Burying Ben (41 page)

Read Burying Ben Online

Authors: Ellen Kirschman

Tags: #Fiction, #Retail, #Suspense, #Thriller

BOOK: Burying Ben
12.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The Com
m
iss
i
on chair hits the gavel and asks if there are any
m
ore public co
mm
ents.

“T
i
m
e is up.” I stand,
m
y pu
r
se under
m
y
ar
m
. “So, who takes the
m
i
crophone next, you or
m
e
?”

Chapter Forty

 

 

I am
awake at dawn. Long fingers of pink announce the sun as it c
o
m
es over the horizon. I bunch
m
y bathrobe closed against the
m
or
n
ing chill and open the front door. I walk down the front path in my bare feet. The
c
oncrete is cold and scratchy. A lone jogger wearing headphones and black running shorts r
a
ces past, his lips
m
oving in sync with music only he can hear.
I pull the newspaper
out of its plastic s
l
eeve. Shopping inserts and circulars flutter to the sidewalk. The front page headline reads: “Police Chief Stuns Com
m
ission with Resignation.”

“In a surprise announce
m
ent at the end of
last night

s hu
m
a
n
relations
commission
m
eeting, Police Chief Robert Baxter gave no
t
ice of his intention to resign im
m
ediately. Despite appearing to be in robust health, he
cited
m
edical proble
m
s as the reason he is leaving. He indicated that his
present state of health ass
u
res a full recovery from
his undisclosed
m
edical proble
m
s. He
a
pologized
for the abruptness of
his departure and assured everyone that the transition to a new chief would be swift and have no adverse i
m
pact on public safety. He left the auditorium
without further com
m
ent. Chief Baxter was seen earlier in t
h
e e
v
ening enga
g
ed in
intense discussion with Dr. Dot Meyerhoff, fo
r
m
er depart
m
ent psychologist, leading so
m
e to speculate that Chief Baxter

s health proble
m
s may be psychological. The city
m
anager has declined to comment.”

 

On the
m
orning of Baxter

s hastily c
o
nco
c
ted retire
m
ent ceremony I
m
arshal
m
y courage and call Ms. Hudson to inquire
about the status of
April

s complaint against
m
e. She infor
m
s
m
e
t
hat the complainant has failed
to respond to letters or phone calls. Relief slides down my body from
m
y chest to
m
y knee
s
. I start to thank her and she interrupts. “However, your case will re
m
ain on file for three years from
the date Mrs. Go
m
ez
m
ade her complaint
.
For future reference.”

I hang up with no clear sense of what it
m
eans to be on file for future reference. Is there a little icon of
m
e on her co
m
puter
des
k
to
p
?
W
ill she be
f
ollowing me or
f
lying over
m
y head, her pai
n
ted red talons illu
m
inat
e
d in the sun, a vulture in search of fresh carrio
n
?

The phone rings. I ju
m
p and slosh hot coffee
on the counter. It

s Mark calling to tell
m
e that Melinda has delivered a healthy baby boy.
W
ith an al
l
iterative flourish,
they have na
m
ed him
Milo. Mark has read this
m
orning

s newspaper and wonders if I had anything to do with Baxter

s decision to retire. As always, he hopes that we can re
m
ain friends and colleagues. I tell him
I

d soon
e
r be friends with Adolph Hitler.

His voice grows sulky until
h
e re
m
e
m
bers that he

s really
c
alling to ask
if
I’m
still
p
lanning to report him
and Melinda to the Board of Psycho
l
ogy. It would be a pleasure to deliver the lovebirds into Ms. Hudson

s bony h
a
nds if I could do so without dra
w
ing her attention in my direction
at the sa
m
e ti
m
e. It

s not a dec
i
sion I need to
m
ake rig
h
t awa
y. T
he statute of li
m
itations
f
or
f
iling c
o
mplaints with the bo
a
rd gives
m
e seven
y
ears
to
m
ake
up
my
m
ind.

