Read Parker 04 - The Fury Online
Authors: Jason Pinter
story, I'd have to explain the stolen briefcase. And then
I'd have to explain how I got there, how I'd followed
Scotty, and why I was doing all this in the first place.
The goal, of course, was to find Stephen Gaines's
killer and free my father. That would likely have to wait
until I had the full picture. If I went in with half a bird
in hand and the other half hiding in the bush, they'd
laugh me off and then possibly arrest me. Neither of
which sounded particularly appealing.
I picked up the cell phone. It wasn't as fancy as mine
or many of the newer models, and didn't look to have
photo or video capacity. There was no flip top, just a
dimly lit LCD screen and chunky buttons that looked
old and worn. Clearly, this phone was meant for one
thing, and one thing only. And whoever was using it
didn't need all the excess accoutrements.
The phone was still on. The screen said there were
five missed calls. I checked the log, and saw they'd all
come from the same number. I didn't recognize it, and
rather than a name popping up it was just the number.
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Most likely it was the kid whose briefcase I'd stolen
calling from a pay phone, praying someone would pick
up. It was only a matter of time before the phone was
disconnected.
Though somehow I didn't think there was a high
probability of the owner calling the cops to report it.
On the LCD screen, there was a "contacts" line
directly above a flat, rectangular button. I pressed it.
Immediately a roll call of the kid's contacts came up.
I scrolled through the names, hoping for something.
Then I saw two names that
did
ring a bell.
Scott Callahan and Kyle Evans.
Scotty and Kyle from this morning.
It didn't shock me that they were listed in the kid's
contacts list. They did share the same "occupation,"
and odds were Scotty and Kyle had this kid's number
in their database as well. I kept scrolling.
Then a name appeared on the list that made me
catch my breath.
"What?" Amanda said. "What it is?"
I showed her the phone, my finger underlining the
name.
"Oh my God," she said. "Why would he be..."
I looked at her. We both knew why he was there.
Halfway down the lists of contacts was the name
Stephen Gaines.
"He knew my brother," I said. "Wait a second..."
I exited the contacts list and returned to the main
menu. I knew what I was looking for but didn't know
if it was there.
I hoped it wasn't.
I pressed the send button to bring up the list of the
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most recent calls from this cell phone. There were
several from a name marked Office. I clicked edit to see
the number. It was from a 646 area code in Manhattan.
I wrote it down, then kept on scrolling.
None of the names were recognizable.
But then, at the very end of the list, was the one
name I'd hoped not to see.
"He called Stephen," I said to Amanda. "He called
my brother the night he died."
19
The next morning, Amanda and I took the subway to
100 Centre Street, which housed the New York County
Correctional Facility. My father was being held there
before his grand jury hearing, and we were on our way
to show support, discuss his court-appointed lawyer.
And ask him some questions to which I hoped he would
hold the answers.
Amanda and I had spent the previous night talking
and thinking about the Gaines family, Rose Keller and
Beth-Ann Downing. Drugs seemed to be the only link
between the four people. Two of them were dead,
Stephen Gaines and Beth-Ann. And the stash of narcot
ics from the stolen briefcase was hidden inside my
laundry hamper. I figured if anyone were to break in, the
stench itself might deter even the most hardened thief.
Stephen used to date and party with Rose Keller.
She claimed they'd met randomly. But I had to wonder.
Stephen's name was in the kid's cell phone I stole.
Which meant one of three things.
First, the two were merely friends. Which was
highly unlikely.
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Second, that Stephen was the kid's client. That one
was a possibility.
Third, and perhaps the most frightening yet the most
plausible, was that Stephen Gaines was a dealer himself.
Perhaps Stephen, before he died, was one of the
faceless suit monkeys who entered that office building
in midtown for re-ups. Perhaps had I gone there another
day, I would have seen my brother enter with an empty
briefcase and exit with a full load of narcotics.
Helen Gaines had somehow befriended Beth-Ann
Downing after relocating from Bend to New York City.
They both had children--though I had no reason to
suspect Sheryl and Stephen had met, unless Stephen
happened to have sold to Sheryl's mother. Sheryl was
likely gone by the time Helen and Stephen settled in.
And at some point along the line, both Helen and BethAnn had developed drug addictions.
Chances were Stephen discovered the path to his
own demise through his mother. Anytime you grow up
in a household in which such evils were not only
common but encouraged, it was just a matter of time
before you followed in step.
In my relatively short time on this planet, I'd learned
that there were two types of people. Those who were
doomed to follow in whatever footsteps had been laid
out for them, and those who were strong enough to
carve their own path.
Amanda and I were lucky. I could have turned out
like my father, with a general disregard for decency
and an attitude toward women that could be described
as combative on a good day. Amanda could have been
swallowed by her grief as a child, stifled by the tragic
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deaths of her parents. She never grew close to Lawrence
and Harriet Stein, her adoptive family. She feared that
she would never truly be close to another person again.
She began to write in diaries. There were hundreds of
them, each one chronicling every waking moment of
her life, cataloging every soul she met on her aimless
journey. A moment-to-moment timeline of loneliness.
