Burying Ben (34 page)

Read Burying Ben Online

Authors: Ellen Kirschman

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

BOOK: Burying Ben
10.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Then I call Vinnie Patcher at
h
i
s office. H
i
s secretary tells me he is taki
n
g leave for a f
a
m
ily e
m
ergency. I call him
at ho
m
e and he answers on the first ring.


W
hat do you want?”

“I want April to drop her co
m
plaint against
m
e. I doubt she knew to file the co
m
plaint without your help, so I w
a
nt you to tell her to drop it.”


W
hy would I do that
?

“Breaking up with Ben, lying about the b
a
by, threatening to give
it away, that’s what pushed him
over the edge. There were al
m
ost half a dozen witnesses who heard her brag about how cruel she was to hi
m
,
including a nun. I can see the headlines. Sacra
m
ento county D.A.’s sadistic daughter drives husband to suicide.”

“I don’t care what people think about
m
e.”

“Don’t yo
u
? You’re an
e
l
ected o
ff
i
cial. This
k
ind
of
publicity
will be like a gi
f
t from
heaven for whoever runs against you. I
m
ay not be able to prove you broke into
m
y house, but I saw you slap your wife across the face. So did the nun and all of April’s friends. The D.A. is supposed to enforce do
m
estic violence laws not break the
m
.”

“My wife was hysterical, I was trying to calm
her down. I told you before. Belle is e
m
otionally unstable. She’s thro
w
n herse
l
f down the stairs before. That’s why she li
m
ps.”

Chapter Thirty Five

 

 

“I want
m
y job back.” I am standing in front of
Baxter on that worn spot in the carpet,
m
y heart tra
m
polining in
m
y
chest. He looks up f
r
om
what he

s reading and jumps to his feet, alert, ready for battle.

“How did you get in here?
You’re
n
ot per
m
itted in the b
u
ilding.”

“Five
m
i
nutes. That’s all I want, five
m
i
nutes of your ti
m
e.”

His eyes dart around the roo
m
, looking for the secretary who deserted her post to go to the b
a
throo
m
, allowing
m
e to sneak i
n
to t
h
e inner
s
anctu
m
. She is still go
n
e. He takes off his watch, places it on the desk in
front of h
i
m
, and re
m
ains standing.

“Five
m
i
nutes,” he says, holding up the five fingers of his right hand, “not a second longer.”

“I’m
not responsible for Ben’s death,
not in any direct way. Neither is Eddie. Neither are you.”

I tell him
about April, her threats and her taunts.

“So he didn

t kill hi
m
self because of the job. That

s what I

ve been saying all along.”

“It

s not a
s
imple cause and effect rel
a
tionship. He never should have been a cop in the first
p
l
ace. He j
u
st wasn’t tou
g
h enough, he didn’t ha
v
e the sta
m
ina. He had a terrible childhood. His parents were drug addicts
with long cri
m
inal histories. He lied about them
to your backgrounder who appar
e
ntly didn’t dig very
hard. Imagine the pressure he was under. His
m
arriage was falli
n
g
apart and
h
e
m
ust have been li
v
ing in constant fear of being exposed as an i
m
po
s
ter. Getting
f
ired was the la
s
t straw.”

“He resigned, I didn

t fire hi
m
. How
m
any t
i
m
es do I have to tell you that?”

“If he hadn

t resigned, you would have had
to fire hi
m
. You didn

t have a choice. He couldn

t do the job. And that

s my point. You, Ben, Eddie,
m
e, we w
e
re all put in a terrible position. And the person who put us
there is Mark Edison. For one thing, Mark didn

t do Ben

s psych assess
m
ent hi
m
self. He let an unqualified psychological assistant do it. Secondly, Ben
was lying to everyone about his background. A
m
ore experienced psycholog
i
st would have picked that up during the assess
m
ent. Thirdly, and
this is the
w
orst of
it,
M
ark accepted
m
oney from Ben

s
m
o
t
her-in-law to say Ben was qualified.”

The blood in Baxter

s face drains down the veins in
h
i
s thick nec
k
. His forehead glea
m
s with yellowish sweat.

“Do you understand what I’m
saying?
Mark took a bribe to
m
anufacture test results and he signed his na
m
e to a report he
didn

t write. That

s healthcare fraud.
W
ho knows how
m
any other ti
m
es he’s done this? Eve
r
y suspect who’s been
arrested
in
this town is going to want to reopen his case
and look into the ba
c
kground of the arresting officer. Every person who ever filed a citize
n
’s co
m
plaint is going to do the sa
m
e. You can shoot the
m
essenger with the bad news or you can get out in front of
this and
m
ake it right.”

