Read Parker 02 - The Guilty Online
Authors: Jason Pinter
her that kind of coverage unless she cured AIDS or something. But murder changed all that, I guess.
"On my way," I said.
"I was never a fan of hers," Wallace said, offering more information than he needed to. "But the way it looks down
there...she didn't deserve what this monster did."
3
The New York night was muggy. Even at two-thirty in the
morning, when the sun, like most of the city, is hibernating
and waiting for the start of a new day, something kept the air
thick. It was early May, and humidity already choked the
streets. Late night revelers all wore shirts soaked through
with sweat, foreheads shiny, content for the sun to never show
its face again.
My cab slowed down and then stopped as we approached
a tangled mess. I could see flashing lights nearly three blocks
away. Kids lining the streets with worried looks. It took a lot
to ruin a good night. I could only imagine what had happened
here.
I walked the last few blocks to Thirteenth, wading through
honking cars and loaded partiers screaming on cell phones. I
couldn't help but hear the panicked voices.
"Man, there was blood everywhere. I was right near her,
man!"
"She...they think she's dead. Oh God, does that mean her
album won't come out on time?"
I saw Wallace Langston talking to a cop and jotting down
some notes on a spiral pad. Wallace didn't get out of bed for
The Guilty
27
many stories. He left that to his city desk. But this wasn't just
New York front-page news, this was a national headline. The
kind of tawdry story that Paulina Cole and the
Dispatch
would
be sopping up with a biscuit and squeezing dry.
I hadn't seen Paulina Cole in months, and I prayed she
wasn't here tonight. I didn't need any distractions. Paulina
Cole had once been a top reporter at the
Gazette
but left after
penning a series of controversial yet shockingly popular
articles where she insinuated that my murder accusation was
merely the next story in a succession of young journalists
whose names always ended up in brighter lights than their
stories. Didn't matter that my murder rap was bogus. The
articles enabled Paulina to jump to the
New York Dispatch,
the
Gazette'
s biggest rival. She got more money, more perks,
and of course the chance to hoist her name among brighter
lights.
Covering Athena Paradis's murder would be tricky. If we
played catch-up to Paulina and the
Dispatch's
muckraking,
they would dig a grave and bury us in a pile of our own moral
righteousness.
Above the Kitten Club was perched a gigantic neon sign
in the shape of a kitten. And not just any run-of-the-mill
kitten, the kind of kitten that apparently wore a halter top and
stockings and every few seconds tipped back some sort of
pink cocktail that probably cost more than my pants and contained less alcohol than a glass of seltzer. Appearances. Atmosphere. That's what Kitten Club patrons came for. And last
night they got it. In the form of Athena Paradis, world-famous
socialite, erstwhile fashion model, nubile actress, soon-to-be
recording artist, and, depending on who you asked, either
your personal hero or the bane of your existence.
I had nothing against Athena personally, but a few weeks
28
Jason Pinter
ago a colleague forwarded me a leaked demo of her first
single. Not even three straight hours of Bruce and Dylan
could rinse that stain off.
You'd think my generation would have more to offer. I'd
like to say they do, but lying to yourself is pretty pathetic.
Within hours all those people soundly sleeping in their
beds would wake up to find out that one of the most famous
women on the planet had been murdered. That the suspect
was still at large. That there would be a city-wide manhunt
that would put all other investigations--including my own--
to shame. Not to mention the resources that Athena's father--
Costas Paradis--would likely contribute. Bottom line, if your
finger pulled the trigger, you were a marked man. But as
soon as the killer fired that round, the reverberations created
a news story. It was my job to see all the ripples.
Problem is, New York is a city eight million strong. If you
want to disappear--and don't have a pile of mush instead of
brains--you could disappear. Hundreds of crimes and dozens
of murders went unsolved every year. All this guy did was raise
the stakes. Raised them to a level that would scare off pretty
much anyone without a death wish, but raised nonetheless.
I saw Wallace, approached him. The editor-in-chief of the
New York Gazette
was a tall, slender man. He wore a neatly
trimmed brown beard flecked with gray, and though his
stature was hardly imposing, his intelligence shone through.
He wore a light jacket, hands tucked into the pockets. Wallace
and I acknowledged each other with a brief nod, then turned
back to the scene.
A line of police tape had cordoned off a thirty-foot radius
around the spot where Athena's body had fallen. Even against
the dark red of the carpet, I could make out a darker, more
gruesome shade. The body had been removed from the scene,
The Guilty
29
but forensics had taped off the angle at which her body had
fallen. Several areas were marked with flags, presumably for
ballistics and blood spatter experts. Some of the spatter
appeared to be as far as ten feet from where Athena had fallen.
Only a high-caliber slug could cause that much damage. I saw
a flag on the carpet, in front of a piece of chipped pavement.
Quite possibly where the bullet had lodged after exiting
Athena's skull.
The other bars in the district had been emptied out by the
cops. The music had been turned off. The only sounds were
the sirens and the cops, but the fear was louder than all of it.
"Warm out tonight," I said. Wallace nodded, wiped his
forehead with a handkerchief as though reminded to.
"Gunman shot Athena from a distance. Goddamn sick
coward."
"Just what I was thinking," I said. I looked around. "Guy
would have been noticed on the street," I said. Wallace lifted
his head, looked at the rooftops, didn't need to say more.
"How do you shoot a woman like that?" Wallace said, to
nobody. "Disgusting, that's what it is."
