Read Burying Ben Online

Authors: Ellen Kirschman

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

Burying Ben (30 page)

BOOK: Burying Ben
7.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Chapter Thirty Three

 

 

The Taxi drops me at Fran’s. The restaurant is cl
os
ed and the
p
arking lot across from
the restaurant is e
m
pty exce
p
t
f
or
m
y car and Vinnie Patcher’s car. I drive to the
K
enilwo
r
th Community hospital. I

m not sure why I’m
do
i
ng this. It

s not as though I pushed Belle Patcher over that railing, but I feel that so
m
ehow my pushing
for answers is part of the chain of events that drove her to jump. I’m
not a disinterested bystander. Whether I

ve been drawn into t
h
eir li
v
es or they

ve been drawn into
m
ine is of no consequence and little
sola
c
e.

Vinnie Pat
c
her is
s
lu
m
ped on a cou
c
h in the e
m
pty ER waiti
n
g roo
m
, like a puppet whose strings have been cut. He sees
m
e and doesn

t
move. I sit on a chair across from
h
i
m
and wait. April’s suitcase and a pile of
her clothes is on the seat next to hi
m
.

“She hates
m
e. I love her
m
ore than life and she hates
m
e. All I ever wanted to do was protect her,
m
ake her happy.
Everything I

ve done is for her.”

“Is she badly hurt?
W
hat does the doctor say?”

He jerks upright, his flaccid spine now straight as a r
u
ler. “I

m
not talking about my wi
f
e. I’m tal
k
ing ab
o
ut April
.


W
here is
s
he?”

He gestures at a si
g
n pointing to
the la
d
ies
b
athroom
and collapses back into the couch. I run around the corner and bang open the swinging door. April is looking in the
m
i
rror, a
m
ascara wand in her hand. Her cos
m
etics are spread out on the s
m
all
m
etal sh
e
lf over the
s
i
n
k.


W
hat do you want?”

“Answers.”

I swipe
m
y arm
over the shelf and knock everything on the
f
l
oor.

“Bitch” April hisses as she drops to h
e
r knees, reaching for the rolling tubes and brushes.

I grab her by the back of her sweater,
haul her to her feet
and shove her into a stall and d
o
wn onto the t
o
il
e
t se
at
. I reach behind and push the l
o
ck i
n
to pl
a
ce.


W
hat is it with you?
You just gave away your baby, your
m
other tried to kill herself, your father is sitting out there looking like a broken
m
a
n and you’re in here putting on
m
akeup
?
” I shake her shoulders. “Answer
m
e.”

“I don’t know.” She starts to cry and hold her sto
m
ach. “My sto
m
ach hurts. I need a doct
o
r.”

“Quit your
p
l
ay acting. I’m all the d
o
c
t
or you’re going to g
e
t until you a
n
swer
m
y questions. What were you and Ben doing in
the Sierras when he killed hi
m
self.”

“It was your idea. ‘Take so
m
e t
i
m
e
off’, you said. ‘Have the honey
m
oon you never had’.” Her voice is a
girlish sing song. “
W
e
didn’t go
w
hen you told us to. Ben wanted to stay ho
m
e and study. All we did w
a
s fight.
I told him
I couldn’t stay cooped up in
m
y house any longer. I told him to quit before he got fired. Go back to Safeway,
m
ake so
m
e money so we could
m
ove out. But no, he had to do better for his baby.
S
o I told hi
m
.”

“Told him
what
?

“That the baby wasn’t his. That I didn’t
know who the father was. That I hated him
and I hated the baby. I told him I was sorry I
m
arried
him, and as soon as I gave the baby up, I was going to file for divorce.”


W
hat did he do?”

“Started to cry. Begged
m
e not to leave hi
m
. Said he didn’t believe the baby wasn’t his. Pro
m
ised he would get his old
job back. All sorts of stuff. Only Safeway wasn’t hiring, so he took so
m
e t
e
m
p job in
a warehouse.” I lean away
from the stall door. The door handle has left a pai
n
ful indentation in my back.

