Read Parker 04 - The Fury Online
Authors: Jason Pinter
felt, was conjecture."
"So Jack thought there was more to the Fury, then."
"I believe so, but again I'm speaking from what I
recall twenty years ago. Jack and I haven't spoken about
that book or that story in years. He's written half a
dozen books since then, most of which made him a lot
more money than
Through the Darkness
. And with no
new leads to track down, no other proof or witnesses,
it was on to new matters. In a city where new stories
materialize every day, if you spend your time hoping a
fresh angle will pop out of the ground you'll miss ev
erything going around right beside your head. Jack's a
great reporter, but he's not stupid."
"He's not a coward either," I said. "He kept that bit
in there for a reason. Like you said, a footprint."
"Maybe he did," Wallace said.
"I need his files," I said.
"Henry," Wallace said, folding his hands across his
chest. "You know better than that. Besides, company
policy states that any work, research or otherwise, done
on books is kept outside of the office."
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"He must have something here," I said. "I've seen
Jack's apartment. He barely had any furniture, let alone
files. Please, do me a favor. Let me see Jack's files. I
know there's a storage room here. I swear I won't take
anything that doesn't pertain to the Willingham case.
And I'll even do the digging for you."
"I can't let you do that," Wallace said. "But I'll meet
you halfway. I'll go through it myself and send it over
to you if I find anything. I'm going to err on the side of
caution, though, so don't expect much."
"Thank you," I said. I stood up, prepared to leave.
Then I saw a copy of that morning's
Gazette
on
Wallace's chair. I looked up at him, raised an eyebrow.
"Go on, take it," he said, grinning. "But after today
you don't get diddly-squat for free until I see your name
below a story."
22
The subway was hot and humid as I went back uptown.
I had no idea how long it would take for Wallace to get
me those files. The man had been gracious enough to
offer, and frankly I didn't expect much going in. I des
perately wanted to know what Jack knew, what else he
knew about the Willingham murder. And what, if
anything, it had to do with Stephen Gaines.
The strange thing was, the deeper I looked into this,
the further away it seemed to go from Gaines. From him
to Beth-Ann Downing, from Rose Keller to Butch Wil
lingham, there seemed to be a pattern of behavior that
went back twenty years. I had no idea how long, if at
all, my brother had been dealing. But I was damn sure
that it had somehow gotten him killed.
Now, I've read the books. I've seen the TV shows. I
read as much news as I can take until my eyeballs hurt.
I'm well aware that pushing is not a profession made
for duration. People get into it hoping to make a quick
buck, usually because they have no other options. They
have neither the education to get a job punching a clock,
nor the desire to work for a corporation that can termi
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nate them without a moment's notice. There was some
thing romantic about the notion of a drug dealer, some
thing that went against the system. But when I saw
Stephen Gaines that night on the street, I did not see a
man defiant in the face of unspeakable odds stacked
against him. I saw a defeated, emaciated, broken-down
young man. A man scared of something. Something he
felt, for some reason, I could help with.
I was a newspaper reporter. Nothing more, nothing
less. I sincerely doubted Gaines came to me because I
was his flesh and blood. He'd had years to try to reach
out. He came to me because something about my pro
fession, my line of work, could have helped him, thrown
him a lifeline.
I sat down, my butt immediately becoming stuck to
the seat by a clear substance I hadn't seen before. The
joys of traveling on the MTA. Unfolding that morning's
copy of the
Gazette,
I put all thoughts of Gaines and
Willingham out of my mind until I got home. Perhaps
good old-fashioned newspaper reporting would help
me out. Clear my mind.
But when I saw the story on page eleven, I nearly
threw up.
Man, 27, Shot to Death in His Apartment
A photo accompanied the article. I recognized the
man in the shot. I'd seen him just recently.
It was the guy whose briefcase I'd stolen. He was
found last night, murdered, shot twice in the back of the
head.
23
I couldn't think of any words. My mouth was dry, my
head throbbing. Amanda and I were sitting in a cold
room in the Twenty-eighth Precinct on Eighth Avenue
between 122d and 123d streets. On the table in front of
us were several items: an empty briefcase, several
thousand dollars' worth of various types of narcotics;
and one cell phone.
The man's name was Hector Guardado. He was
twenty-seven years old. Lived alone in Spanish Harlem.
According to police reports, Hector had less than a
thousand dollars in his bank account. But upon search
ing his apartment, they found nearly fifty thousand
dollars in cash stuffed underneath a fake floorboard in
his kitchen.
Hector was not some young kid with no education
dealing to make ends meet. He had an MBA. A freaking
business degree. Yet despite the degree, despite the
hundred thousand dollars he spent to attain it, Hector
Guardado had not been able to find employment since
returning to New York City, his hometown.
The other day I'd stolen Hector's briefcase to learn
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more about his dealings, to learn more about this group
of misfits that my brother may or may not have been a
part of. And now the man was dead, murdered in cold
blood. Another young man killed like a piece of meat,
shot twice in the back of the head, surely by someone
who knew him.
Because of that, I called Amanda the moment I got
out of the subway. Stopping at the apartment first to pick
up the briefcase and its contents, I headed straight for
the police. No more clandestine detective work. No
more hiding my hand until all the cards were dealt. A
life had been taken.
