Blind Justice (30 page)

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Authors: James Scott Bell

Tags: #Mystery

BOOK: Blind Justice
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CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR
PAIN IS A great clarifier. It forces you to think about survival—even while you’re rolling down a rocky hillside in the dark. Especially then.
I hit rocks, brush, sticks, and possibly several nocturnal animals on my way down to the road. The only thing I didn’t hit was a tree, which is why my descent was not interrupted. All the way I kept trying to think of a way to keep from impaling myself on some limb, and I came up with no answers.
By the time I thudded onto the shoulder of the road, I was warm with blood and numb with pain. But I was alive and apparently didn’t have any major injuries. At least I wasn’t aware of them. I lay there for a moment on cool grass and gently felt around my body. I’d be hurting for a long time.
Light flashed around me. Headlights. A car coming. Could it be Darcy and his friends? No, it was too soon, but I was sure they’d be heading this way in no time.
Knowing I was not going to make it on foot, I brought myself to my feet, fire shooting up my legs, and stumbled to the edge of the road. I waved my arms like a wild man at the oncoming car.
But who was going to stop for the likes of me in the dead of night? Still, I had to take a chance.
It was the right one. The car was a police unit. Even though it was the Hinton police, it was a welcome sight at the moment.
The headlights stopped. Through the glare I saw a shadowy figure emerge and walk toward me. A terrible thought hit me. What if it was my old friend Officer Cheadle? He’d probably cuff me to a tree.
“You all right?”
The voice wasn’t Cheadle’s, and it sounded young.
“No,” I said. “Can you give me ride?”
The young policeman stopped, and I could tell he was in a ready position. I couldn’t blame him. I must have looked like Swamp Thing.
“What happened?” the officer asked. “You’re hurt pretty bad.”
“Can I explain it to you in the car?”
“Where’d you come from?”
“There’s some guys who want to mess me up.”
“Did you come off that hill?” He sounded incredulous. Down the road I saw another set of headlights looking our way, like eyes.
“Quick,” I said, limping toward the squad car. The young officer, who had probably never trained in confronting the walking dead, wordlessly followed.
The headlights of the other car were almost upon us.
“Man, you look bad,” the officer said. He was fresh-cheeked and thin, no more than twenty-two or three. He would have looked perfectly at home behind the counter at Dairy Queen. “I’ll get you to the hospital.”
“Just go,” I said, glancing behind me.
He followed my glance. “You think those are the guys?”
“I don’t know. Do we need to find out?”
“I guess not,” he said, sounding a little confused. With a shrug, he started up the unit and took off.
The headlights behind seemed to stop dead in the road. If it was my fan club, they’d wait for another time.
“Maybe you’d better tell me about it,” the officer said.
“I want to tell Tolletson.”
“The DA?”
“Take me to the station.”
“But you’re—”
“Just do it. Radio ahead. Get Tolletson down there. Tell him it’s Jake Denney.”
I washed up as best I could in the station’s public restroom. At least it was clean. My face was another story. I looked like I’d been in a scratch fight and lost. And a big, ugly, blue spot was breaking out all over the right side of my face. I had various points of pain up and down my body, and my clothes were caked with blood and mud. I wondered what they were saying out at the station desk.
I didn’t have a chance to find out. As soon as I emerged, I was met by Benton Tolletson himself.
He was wearing a crisp blue polo shirt and sharp slacks—the picture of country-club casual. Out of a suit, he looked almost human. But he had his usual expression of contempt on his face.
“What’s this about, Denney?”
“Nice to see you too.”
“Come with me.”
He led me past the leering eyes of a few Hinton police officers, and the kid who’d given me the lift. He still looked utterly confused.
Tolletson opened the door to a small meeting room and in we went. Metal folding chairs were scattered around in haphazard fashion. A large whiteboard held a mishmash of officer names and assignments scrawled in blue marking pen. Was “arrest Jake Denney” one of them?
“I get a call at night about you, I’m intrigued,” Tolletson said. He didn’t bother to sit or offer me a chair.
“I know what you think of me, and at the moment, I really don’t care.”
“Did you ever?”
“No.”
“Go on.”
“But you’re the DA. You still have the obligation to see that justice is done.”
“This about Patino?”
“You bet it is.”
“Then I’m not interested. You can take it up on appeal.” He made a slight movement to leave.
“Will you knock it off!” I yelled, surprising myself. “Quit making everything a game, a competition, and listen to me for a change. Darcy Hazelton tried to kill me tonight.”
A look I could not read registered on Tolletson’s face. That -didn’t surprise me. What was going on behind those eyes was always anyone’s guess. “Darcy Hazelton?”
“Yeah, and his two buddies.”
“They did this to you?”
“They gave me this”—I pointed to the left side of my face—“and the rest was provided courtesy of your Hinton topography.”
“Stupid.”
“What?”
“Darcy Hazelton’s always been stupid.”
“And I thought he might be the guy who killed Rae Patino.”
“Why?”
“Several reasons. But I don’t think he did it. I think it was someone else.”
“Who?”
“Are you really interested?”
“I’m listening, but I know you’re desperate. You’ve always been desperate.”
That I could not argue with. Desperate is exactly what I was. “I called you in good faith. I want you to listen to me.”
“I’m listening.”
“I think it was Darcy’s father.”
“The Captain? Whatever gave you that idea?”
“The fact that Darcy’s gay.”
Tolletson scowled, and for the first time looked like I’d made an impact. “So what?”
“So I don’t think he was having an affair with Rae Patino. But his father was. In fact, he was paying her for it. There’s no other way to explain that rack of skin and bones getting together with her. And when she got pregnant, she thought she’d hold out for a little more money, but he wasn’t buying.”
Shaking his head, Tolletson said, “This is screwball. You have any proof?”
“No, but you do.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
It was a shot in the dark, but I took it. “I think you know more about all this than you’re telling me. I think you know things about the Hazelton family and a possible connection to the murder. And I think you never followed up on any of it because, frankly, you had a winner with Howie Patino, and you just went for it. You went for a notch on the belt rather than the truth.”
His jaw muscles twitched. “You’re nuts.”
“Am I?”
For a long moment he glared at me, wheels turning in his head. “I’ll prove it to you.”
“How?”“You’re coming with me.”
CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE
IT WAS A bizarre situation.