“That’s why we went to the Sierras. To the Hide-A
w
ay
M
otel. The only thing they hid away was the sha
m
poo and the clean s
h
eets. Ben wanted to
m
ake it up to
m
e
. Have so
m
e
fun. Only staying in a s
h
itty motel in the
m
i
ddle of nowhe
r
e isn’t my idea of fun. Anyhow,
I
m
et so
m
e
one else online and told Ben I was leaving, no
m
atter what. He didn’t believe
m
e then either, so I sho
w
ed him
on my co
m
puter.”

“Showed him what
?

“The pictures I posted on Facebook, the
sexting I sent this other guy. Actually, there was
m
ore than one, but I only really liked this one guy. Even though I was pregnant, he thought I
w
as way sexy.”

“I don’t want to hear this.”

“First you
w
ant
m
e to talk and now you don’t. You are freaking crazy.”

She stands up and tries to push past
m
e to get at the lock. I push her back onto the seat.”Did you shoot Ben
?

“You are so fucked up. How can you be a
psychologist? I did not shoot hi
m
. He started playing around with his g
u
n. Said if I left him
he’d kill hi
m
self. I told him,
‘go ahead, I don’t care’. And then I left. Took the car. So I guess that’s when he did it. Now can I go
?

“You didn’t call the pol
i
ce or try to get help?”

“I was afraid he’d kill
m
e, too, if I tri
e
d to stop hi
m
. Anyhow, if he wants to off hi
m
self, that’s his ch
o
ice. It’s a free world.”

 

I sit in
m
y car, shaking. I should write t
h
is up. A teenage Jezebel. A f
a
m
ily of psychopaths. Poor Ben, what agony. Everything he hoped for torn away.

I’m
exhausted, but I drive to headquarters
in the dark and park
m
y car. I can see Eddie behind the glass window at the front
desk. He’s slumped over, sleeping. The lobby is e
m
pty. I tap on the glass and he jerks upri
g
ht. It takes him
a
m
i
nute to figure out where he is.


W
hat the fuck are you doing here? You’re
not supposed to be in this building.”

“So arrest me for trespassing.”


W
hat do you want?”

“I guess turnaround’s fair play.”


W
hat the hell are you talking about
?

“I didn’t tell you about taking April ho
m
e
or about Vinnie Patcher breaking into my house, because I was trying to protect you.
B
ut you knew all along who Ben was and you didn’t tell
m
e. You just kept on hounding him until he
b
r
oke.”

He
raises up out of his chair and
leans forward, breathing s
m
all clouds of moisture on the thick glass window. “I re
p
eat. What the fuck are you talking about
?

“Ben Go
m
e
z, a.k.a. Ben S
t
urgis?
His parents overdosed on so
m
e bad heroin in a motel. So
m
e
one found him wandering around the parking lot crying and called the police. His grandparents adopted him
and changed his na
m
e to theirs.” Eddie scowls. “You were there, apparently. Don’t you re
m
e
m
b
er or have you totally pickled your brain with alcoh
o
l?”

He takes a long wheezy gulp of air and then po
u
nds his fist
o
n the desk. “Sonofabitch. Sonofabitch. I knew it. That fucking
eyebrow. I knew I knew hi
m
. Sturgis. The goddamn Sturgis case.” He looks up at
m
e
. “He tried to run away, fell and split his head open, right through the eye
b
row. Screa
m
ing for his parents, ‘the police are here, the police are here’. Fuckers used him
as a lookout
w
h
ile they shot up in that rat trap
m
otel. I held that kid
with
m
y h
a
nd over his bloody head
until the s
o
cial wor
k
ers
got there. It was the
longest
30
m
i
nutes
of
m
y
life. I saw him a few weeks later during the inquest. The scar was already beginning to show. God, I’m
a wo
r
t
hless cop. I should have recognized that scar.”

BOOK: Burying Ben
7.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Mother Lode by Carol Anita Sheldon
Farnsworth Score by Rex Burns
The Before by Emily McKay
Dead Man's Thoughts by Carolyn Wheat
Naamah's Curse by Jacqueline Carey
Informed Consent by Miller, Melissa F.
Demon's Embrace by Devereaux, V. J.
Nan-Core by Mahokaru Numata