Read Parker 05 - The Darkness Online
Authors: Jason Pinter
same. Or you can lose your balance and be blown away
like a crumpled newspaper. Some people lean into the
wind and try to walk faster. They press ahead, moving at
greater speeds than the rest of us. But with greater reward
comes greater risk, and the more you lean the faster you
can lost your balance and be blown away.
My brother fell. My idol and mentor, Jack O'Donnell,
fell. I was still leaning into the wind, sometimes hard
enough to lose my balance. I'd lived and worked in this
gusty city for several years now, and thought I was used
to it. But time and time again, the city showed me just
how strong the winds could be.
I got to the office of the
New York Gazette
at eight
o'clock sharp, half an hour before I was supposed to be
there, and even fifteen minutes before I'd said I'd be
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there. To put it mildly, this was the most excited I'd been
about the job in a long time.
The last few weeks had been a maelstrom of violence
and secrets. I'd recently learned that my father had had
an affair thirty years ago, and that affair resulted in the
birth of a boy named Stephen Gaines. My brother.
I didn't learn about Stephen until just a few weeks ago,
when he showed up out of nowhere at the offices of the
New York Gazette,
where I worked as a reporter. Gaines
was stoned and scared out of his mind that night, and for
that reason I didn't give him a chance to tell his story. I
didn't see the man up close until a few hours later. After
I learned he'd been shot to death in his own apartment.
When I saw him next, he was lying on a slab in the
morgue.
Not what you'd call the most enjoyable family reunion.
I'd pieced the truth together in a large part spurred on
by a book written by Jack O'Donnell called
Through the
Darkness.
In that book, he discussed the murder of a lowly
drug dealer named Butch Willingham who was possibly
murdered by an elusive drug kingpin nicknamed the Fury.
Yet the truth wasn't whole. If the Fury did exist, then
something big was on the horizon. Butch Willingham's
murder was one of a spate of drug-related murders, and
if history did repeat itself, that meant Stephen's murder
was merely the beginning.
Coming to grips with the life and death of the brother
I'd never known was difficult, if not impossible. It was
something I was still struggling with. Eventually we
tracked down the man who killed him, a low-level drug
dealer who seemed to want Gaines dead to open up the door
for his own upward mobility in the New York drug trade.
But something about it still didn't sit right. It was too
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neat, too clean. Too many questions still lingered, an
open wound that wouldn't close.
And leave it to Jack O'Donnell to throw a crowbar
into the wound.
I was wearing a suit, the same one I'd worn on my very
first day in the office several years ago. I remembered the
day clearly. Meeting Wallace Langston, the paper's editor
in chief, being led to my desk where I'd write the stories
I was born to write. Seeing the man, Jack O'Donnell, in
person for the first time.
The man was a legend of the New York newsroom, as
synonymous with this city as any one of its towering
monuments. But every monument has cracks, ignored
by those who prefer to see their gods as unfailing, monuments pristine in their foundations and men pure in their
humanity. Yet while Jack raised the bar for journalism,
his cracks had begun to show themselves not just to me,
but to millions of people.
We all knew that Jack drank. But when you told people
Jack drank, you raised your eyebrows and enunciated the
word
drank
like it was hepatitis. Jack O'Donnell
drank.
Three-martini lunches might have fallen out of fashion, but Jack was trying to keep the tradition going almost
singlehandedly. And who else would expose the cracks
in the foundation but someone who resided as low to the
ground as possible.
Paulina Cole used to work with Jack at the
Gazette.
A
few months ago, she penned a hatchet job to end all hatchet
jobs, exposing Jack's drinking problem on the front page in
our rival paper, the
NewYork Dispatch.
It was a colossal embarrassment to his reputation, personally and professionally.
Then Jack disappeared.
Whether he was in rehab or lying in the gutter some-22
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where, I figured the man needed time to figure out if he
was going to be swallowed whole by his demons, or if he
still had the strength to fight them off. My answer came,
surprisingly, when I needed him the most.
After I learned the truth about Stephen's killer, Jack
found me at my home just as my girlfriend, Amanda, and
I were packing up. He told me he'd needed a "dialysis of
the soul." He looked good. Healthy. And raring to go to
answer the questions that Stephen's murder just touched
upon.
Anyway, that's what I was doing here early in the
morning. I wanted to get here before him. Though we'd
worked in the same offices for several years, I'd never had
the chance to work side by side with Jack. I was eager to
prove what I'd learned, eager to prove that there was
someone waiting in the wings to carry on the traditions
he'd started. And what better way to show I was ready
than by beating the man to his desk on his first day back
in the office?
So when I got off on the ninth floor, pushed through
the glass doors to the newsroom, rounded the corner to
the sea of news desks, I was shocked to see Jack O'Donnell surrounded by our colleagues, looking like a kid at
his own birthday party.
He was sitting on his desk, feet on his desk chair,
speaking loudly and buoyantly while the other reporters
and editors laughed and slapped him on the back. I hadn't
seen Jack with this much energy since, well, ever. And
any frustration I felt in getting here late disappeared when
I saw the smile on the old man's face.