Here I was riding in a new black Cadillac with a man I loathed and who felt the same way about me, on a mission of criminal justice. At least that’s how Tolletson had put it. He said he wanted to clear things up tonight.
We were going to see Warren Hazelton.
It was unorthodox, yes, but Tolletson convinced me this was the right thing to do. I would stand in the room with him while he put the questions to Hazelton. Tolletson said he wanted me there to watch Hazelton’s eyes, as I would with any witness I was confronting in court. That would be enough to convince me, Tolletson said.
Strangely enough, I believed him. He was, after all, the DA of a small county. That gave him tremendous power. And even though he had socialized with Hazelton, I didn’t think that would prevent Benton Tolletson from trying to get to the bottom of things. He didn’t strike me as a man who would let a minor item like social graces get in his way. The fact that he had made his reputation bringing down another local hero, the football coach, made it seem plausible that he’d do it again.
There was another reason this was so strange. Technically, I was a criminal defendant in a drunk driving case that Tolletson’s office was prosecuting. It’s not often that a defendant rides around town with the DA. It was almost comical.
As we made our way toward the Hazelton estate, Tolletson’s mood was far from frivolous. “If there isn’t anything here,” he said, “you better be ready to face the music.”
“What sort of music?”
“Hazelton has money. He can make your life hell. He might sue you for defamation, for starters.”
I huffed. “He’s welcome to go after my deep pockets. Maybe he’ll get my VCR.”
“What went wrong with you?” Tolletson said, taking a sharp turn into the personal. “You were a good attorney.”
Suddenly I was in the car with my father. The disapproval and disappointment were heavy in his voice.
“I’m still a good attorney, Benton. I just have to find my way back.”
“You got a long way to go.”
“I know that.”
“We’re almost there,” Tolletson said. I’m sure he didn’t want to go any deeper with me. What had started as an attempt to establish superiority had turned into a discussion about the meaning of life. Benton Tolletson was not ready to go there, especially with me.
At the large, black iron gate Tolletson pressed a keypad and announced himself through the speaker. Apparently he had called ahead because the gates slowly swung open without any further comment.
The same security guard was waiting for us as the front entrance. He showed us in. The Hazelton mansion looked familiar, but at night it was oddly dark, even with the lights on. Sort of like a medieval castle illuminated with torches. I started to wonder where the torture chamber was.
We were shown into the same library where Lindsay and I had confronted the captain before. It had the same, musty smell. Hazelton himself seemed not to have moved or changed clothes since that encounter. Even the fire in the fireplace seemed perpetual.
“Benton,” Hazelton said in his raspy voice. He was standing by the mantle tamping tobacco into his pipe. He said nothing to me, giving me only a glare.
“Thanks for seeing us on such short notice,” Tolletson said.
“Of course. Anything to help the DA’s office. Sit down.” He motioned us to the leather chairs in front of his desk and then sat in his own chair. He lit his pipe with a wooden match.
“Warren,” Tolletson began, “you know Mr. Denney, I believe.”
Squinting at me through a veil of smoke, Hazelton said, “Oh yes.”
“That’s the reason I’m here tonight. Mr. Denney thinks he has some information on the murder of Rae Patino.”
I had no idea where Tolletson was going with this, but I was surprised he would be so direct. A good prosecutor doesn’t show his cards while the investigation is going on.
“And what sort of information would that be?” Hazelton asked me, appearing unconcerned.
“Maybe Mr. Tolletson can tell you,” I said.
“No, Jake, why don’t you go ahead?” Tolletson said. I felt like he was leaving me out to dry.
But I didn’t care. “All right,” I said. “What was your relationship with Rae Patino?”
For a moment Hazelton’s sunken eyes quivered. They quickly resumed impassivity. “Who is he?”
“Come off it, you know who I’m talking about.”
“Benton?” Hazelton said with seeming confusion.
Tolletson turned to him. “The young woman who was -murdered.”
“Ah, yes,” said Hazelton, the liar. I hoped Tolletson wasn’t buying this sham. “I didn’t know the girl.”
“This is a pretty small town,” I said.
“Quite so.”
“You’re a pretty big wheel.”
“True.”
“And you claim you didn’t know her at all?”
“Mr. Denney,” Hazelton rasped, “there are two worlds in existence. There is the world I occupy, which has very few people in it. All the rest live down there.” He motioned toward the window with his bony hand.
“You mean you’re sort of like a god, up here on Olympus.”
“In a way,” he said with complete seriousness.
“Pardon me if I find that a bit deranged.”
The remark did not amuse Warren Hazelton, even though a demented half-smile edged across his face.
“Maybe we can start by asking where you were on the night Rae Patino was murdered.”
Hazelton looked at Tolletson and said, “That’s enough.”
Tolletson looked at his feet.
“Enough what?” I asked.
No answer. And then it hit me. “You’re in this with him.”
Tolletson raised his head and looked at me. His eyes were dead.
Hazelton stuck out an osseous finger, pushed a button on a small console, and said, “Bring Mrs. Hazelton in.”
A moment later Heather Hazelton walked into the library.
She looked older than I’d expected. I had a picture in my mind of the youthful hippie tromping through the flowers with skin like milk. What I saw now was a middle-aged woman, dressed completely in black. Her dark hair was streaked with white lines and fell to the middle of her back. Most striking was her face. It was not that of an innocent flower child. She had a darkness about the eyes. Around her neck she wore a large, silver pentagram.
“We’re ready,” Hazelton said tonelessly.
Heather walked to the middle of the room, staring. The look held more than contempt. It was deadly and chilled me to the spine.
I turned to Tolletson. “What are they talking about?”
“Sorry, Jake,” he said.
“Sorry about what? What is this?”
At that moment the security guard, as if on cue, walked through the door. His gun was in his hand, and in two seconds it was at the base of my neck.
Heather reached up on the mantle, pulled down a black box, and held it out to Tolletson.
Stunned beyond belief, I watched as Benton Tolletson, district attorney of Hinton County, pulled from the box a set of handcuffs. He then pulled my arms behind me and locked them there.
“You’re all crazy,” I said.
“Silence,” said Heather.
Tolletson pushed me to a chair and sat me down. A rope was looped around my body. The security guard was tying me to the chair.
“Benton,” I said, “I can’t believe this.”
Tolletson said nothing.
Warren Hazelton walked to his wife and stood with her in front of the fire. They joined hands. Then Warren Hazelton closed his eyes and said, “
A diaboli et Rege!”
It was more a chant than anything else.

