Kill Switch (21 page)

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Authors: Neal Baer

BOOK: Kill Switch
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“The doll,” he said, clarifying.
Claire nodded, staring at the image.
“Do you remember where?”
“Yes.”
 
The rain had stopped as Claire, shovel in hand, slung mud from an ever-growing hole in the grass of her parents' backyard.
“Why?” Nick asked her.
“I thought you said
why
was overrated,” Claire said.
The digging was therapeutic. She pressed the shovel into the moist earth and lifted out a heap of dark soil. “I always imagined he took Amy and buried her body somewhere. I wanted to feel how she must've felt. The dirt on her face. In her eyes. What that bastard felt when he put my friend in the ground.”
Nick could see she was crying. Gently, he took the shovel from her. She let him move her aside as he dug until he felt something.
He bent down and grabbed a plastic hand. Pulled the doll from the dirt.
“Stupid, right?” Claire asked.
Nick looked at the doll. Its painted eyes were barely visible. “She was as much a part of you as Amy was.”
“We had a funeral for Amy. We buried a casket but it was empty. It shouldn't have been.”
“Let me help you,” Nick said.
“Help me what?”
“Find Amy. And the man who stole her from you.”
“Why do you want to find him?”
“So you can ask him why.”
Claire looked at him. She knew the reason was more than what he was willing to say. But she had known all along she couldn't do this on her own. Or was it that she didn't want to?
Maybe it doesn't matter. Maybe we can save each other.
“Okay,” she said.
C
HAPTER
21
T
he
click-clack
of heels along the gray-walled hallways of Rochester's Public Safety Building reminded Claire of that first day with Paul Curtin, walking through the cinder-block and concrete corridors of Rikers Island. That had been less than a month ago, but to Claire it felt like a decade.
This time, though, was different. Instead of the fear and intimidation she felt walking behind Curtin that morning, her step was filled with confidence and purpose as she strode beside NYPD detective Nick Lawler, convinced that with his help, they'd find both her friend Amy Danforth (or her remains) and Mr. Winslow, the man who'd taken Amy from Claire's driveway so many years ago.
Nick had offered to remain for several days to help Claire, and she immediately accepted, inviting him to stay in her parents' guest room. Claire thought they should begin with a tour of the places she and Amy visited together as children, thinking it might trigger a memory of a place where she'd seen Winslow. But Nick insisted the only place to start was the case file, which meant contacting the Rochester Police Department's Homicide Unit. Claire's parents were well connected in Rochester's political circles, and she suggested using her parents' clout to secure the police chief 's cooperation with their investigation. To which Nick replied that he was more connected in the RPD than her parents could ever be.
Which he proved the moment he and Claire rounded a corner. A tall, trim man with a full head of silvering hair, and wearing a tie and shirtsleeves, the badge and automatic on his belt pegging him as a cop, waited by a door. When he saw Nick, his face burst into a huge smile. Nick couldn't help but return the grin.
“I knew that stuff about your wife was bullshit,” said the detective, slapping Nick on the shoulder and pulling him into an embrace. “Welcome back.”
“You two know each other?” Claire asked, incredulous.
“Detective Allan Hart, Dr. Claire Waters,” Nick said, gesturing to Claire.
“I've read all about you,” Hart said to Claire as they shook hands. “In the case file, that is. You still look like your picture.”
“That picture was taken when I was eight,” Claire said, returning his easy smile. “I guess I'll take that as a compliment, Detective.”
“My friends call me Al,” said Hart, opening the door beside him. “And any friend of Nick's is a friend of mine. Follow me.”
Hart led them into the Homicide office, where six detectives (four men and two women) worked individually at standard government-issue metal desks—until they caught sight of Nick, whereupon they rose and gave him a standing ovation.
Claire looked at Nick. “What's up with the hero's welcome?”
“I helped them out with a case a couple of years ago,” Nick replied uncomfortably.
“Must've been some case,” Claire said, shaking her head as the other detectives came over and greeted Nick, pulling him aside.
