
live?” I said.
“In town with his exchange-student
foster parents.”
“Add them to my
list.”
“Anything else?”
“Tomorrow morning,
call both schools and tell them I’ll be stopping by to do some research,” I said.
“Make it after lunch so I have time in the morning to review your list.”
“Okay,” Jane said.
“I’ll drive you back and then put your list together.”
*****
In the cruiser on the way back,
Jane fired up two cigarettes and gave me one.
“I don’t mean to
meddle, Bekker, but I heard from Regan about Janet going to Chicago
for a month,” she said. “I got the impression Janet isn’t too happy with you
right now.”
“I can’t blame her
for that,” I said.
“Why did you stay
that extra month?”
“Work on my
conscience,” I said.
Jane nodded. “A
conscience has a way of screwing things up,” she said. “But in the end things
always work out one way or another.”
“I know,” I said.
A lifetime ago
when I was a kid in Bible study class, I asked the priest teaching the class
why God didn’t answer my prayer to make my grandmother better and let her live.
He told me God did answer my prayer, but that sometimes the answer is no.
Things working out
are a lot like prayer in that regard.
Five
After Jane dropped me off I decided
to go for a run since my car, Oz and Regan were gone.
I changed into
shorts, tee shirt and running shoes. I stretched for a bit and then jogged
slowly down to the beach. The tide was up and surfers in black wetsuits dotted
the landscape.
I ran for thirty
minutes before removing my shirt and tucking it into my shorts and turning
around. On the way back I upped my pace and my mind entered the zone of quiet.
Thoughts are shut out and all you hear is your own heartbeat and rhythmic
breathing. Runner’s high, they call it. I call it peace and quiet.
Not true.
I call it escape.
*****
Regan was at the patio table
waiting for me when I returned.
My daughter knows
her father. A fresh pot of coffee was on the table beside her. A towel hung
over a vacant chair.
I arrived at the table,
grabbed the towel and wiped my face before taking a chair. “Where did you and
Oz disappear to?” I said.
“I asked him to
take me to that tobacco store on Elm
Street,” Regan said. “And to pick up Molly from
Aunt Janet’s house.”
My hopes were up
as I filled a mug with coffee.
“I bought you
this,” Regan said. She produced a gift-wrapped box from her lap and set it on
the table.
Before I could reach
for the box, Molly magically appeared from somewhere and jumped onto Regan’s
lap.
I removed the
wrapper from the box to reveal a complete kit for electronic cigarettes.
“I know you tried
them a few years ago, but they’ve improved them now and I want you to try them
again,” Regan said. “And also wear sun block when you go running around
shirtless in the sun. There is a thing called skin cancer you should know
about. Okay?”
I nodded.
“Uncle Walt
called,” Regan said. “He’s stopping by. I told him I would make us all lunch,
so you sit and try one of those cigarettes, drink your coffee, and I’ll make something
to eat.”
“Yes, ma’am,” I
said.
Molly followed
Regan into the kitchen.
I looked at the electronic
cigarette kit and finally opened it. The starter kit held two ceramic filters,
four screw-on white tubes and a battery charger. The instructions said the
filters were fully charged and ready to go. One white tube was equal to two
packs of cigarettes. Five puffs on one tube were equal to one regular
cigarette.
I screwed a tube
to the filter. It was about the length of a king-size filtered cigarette.
I sighed and placed
it between my lips.
From behind me,
Regan said, “I see Uncle Walt’s car.”
Walt’s unmarked
sedan was headed our way across the beach.
I took a puff on
the electronic cigarette and the tip glowed red. It wasn’t as bad as I thought
it would be, but not as good as the real thing. Most things in life aren’t.
Walt arrived,
parked and exited his sedan wearing a charcoal gray, lightweight suit with
white shirt and paisley tie.
Regan gave Walt a
warm hug and kiss on the cheek. “Lunch is almost ready,” she said. “So you two
have some guy talk time.”
Walt looked
around. “Where’s the cat?”
“Wherever Regan
is.”
“So as your best
bud maybe you could enlighten me as to why you stayed in Hawaii so long?” Walt said.
“Work on my
conscience, wait for Koch to show up, come to grips with killing Melissa Koch,”
I said.
“I read all the PD
reports,” Walt said. “It was an accident. Even the Senator said so in a
statement.”
