The Path of Silence

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Authors: Edita A. Petrick

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THE PATH OF SILENCE

EDITA A. PETRICK

The Path of Silence

Copyright © 2016 by Edita A. Petrick

www.editaapetrick.com

twitter.com/EditaBoni

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COPYRIGHT NOTICE—ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

The content of this book is protected under Federal and International Copyright Laws and Treaties. Any unauthorized reprint or use of this material is prohibited. No part of this book may be electronically or mechanically reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or retention in any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from Edita A. Petrick

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, locations, events and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual events or actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

Book Cover Art by Karri Klawiter

Book Layout by Maureen Cutajar

eBook ASIN: B01DI94MGM

Table of Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

Chapter 1

I
t was one of those nights that hell’s accountants crow about, full of black ink and rising death statistics.

A citizen, running an errand in a dependable quiet neighborhood in Woodbrook, was found lying prostrate on the hood of the car—prone forever.

My shock wore off quickly. Its byproducts were fatigue and irritation.

“He’s dead, Kenny,” I said to my partner. He had the presence of mind to put on gloves. I was still struggling to understand what the hell happened in those few minutes we spent inside the convenience store.

Ken finally gave up checking for pulse anywhere he could reach the male victim, Caucasian, mid-thirties and dressed like any other Baltimore dweller who skips out to a convenience store at ten o’clock at night, in jeans and a navy blue sweatshirt.

“What the hell happened here, Meg?” He backed away from the car, bloodied latex-covered palms upturned.

It was a strange question. Viewing dead bodies with professional objectivity was our job. But for some reason, the sight of bloodied latex gloves made my stomach cramp.

On a harsh day, when the pile of cold cases on our desk grew so tall we could no longer see each other, I’d ask him if he wanted to take a rotation—with our bomb squad. It always worked to clear his perspective. He would call Brenda, his girlfriend, to reassure her that he had survived another day as a homicide cop.

Now, looking at the body sprawled on the hood of Ken’s car, I wondered whether, upon rising, I had missed a divine sign—a warning.

The new dawn of work-filled pleasures had started on a decent note. It was a vibrant morning, sunny and sea-fresh, the fifth such glorious day in May. Half the city of Baltimore, which translated into two-thirds of the government employees, decided to take Wednesday off. The traffic was light. I made it downtown in half an hour and stopped to pick up two large cappuccinos at the Urban Bean. The manager had flirted with me. At thirty-two, I didn’t think I looked like his baby-sister’s high school rival but it made me laugh. The coffee sales were brisk. He was having a good morning and tried to get my phone number. I flipped out my badge from my denim shirt and let it dangle on the twisted cotton braid that my daughter had made for me the year before at the summer camp.

He raised his hands, alarmed. “Whoa there, officer! I meant no disrespect.”

“None taken, sir.” I smiled.

As I walked away, a couple of suits standing in line did a circle-check. I wished they had whistled. It was that kind of irreverent morning.

By nine o’clock, wired and ready to take on the world, I had attacked a looming paper pile. They were all old and cold cases, waiting for resolution. Our Cold Case Unit was humble in staff numbers but our caseload was three times that of the here-and-now homicide unit.

By noon, Kenny and I had reviewed seven old cases and picked out a dozen “tags” that we had previously missed. We felt a sense of accomplishment, went outside, bought hot dogs at a vendor’s stand and practiced “reading” people.

After stuffing down dogs slathered in all kinds of unhealthy condiments, we returned to our desks and spent the afternoon arguing about the order of importance of the seven cases we planned to follow up.

I like to start with the simplest case first.

A list of evidence collected from a stockbroker’s office, had, among the wastebasket contents, a discarded bulldog grip. I checked all the reports attached to this homicide-disappearance. No one had bothered to tour the neighborhood gyms. The stockbroker had left his secretary slumped in an ergonomic posture chair, a bullet hole in her forehead. He was a marksman. He may have toned his muscles in a local gym. Estrelle Gomez did not deserve the kind of job performance review her embezzling boss gave her. We owed it to her next of kin to keep trying to apprehend her killer. I stuck this folder into the first metal filing slot on my desk and moved on.