“It was,” Hart said to her, and proceeded to tell her the story. Two years earlier, three brothers operating a heroin-processing factory in the basement of their home in Rochester's crime-ridden 19th Ward were gunned down by a duo of professional hitters equipped with Uzis. They might've gotten away clean but for an unmarked police cruiser passing the house at exactly the wrong time. The solo rookie cop behind the wheel, Officer Evan Springer, was passing nearby when he heard the automatic weapons fire. A former marine sharpshooter in Iraq, Springer stopped, got out, and positioned himself behind his car as the two shooters burst from the house. He scored head shots on both killers literally before they knew what hit them. They sprayed bullets everywhere as they went down in their death dance. Unfortunately, one of the bullets ricocheted off a light post behind the police cruiser and into the back of Springer's skull, slicing through his brain and killing him.
The last Rochester cop shot to death had been in 1959, when Hart was in diapers, and he wasn't about to let Officer Springer's death go unanswered on his watch. Whoever ordered the hit on the three drug-dealing brothers was as guilty of murdering Officer Springer as the two dead killers-for-hire, and Al Hart vowed to catch the bastard.
A set of keys in one of the dead killers' pockets led to a 2006 Mitsubishi Diamante parked around the corner from the scene of the massacre. The vehicle turned out to have been stolen from an outdoor parking lot on West 47th Street in New York City. Cop brotherhood being what it is, Hart skipped official channels and dialed Manhattan South Homicide on his own, looking for help. When Detective Nick Lawler just happened to pick up the phone, he not only pledged his cooperation, but he also invited Hart to come down to the city to work the case with him.
By the time Hart arrived in Manhattan the next day, Nick had already worked his contacts in Special Narcotics, who'd rousted their snitches and come up with the name Eduardo Pena, the reputed owner of the Juarez Cartel's New York City heroin franchise. Word had it that Pena planned to expand his operations upstate by knocking off the competition—literally.
Heavily armed NYPD emergency service cops burst through Pena's door, followed by Nick Lawler and Al Hart in body armor, and took him down. One of the ESU guys pulled Pena to his feet and held him out to Nick.
“All yours, Detective,” the ESU cop said.
Nick turned to Hart. “Your case, your collar.”
“Your turf,” Hart said, flabbergasted that Nick would hand over such a high-profile arrest to someone from out of town.
“We're still in New York State,” replied Nick. “You're a cop here too. Take him home and put him away.”
Hart nodded a grateful thanks and cuffed Pena, taking him back to Rochester to face capital murder charges in the death of Officer Springer. And the Rochester police got to announce that one of its own locked up the most dangerous drug-running cop-killing badass scumbag in the country.
For his work, Nick Lawler received an honorary Rochester detective's badge and the assurance that anything he ever needed in the Flower City was his for the asking.
“And in this particular case,” Hart said, finishing, “anything you come up with helps us as well. We've been carrying this as an open file for more than twenty years.”
“Did you work on it originally?” Claire asked, glancing at a man she pegged as Hart's boss emerging from a glassed-in office and heading their way.
“Sort of,” answered Hart. “I was in the academy and they had us out doing grid searches for your friend in Seneca Park.”
“You mean, searching for Amy's body,” Claire concluded. She looked down to chase away the pain and compose herself. “I can't tell you how much I appreciate all this,” she said, managing a smile.
Hart nodded as the man from the office reached them. “Captain Killian,” Hart said, gesturing to Claire, “Dr. Claire Waters.”
“Your mother taught all my kids how to dissect a frog,” the captain said, shaking Claire's hand. “I guess that's a strange way to introduce myself.”
“No worries,” Claire replied. “I just hope she did a good job.”
Nick joined them now, shaking hands with the captain, whom he'd met on the Springer murder case. “We've got you all set up,” Killian said, pulling from his pocket two temporary ID cards and handing them to Claire and Nick. “You can come and go as you please, use our computers, whatever you need. Chief 's providing us with an extra unmarked car for this investigation and an empty office right down the hall. The files are there, and the three of you can work comfortably.”
“Three of us?” Nick asked, shooting Hart a knowing look.
Hart smiled. “You didn't think I was gonna pass up a chance to help you out, did you?”
“Payback's a bitch,” Nick said with a smile.
Captain Killian headed back to his office. “Al, just let me know if there's anything else,” he said over his shoulder.
“Thank you, Detective,” Claire said with relief, as if a heavy burden had been lifted from her shoulders.
“Forget it,” Hart replied. “Let's get to work.”
 