“Say you were
driving home one dark night and just didn’t see a kid on a tricycle as he
darted out from the curb,” I said. “It was an accident you ran him over, but
wouldn’t you feel just as guilty as if it weren’t?”
Walt sighed. “What
the hell are you smoking?”
“A gift from my
daughter,” I said.
“And your lady?”
“She’s in school
in Chicago for a month,” I said. “And she’s not
too happy with me right now.”
“Do you blame
her?”
“No.”
I took another hit
on the e-cigarette.
“How are those
things?” Walt said.
“Like food without
salt,” I said.
Walt nodded. “You
gonna help Jane? She wanted to borrow a detective, but I’m short-handed as it
is and the mayor would never go for it.”
“I met with her
this morning,” I said. “Any ideas?”
“I haven’t looked
at any evidence or read statements,” Walt said. “But Norman Felton was
obviously in a rage over something and I’d guess it’s his missing daughter.
Without Felton telling us why he attacked that kid it’s the only obvious link.”
“About as I see
it,” I said.
“I’ll help when I
can,” Walt said.
“Enough boy talk,”
Regan said as she emerged from the trailer with a large serving tray loaded
down with thick club sandwiches, pickles, chips, fries and bottles of cold soda.
“Where is the . .
. ?” Walt said as Molly jumped onto the table.
“I called Oz,”
Regan said as she looked at me. “Okay?”
“Did you ask him
to change his shirt?”
“No.”
“Why does he need
to change his shirt?” Walt said.
“That’s why,” I
said and pointed to Oz as he merrily strolled toward us in his canary yellow
shirt.
*****
After Walt returned to work, Oz and
I sipped coffee while Regan cleaned up in the kitchen.
I waited for her
to join us at the table before I said, “Oz, I’d like you to do me a favor.”
About to sip
coffee, Oz paused and gave me his look. “Is it one of your favors where people
shoot at me?” he said.
“I doubt it,” I
said.
“Try to beat me
up?”
“Probably not.”
“Will I get paid?”
“In free burgers
and hot dogs.”
“In that case,
what is it?”
“I’d like you to
teach Regan to drive,” I said.
Regan shot her gaze
in my direction.
“Me?” Oz said.
“You’re a good
driver and I’m a lousy teacher,” I said. “I would screw it up and I think it’s
about time Regan got her license. What do you think?”
“Do I get a car?”
Regan said.
“If you get a
license you can have mine,” I said.
“A car that wasn’t
first owned by Fred Flintstone,” Regan said. “Or smells like the city dump.”
“Take it or leave
it,” I said.
Regan looked at
Oz.
He nodded at her.
“Yabba dabba doo,”
Regan said.
Six
While Oz drove Regan to the motor
vehicle bureau to get a learner’s permit, I called Jane and she picked me up in
her cruiser.
“Have breakfast
yet?” I said as I slid into the passenger seat.
“No.”
“Let’s pick up
some on the way in,” I said.
Jane hit the drive-through
for egg sandwiches with hash browns and coffee. I carried the bags to her
office where I broke out the food while she set up the DVD player.
We watched the
incident for the second time, then a third. As far as I could determine from
viewing it, Deputy Spears and Deputy Andrews followed procedure one hundred
percent by the book and the shooting was completely accidental.
It was difficult
to determine if Felton meant to attack the deputies or was so insane with fury
that he didn’t know what he was doing. It appeared he was out of control when
he struck Spears with the baseball bat.
It was in his
eyes. That look that said occupant
missing in action, please check back later when I’m home again.
Question was, why?
What could drive
an otherwise sane man to get in his car, ferry it to town and beat a kid half
to death with a Louisville Slugger?
Did the Montero
kid have something to do with Amanda Felton’s disappearance?
Did Amanda run
away from home and did Normal Felton blame the Montero kid for it? If so, why?
On the surface the
fourteen-year-old girl and eighteen-year-old boy weren’t connected in any way.
On the surface.
On the surface the
iceberg that sunk the Titanic didn’t appear all that much, either.
“Any sign of the
Felton girl yet?” I said.
Jane shook her
head as she finished off a hash brown.
“Have a contact
number for the brother, what’s his name?”
“Robert,” Jane
said. “Robert Felton. Owns a car dealership.” She gave me the number and I
punched it into my cell phone.
“Good morning,
Felton Motors, how may I direct your call?” a chipper female voice said.
“John Bekker
calling for Mr. Felton,” I said. “I’m a special investigator with the Sheriff’s
Department.”