It was like a returning war hero being embraced by his
countrymen. While Jack was gone, one of the things I
wished I understood better was the newsroom's opinion
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of him. While I always held his professional career in the
highest regard, there were no doubt others who looked at
his departure as something of an embarrassment. Any
time a paper's reporter ends up in the headlines instead
of below them, it was considered an affront to the integrity of the establishment. The
New York Times
went
through it with Jayson Blair, and the
Gazette
had gone
through it twice in the last several years: the exposure of
Jack's alcoholism by Paulina Cole at the
Dispatch,
and
when I was accused of murder. And while the truth about
my situation eventually came to light, the harsh reality
was that every word in Paulina's story was true. Granted
she handled it with the class and dignity of a five-dollar
hooker, but her words touched a nerve because they cut
deep.
The stain on my reputation had begun to disappear
over time. I didn't know if Jack's ever would.
"Henry!" Jack's voice boomed over the newsroom.
He was waving me over, the reporters around his desk
looking in my direction expectantly. I smiled, big and
wide, and walked over.
"Jack," I said, "how's the first day back?"
"Coffee still sucks, elevator's still slow, and the receptionist still doesn't know my name. Just another day at
the office, and I'm loving it."
He was wearing a suit and tie that both looked new.
His beard, usually shaggy, was neat, the gray more
evenly spread. The bags beneath his eyes looked to have
dissolved, and his movements were sharper, livelier. It
was great to see him like this, and though my smile was
wide on the outside, it was nothing compared to how I
felt inside.
Jonas Levinson, the paper's science editor, said, "We
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didn't know when we'd see you again, old boy. No note,
no forwarding address. Who are you, my ex-wife?"
"I guess when you have enough of them," Jack said,
"you start to inherit their best qualities." The group laughed.
"Coffee tastes a whole lot better with a sprinkle of
Beam in there," Frank Rourke said. "I got a bottle at my
desk, Jack. Stop by if you need a taste."
The smile disappeared from Jack's face. "Hey, Frank?"
"Hey, Jack-O?"
"Why don't you go back to your desk and slam a
drawer on your head a few times."
Rourke seemed taken aback. "Christ, it was just a joke,
O'Donnell."
"Just leave. Amazingly you've got less tact than brains,
and that's not an easy feat. Go on,
git.
"
Rourke walked away, fuming. Jack's face warmed
again, then he turned to me. Speaking to the rest of the crew,
he said, "Fellas, would you give me and Henry a minute?"
They all gave Jack a firm handshake, a pat on the back,
a hug or two. I could tell Jack hadn't been hugged a
whole lot. He wasn't sure where to place his hands. Once
the crowd had thinned, he motioned for me to pull up a
chair. I grabbed one from an empty desk a few rows away
and pulled it into his cube. "Sit down," he said. I obliged.
"It's great to have you back," I said. "I wasn't sure--"
"You're late," Jack said. I checked my watch.
"It's not even ten past eight. You told me to be here at
eight-thirty."
"If a press conference is called for four and you show
up at three-thirty, you'll be sitting in the back row with
the reporters from the high school newspapers."
"I get your point," I said.
Jack continued. "So far, you've made it by on talent
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and luck. You want to be great at this job, you need to add
a spoonful of brains. With the story we're going to be
chasing, there's no half an hour early. Murderers don't
want for you to be on time. Drug dealers don't use personal data organizers. When you catch people off guard,
that's when the truth comes out. Never give someone the
time to make up a lie."
"I know how important this is," I said. "I know that
what my brother was killed for goes higher than the
assholes who pulled the trigger."
Jack stared at me. "You don't know anything, Henry.
You never go into a story 'knowing' anything. A good
reporter is open to every possibility. If you have on
blinders, you miss the bigger picture. You might think
there's a massive conspiracy, but then you look for facts
to support your thesis. You may be right about Gaines.
But you don't know anything yet. So let the picture paint
itself for you."
"Gaines was killed because somebody thought bumping
him off was the quickest route to money and power," I said.
"And they wouldn't have thought that without a reason."
"You said there was a connection between Gaines and
some company, right?"
"718 Enterprises," I replied. "I think it's a shell corporation. I saw a battalion of drug dealers leaving the
company's midtown headquarters, but I didn't find out
what it is or who runs it. Plus my buddy at the NYPD,
Curt Sheffield, told me that five people connected to 718
have been killed over the last few months. 718 is hiding
something major, and for some reason its employees have
shorter shelf lives than a chicken at KFC. So you think
we should start by looking into 718?"
Jack put his thumb to his lip, tapped it as he thought.
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Then he shook his head. "You don't get a story by meeting it head-on. You need to confront the big dogs with
facts, not accusations. We need to poke around. Find out
who and what exists at the peripherals. We..."
Just then my cell phone rang. I noticed that the red
message light was blinking at the voice mail on my desk.
Whoever was calling had tried to reach me at the office
and was now calling my cell.
My first thought was Amanda, but she was likely on
her way to the office. I took the phone from my pocket;
the number on the caller ID made my stomach lurch.
There's no way he'd be calling this early in the morning
unless something had happened. Something bad.
I answered the phone. "Curt?" I said.
"Henry," Curt Sheffield said. Curt was an officer with
the NYPD. A good buddy and dedicated cop. He'd helped
me with numerous cases over the last few years, often
giving me scoops ahead of other papers because he knew
I'd do the right thing with them. A lot of other news outlets,
not that I'd name names, would takes quotes out of context,
make officers who stuck their necks out look bad.
The thing you learned in the news business was that