It was clear that Nick and Claire had their work cut out for them. Inside their temporary office, more than a dozen boxes, battered from use and yellowed with age, were piled on several metal tables in the windowless room.
“So many?” Claire gasped, filled with trepidation over what she might find inside them.
“There was barely a cop in western New York who didn't help us in some way,” Hart told her as he pulled the lid off a box and peeked inside.
“What about the original detectives who ran the case?” Nick asked as he shot Claire a look. “Any value in talking to them?”
“Wish we could,” Hart said. “But the captain who ran the investigation died in ninety-eight, the lead guys both passed away last year, and everyone else who was in Homicide back then's retired and living in Florida.”
Claire barely heard any of it. Her eyes were focused on one particular box, on which was written “#1” and the date she'd never forget: “July 18, 1989”—the day Amy had been stolen from her.
Nick sensed her discomfort. “You okay?” he asked, moving beside her.
Claire brushed a wisp of hair from her eyes. “I hoped this would be easier,” she replied.
“There's no physical evidence to look at,” Hart assured her as he stepped over to join them, “because none was found at the scene of the kidnapping. Our CSU techs got a few photos of tire tracks in the dirt on the street but that's about all.”
Claire looked up at Nick. “How do you want to do this?”
“From the beginning,” Nick answered instantly, pulling the first box from atop the pile and opening the lid. “Best information about any crime comes when the crime is fresh in everyone's mind. We'll each take a box, work through them in chronological order.”
He pulled the second and third boxes, keeping the former for himself and handing the latter to Hart, who moved off to one of the three tables. Claire took her cue and began going through the massive amount of paperwork in the first box. Report after report, statement after statement, the sheer volume of what she didn't know about the case made her head spin and, at the same time, cleared up what she'd wondered about for so many years: The police had left few, if any, stones unturned in their search for Amy and her kidnapper. The investigation had been a thorough, professional one, involving numerous cops from surrounding towns and counties, the state police, and even the FBI when a piece of evidence turned up suggesting Amy was abducted to be sold into child slavery. That was ruled out when the ring in question was busted and Amy wasn't found.
Although the file boxes were labeled in chronological order, the paperwork inside was disorganized, presumably from having been gone through numerous times over the past two decades. They worked silently for an hour, leafing through papers, until Claire picked up a manila folder and stared at the label affixed to the tab.
“Someone else needs to read this,” she said, the fear in her voice catching both Nick's and Al's attention.
“What is it?” Hart asked, putting down a piece of paper.
“My statement to the police the day Amy disappeared,” Claire answered, realizing she'd completely erased or blocked it from her mind. A good part of her didn't want to bring it back in. She dropped the file on the table as if it were burning her hands.
Nick slid his chair beside hers. “We can look at it together,” he said, “but you need to read what you told the cops the day it happened.”
“Why?” asked Claire, avoiding Nick's eyes.
“Because it may help you remember something,” Nick answered. “You're the only one who saw the kidnapper. And you were just a kid. What seemed irrelevant then may have more meaning to you now.”
Claire understood. She had seen enough patients unlock childhood memories for the sheer reason that they were now adults who could reason their way through and interpret events in ways a child never could.
She opened the folder and read. The interview she gave to detectives all those years ago appeared in front of her, the words neatly transcribed from a cassette tape she could almost see whirring in a recorder on the table in front of her.
The words themselves didn't ring familiar, for they were the words of a terrified eight-year-old who'd just witnessed a horrible crime.
And then she began to remember. The room at the precinct had stuffed animals on the chairs. She'd sat on a couch beside a psychologist, and the detective sat on a stool facing her. She could tell from the way their questions were worded that they had been gentle, trying not to traumatize her more than she already was. They tried to jog her young memory without crossing the line by asking leading questions. The interview was short, and Claire told them as much as she could remember. Which, she realized, was so much less than she remembered now.

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