You Think You Know Me Pretty Well aka Mercy (45 page)

BOOK: You Think You Know Me Pretty Well aka Mercy
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“Shit!”

Not waiting for anyone else to act, the warden leaped out of his chair to hit the abort button. As the significance of the action became apparent, the room erupted into pandemonium, with deputies spinning the wheel that opened the door to the execution chamber and another running in to rip the tubes out of Burrow’s arms. By this time, the chaos had spread to the spectators.

 

 

 

00:08 PDT

 

Alex Sedaka arrived in the reception area just as the spectators were being herded out. He had been allowed into the high security section because of his pass. But they had told him that he couldn’t go in to the spectator’s section because the procedure had already started. He had wanted to give Burrow some comfort in his last moments and he cursed himself for his lateness.

But now the doors to the spectator’s section had been thrown open – somewhat earlier than expected – and people were positively
charging
out in a state bordering on hysteria. This was not the usual press stampede to phone in their stories. These people were in a state of shock – as if something untoward had happened.

“What is it?” he asked frantically as one man barged past him.

He had heard of things going wrong with executions before, although usually that was with the electric chair, like heads catching fire. With the old gas chamber it was usually frothing at the mouth and going into spasm.

But this was a lethal injection procedure. The worst thing that could go wrong was the prisoner regaining consciousness before the other drugs had taken effect. And that was supposed to have been precluded by the new execution protocol that provided for a continuous dose of sodium thiopental while the other drugs were being administered.

The hysteria all round him was such that he almost forgot his recent discovery, not to mention his concerns about Nat. But what he saw next brought it all flooding back to him. For the last person to emerge from the spectator’s room was Nat. He looked completely unfazed even as he walked up to Alex. There appeared to be not just an air of calm about him, but almost an air of relief, as if a great burden had been lifted from his shoulders.

“We found Dorothy’s passport,” said Alex.

Surprise flipped across Nat’s face, followed by fear … followed by a smug calm.

“Oh really?”

“Yes. And the picture of Esther when she was younger.”

“And what conclusions have you drawn?”

“I … I’m not sure. I know that you’ve had an obsession with this case for some time. And maybe even an obsession with the Olsen family. The passport shows that she went to England but never came back here or entered another country. ”

“But you still don’t know what to make of it,” Nat taunted.

“No.”

“And presumably it was your burglar friend Lee who found the passport and picture?”

“Yes. Lee.”

“I should’ve guessed. I should have searched him.”

“I also know about Dusenbury and Jimmy … and Jonathan.”

Nat smiled.

“You really
have
been doing your homework.”

“But I still don’t understand the rest, what you did … the why and the wherefore.”

“Does it really matter now? Isn’t it more important that the man who tormented Dorothy has finally got what he deserved?”

“Do you mean Clayton Burrow or Edgar Olsen?”

Nat shrugged.

“Both, I guess.”

“To be perfectly honest, Nat, that’s
not
what concerns me right now. What concerns me is you. I want to know what
your
interest in this case is.”

“My … interest?”

“Oh come on, let’s not play games, Nat. You badgered your way into my office, battering down my defenses with flattery. You set your sights on working for me and you made it happen. You went about it like a military campaign. You also made sure that I got the Clayton Burrow case. You were working with the Public Defender’s office and you got some con to recommend me to Burrow. Hell, I wouldn’t even be surprised if you persuaded the other law firm to drop the case.”

“Oh no, that I didn’t do. That was just luck. They wanted out and I saw my opportunity. If they hadn’t dropped out, I’d’ve probably gone to work for them. Although I must confess I liked it a whole lot more this way – for reasons that should have figured out by now.”

“Then perhaps you’d like to tell me.”

 “Well firstly, I liked the irony of defending the man who was found guilty of killing her.”

“Except that he didn’t kill her, did he?”

“No,” replied Nat, swallowing nervously. “I did.”

 

 

 

00:09 PDT

 

Juanita was waiting for the second page of the fax to come through. But there seemed to be a problem. The machine was making frantic noises like it was making valiant efforts to print the page, but it wasn’t happening. After a few more seconds, the machine fell silent and it flashed a message on the LCD display: “Black toner empty.”

“Damn!” she cursed.

She raced to the office supply cupboard and found another, angrily ripping the box open and tearing the wrapping off the cartridge. There was a frantic haste in her movements as she opened the fax machine and removed the old cartridge, tossed it aside, pulled off the tape that covered the flow-hole of the cartridge and slotted it into the machine.

Then came the long wait for the machine to restart. The motor cranked to life and started huffing and puffing like an aging locomotive struggling up a high-grade track to the top of a hill. Even then it wasn’t over: the LCD display invited her to choose “Y” or “N” for whether she had changed each of the four cartridges. And even then, after more cranking and wheezing, the LCD announced: “Cleaning.”

Every time! She thought to herself. Every fucking time!

 

 

 

00:10 PDT

 

“I had a feeling that you were going to say that,” said Alex, meeting Nat’s eyes unflinchingly. “I assume you were one of her classmates. I don’t remember your picture in the year book. Which one were you?”

“It doesn’t matter,” said Nat.

“Is he dead?” asked one of the crowd of people, a reporter.

“The doctor’s still checking.”