“I don

t believe you. You

d say anything to
get your contract back. It

s not going to happen, not on
m
y watch.“

“I’m
reporting fraud and
m
i
sconduct that is a direct threat to the public interest. In case you don’t know, I’m
protected by the whistle
blower law. Any retaliation, loss of inco
m
e, or da
m
age to my professional reputat
i
on is your responsibility.” By now I

ve got the law co
mm
itted to
m
e
mory.

“You’re a contractor, the whistle
blower law doesn’t apply to you.”

“Maybe so, but by the ti
m
e a court decides whether or not to hear
m
y case, I will have blown my little whistle all o
v
er town. I don’t want to do this, but I will if you force
m
e.”

A
s
m
all
m
uscle in his chin
m
oves up and down, tightening the corners of his mouth.

“I’m
giving you an option,” I say. “You’re a victi
m. Y
ou
t
rusted Mark, just like I did.
W
ork with
m
e on this. If you fight
m
e, we’ll both lose.”

He bends over and looks at his watch. “I need ti
m
e to think ab
o
ut this
.

“I don’t have any ti
m
e. Mark lied, knowingly, purposively. He put Ben in a treacherous situation,
pl
aced your o
f
ficers in
je
o
pardy, put t
h
e depart
m
ent’s reputati
o
n on the line and put you at risk for a slew
of lawsuits.” A
m
uscle beneath his left eye twitches once, then twice. “You and I
m
ade
m
i
stakes, so did Eddie, none of us are without bla
m
e, but for God’s sake, we didn’t do it intentionally.
W
e
certainly didn’t do it for
m
oney. Can’t you see the difference
?

“So what you

re saying is that if I g
i
ve you back your contract, you

ll drop this? And if I don’t, you

ll go to the press?”

“I ju
s
t want the chance to
m
ake things right again.”

“That

s black
m
ail.” He scoops his
w
atch off the desk, slips it over his wrist and snaps the clasp closed. “And extortion. You

re
lucky I don

t arrest you on the spot. If you co
m
e back into this
b
uilding again,
I will.
Am
I
m
aking
m
yself cle
ar
?

“You can

t do that. It

s a public building.”

“Try
m
e,” he says.

 

I go back to my office. Gary’s working downstairs, although he’s not particularly friendly these days. I
m
i
ght as well enjoy the sun
s
et of my career among
the trappings of
m
y profession – books, diplo
m
as and
l
eather furniture that still s
m
ells like the inside of a new car.

There is a soft knock at my door. I
get up from
my chair as the door opens slowly. The lovely Melinda stands in the
door
w
ay, her sto
m
ach rounding with new life. She is ethereally beautiful as though created from
a
m
edieval wall tapestry, long, slender ar
m
s and legs, glossy light brown hair that
sheets down to her shoulders.
T
here are s
m
all drops of sweat on her forehead and upper lip. She leans with one hand against the door fr
a
m
e. The other holds a canvas tote bag.

“I’m
not so good at stairs these days,” she says. She is breathing hard. “May I co
m
e in? I
n
eed to
s
it d
o
wn.”

She goes im
m
ed
i
ately to the c
o
uch, settling
heavily into
the low seat. I
o
ffer her a glass of water which s
h
e accepts. She pulls a ti
s
s
u
e from
the holder, folds it carefully and puts the glass down on
top of
it. She is wearing a
m
ater
n
ity
d
re
s
s with long flowing slee
v
es, rose c
o
l
o
red with purple and green accents. She lifts her
h
air and blots the
back of her neck with a
n
other
tiss
u
e, finding little
pieces
of b
u
siness to fill the ti
m
e wh
i
le she figures out how to start w
h
atever she’s come here to say. I hadn’t noticed before that her eyes are so green or
that she is so truly
b
eautiful. I never stood a chance.

“I wanted to talk to you
earlier, but I was afraid. God, this is so uncomfortable. I really don’t know what to say. I want to apo
l
ogize and then I don’t.
I didn’t intend for Mark and me to fall in love, but I don’t want
to take back what happened. I just wish we hadn’t caused you so
m
u
ch suffering.”

Other books

Hell to Pay by Simon R. Green
Blaze of Silver by K. M. Grant
Second Chance Ranch by Audra Harders
Sisterchicks Go Brit! by Robin Jones Gunn
The Queen Slave by Reardon, Savannah