Read Parker 02 - The Guilty Online
Authors: Jason Pinter
closed the window and pressed the door release button.
"Doesn't he have his own home? What's he doing here at
this hour?"
"I have no idea." I'd worked with Jack for over a year,
and never once had we seen each other's apartments. I
pictured his clean, full of polished wood and cracked books.
Shelves lined with erudite literature and snifters of amber
liquid, a fire roaring as he puffed a pipe and wrote great
news of the day.
I looked around my apartment. Wondered if his vision of
mine contained empty bottles of Pepsi and a subscription to
Glamour.
"Quick," I said. "Hide stuff."
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I picked up all the girly magazines, food wrappers and
rubber bands I could find and threw them in the trash. Which
was already overflowing with girly magazines, food wrappers
and rubber bands.
"What are you doing?"
"Amanda, baby," I said, taking her hands in mine. "I
idolized this man growing up. He's probably the only man
I've ever dreamt about. And now he's coming up to my apartment." She eyed me like I'd just insulted her mother. "Okay,
forget I said that. Just help."
For the next minute, we scrambled around the room
tidying up as best we could. In those sixty seconds, our onebedroom apartment went from resembling a tsunami-affected
college dorm room to resembling an apartment lived in by two
people who cleaned dishes after using them.
I heard a knock at the door. I looked around, panicked, then
threw myself onto the worn polyurethane sofa and crossed my
legs. Amanda glared at me.
"You expect me to open the door?"
"Would you mind?" She gave an exasperated sigh.
"Just so you know, you're sleeping on the couch tonight."
She went to the door. Peered through the eyehole for dramatic
effect. "Who is it?"
"Now it'd be some coincidence if it was someone other
than the guy who was just downstairs," Jack said, his voice
muffled by the door.
Amanda unlocked the door and opened it. Jack was breathing heavy, the trenchcoat seeming to weigh him down. He
took off his hat, a few loose gray hairs sticking to it.
"You must be Miss Davies," he said.
"That's right."
"Charmed." He took her hand, kissed it as he looked into
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her eyes. She smiled demurely. "Henry here talks about you
nonstop."
"Is that so? Well, at least one man here can call himself a
gentleman." She led him into the apartment. "Can I get you
a drink, Mr. O'Donnell?"
"Please call me Jack. And I'll take a Jack as well, if you
have one, on ice." Amanda and I looked at each other. "It's
been a long day."
Amanda disappeared into the kitchen. She came back
with a glass full of brown liquid over ice. "Seagram's Seven.
All we had."
"Do nicely," Jack replied. He moved over to the couch, let
out a groan as he sat down. "How you holding up?"
"Me?" I said incredulously.
"Heard you were at the Franklin-Rees building when...it
happened."
"Nearby," I corrected. "I'm holding up fine. Jeffrey
Lourdes is the one who was shot."
"Murder has a ripple effect, gets a lot of people wet," Jack
said. "You better than anyone should know that."
Jack took a sip of his Seagram's. His cheeks were red, eyes
tinged with veins. I wondered whether he was simply fatigued
from taking the stairs, or if that Seagram's wasn't his first
cocktail of the evening.
"I'm fine," I said. "Really."
"You know they haven't found a quote at the scene of
Lourdes's murder," Jack said. "The first two were left in such
prominent locations, either he dropped the whole thing, or..."
"Or he just didn't have time."
"You have to wonder, really, what kind of person walks up
to a man in broad daylight and shoots him in the head."
"Same kind of person who shoots an unarmed woman and
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a cop from a distance," I said. "They're not dealing with your
average run-of-the-mill lunatic. This guy has an agenda."
"You think so?" Jack said.
"Well, look at his targets. Athena Paradis, Mayor Perez and
Jeffrey Lourdes. Remember, Joe Mauser was a mistake. All
three of those people are celebrities, in some form or another.
He's not killing random people, he's killing people whose
deaths would pretty much dominate news coverage. I mean,
just look at the Metro papers the last few days. Athena,
Mauser and tomorrow Jeffrey Lourdes will be everywhere."
"What do you make of the gun?" Jack asked, another nip
of brown disappearing down his throat.
"I really don't know," I said. "Seems like he's using some
sort of antique, something with a meaning. Don't quite know
what yet, but Amanda has a contact from school who might
be able to shed some light. I spoke to Lourdes's assistant at
the scene. She got a quick glimpse of the killer and a partial
of the murder weapon. Unfortunately she couldn't ID the
actual shooter, and her police sketch is more vague than a
Rorschach. Because of the chaos at the Franklin-Rees building, the guy was able to escape in the stampede."
"Mayor Perez, Athena Paradis and Jeffrey Lourdes," Jack
said. "Not exactly three people you could imagine having
brunch together on a Sunday morning."
"But someone sees them fitting in the same pattern."
"In this city," Jack said, "there's no shortage of people like
those three. People who hog the front page. And though our
great police force is locked up tighter than my grandma's
cooter when it comes to terrorism, there's no defense for a
sick fuck who wants to kill one person at a time."
"Lourdes," I said, "was surrounded by a hundred people
when he died. His shooting caused a stampede. It couldn't
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have been any easier for the killer to disappear than if Scotty
had beamed him aboard the
Enterprise.
"
"Nobody disappears," Jack said, swallowing the last of the
whiskey. "It's our job to find out what rug they're hiding
under."
"I'm on it," I said. "You know the last quote he used. When
he killed Joe Mauser." I'd told Jack about my tip.
"I'll let them know what bad means," Jack said.