“Why was it called off?” asked the reporter.

“They got a call from the governor,” said another reporter.

For a moment, Alex and Nat had got distracted by the exchange. But now they looked at each other again.

“Okay,” said Alex. “I don’t need to know the minutiae now. But I want to understand why. Why did you kill her? What had she done to you?”

“You really don’t get it, do you?” asked Nat with a sneer in his voice. “I was doing her a favor.”

“A favor?”

“Yeah, you know … like in that movie
-
They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?

Alex was beginning to understand. “You wanted to put her out of her misery?”

Nat nodded.

“Think about it. An abusive father. An indifferent mother who turned a blind eye to what her father was doing to her. Bullying in school, not just at the hands of Clayton Burrow but most of her class. Burrow was just the ring leader, but how do you think the rest of them reacted to a cross-dressing bull-dyke?”

“So what was it? A mercy killing?”

“You could call it that. I know that’s not a defense in law, but it’s the truth.”

“But when did you do it?”

“What do you mean, when?”

“Well it wasn’t round about the time she vanished. We know that she went to London and had an abortion. We know that she never came back. You had her passport at your place and it didn’t have any exit stamp from England. What happened, Nat? Did you go over to England and kill her there?”

“I had to. It was hard. To do something like that is never easy. But I had to. I finally killed her when she was over there.”

“What do you mean ‘finally’? Had you been trying before?”

“Oh, I’d been trying to kill her for a long time.”

 

 

 

00:11 PDT

 

Looking at the clock on the wall, Juanita was frantic. The fax machine was taking ages to go through its self-cleaning routine. She shifted uncomfortably, waiting for it to finish and start printing again.

But what was the point? Looking at the clock on the wall, she realized that it was too late. Unless they had taken a long time reading out the warrant or Clayton had made a particularly long final statement, he had to be dead by now.

While she waited, she remembered Jonathan’s call about his mother. She thought she should tell Alex. But when she called, it went straight to his voicemail. She decided to send him a quick, tersely-worded text.

Finally the machine finished its routine, the chugging sound gave way to a rapid high-pitched whirring and the printing started up again.

Juanita’s heart leaped into her mouth as she waited for the machine to spit out the next sheet of paper.

 

 

 

00:12 PDT

 

David had finally recovered the MP3 file. He wasn’t sure if the recovery process was bit perfect, but even if there were a few inaudible or distorted parts, they would still have the bulk of it.

He had copied it over to a PC in the lab; now he had to run it and listen to it. But the PC didn’t have any speakers, it was built as a high-spec functional machine, not a games machine – so, although it had a sound card, it had no speakers.

He wandered off in search of another computer that he could borrow. The trouble was, most of the offices were locked, making it impossible to check them out. The offices that
were
open told the same story: no speakers.

Finally, on a hunch, he decided to check the drawers in some of the offices and labs that were open. He eventually found what he was looking for: a set of headphones.

He raced back to the lab and plugged the speakers into the PC. Then he put them and played the MP3 file, listening to the voice of a girl who may or may not have been dead, addressing her daddy.

 

 

 

00:13 PDT

 

“How did you kill her?”

“Slowly?”

“I thought you said it was a mercy killing?”

“Some things can’t be rushed.

He was still facing Nat. In the background, several other people seemed to be taking an interest in them.

“He’s dead!” said a reporter in the background.

Alex and Nat half-turned.

“Are you sure?” asked another.

“Yeah, they’ve just confirmed it.”

“Why did they try to halt it?”

“The warrant was withdrawn.”

“Procedural or substantive?”

Some of the reporters were looking at Alex from a few yards away, as if hoping for a reaction from him.

“God knows.”

Alex, for his part, kept his eyes locked on Nat.

“So what did you do with the body?”

“I buried her.”

“Where?”

“Somewhere deep.”

Nat hadn’t noticed the uniformed men who came up behind him, until Alex motioned to them with his eyes. When Nat did eventually look to his side he noticed them – a slightly fat older one of just below average height and a lean younger one, maybe two inches taller. They were wearing the uniform of Marin County Deputies.

“Nathaniel Anderson?”

“Yes.”

“We have a warrant for your arrest for obstruction of justice.”

One them flashed the warrant in front of him, while the other clamped his hand behind his back and handcuffed him. Nat offered no resistance and made no attempt to run. As he was about to be led away, he smiled at Alex.

As Alex watched them leading Nat away, he switched his iPhone back on. As soon as it came on, a message came through. He looked at it. It was a message from Juanita.

 

Had call from Jonathan. Esther Olsen died.

 

 

As he walked out into the corridor toward the entrance area and the exit from the prison, Alex felt the pain in the pit of his stomach. He had been moved by the death of Clayton Burrow. But it was nothing compared to the gut-wrenching feeling that ripped at him now. This poor woman, who had wanted only to bring happiness to her daughter, had instead alienated the girl and lost her love forever. This woman who had tried to ease her husband’s pain and guilt as best she knew how, had lost him – and lost her daughter trying to keep him. This woman who had gone to unimaginable lengths to give her tormented husband a son, had lost the son’s affection and love. This woman who had sacrificed everything and let other people walk all over her for the sake of those she loved had died alone … unloved.

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