The desk chair rolled away from
Richard
“Keep going on
First Avenue
,”
“Where are we going?”
“I’ll show you when we get there. I don’t want you to get lost.” It was not clear if he smiled or sneered, but he, alone, seemed to enjoy the show.
“We can still call this off, you know,”
“Yeah, right,”
Katherine wondered who should hit him first. She felt like it, and her hands almost hurt from holding back.
“That’s enough,
“It’s right up here. Here! Turn in here.”
Markowitz pulled into the parking lot behind the Donut Shop and stopped abruptly in the middle of the driveway. He turned around so quickly that
“If this is a joke, punk, you and me are going to have a talk.”
“It’s here. All right? You want me to show you or what?”
“We’ve looked everywhere around here.”
“Yeah, well, you didn’t look so good then.”
Markowitz took a breath that all could see. “All right,
When
“You ready for me to show you?” he asked.
“Yes,”
“Down there.” He nodded with his head and tried to move his hands.
Clearly
Markowitz led the way, followed by
“Counselor, I’ll want you to stand right beside your client. We’ll stop inside the door. I don’t want him to go any farther than that.”
“I understand,”
“I don’t like where this is going.”
“I understand,” she repeated.
Markowitz pushed the door open and stepped inside. The cool smell of the basement drifted past them while they waited in the sunshine. It had the smell of darkness.
They crowded past the front door and shuffled, step by step, farther inside until everyone was in.
“What’s next?”
“You have to go into the next room,” the boy said.
“I was there yesterday. There’s nothing there.”
“I need to show you,” the boy said, losing patience with his confinement.
“No. You’re going to stay right here with your lawyer. You can tell me. So far, you’ve been real good at telling me where to go.”
The boy chafed within his handcuffs as though verbal instructions were beyond his ability. “In the next room, there’s a ceiling. Look, I can show you.”
“Keep talking. A ceiling.”
“In one place, the boards are loose. You can’t see it from the floor.”
“All right, let’s say I find those boards. Then what?”
“You push them out of the way and crawl up. There’s space between it and the floor up above.”
Two sentences seemed to be the maximum the boy could speak at one time without being reminded what he had said.
“You crawl a little ways and there’s some more boards that are loose. They go to the basement next door. There’s no other way to get in there.”
“Next door?”
“Yeah.
Markowitz ignored him and spoke to
In single file they walked to the next door. The pace was too slow for
“That corner,”
“Which corner?”
“Over there.” He nodded with his head.
Evans followed
“Farther. All the way to the wall. Shit, you guys never would have found it.”
Markowitz finally found the loose boards. Carefully he pushed them away. He muttered something under his breath. He pulled a table that was against the wall beneath the hole and was about to climb up on it when
Markowitz paused for a moment, then abruptly climbed onto the table. He disappeared into the hole.
Wilson chose to ignore her client, and
At last they heard
“There’s some new concrete in the floor,” he said. “Is that where she is?”
“That’s it.”
“What happened to the old concrete?”
“We carried it out in buckets and put it in the Dumpster.”
“I hate to say this, Detective Markowitz, but we have to be careful what questions my client answers,”
“No problem. Let me know when I’ve crossed your line.”
She nodded her head.
“I’d like to know how they got her over there.”
“She crawled, just like you,”
“
“Hey, you said if I didn’t kill her, they couldn’t do anything to me. I was right here. I never went in there until it was all over. I was supposed to be standing guard at the door outside, but I snuck over here anyway.”
“I think we’re okay then, Detective Markowitz,”
“Who went in there with her?”
“Pierre and Morris.”
“Why would she go with them?”
“She wasn’t happy about it, I’ll tell you that.”
“What do you mean?”
“Bawling like a baby. But she wanted out, and they said they’d let her out—her and her kid. Shit, can’t nobody get out.”
“So why would she go into that room?”
“That’s where we split the dope. She knew about that. She carried it.”
“So maybe they told her she had to carry it one more time?”
“Maybe.”
“Do you know how they killed her?”
“I was standing here, remember?”
“
“You should have heard her when she saw that hole. I dug it, man, and it was deep.”
“How deep?”
“Five, six feet. Took me all day. You should have heard her.”
“Yes. I almost can,”
“Hollering like that. It wouldn’t do any good.”
“Somebody might have heard her. You heard her.”
Rutherford snickered from what he had heard. “They shut her up quick. It sounded like they put something over her mouth. You could still hear a little, but it wasn’t nearly so loud. That must be when they threw her in the hole.”
“What did they use to kill her? What happened to her?”
“They didn’t kill her like that. They just tied her up and threw her in the hole. He said that’s what he’d do if anybody squealed or wanted out. Shit, you should have heard her.”
“That’s enough,
“Why? I stood right here. I didn’t do anything. Those guys had balls. When they threw the dirt on her, she squealed like a pig.”
He began to laugh, and before anyone could respond,