"Athena wasn't just a woman," I said. "You get that
famous, you become bigger than yourself. Become an ideologue or something." Wallace looked at me, knew we were
both thinking about what happened to me last year. When
people thought I'd murdered a cop, I was no longer Henry
Parker. I stood for something evil. And even when I was vindicated, the stench lingered. Athena lived in that spotlight
every day of her life.
Police were questioning several young men and women
who were sitting on the sidewalk, leaning against an ambulance. They looked visibly shaken. Eyes red, heads down.
Confidence sucked out of them. Several were crying. I
30
Jason Pinter
wondered whether they were crying due to the horror they'd
just witnessed, or because the world had been robbed of
Athena Paradis.
"Cops aren't going to get anything from witnesses who were
inside the club," I said. "Figure at least fifty paparazzi outside,
all those strobe lights, every single eye was focused on her."
"How can you be so sure?" Wallace asked.
"'Cause mine would be. You tell yourself you could care
less about celebrities like Athena Paradis, but it's damn hard
to turn away. And this was her scene."
I thought of Mya. Wondered if she was near here when she
called. I hoped she'd made it home safe. I debated calling her
just to be sure.
"This is page one," I said to Wallace.
"We're too late for the print edition," he said. "I want your
copy on the
Gazette
website in an hour. And I want updates by
the time Al Roker is smiling his way through the weather report."
"Awful generous deadline of you."
Wallace looked at me. "We mishandle this story in any
way, the
Dispatch
will cannibalize our circulation rate and
spend all winter bragging about its superior reporting."
"They couldn't report their way out of the 6 train," I said,
expecting a laugh, but receiving none.
"Doesn't matter," Wallace said softly. "Story like this, it's all
about how sensational you can make it. Who runs the cover
photo of Athena in the most revealing dress. Gets the best quotes
from her exes. Finds the most salacious angle to play up, even
if it turns out to be bogus later on. You know Paulina will be all
over this."
"So what do you want me to do?"
"You know the sign I keep by the elevators to all our news
divisions, right?" I nodded. The sign Wallace was referring
The Guilty
31
to was simply titled The Three Types of Reporters. It was a
piece of paper containing four short, handwritten sentences.
Some reporters are always one step behind.
Some reporters always keep pace.
Some reporters are always one step ahead.
What kind of reporter are you?
"Good. Then Evelyn will be expecting your copy in
sixty minutes."
"I'm a lucky man."
Evelyn Waterstone was the
Gazette'
s battle-ax of a Metro
desk editor. All stories that focused within the five boroughs
were doled out by her, met with her approval, and she had
final edit. She was notorious for fighting for front-page space,
claiming that New York was the country's central nervous
system, and that most relevant stories stemmed from there.
So far she had treated me with kid gloves. Which left me
uneasy. She always seemed to be much tougher on the other
young journalists, the interns, the people who hadn't paid
their dues. The fact that she liked me was fairly disconcerting. Like someone who smiled to your face while they held
a Ginsu behind their back.
"Leave out the stuff about slug caliber and shooter vantage
points," Wallace said. "Too much conjecture. Let the
Dispatch
be forced to make retractions. We need to play this clean."
"I'll get it done," I said, trying to convince not only Wallace
but myself.
"Don't worry, I spoke to Evelyn before you got here.
She's aware of the time-sensitive nature, and is waiting for
your e-mail. I'm asking you to play in the same scuzzy
ballpark the
Dispatch
does, only you bat clean. You have an
32
Jason Pinter
hour. Find an angle the
Dispatch
will miss. The entire country
is going to be talking about Athena's murder, and we need to
give them something nobody else will. I don't want any
baseless conjecture. I don't want any name-calling. I don't
want to stoop to their level. I want you to report this story the
way a
Gazette
reporter would."
I nodded. Had no intention of doing it any other way. Since
I returned to the
Gazette
full time, I'd worked my ass off in
an effort to prove I could hack it at that level. My first goround had been sidetracked by a slight case of murder. I'd
spent the better part of a year trying to live down my own
story, and now it was time to return to what I did best. To what
I was born to do. Find the stories nobody else could.
I looked back at the crime scene. Saw where the body had
fallen. A ballistics expert used a pencil to trace an invisible
line from the top of a brownstone several blocks away to the
spot where the bullet had struck Athena. This club had
security cameras outside, meaning Athena's death had undoubtedly been captured live and in color.
All those cameras. All those witnesses. No doubt a dozen
people or more had taken cell phone photos and videos of her
murder. Who knew how many ghouls would post them publicly? Whoever had killed Athena couldn't have picked a more
public place. It was as if the killer wanted people to see it, to
record it, to spread his mayhem. It didn't make my job any
easier, that's for sure. There would be a cacophony of noise
tomorrow, and I needed to find a pitch that could rise above it.
I looked at the brownstone being eyed by the tech. Checked
my watch. Under an hour to find a story. Didn't have to be
the whole ball of yarn, just a strong thread. Sometimes a
thread was all you needed.
4
I pushed my way through the throng of eager reporters. Felt
more than one elbow jab my ribs. I wasn't naive enough to
think they were accidental. Much of the NYC press corps still
burned because of the publicity I'd received from my murder
rap. Grizzled vets who resented the book and film deals I'd
turned down. It was a Catch-22. They would have hated me
just as much if I'd taken the money. The spotlight of fame