Read Parker 02 - The Guilty Online
Authors: Jason Pinter
wearing a simple tank top fit to her toned body, the floor of
her Toyota strewn with empty fast-food wrappers. There
weren't many girls like her, who could look stunning both in
elegant work clothes and pajamas. Who looked beautiful
when they tried, and even more so when they didn't.
I mustered up some strength, leaned forward and gently
kissed her on the lips. She was slightly surprised, but after a
moment she pressed back hard. I could taste her strawberry
lip gloss, felt her hand as it came up to cradle my face. The
throbbing in my head and my hand quieted to a dull ache as
Amanda straddled my legs, supported her body against my
chest and kissed me harder and more passionately than she
had in a long time.
Adrenaline began to kick in, and keeping my injured hand to
the side I began to slide my good hand along her body. Up her
side, across her chest, between her breasts. I felt her heart beating
faster, her breath quickening. She ground against me, started to
kiss my neck. I brought my right hand up, careful not to flex it
too much, but Amanda took it and held it against the sofa.
"This stays here," she said between ragged breaths. She
raised her arms and eased off her vest. I eased off her blouse
with my good hand, pressed my palm against her bare skin,
ran it up toward her bra, then underneath, cupping her warm
breasts in my hand. Amanda sighed, reached behind and
unhooked the clasp, letting the clothing fall free.
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She stood up, giving me a moment to gaze at her body. A
moment later my pants and her skirt were undone and she
managed to slip off my boxers. Amanda eased on top of me
again until I was inside of her. We both groaned and began to
move back and forth, up and down.
"I want to be so close to you." She sighed, her movements
growing faster and faster. "I love you, Henry."
"I love you, too," I managed to gasp, as we rocked violently for another minute before collapsing onto the couch,
Amanda's sweat-glistened body rising and falling against
mine. Our lips found each other one more time, and then we
fell asleep intertwined, as all the pain faded away.
34
Jack O'Donnell sat at his keyboard, fingers flying as he
typed away on the only story that currently mattered to him.
When he told Wallace he was going to write it for the
Gazette--
they had to cover it, after all, as the crime was committed by a man who'd already killed four people--there was
no argument, only a solemn nod and an assumption that the
most accurate and unbiased story would be written. Wallace
did point out that the
Gazette
would have an exclusive--the
only paper in town to interview the victim, Henry Parker. All
the other news organizations would simply have to credit
Jack's piece when they quoted from it.
Jack had arrived at the hospital less than ten minutes after
the ambulance arrived with Henry. He'd watched them unload
the stretcher. He saw Amanda leap out, doing her best to hold
back tears. Jack offered a terse hello, then asked how Henry
was doing. She said they didn't know, that he needed a CAT
scan and that his hand was hurt something bad. Amanda
looked at Jack in a way that made his stomach feel hollow,
like somehow he'd been responsible for the attack.
He waited as they made sure there was no cranial bleeding,
no fractures. When the tests confirmed a grade one concus-
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sion Jack sighed in relief, said goodbye to Amanda, and left.
He went straight back to the office, locked himself in a conference room, pulled a flask of whiskey from his pocket and
drank until his eyes were ruddy and the tears of frustration
were sufficiently dammed up.
A year ago, when Henry had recovered after being shot,
Jack had viewed him merely as a young reporter with potential. It was a professional relationship, nothing more, one that
could be severed at any time for a multitude of reasons. Over
the past twelve months, however, Henry had become more.
For a man in his sixties who hadn't spoken to his own offspring in more than a decade, Henry Parker was the closest
thing to a son Jack O'Donnell had ever known.
Jack was a legend. He knew this, but did not brandish his
legacy like some vulgar bayonet. Instead he cloaked himself in
it, remembered it every time he began a story, every time he
followed a lead. Jack had torn through three marriages because
he simply
could not
perform the duties most women expected
of a husband. He would not come home when they pleased. He
would not offer comfort or solace with any regularity. He stayed
out late, drank often, was surly and emotionless depending on
how a story was evolving. Every relationship was a bell curve.
Passion and romance rose to a peak, then fell into a trough until
they flatlined. And when that happened, it was time to move on.
But it made him a great reporter. He devoted himself to
the craft, and in doing so became something more than just
a newsman. Within Henry, Jack could see the same potential. He would have to make sacrifices. Sacrifices ordinary
men could never make. Family, friends, even some happiness. But by doing so Henry would become what Jack
believed he could be: someone who made a difference.
Someone whose work lived on.
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Amanda seemed like a nice enough girl, yet every loose
thread a man had was one that could be pulled. One that
could be leveraged. If a man had nothing, he risked nothing,
and would stop at nothing. A woman could hold him back.
Love could make him soft. Jack was unsure if he'd ever truly
been in love, though if he had he would have retired ages ago,
spent his elder years in some pastel retirement community,
flitting about in golf carts and wearing pants with shameful
plaid designs. Eating lunch at "the club" with the other
retirees before they went out and shot a hundred and fifty on
the back nine. That was no life for him. That was no life at
all.
He gulped down another hot sip of coffee, laced with just
enough Baileys to give it a little kick, keep his blood pumping.
He typed in his byline and got ready to send it off. It would
be in tomorrow's national edition. He knew many people
thought this killer was some sort of twisted hero, knocking
off people whose deaths would somehow benefit the common
good. They didn't think about the monster beneath, just what
it took to pull a trigger and end someone's life. The families
shattered. The soullessness of it all.
