“I’m okay,” she said, and then because life can also be frighteningly practical in moments of abject horror, she asked, “Who’s watching the kids?”
“They’re with the Reales. Don’t worry about it, okay?”
“Okay.”
“I love you,” he said.
“I love you too,” she said. “More than you can ever know. But I need to tell you the truth.”
“It can wait,” he said.
“No, it can’t.”
“You’re hurt. My God, you were nearly killed tonight. I don’t care about the truth. I only care about you.”
She knew that at this very moment he meant that—and she also knew that eventually that thought would change. She would heal and come home, and then life and questions would nibble around the edges again. Maybe he could wait. But Megan couldn’t.
“Please, Dave, just let me talk, okay?”
He nodded. “Okay.”
And then while his hand slowly slipped off hers, Megan told him everything.
W
HEN THE DOORBELL RANG
, Del Flynn’s hand automatically went for the Saint Anthony medal.
Del sat at home watching the Celtics take on the Sixers. He
cheered for the Sixers—they were his favorite basketball team—but the only team the Flynns truly loved was the Philadelphia Eagles. Football was Del’s game. Three generations of Flynn men—Del’s dad; Del; Del’s son, Carlton—had been huge Eagles fans. Twenty plus years ago, when Del had finally started making some serious dough, he started to buy Eagles season tickets right on the fifty-yard line. It took him two years to persuade his old man to skip working the pub on just one Sunday and attend a game. It had been a great day, the Eagles beating the Cowboys by three. Del’s father died not long after that—lung cancer, probably from all those years in that smoky pub—his work literally killing him. But that game was a good memory, one Del kept with him and took out sometime when he wanted to remember his old man before that damned disease ate away at his insides.
Del remembered taking Carlton to his first game when he was only four. The Eagles had played the Redskins, and Carlton had wanted to buy a Redskins pennant, even though he hated the Skins. After that, it became something of a tradition—Carlton collecting pennants of the opposing team and hanging them on that wall above his bed. Del wondered when that stopped, when Carlton didn’t want the pennants anymore, and when he eventually moved from that to taking them down.
From the TV, the Sixers’ new center missed two straight free throws.
Del threw up his arms in disgust and turned as if to bemoan the poor shooting with his son. Carlton, of course, wasn’t there. He wouldn’t care anyway. He was all about the Eagles too. Man, that kid had loved going to the games. He loved everything about it—the tailgating, throwing a football in the parking lot, buying those
pennants, singing the Eagles’ fight song. Of the eight Eagles home games per year, Carlton usually got to go to only two or three, though he begged for more. For the others, Del took friends or business associates or gave them to some guy he owed a favor.
Man, what a dumb, stupid waste.
Of course, as Carlton had gotten older, he didn’t want to go with Del either. Carlton wanted to go with his friends and hang out and party afterward. That was how it was, right? Dad and son can’t get on the same page—like that old song “Cat’s in the Cradle” or whatever. Del wondered where Carlton had started to slip off the tracks. There was an incident his senior year of high school where a girl accused Carlton of rape and assault after a date. Carlton had told Del that she was just pissed off because he’d dumped her ass after a one-night stand. Del believed him. Who raped someone on a date? Rapists hid in bushes and jumped out and stuff. They didn’t get invited back to a girl’s place, like Carlton. Still, there were bruises and some bite marks, but Carlton said that was how she liked it. Del didn’t know, but in the end, he didn’t care about thin lines and all that she-said, he-said stuff. No way was his son going to jail for some misunderstanding. So Del made some payments, and it all went away.
That was the way it worked. His son was a good kid. It was a stage he was going through maybe. He’d grow out of it.
But still, something had changed in his boy, and now, with so much time on his hands, Del tried to figure out what. It could very well have been football. When he was really young, Carlton had been a great running back. Even in eighth grade he broke all the town records for yardage in a season. But then Carlton stopped growing. This frustrated the hell out of him. It wasn’t Carlton’s
fault. It was genetics, plain and simple. Nothing you can do about it. When Carlton got demoted to second-string, he started lifting more and, Del suspected, started taking steroids. That was where it started. Maybe. Who knew for sure?
Del tried to concentrate on the Celtics and Sixers, and, surprising himself, he could. Funny how life worked. He actually gave a crap if the Sixers won. Still. Despite what was going on in his life. Maria, of course, would laugh her ass off when she saw him get so involved in watching a game. She’d point at the TV and say, “You think these guys would go to your job and cheer you on?” She had a point, but so what? And as if to show she didn’t mean any harm, Maria would always bring out a snack for him then, potato skins or nachos or something.
It was at the moment, sitting on his white couch and thinking about his sweet Maria, with the Sixers on an eight-to-zero run, that Del heard the doorbell ring.
His hand immediately landed on the medal of Saint Anthony of Padua. You were supposed to invoke his name in the memory of lost things, including, Del knew, lost people. When he was younger, Del found such stuff total nonsense, but he’d grown superstitious over the years.
He pushed himself off the white leather and opened the front door. Goldberg, the cop, stood there in the cold. He didn’t say anything. He didn’t have to. Their eyes met, and Goldberg gave him the smallest, most devastating nod one man could give to another. Del felt something in his chest crumble into dust.
There was no denial. Not at first. At first, there was only a crushing clarity. Del Flynn understood completely what this meant. His boy was gone forever. He’d never be back. His son was dead. His
young life was over. There would be no reprieve, no miracle, nothing to save him. Del would never hold him or see him or talk to his boy again. There’d be no more Eagles games. Carlton was gone, no more, and Del knew that he would never recover.