It made me sick to my stomach to think that Hector
Guardado's life might have been taken because of his
stolen briefcase, but two days ago he was alive. Two
days ago the briefcase, along with the drugs and his cell
phone, were in his possession.
And now today he was dead, and the drugs were
in police custody. I wasn't willing to write it off as a
coincidence.
"You okay?" Amanda asked. I didn't nod. I wasn't
the one on a slab somewhere, or being written about in
the newspaper. She seemed to get this, because she
didn't ask again.
Soon the door opened and a familiar face walked in:
Detective Sevi Makhoulian.
Makhoulian sat down in a chair across from us.
Looked me over, then looked at the items on the table.
He took a pair of rubber gloves from his pocket, spread
open the black folds of the suitcase and peered in.
"This everything?"
I nodded.
The Fury
197
"And this was all in Guardado's possession when
you took it from him."
I nodded again. "You can fingerprint it," I said. "I
never touched the stuff." I nudged Amanda slightly with
my elbow, giving her a silent thanks for the advice.
Makhoulian sighed and leaned back in his chair. He
folded his arms behind his head as though deciding
what to watch on television. He didn't look the least bit
concerned with anything.
"What are you going to do?" I asked.
"Frankly," he said, "I'm not sure yet. Unfortunately
we can't charge you with theft, because Mr. Guardado
would have been our only witness, and frankly it would
be a waste of time. Because, though I don't know you
that well, anytime a person willingly brings half a pound
of weed, a fourth of a kilo of cocaine and enough crack
rocks to keep Flavor Flav's teeth chattering for a year,
they're not the ones using it."
"We're not," Amanda said. "We weren't."
Makhoulian nodded, then thumbed his lip. "Look,
Parker, I know you think your father is innocent. If I was
in your shoes, I'd want to do anything I could to help
him, too. And if he is innocent, he'll be found as such
by a jury of his peers."
"The case hasn't even gone to the grand jury yet,"
Amanda spat.
"True, but we all know that's a mere formality. We
have his fingerprints. We have his receipts from his trip
to New York. And we have a motive."
"Does the name Butch Willingham ring a bell?" I
asked suddenly.
Makhoulian looked confused. Said, "No, why?"
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I believed him. "Nothing," I said. "Just a guy who
was killed a long time ago."
"And you bring it up, why, as a brainteaser?"
"I'm not sure why," I said. "Just wondering if I'm the
only one who thinks there's a lot more to this than a
simple case of a guy murdering his son. Since, you
know, another young man was just killed in the same
manner as Stephen Gaines."
"The investigation into the death of Hector Guardado
is under way," Sevi said. "You're a reporter, Henry,
right? Can you tell me how many murders were com
mitted in New York City last year?"
"Not the exact number, but I believe it was under
five hundred."
"Four hundred and ninety-two," Makhoulian said.
His eyes were riveted on mine. This was not a history
lesson or an attempt to belittle my knowledge. "Now,
first of all, that was the lowest number of murders com
mitted in Manhattan in over forty years. First time it's
been under five hundred since 1963, to be precise. Thing
is, even though that's low for our standards, that's still
an awful lot of homicides. Now, think about that word.
Homicide.
These four hundred ninety-two people were
killed by someone else. They didn't step into open
elevator shafts or pee on the third rail. They were killed.
Murdered. Now, you are a reporter. So it's part of your
job to report crimes that are extraordinary. Like Sharon
Dombrowski, the elderly woman on Spring Street who
was so convinced she was being targeted by a robber
that she hooked up an electric cable to her door, so
when her poor landlord came by to check on a leak and
knocked he was electrocuted to death. Or Percy
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Whitmore who bought a studio in Little Italy using a
loan from his father. Only when he didn't repay in time,
Percy's dad came over and smacked his son across the
face so hard ol' Percy fell and cracked his skull open on
his bookshelf. Accidental? Maybe. But homicides
nonetheless."
"What's your point?" I said.
"See, you write about these instances because they're
one in a million. Like a shark attack, they're so
gruesome and out of the ordinary that people want to
hear about them just like how they slow down when
passing a car wreck. What doesn't get that press are the
boring murders. The two taps to the back of the head."
Makhoulian mimicked pointing a gun to his cranium,
cocking his trigger finger twice to illustrate the shots.
"You know how many of those nearly five hundred
murders were the result of gunshot wounds? Four
hundred and twenty-eight. Now, I'm not a mathemati
cian, but that's somewhere between eighty and ninety
percent. So you're going to come in here and tell me,
definitively,
that these two murders are the result of
some vast conspiracy that I'm too dumb to see?"
"I'm not saying you're dumb. But Hector called my
brother that night."
"According to Verizon, the phone call lasted eight
seconds. You know how long eight seconds is? Long
enough to realize you've dialed the wrong number before
you hang up. There are no other records of these two
having ever corresponded, no other calls between the
two."
"You don't see these killings as two pieces to--"
"Pieces my ass, you're reading too much James
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Ellroy. Know what they teach us in the academy? The
rule of
lex parsimoniae.
Since I'm guessing you're not
exactly fluent, what the Latin translates to is 'entities
must not be multiplied beyond necessity.' Boil down the
translation, what that means is if a man is murdered, and
the fingerprints on the gun belong to someone he
knows, who has access to him, and who has a
motive
to kill him, I'd be willing to bet my badge, my wife, my
mortgage and my iPhone you put that killer in cell block