Ken finally stopped listening to his eco-voice about killing innocent trees and made fresh new photocopies. He’d turned the printer contrast to maximum because the paperwork was five years old. That’s how he discovered someone’s hand-scribbled notes on the margin. Five years ago, Sidhi Ben Ahbib was gunned down at midnight, closing down his gas station franchise in Greenmount neighborhood. Since he was a Syrian immigrant, the Homeland remained keenly interested in the case for three years, fairly interested for another and when the terrorist angle flattened out to an uninteresting line, they passed it on to us. We’d been working an out-of-town gang-member-opportunity angle. He had kept a gun in his till. It was an Israeli issue, a “Baby Eagle”, Jericho 941, with a 12-round, .40 magnum capacity, the cherished companion of every urban commando. The handwritten notes on the margin claimed that Ahbib was a gambler—and a womanizer. The Muslim community frowned on such risky hobbies. What if it was a jealous husband or an irate father? We decided that we would pay a visit to Ahbib’s family and gently broach this difficult character issue. Five years were certainly enough to speak well of the dead. It was time to reflect on his lifestyle faults and solve the case.

The third case was a paradox. A thirty-one-year old economist, Jonathan Anderson Brick, had disappeared from a 7-Eleven in Dundalk four years ago. I had tried to avoid this file as often as I could. In my experience, there was no such thing as solid moral fabric. A dedicated churchgoer, a devoted family man, might take a walk and never return to his genetic and financial obligations. I told Ken that women grew and sank roots that stabilized the slopes of life. Men just liked to climb them.

Patricia Vanier—Brick’s fiancé—had become unhinged when she’d given a statement at the Central District headquarters. Her Johnny just went out to get popcorn and pop, to spice-up their evening entertainment. The 7-Eleven was a block down the street. He took the car to get back faster. He could not possibly have been steeped in thought to a degree that saw him drive to Dundalk, to visit their 7-Eleven.

Our colleagues four years ago had assured her that he was. She had reported him missing the next morning. Six hours later, the owner of the 7-Eleven in Dundalk handed over the shop surveillance tape and swore on a string of meditation beads that citizen Brick had visited his establishment last night.

A lot more manpower would have been thrown at this case, had Patricia not insisted that her fiancé was kidnapped, threatened, tortured—and possibly murdered. That brought her under the scrutiny of Preston Jacks, a consulting psychiatrist for the Baltimore Police Department

I glanced through his report and felt sorry for her.

Thanks to her four previously filed missing-kidnapped-tortured-murdered reports, when Brick went to the 7-Eleven and lingered longer than she considered appropriate, she was recommended for extensive mental therapy. Since he had returned each time, the reports were stamped with “ERROR” and the hardcopies were filed in the “false alarm” drawer.

What I got from the dispirited perusal of her historical-hysterical term papers, showed that Brick was not just a career-climber but also a peripatetic spirit. Each time he had gone out at night to a convenience store, he’d gone further—and lingered longer. She was just starting to question the “lingering” part when he disappeared.

Jacks had pointed out this developmental trend to her. Her loyal, loving, sensitive and well-paid boyfriend, was most probably trying to walk away from the engagement ring she wore on her finger. He had never returned from Dundalk’s 7-Eleven. Jacks had spelled it out for her. Brick had made up his mind to end the relationship. Patricia went into withdrawal, then depression and finally into full-time residence at the Mongrove Psychiatric Facility.

Brick didn’t resurface. That’s how we ended up with his file.

It had been four years since the 7-Eleven in Dundalk had swallowed him. We should pay a visit to Ms. Vanier, I decided.

I sighed and scribbled down a note to track her down. We should at least ask her if she’d ever heard from him.

The other four cases were homicides where the killer had kept on running—under several different aliases. We needed to check as to whether any of the names might have landed in any of our penal institutions. After all, our criminal and justice system worked—sometimes. We closed three cold case files that way last year.

At six o’clock, Jazz left a message on my cell phone that she was running away from home. I phoned Mrs. Tavalho, my housekeeper. She assured me that my daughter was still in residence and so were three other ten year olds who would be sleeping over.

“Blackmail?” I sighed.

“Not to worry, Miss Stanton,” she assured me. “You know she always does something like this when she wants her friends to sleep over and knows you wouldn’t allow it. I’ll have a chat with her.”

“I’ll be home by ten, eleven the latest,” I told her. She confirmed that our arrangements for her overnight stay stood and told me to have a good time at the party. I thanked her and hung up.

Kenny nodded at me. “It’s time. Let’s change.”

Fifteen minutes later, I looked as good as any of those women who deliver authoritative weather reports. I was about to knock on the men’s washroom to see if he was ready, when my text-received notification went off.

Mrs. Tavalho must have told my ten year old what she thought of her prank. Jazz texted me another nasty message. She said that since she never had a father and didn’t know whether there ever was one, she saw no point in having a mother either. She wanted to be an orphan. Ken came out—hair gelled and slicked back. He was dressed in a white shirt and dark slacks. He looked like a groom who had been dieting for months, not a guest heading to a staff dinner party for our office supervisor who was getting married.

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