His legs gave way. He began to collapse to the ground—wanted to actually—but Goldberg caught him in his strong arms. Del sagged against the big cop. The pain was too great, unfathomable, unbearable.
“How?” Del finally asked.
“We found him near where we found his blood.”
“In the woods?”
“Yes.”
Del pictured Carlton there—alone, outside, in the cold.
“There were other bodies too. We think it might be the work of a serial killer.”
“A serial killer?”
“We think so.”
“So you mean, like, there was no reason? It was just random that he killed my boy?”
“We don’t know yet.”
Del tried to push away the pain, tried to concentrate on what Goldberg was saying. That was what you did in times of agony. Some people used denial. Some used the need for vengeance. Whatever, you didn’t concentrate on what it all meant to you because that would be too much to bear. You divert with the irrelevant because you couldn’t change the awful truth, could you?
With the tears starting to flow, Del asked, “Did my boy suffer?”
Goldberg thought about it for a second. “I don’t know.”
“Have you caught the guy?”
“Not yet. But we will.”
From the TV, Del could hear the home crowd cheering. Something good had happened for the Sixers. His son was dead, but people were cheering. No one cared. The electricity in the house still worked. Cars still drove by. People still cheered for their favorite teams.
“Thank you for telling me in person,” Del heard himself say.
“Do you have someone who can stay with you?”
“My wife will be home soon.”
“Do you want me to stay with you until then?”
“No. I’ll be fine. I appreciate you coming by.”
Goldberg cleared his throat. “Del?”
He looked up at Goldberg’s face. There was genuine compassion there, but there was something else too.
Goldberg said, “We don’t want any more innocents hurt. You know what I’m saying?”
Del did not reply.
“Call those psychos off,” Goldberg said, handing him a cell phone. “There’s been enough death for one night.”
Through the blinding agony, there was indeed the crushing clarity. Goldberg was right. Too much blood had been spilled. Del Flynn took the phone from Goldberg’s hand and dialed Ken’s number.
But no one answered.
B
ROOME CALLED
S
ARAH
G
REEN
. “Will you be home in an hour?”
“Yes.”
“Can I come by?”
“Something new?”
“Yes.”
There was a brief pause. “It doesn’t sound like good news.”
“I’ll be there in an hour.”
T
HE STREETLIGHTS IN FRONT OF
Ray Levine’s residence were too bright and too yellow, giving everything a jaundiced feel. Four Atlantic County squad cars were parked in front of the modest dwelling. As Broome approached, he saw the feds pull up in a van. He hurried inside and found Dodds.
“Anything?” Broome asked.
“Nothing surprising, if that’s what you mean. No murder weapons. No hand trucks. Nothing like that. We already started going through the photographs on his computer. On that score, at least, the guy was telling the truth—the pictures by the old iron-ore mill were taken on various February eighteenths, not Mardi Gras.”
That backed Ray Levine’s story in a pretty big way.
Dodds looked out the window. “That the feds?”
“Yep.”
“They taking over?”
Broome nodded. “It’s their baby now.” He looked at his watch. There was no reason to hang here. He could get to Sarah’s and start to explain. “If there’s nothing else…”
“Nope, not really. Just one thing I found weird.”
“What’s that?”
“Ray Levine. That’s the guy’s real name?”
“It is.”
Dodds nodded more to himself. “You know any other Levines?”
“A few, why?”
“They’re Jewish, right? I mean, Levine is a Jewish name.”
Broome looked around this dump of a basement and frowned at Dodds. “Not all Jews make a lot of money. You know that, right?”
“That’s not what I meant. I’m not stereotyping or nothing like that. Look, just forget it, okay? It’s no big deal.”
“What’s no big deal?” Broome asked.
“Nothing. But, okay, like I said, we didn’t find anything incriminating. It’s just that, well”—he shrugged—“what would a Jewish guy be doing with this?”
He handed Broome a small plastic evidence bag. Broome looked down at the contents. At first he didn’t comprehend what this was, but a few seconds later, when he did, when it finally registered, Broome felt a sense of vertigo, like he was falling and falling and couldn’t stop. His world, already teetering, took another sudden, jarring turn, and it was almost hard to stay upright.
“Broome?”
He ignored the voice. He blinked, looked again, and felt his stomach drop, because there, inside the plastic bag, was a medal of Saint Anthony.
F
ROM HIS SPOT ACROSS THE STREET
, Ken watched Lorraine leave La Crème by the back door. It took her a fair amount of time to get through the lot. Her departure seemed to be something of an event. Every girl who worked in that cesspool called out to the older barmaid and gave her a long hug. Lorraine in turned accepted the embrace and then seemed to give each one of them something they craved—a sympathetic ear, a crooked I-get-it smile, a kind word.
Like she was their mother.
When she was finally through the crush of girls and headed for home, Ken followed at a safe distance. The walk to her place wasn’t far. The barmaid lived, of course, in some two-bit dump, a house that one might kindly say had seen better days, though it was probably grimy from day one.
Lorraine used a key to open the door and disappeared inside. Two lights went on toward the back. Before that there was no illumination in the house. That seemed to indicate that she was here alone. Ken circled the house, peeking in through the windows. He found Lorraine in the kitchen.
She looked, he thought, exhausted. Her high heels had been kicked off, her bare feet up on a chair. She warmed her hands on a cup of tea, gently sipping it and closing her eyes. In this harsher light, she was far less attractive, far older, than she had looked in the dim light of that strip joint.