"I looked it up," I said. "Guess quoting a junior reporter
just wasn't scary enough, he had to upgrade to sicker game."
"Billy the Kid," Jack said. "Carruthers scowled during his
statement, like he couldn't believe this thing could get any
more macabre."
"He's moved on from quoting me to quoting mass murderers," I said. "Forgetting for a moment my disgust at being
in that company, if the killer does see himself as some sort of
avenger it probably means there's a longer list of people this
guy doesn't like."
"Billy the Kid," Jack said. "You know the Kid, or whatever
the hell his real name was, pretty much started the trend of
yellow journalism. His estate should get royalties from the
National Enquirer
and
Weekly World News.
Reporters and
hack novelists all over the country tripped over themselves
to drool over this guy. Made him out to be some kind of hero.
Some kind of Robin Hood. Idolizing celebrities practically
began
with the Kid."
"You think that's how this killer sees himself? Offing the
rich and famous to help the poor?"
"Remember he also quoted
your
ass," Jack said. "Let's just
hope all he's got is an affinity for scary words. In the meantime, we need to stay ahead on this story."
"Stay ahead? What do you mean?"
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He took another sip and looked at me. And for the first time
since I'd known him, Jack O'Donnell looked worried.
"Paulina," he said.
"What about her?"
"She's selling newspapers."
"Well, that's her job," I said. "From what I hear she just
didn't fit at the
Gazette.
"
"Maybe not," Jack continued, "but if the
Dispatch
beats
us to this story, they could see a double digit circulation
growth by the end of the year." I stayed silent. "What that
means, in lay terms, is we'd be fucked."
I considered this. "I know the
Dispatch'
s circulation is up
since she joined the paper, but I mean..."
"There's been a three percent swing this week
alone,
Henry. Whether it's our reporters getting beat to the punch or
her articles attracting our readers, it's happening. These three
murders are the biggest story of the year, everyone with a pen
and a brain trying to get a piece. There's going to be a clear
winner and loser here. We need to make sure we're not the
ones holding the silver."
"They weren't beating us to the punch when I reported
Athena's murder the morning she died," I said, my voice
coming out angrier than I'd hoped.
"That was days ago, Henry," Jack said. He sighed, sank
into the couch. "Since then it's neck and neck. Nobody is
getting new scoops. So it comes down to juice, plain and
simple. Paulina has it, we don't. People want salacious stories,
headlines in bold, and photos of celebrities in bikinis. Only
thing that can distract them from that is real, honest-to-God
news. And until we get that, we're going to get creamed every
day. If two people are tied during the race, everyone stares at
the one wearing flashier clothing."
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"I prefer jeans," I said.
"Don't be a smart-ass. And listen, Henry, you should be
aware of it...Paulina knows you were at the crime scene
today. Knew it before we did, actually."
"What--how is that possible?"
"I think she has some chumscrubber tailing you. But she's
mentioning it in tomorrow's article on the Lourdes murder,
claiming you always find yourself at the scenes of brutal
crimes. Between Fredrickson, Mauser, your quote being
found at Athena's crime scene and being seen talking to a
witness today, she's got enough paint on her brush to level
some pretty brash accusations."
"That was a coincidence. I was talking to a friend. Any
decent reporter would have done the same thing."
"A friend. You mean the cop."
"Yes, a cop friend, Curt Sheffield."
"I know Curt. Seen that recruiting poster everywhere but
my refrigerator."
"Whatever," I said. "Bottom line is I have a lead on a hell
of a story."
"You know, I thought you might."
"That gun, the one the killer is using, there's a reason he's
using it. I'm going to find out what that is. Paulina doesn't have
that. Combine that with this new quote, it's going to fit somewhere." I sat there silent. Watched Jack rattle his empty glass.
Then he stood up, tipped his cap at Amanda, nodded at me.
"Find the story," Jack said. "Behind every murder is a
motive. The cops don't care about that right now, they just
want the man. Motive will come later, once they can be sure
there aren't any more high-caliber bullets aimed at anyone's
skull. So keep on keeping on."
"I will."
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"Important work is silent until it needs to be heard. Keep
that in mind. Other people want this story, too." Then he left.
I turned to Amanda. "Your history professor," I said. "You
think she's still awake?"
18
The headline read, Head Of Franklin-Rees, Now Without
A Head.
Even I was shocked by the tactlessness and audacity of the
Dispatch'
s front page. The lead story, naturally, was the murder
of Jeffrey Lourdes, accompanied by a gruesome photo of the
man's legs with blood pooling around them. In Technicolor.
The paper neglected to mention how Jeffrey Lourdes had
revolutionized the magazine industry in the early seventies
with several titles that captured the zeitgeist with aplomb and
erudition, how he'd mentored many of the country's most
talented writers and journalists from scruffy-haired hipsters
to men and women who changed the face of American
culture. Instead the
Dispatch
focused on rumors of money
laundering, infidelity, drugs and under-the-table deals. It
noted how, over the last decade, Lourdes had been accused
of letting his legacy go to seed, eschewing strong journalism
for salacious stories and shoddy reportage that his younger
self would have thrown in the fire. It also noted how, despite
Lourdes's rumored twenty-million-a-year salary, circulation
for
Moss
was way down, and the magazine had long ago
ceded any cultural impact.
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They would have had you believe Lourdes was as dirty as
they come, a common rat working in an ivory tower.
Our article for the
Gazette
painted a more accurate, more
even picture. Giving Lourdes credit where he deserved it. I
expected the
Dispatch
to kick our asses at the newsstand.