Read Parker 04 - The Fury Online
Authors: Jason Pinter
where he lived. He was carrying nothing but his brief
case and his wallet. There was nowhere to go. No place
to hide.
And then, from the opposite end of the street, we
both heard the faint shrill of police sirens. Scotty
whirled around. The cops weren't within sight yet. He
was sweating, nervous. Then all of a sudden Scotty
came around and punched me in the stomach.
It wasn't a hard blow, but I was unprepared. Rather
than buckling and trying to absorb the hit, it landed
square in my gut, knocking the wind from me. I fell to
a knee, gasping for air. Scotty began to run. So I did the
only thing I could. I grabbed his ankle as he ran past.
Scotty's leg went out from under him, and he landed
with a thud on the pavement. His briefcase went flying,
fluttering pathetically in the wind. Forgetting about my
own lack of air, I leaped up and pounced on him. I dug
my knee into the small of his back, then rolled him over
and reared back to deliver my own blow. Scotty brought
his elbows up to protect his face, and my punch hit
nothing but bone. The pain was terrible, but it dissipated
in an instant. I connected with a solid right to Scotty's
ear, knocking his face sideways. A scream escaped his
mouth.
I threw another punch, but Scotty was able to block
it, twisting sideways. I still hadn't recovered from his
punch, so I was thrown off balance and fell off him. I
managed to keep my hand on his shoulder, pulling him
back down as he tried to get up.
Scotty was crawling for something; I couldn't see
what. My face was still close to the ground, and I could
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smell the concrete. Then I heard a clang as something
toppled over, and that was followed by a whoosh of air
as he swung what appeared to be the lid of a garbage
can at my head.
I managed to roll away, catching a glancing piece of
the aluminum on my jaw. It stunned me and I fell back.
Scotty stood up, limping, clutching his knee. The sirens
were growing louder. Not long ago the police had been
after me, and I'd managed to escape. At least for a
while. Scotty had lived here for years, knew every inch
of the city. He had friends who would protect him. If
Helen Gaines, a frail junkie, could find a safe house, no
doubt a dealer with innumerable contacts could as well.
I couldn't let him get away.
As Scotty began to run, I got to my feet, dived
forward and tackled him from behind. His legs gave out,
and Scotty screamed again as his knee slammed down
on the ground. By this point I could see several pedes
trians watching us, hands over their mouths in shock and
terror. A few were on their cell phones, no doubt calling
911.
A little late, but I appreciated the gesture.
Scotty was still writhing, and I managed to turn him
over, placing my knees in the crook of his elbows. Just
like I had to the guy who tried to jump me at the apart
ment. Scotty's head was bleeding from where I'd
punched him. There was a ragged hole in his pants by
his right knee. There was a nasty cut that was bleeding
pretty heavily. I could feel the slow, hot trickle of blood
running down my neck, where he'd clipped me with the
lid.
I raised my fist, ready to exhaust all the rage and fury
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Jason Pinter
of the last few days. To get payback for my brother's
murder, for my father's incarceration.
This man, this killer, this hired dealer. The world
would be better off without him.
Yet as I stared at my own fist, poised and ready to
strike the helpless murderer, suddenly my hand went
slack. My fingers uncurled. I couldn't do it. Justice
wasn't about taking an eye for an eye. I was above that.
I had to be.
So I sat there, knees on his arms, the man below me
in terrible pain, tears streaming down his face.
"Please," Scotty blubbered, "let me go. You don't
know what you're doing..."
"I know exactly what I'm doing," I said. "I'm giving
you the chance you never gave Stephen. I'm going to
let you live."
The sirens grew closer. I could see the red and blue
flashing off the windows on the street. The air was hot,
swirling around us as I waited, my breathing heavy,
angry.
"Get the hell off of him."
I didn't recognize the voice. The sirens screamed all
around us. I hadn't heard a car pull up. It wasn't a cop
talking. The voice did sound familiar, though....
Turning my head, from the corner of my eye I saw Kyle
Evans standing two feet from our sprawled bodies. He was
holding a gun in his hand. It was pointed right at my head.
I heard more screams, and anyone who had been on
the street watching had run off when the gun was pulled.
It was just the three of us.
I took my knees off Scotty, who scooted backward.
He clutched his knee, biting his lip.
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I stood up. Air was coming back to my lungs, but I
was still doubled over slightly.
"He's a killer," I said, the words coming out in
bursts. "He's--"
And then I saw it. And whatever breath had found
its way back into my lungs vanished.
Kyle was holding a black pistol. And attached to the
end of it was a thin metal tube. And I remembered what
Leon Binks had said to me the night I identified Stephen
Gaines's body in the medical examiner's office.
"The killer was using a silenced weapon. Now, very
few guns have those kinds of professional silencers you
see in movies, that screw on like a lightbulb. Usually
they're homemade, a length of aluminum tubing filled
with steel wool or fiberglass."
"It was you," I said. "You killed Stephen."
Kyle went over to where Scott Callahan was lying
on the ground. He was still holding his knee, but smiled
when he saw his friend approach. Kyle knelt down, put
his hand on his friend's shoulder. Scotty tried to prop
himself up, but he was too weak. I stood there, my body
rigid with anger and dread.
Kyle looked back at me. Then he said, "You gotta do
what you gotta do to survive."
Then he placed the gun under Scott Callahan's chin
and pulled the trigger.