Mark gives a hoarse sigh. Seven years, he says, is a long ti
m
e to have the threat of
an investigation hanging over their heads. I tell h
i
m, with absolute si
n
ce
r
it
y
, that I coul
d
n

t agree
m
ore. Still, Mark
h
as far worse troub
l
es to
f
ace than Ms.
Hudson. Unless I’m
way off base, and I doubt it, his future with Mel
i
nda will rese
m
ble Vinnie Patcher’s
p
resent.

 

I’m
t
e
m
pted to wear something black to Baxter

s retire
m
ent cere
m
ony as an ironic fashion state
m
ent, but I don

t want to further add to t
h
e travesty or give the appearance that I am mocking his downfall. I choose, instead,
m
y default gray pants suit.

People are straggling into the auditorium
and taking their seats. It

s 2:00 in the afternoon.
T
here are a lot of r
e
tirees in the audience, a f
e
w workers from
city hall, some reporters and a ho
m
eless
m
an who rushes to t
h
e back row with his backpack and junk
f
illed pap
e
r bags and pr
om
ptly
f
alls
a
sle
e
p.

I sit with Mr. and
Mrs. Go
m
ez and their grandchildren. She is wearing t
h
e sa
m
e clothes she wore to B
e
n

s funeral. I doubt this is by accident. She hadn

t wanted to co
m
e to the cere
m
ony after I told her about Baxter and the bri
b
e. She had wanted to call a lawyer a
n
d start a lawsuit. But
M
r.
Go
m
ez put her off. He wasn’t sure, given
Ben’s early fa
m
ily history, t
h
at they could win a lawsuit clai
m
i
ng Ben’s e
m
ployer was responsible for his suicide. Further
m
o
r
e, he thought they should direct all their energ
i
es to raising their re
m
aining grandchildren. But, out of respect for Ben and to keep his
m
e
mory a
l
ive, the entire fa
m
i
ly would attend the cere
m
ony and sit in the front row, where the chief could see the traces of Ben

s face in their own. They have lost a lot, these
people – a daughter, a grandson, and, in all probability, a great grandchild.

Barely ten
m
i
nutes have gone by when t
h
e city
m
anager decides that the s
m
all crowd is all that

s co
m
i
ng and asks us to take
our seats. There are half a dozen cops in the audience, including Manny. Bax
t
er co
m
es in from a side door and
m
ounts the podium.

He is wearing his Class-A dress unifor
m
. H
e

s p
l
aying this like a politician, waving and s
m
iling at
p
hantom
f
riends in the audience. No one waves back. There is the usual squeal of protest from
the
m
icrophone as the city
m
anager announces that an i
n
terim chief will be appo
i
nted within t
h
e week after which he will authorize a nationwide
s
earch for a
n
ew chief. The
m
ayor, a tall, elegant
m
an with silky snow white hair, presents Baxter with a fra
m
ed
r
esolution in appreci
a
tion of his years of service. He apologizes for the ab
s
e
n
ce of t
h
e ot
h
er elected o
f
ficials, all of
who
m
, it appears, had previously scheduled appoint
m
en
t
s they were unable to change. He bends to shake the chief

s hand and they pose for pictures, holding the r
e
sol
u
tion between th
em
. The photographer has to turn his lens sid
e
ways to get them
both in the fra
m
e.

It is Baxter’s turn at the
m
i
crophone. He adjusts it downward, producing another shattering electro
n
ic sq
u
eal. He ta
p
s the head of
it with his fingers and says, “I hate these things. I

d rather be chasing crooks t
h
an
m
aking speeches, any
day.”

Other books

Wild Cards: Death Draws Five by John J. Miller, George R.R. Martin
Romancing the Fashionista by K. M. Jackson
Head Over Heels by Jill Shalvis
Truth by Julia Karr
The Mystery Horse by Gertrude Chandler Warner
Dragon Moon by Unknown