“Please hold.”
I held. And
listened to Kenny G for sixty seconds or so. Finally Kenny G shut up and Robert
Felton came on the line.
“I had to think a
minute before it hit me,” Felton said. “The investigator recommended by that
woman sheriff, right?”
“I’m assisting the
sheriff with the investigation,” I said. “I’d like to talk to you about it as
soon as possible.”
“I’m in Rhode Island,” Felton
said.
“Not a problem.
Tomorrow mid-afternoon okay?”
“Yeah, sure, I
guess so,” Felton said.
“Need directions?”
“I’ll manage.”
I hung up and
looked at Jane.
“Want some fresh
coffee?” she said.
“Sure.”
While Jane left
her office I scribbled some notes on a pad on her desk. Are the DVD’s available from the POV from the patrol cars? Besides the
teacher in the school were there any others on the field or within view of the
attack? Was the teacher’s the only 911 call to the high school?
Jane returned with
two containers from the break room.
“Can you play the
911 call?” I said.
Jane went behind
her desk and pulled a small recorder from a drawer.
Before she hit the
play button, I removed the electronic cigarette from a pocket and stuck it
between my lips. Jane looked at it.
“A gift from
Regan,” I said.
“How are they?”
Jane said. “Better than last time?”
“Like taking your sister
to the prom,” I said.
Jane nodded and
hit play.
“911, what’s your emergency please?”
“I’m at the regional high school and there’s
a man beating up what looks like a teenage boy with a baseball bat.”
“Are you inside the school?”
“Yes. Third floor.”
“Are you sure the man is hitting the teenage
boy with a bat?”
“Of course I’m sure. I’m watching him. The
boy is against the fence and . . . oh, he just went down.”
“Sheriff’s deputies are on the way. Please
stay inside. What is your name?”
“Sheryl Johnson. I’m a teacher here at the
school.”
“Stay on the line until the deputies
arrive.”
“Okay.”
“Play it back,” I
said.
We listened to the
call three more times. I made another note on the pad. How long was the response time from when the call was placed to the deputies’
arrival?
I sucked on the
electronic cigarette and exhaled water vapor.
“Can I try that?”
Jane said.
I gave her the
cigarette. She inhaled and blew out vapor. “It’s close,” she said. “But no
cigar.”
“Where’s the
evidence log?” I said.
Jane passed me the
log book. It was open to the Felton page.
One standard, 32-ounce
Louisville Slugger baseball bat made of maple wood and available anywhere
sporting goods were sold. Blood on the bat matched blood from Ubaldo Montero.
Hair on the bat came from the head of Ubaldo Montero. Blood on Norman Felton’s
clothing and skin matched blood from Ubaldo Montero.
The 911 call made
by the teacher, Sheryl Johnson, and her written statement.
The DVD recording
made by deputies Spears and Andrews and their written statements.
Hospital reports
of the injuries to Ubaldo Montero. Hospital reports of the gunshot wound to
Norman Felton. Hospital reports of Deputy Spears’s broken right arm caused by
Felton’s attack with the baseball bat.
I read the reports
filed by Deputy Spears and Deputy Andrews.
I read the initial
and follow-up reports from Detective Philip Eaton and Detective Stan Hollis.
“What do you got
on Norman Felton?” I said.
Jane handed me a
file.
Norman Felton. Age
forty-four. Graduated high school and attended college for two years. Took a
job with the Post Office where he’s been employed for twenty-three years, first
as a loader, then sorter and finally to delivery. His tax returns for the
previous year listed as income a total of sixty-three thousand with some modest
capital gains on investments. His pension was fully vested and would have made
his retirement at age fifty-five very comfortable.
His present duty
station was on the mainland with scheduled hours between six-thirty in the
morning until two-thirty in the afternoon. That meant a five-thirty in the
morning ferry ride five days a week.
During his second
year at the post office, Felton met Susan Wiggs, a sorter at the mainland
station he was assigned to. A romance blossomed and marriage soon followed.
They put off having children until they could afford to purchase a home and
when they could, they found a modest, Tudor-style home on Midnight Island.
Susan transferred
to the small post office on the Island while Norman worked his way up the ladder to
delivery. It was then they started to raise a family. Amanda Felton came along
almost fifteen years ago and four years later, after multiple tries at having
more children, Susan was diagnosed with a rare and incurable form of lung and
rib cancer. She fought the good fight, but died when Amanda was just seven.