Adeste diaboli!”
It sounded Latin to me.
Heather said, “Receive this sacrifice, O father.”
Sacrifice?
Me.
“Benton, this is insane!” I said.
“Shut up,” he said.
Heather reached up to another box on the mantle. She opened it and pulled out something of glistening silver—it looked almost beautiful until I realized it was a knife with a six-inch blade.
“A sacrifice, O father,” Heather said, holding the knife up in both hands, “so you will grant me the daughter I seek.”
In the grip of this surreal scene, a picture formed in my head. “It was you,” I said to Heather. “You were the one who killed Rae Patino. She was going to have a child for
you.”
Heather froze. Warren Hazelton looked stunned. “Who else knows about this?” he wheezed at Tolletson.
“No one, I’m sure,” Tolletson said.
“Everyone,” I said. “I’ve been feeding this to the FBI and a reporter on the
Hinton Valley News.

“He’s lying,” said Tolletson.
“Try it, Heather,” I said.
She intended to. She gripped the knife in a plunging position. Then she took a step toward me.

Adeste diaboli!”
she cried, raising the knife even higher.
The boom was like the sound barrier being broken, only right next to my ears.I was knocked backward in the chair, feeling like every part of my body was being hit simultaneously by some colossal compactor. As I hit the ground, I saw a pillar of fire, shooting straight up through the roof.

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