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"What the fuck!" I shouted. The gun blast was more
of a meek
pfft,
like compressed air escaping from a
puncture. Gore sprayed out the top of Scott Callahan's
head. His body twitched once, then fell to the ground
and lay still.
My hands wouldn't work. I stared slack-jawed at
Kyle. He was still on the ground, the gun loose in his
hand. He looked at his friend, a sorrow etching across
his face for an instant. Then his eyes turned cold and
his gaze came to me.
"You have no idea," Kyle said, "how surprised I was
to get to Stephen's house and find a gun already there.
I had this one all ready. Instead, all I needed was the
capper." He pointed to the silencer.
"You used my brother's own gun to kill him," I said.
"But he wasn't the last one to use it."
"No, I really should have bought a lotto ticket that
night. When I heard that Stephen's
dad
got popped for
it? I nearly pissed myself laughing. See, that night I
wore gloves, figured it would slow the cops down, but
I had no idea about your dad's shenanigans. I was there
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to take out Stephen, but I kind of took out the whole
family. As long as they had someone else pinned for the
murder, we were in the clear."
"We?" I said.
"Scotty was supposed to do it. He knew Stephen
better than I did. They were pals, man."
I thought back to our conversation in the deli. Scotty
pretending to barely know my brother. That's how they
got so close to him.
"When your dad got popped, we were in the clear.
We even took the casings just in case. Turns out we
didn't even need to. Now, though, Scotty here's gotta
take the fall. Can't have anyone thinking the killer's still
out there."
"You son of a bitch."
"On a normal day, I'd get pissed at you for talking
about my mom like that, but I'll let it slide. Besides,
when I meant nobody could know, I meant it." Kyle
turned the gun to me. He had me less than five feet
away, dead to rights. There was no tremor in his hand.
By the time I even thought about running, he could pull
the trigger.
"Why?" I said. "Why did he have to die?"
"You said it yourself," Kyle replied. "The man just
had to. When you're the top dog in anything, you're
gonna get bitten."
"But Stephen was so young."
"There's no one guy," Kyle said. "It's like Ronald
McDonald. Every now and then someone new steps up
to the plate. Call it a
coup d'etat,
call it whatever you
want, but every company needs a regime change. Some
new blood at the top. Now it's my turn."
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Jason Pinter
Curt Sheffield had told me that five people connected
to 718 Enterprises had been killed recently. Add to that
number my brother and now Scott Callahan. Helen
Gaines told me that Stephen had wanted to leave the
country, that he feared something terrible. Clearly he'd
gotten wind that there were rivals who wanted to take
him out. So, was Stephen systematically wiping out his
competition? Is that why Kyle killed him--just to beat
him to the punch?
If what Kyle said was true, and Stephen and Scotty
had been friends, Stephen trusted them both. That's
how Scotty and Kyle talked their way into my brother's
apartment. They were couriers for him, yet he didn't
fear them. My brother had been betrayed by his own
friends.
When Stephen came to the
Gazette
that night, he'd
wanted to come clean. He knew the chances of getting
enough money to hide were slim. So my guess was that
he was going to spill on the whole operation. He didn't
fully trust the cops to protect him, but he figured if it
made the papers first he couldn't be killed without the
public being aware of it. His only hope was to cause a
big enough story that he would be forgotten. That he
could disappear in the maelstrom.
But he was killed before he could ever come clean.
And his story was about to die as well.
Kyle then took the gun and placed it in Scotty's dead
hand. He wrapped his own finger around Scotty's in the
trigger guard and aimed it at me.
Just then a car sped onto the block. It was a black
CrownVictoria. Kyle's attention turned from me to the car.
The door opened.And out got Detective Sevi Makhoulian.
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"Freeze, police!" the officer yelled. Kyle couldn't
turn away from Makhoulian. A strange look crossed his
face, and I swear the gun began to lower. He was going
to give up.
And then three successive explosions turned the air
into a thunderstorm, and Kyle Evans's body was flung
backward onto the street. He landed next to Scotty, his
friend, Kyle's eyes and mouth open.
I turned to Makhoulian, hands covering my ringing
ears. He was saying something to me, but I couldn't
hear the words.
He walked closer, gun at his side, the flashing lights
now on our block. I felt the detective's large hand on
my elbow. He was mouthing,
Henry, are you all right?
I knew instinctively that my voice wouldn't work, so
I nodded. Then I turned back to see the dead littering
the street.
33
One week later
LaGuardiaAirport was surprisingly empty.We bought
a couple of coffees at a java stand in the food court. I
waited while he came back from the newsstand,
carrying a bag with a paperback book and a copy of the
Gazette.
My father was thinner than I'd ever seen him. His
eyes were sunken and his skin wrinkled. Gray hair
taking up most of whatever was left. My father no
longer looked angry; he just looked old.
Prior to a few weeks ago, I hadn't seen James Parker
in years. My family was a memory, one I'd longed to
forget. If you leave a person, your memory retains your
last image of them. My last image of my father was an
angry middle-aged man. Now he sat here, one step from
broken, waiting for a flight back home.
"Mom's picking you up in Portland?" I said.
"That's what she said," my father answered, as
though not believing her.
"If she says she'll be there she'll be there." He
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nodded, thinking more about it and agreeing with me.
I popped the top off my coffee and took a sip. Strong
and sweet. "At least you've got a great story for your
bowling league."
"I missed three league tournaments," he said, resent