For the past seven
years, Norman
raised his daughter alone and from the enclosed photographs of her had done an
excellent job of it. I studied several of the eight-by-eleven photos Jane
included in the file.
Amanda was a
beautiful, dark-haired, blue-eyed girl about five foot four inches tall and had
the budding shape of a young woman. She was a B+ student and would be a
straight A student if not for difficulty in her math classes. She played guard
on the girls’ basketball team and was a member of the cheerleading squad for
the boys’ basketball team. According to reports from Eaton and Hollis, she was
a popular girl with many friends on the Island and mainland.
There was a list
of friends interviewed concerning Amanda’s disappearance. She was last seen at
school on Friday as normal. She rode the ferry home after school with several
classmates who also lived on the island. They went their separate ways when the
ferry docked and Amanda hadn’t been seen since.
What were the odds
that the disappearance of Amanda Felton and her father’s beating the Montero
kid were unrelated?
A billion to one.
“How long has
school been back in session?” I said.
“Not long. A week
when the incident took place.”
“Amanda Felton had
become Norman Felton’s entire life,” I said, thinking aloud.
Jane nodded.
“Daddy’s little girl,” she said.
Still thinking
aloud, I said, “Are the tapes from the cruisers available?”
“Yes, but they
show nothing.”
“Can I see them
anyway?”
“Sure.”
“The 911 call; was
it the only one or did someone else also see the attack and make a call?” I
said.
“Nothing else from
dispatch,” Jane said. “I’ll check and get back to you.”
“The response
time, how long?”
“Under three
minutes,” Jane said. “You want exact?”
“As close to,” I said.
“You’re wondering
if there was someone else on the field that ran off before my deputies
arrived,” Jane said. “Another witness.”
“Just a detail.”
“And a damn good
one.”
“When can I see
the tapes from the cruisers?” I said.
“As soon as I can
have them sent up,” Jane said. “Tomorrow.”
“I’ll stop by on
the way back from seeing Felton.”
“What are you
going to do now?”
“Go home and
think,” I said. “Mind if I keep that notepad?”
“This one is going
to get messy, isn’t it?” Jane said.
“I’ve never seen a
neat one,” I said.
*****
To the right of my trailer, a few
years ago, I’d set up a pull-up station, a push-up station, and a hundred and
twenty-pound heavy bag on a tripod. Hanging from a nail on the side of the
trailer were several weighted jump ropes.
Regan was still
out with Oz when I returned home, so I changed into sweats and did a workout to
clear my head and open the thought valve.
I started with
some jump rope using a two-pound weighted leather rope. After ten minutes I
worked up a sweat and put the rope back on the nail. Then I did some push-ups,
elevated and flat, switched over to pull-ups and chin-ups, and then grabbed the
bag gloves and gave the bag a pounding.
Norman Felton went
berserk at the high school and beat the Montero kid with a baseball bat. Why?
When confronted by
Jane’s deputies Felton was still in such a rage he turned the bat on them. Why?
Felton’s daughter,
Amanda, was missing, but for how long was the question. Before or after he went
Mickey Mantle on the Montero kid?
Somebody hurt Felton’s
little girl.
That’s the only
thing I could see that would set him off like that.
I thought about
what I would do to somebody if they hurt mine.
Yeah, somebody
hurt his little girl and on the surface it appeared that somebody was a skinny
teenager from another country named Ubaldo Montero.
“Dad, don’t you
ever get sick of beating yourself up like that?” Regan said. I hadn’t heard the
car arrive over the loud creaking of the heavy bag hinges.
I lowered my hands
and pulled off the gloves.
Regan held up her
learner’s permit. “Did you know Oz’s brother runs the motor vehicle place?” she
said.
“Actually I did,
and let me guess and say Oz called in a few favors,” I said.
“Only one,” Oz
said as he came up behind Regan. “He allowed her to take the written test today
instead of all the usual BS. She only got one wrong and the kid never even read
the book.”
“I have to go to Rhode Island tomorrow,”
I said to Regan. “Want to go for a ride with your old man?”
“Can Mark go with
us?” Regan said. “He’s going nuts and needs to get away from Clayton for a
day.”
“Sure,” I said.
“Give him a call and ask, and I was thinking the three of us might go to dinner
in town tonight.” I looked at Oz. “If you change that shirt.”
“You bought this
thing,” Oz said. “But for a free meal I’ll dip into my wardrobe.”