After we met and later began seeing each other, she
stopped writing in them. I like to think that, in each
other, we found a path through the darkness. She found
someone who would be with her every night and every
morning, and I found a woman strong enough to show
me my weaknesses as well as my strengths, beautiful
enough beneath the skin to make me want to smooth
over the rough edges.
And there were a lot of them.
Stephen Gaines never found that path. He'd never
had a chance. Between his mother and her friends, the
darkness was too much for him to bear.
I gripped the handrail tight as I approached my des
tination. My childhood memories of my father were of
this great and powerful man who never feared anything.
He was an omnipotent tyrant, a man unconcerned with
convention or emotion. I never saw him cry, never saw
him beg. Even when I knew our finances were dwin
dling and my mother was as distant as the sunset at
dusk, he stood rock solid, impenetrable. Seeing him
today would be the opposite of everything I knew as a
child. He was the negative in my life's photograph. And
I wasn't sure if I was prepared.
The New York County Correctional Facility had
several outlets, and as a prisoner your stay was largely
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dependent on a combination of luck and just how many
criminals were waiting their turn before your case came
to the docket. Some ended up on Riker's Island, but
many, like James Parker, were relegated to the facility
known affectionately as the Tombs.
The Tombs had actually been the name for several
locations over the years, beginning in 1838 back when
it was called the New York Halls of Justice and House
of Detention (or NYHOFJAHOD for short. No wonder
they called it the Tombs).
After numerous successful escapes and the dete
riorating quality of the cells themselves, the old building
was merged with the Criminal Court building on
Franklin Street, separated by what was called the Bridge
of Sighs.
In 1974 much of the old Tombs had finally been shut
down due to health concerns. Currently the Tombs
consists of two facilities connected by a pedestrian
bridge, with a prisoner capacity nearing nine hundred.
Ironically, in 2001 the Tombs were given the official
name of the Bernard B. Kerik Complex, though in 2006
after Kerik pled guilty to ethics violations (including
several violations of infamous book publisher Judith
Regan in an apartment near ground zero that was
supposed to be used for the rescue effort) the moniker
was removed.
Currently my father was awaiting a grand jury
hearing on the charges of first-degree murder. Accord
ing to Amanda, the prosecution was surely in the
process of collecting evidence to convince the jury that
there was "reasonable cause to believe" that my father
might have killed Stephen Gaines. We both admitted the
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likelihood of a trial at this point, so time was becoming
more and more precious. We had interlocked several
pieces, but we couldn't see the whole puzzle.
The 4 train took us to Canal Street. For some reason,
passing by the massive pillars and intricate scrollwork
adorning the Supreme Court building reminded me I
hadn't yet served jury duty since arriving in New York
a few years ago. I could already imagine the tremendous
sense of irony I would feel upon signing that jury slip.
Maybe if I was lucky it'd be juror appreciation day. Get
a free coffee mug and everything. Leave this mess with
something memorable.
The Manhattan Criminal Courthouse towered above
the city skyscape, with four towers encircling a larger
center with floors in decreasing size, as though you
were viewing a staircase to the sky. In front were two
massive granite columns, and the whole structure was
designed in an art deco-style.
We entered the lobby through glass doors and made
our way to the security stand. We showed our identifi
cation, which the security guard scrutinized intensely
and matched to his logbook before writing us passes.
After that we passed through a series of metal detectors
and, after a search of my bag and Amanda's purse, we
were headed toward the Manhattan Detention Complex,
aka the Tombs.
A tall guard in a neatly pressed blue uniform accom
panied us to an elevator that looked like it was built into
a brick wall. I noticed he did not have a gun on his
holster. Instead, there was a Taser, a can of Mace and a
thin cylinder about a half inch in diameter and six inches
long. The guard noticed I was staring at it.
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"Expandable baton," he said. "Officers have been
complaining about the longer ones for years. They're
heavy as my mother-in-law and an incredible nuisance.
These puppies are compact and pack a hell of a punch."
"Can I try it?"
"No."
We got on the elevator and the guard pressed Down.
We waited just a few moments before the doors opened
up.
"Not a lot of elevator traffic," I said.
"Anytime I see the elevator going up from the lower
levels and I'm not in it," he said, "we've got problems."
"I hope that's not a regular occurrence."
He didn't answer me. I'd begun to get used to people
tuning me out.
By staring straight ahead I wasn't sure if he thought
that was a stupid statement, or one that struck a nerve.
As much as I hated embarrassing myself with silly
comments, I hope it was the former.
Once the elevator opened, the guard led us through
a long, musty tunnel. At the end was a series of metal
bars, not unlike those on an actual jail cell. Beyond we
could see several more guards, and the unmistakable
orange of prison jumpsuits. The guard took a key card
from his pocket, slid it onto a keypad and unlocked the
door. Opening it, the guard ushered us into a smaller
room lined with metal benches. Guards took both of our
bags and patted us down. Guards with shotguns and
handcuffs adorned the walls, their eyes traveling the
length of the room and back again, dispassionate.
Security cameras with weapons.
We sat down at a table at the end of the room. There
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were two other people seated at a table twenty feet from
us. An older balding man wearing an orange prison
jumpsuit, thick glasses and a thick paunch sat, chin in
his hands, while a bejeweled woman many years
younger (with many half-priced plastic surgeries under