Jack was too old to go chasing villains. That was a job for
a younger man, one ready to claim the mantle for his own.
And Jack knew that if Henry kept his head on straight,
snipped off any loose threads, the story would be fully told.
And he could only hope it was told before the next victim fell.
35
I tossed and turned the whole night, every position bringing
a new bolt of pain. Whether it was my hand, my head, or
Amanda accidentally kneeing me in the groin, I would have
had a better night sleep covered in honey and stuck in an ant
farm. Amanda didn't wake once. I tried to be jealous, but
watching her sleep soundly, all I could do was smile.
After making love we fell asleep for an hour. When we
woke, I threw on a pair of boxers, Amanda slipping into
cotton underwear and one of my T-shirts that came down to
her knees. We fell into bed and wrapped our bodies around
each other, my head on two pillows and numbed by two
aspirin, my hand stretched above my head to prevent undue
pressure from ripping the stitches.
When the sun came up, I blinked the crust from my eyes
and went to the bathroom. After peeing for what felt like an
hour, I turned the water on for a shower.
"You're not supposed to shower for forty-eight hours,"
Amanda mumbled from the bed.
"Crap, I forgot. Good thing I'm all sweaty from last night,
I've always wanted to smell like a hobo at work." Though
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Amanda's face was mushed into a pillow, I saw the edge of
a small smile.
I got dressed, and pulled out the note Agnes Trimble had
written me yesterday. My stomach clenched as I wondered if
the killer was watching me from the window. Watching
Agnes. Watching Amanda.
I took out my cell phone and called Curt Sheffield.
"Hey, Henry, how's the noggin feeling?"
"Feels like I went twelve rounds with Mike Tyson circa
1989."
"Damn, that's bad. Don't worry, give it a few years and you'll
be biting off ears and threatening to eat people's children."
"Those are some nasty side effects."
"You're telling me."
"Listen, Curt, I was wondering if you could get someone
to watch Amanda. Just while I'm gone during the day."
"Bro," Curt said, laughing. "Look out your window."
Confused, I pulled open the window with my good hand
and poked my head out. Below me I could see the sidewalk
and the building's entrance. Parked right in front was a blueand-white squad car. I could see two officers inside. And I
swear I could make out the outline of a donut.
"They'll be on your ass every morning and night for the
next week. You got a private escort to and from work, as does
your ladyfriend. You decide to shop for groceries, go to the
Chinese laundry mat during the day, that's all you."
"Thanks, Curt, I appreciate it."
"Don't thank me. Orders came down from Chief Carruthers's office. Guess there are people who want you to
stay alive."
"I'll be sure to send Carruthers a fruitcake."
"No fruitcake. His in-laws send one every Christmas and
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he chucks it. Later, Henry, give me a ring if you need
anything." I hung up, then dialed the number Agnes Trimble
had given me for Largo Vance. Hopefully Vance was an early
riser. The phone picked up on the very first ring.
"Yes, who is this?" a high-pitched voice croaked out.
"Hello, is this Professor Largo Vance?"
"If this is Jehovah's Witness, then no. If it's anyone else,
depends who's calling."
"Mr. Vance, my name is Henry Parker. I'm a reporter with
the
New York Gazette
and I was given your name by Professor Agnes Trimble--"
"Agnes! I haven't seen that minx in years." There was a
moment of silence as I tried to think of what to say. "Oh, come
now, Mr. Parker, don't be offended. I mean that with the
highest compliments. Agnes is a randy little minx, she and I
go way back."
"That's, um, wonderful. Anyway, Mr. Vance, if you have
a few moments today, I'd like to talk to you about Brushy
Bill Roberts."
This time the silence came from Largo Vance's end. His
response came sputtering out. "How fast can you be here?"
"Um, I don't know where you live, Mr. Vance..."
"3724 Bleecker. Be here in half an hour." He hung up.
"Who was that?" Amanda asked. She was sitting up in bed,
clutching a pillow in her arms.
"A potential source Professor Trimble gave me yesterday,"
I said. "An old professor. I think he has some more information on the Billy the Kid lead."
"Henry," she said, "please...be careful. Just yesterday you
were in the emergency room and..."
"I know that." I went to the bed and sat down next to her.
I took her hand in my good one, raised it to my lips and
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kissed her fingers. "I promise I'll be careful. There are policemen downstairs who are going to watch you, just to make
sure this lunatic doesn't come after us again. If you go
anywhere other than work, you know Curt's number. Call
him."
"This lunatic killed four people," she said. "If he wants to
kill, he's going to get them." I let that sink in, knew she was
probably right.
"Call in sick today. Just this once. I have to go talk to this
guy Vance. I
have
to."
"Then go," Amanda said. "The sooner you go, the
sooner you get back, the less time I have to spend worrying
about you."
"Listen, that guy wouldn't have attacked me if he didn't
have something to hide. He has an entire city police force
looking to draw and quarter him. A newspaper reporter
doesn't pose that much of a threat, comparatively."
"If he was willing to break into our apartment and do what
he did, it must be something awful he wants to keep a secret."
"That just means I'm going to find it," I said. "I'll call a
locksmith, have him change the locks and get a security
system installed."
"This apartment?" Amanda said. "That's like getting rims
on a 1987 Yugo."
"Now that sounds like one crunked-up car. Don't worry
about me," I said. I was having trouble pulling a shirt over
my head, so Amanda came over to help. "I'm Mr. Incredible."
"Well, please ask Mr. Incredible why he needs help getting