Burying Ben (28 page)

Read Burying Ben Online

Authors: Ellen Kirschman

Tags: #Fiction, #Retail, #Suspense, #Thriller

BOOK: Burying Ben
9.03Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He gives up. Too
m
any reports to write in too little ti
m
e appa
r
ently leaves him without the energy to fight a
bigger, more pernicious burea
u
cracy than the one he works for. Not to
m
ention that having someone on the Board of Psychology mad at you
m
i
ght not be career enhancing.

I r
ec
eive t
h
e ret
u
rn
f
ax within
m
inutes. The ap
p
lica
n
t, Benj
a
m
in Go
m
ez, had low yet acceptable ratings up to and including his chief’s interview. He was dropped from the hiring process after he
failed his pre-e
m
ploy
m
ent psychological screening, just as he had been for the Sierra S.O.

If two psychologists had found h
i
m unsuitable,
why
hadn’t
Mark?

 

I walk out into the garden and sit on my
b
ack step. My neighbor’s cat, Oedipus, is walking gingerly on the fence between our
two houses. He drops soundlessly into
m
y yard, rubs against
m
y legs and curls up next to
m
e in the sun, purring. After Mark and I separated, one of
m
y friends told
m
e
that
a
ll I needed was a cat and a vibrator. At the ti
m
e, I didn’t take kindly to her suggestion.

I stroke Oedipus’ soft
f
ur and consider that I have just added i
m
personating a professional conduct investigator to b
r
eaking and entering, stealing confidential infor
m
ation, kidnapping,
breach of confidenti
a
lity and inc
o
mpetence. I

ve been a law abiding citizen all
m
y life, except for a few acts of civil disobedience, a good girl who did what she was told, and now I have a rap sheet the equal of a career cri
m
inal.

W
hat I don’t have any longer is a career. Oedipus stretches languorously and cli
m
bs onto my lap sandpapering
m
y arm with his tongue. His na
m
esake is the tortured
icon of one of the world’s most infa
m
o
us dys
f
unctio
n
al
f
a
m
ilies. A tingling
s
ensation st
a
rts at the ba
c
k of
m
y neck, an ele
c
t
r
ic buzzing, that rolls through
m
e, raising the hair on
m
y ar
m
s
. Vinnie Patcher
m
ay not have murdered Ben, but he had
m
otive enough to
drive him
to suicide. Ben wasn’t good enough for April. No one has ever been good enough for April, except perhaps, Vinnie hi
m
self. Cl
a
ssic Oedipal f
a
m
ily dyna
m
i
cs run in reverse. Father forces son-in-law to kill hi
m
self so that he can claim
his daughter f
o
r his own.
W
ho knows what has been going on in th
a
t
f
a
m
ily? Or who the
f
ather of
April’s child
really i
s
?

My phone rings.

“Fuck you, Meyerhoff.”

“Eddie?
Had a bad shift last night?”

“Actually I had a great shift until the chi
e
f hauled
m
e into his office, fat, du
m
b and happy, and di
m
ed you out.”


W
hat do you
m
ean
?

“I never would have figured you for kidnapping.”

“Are you talking about April Gomez
?

“No, I’m
talking about Charles Lindbergh.”

“She was trying to get away from
h
e
r
father. I gave her a
ride, that’s all.”

“Bullshit. You let h
e
r stay in your house.”

“Did Baxter also tell you that Vinnie Patcher broke into
m
y house and trashed it? Savagely.
P
ut a knife t
h
rough one of
m
y
sweaters?
That

s why you thought
m
y place looked e
m
pty.”

“No. And neither did you. I chase
m
y tail around so
m
e God fo
r
saken
m
ountains trying to help you out and you don’t tell
m
e shit.”

“I didn’t want to g
e
t you in trouble.”

“I’m
already in trouble, thanks to you. Baxter’s taking
m
e out of FTO and putting
m
e on the f
r
ont desk. Per
m
anently. Fucker exp
e
cts
m
e to take co
m
plaints and
m
ake nice with Brownie troops for the rest of my
life. And then he gave
m
e the speech.”


W
hat speech?”


The you-don’t-have-
m
u
ch-of-a-future-he
r
e-think-about-retiring one. Fuck it. Maybe he’s right. Everything hu
r
ts, my knees, my back,
m
y
s
houlder. The only rush I get is putting bad guys in jail. And now that’s gone.”

“I’ll talk to hi
m
.”

“You coulda told
m
e what was going on. Then I could of thought of so
m
ething to say, instead of standing there with
m
y jaw hanging open.”

“I’m
really
s
orry. I thou
g
ht I was doing the right thing, not
ge
tting you in
v
olved. Now that you know, let
m
e tell you everything.”

Not that it
m
akes any difference, at this point, but I want to tell him
what April
s
aid ab
o
ut Ben’s parents being dope addicts.

“That spineless
m
otherfucker Baxter h
a
s known
m
e
forever, and he’s throwing
m
e under the bus to save his own ass.”

“Do you want to hear what I have to tell you
?

“No fucking way.
Hasta lu
m
bago
, Doc. You’re on your own.”

He hangs up. I push the call back button. No answer.

Chapter Thirty

 

 

I raise
m
y voice and three applicants look up from their clipboards, their pens frozen in
m
id-air. Mark is telling
m
e to co
m
e back l
a
ter.
T
he lovely Melinda, her fecundity hidden beneath a gauzy top, opens the door to her office, fo
r
m
erly
m
y
office, looks out, sees
m
e, and steps back inside without a word.

“Now, Mark. I need to talk to you now.”

“I have appoint
m
ents all afternoon.”

“I don’t thi
n
k you want
m
e to say what I
need to
say here in the waiting roo
m
.”

He points at
m
e and then at
his office door like he was dir
e
cting traffic. I can hear him behind
m
e, apologizing to the waiting applicant
s
, telling them that he has an e
m
ergency and will be with them
as soon as po
s
sible. He cl
o
ses the do
o
r.

“Those are law enforce
m
ent candidates. It only takes one to co
m
plain that he couldn’t concentrate because of a disruption,
a
nd I

ll have to redo everyone’s evaluation.”

He is weari
n
g a leather jacket and a black
t-shirt. His hair, wavy and curling over his collar, is silvering gently. The stress of our
divorce looks good on hi
m
.

I gained weight and
m
anufactured
m
ore wrinkles.


W
here is
B
en Go
m
ez’s file?
I want to see his
protocols.”

“Under lock and key. State law. Let
m
e r
e
m
i
nd you that
m
y lawyer told
m
e not to show it to anyone without a subpoena.”

“Stop lying. There are no protocols.
His
file
is
empty.”

Mark looks at
m
e over the top of his gl
a
sses. It is his signature
m
ove, therapeutic astonish
m
ent.

“How do you know that?”

“Don

t you want to check?”

“The only way you could know that is to
have snuck in here without per
m
ission. Tell
m
e you didn’t do that.”

“Maybe I did,
m
aybe I didn’t. Maybe I b
r
ibed your secretary.
Or
m
aybe I told Melinda, the innocent, how you are going to
leave her the way you left
m
e and she showed
m
e the
f
ile r
a
ther t
h
an stab you in the heart with
an ice pick.”

He flashes a lopsided s
m
ile.

“I need those protocols, Mark. My career is on the line.”

“I never
m
e
ant to hurt you. Things
happen. I thought we’d worked everything through, walked away from
each ot
h
er with no ani
m
us.” He reaches for
m
e. “I hate to see you suffering.”

I swat his arm away. “Pedal your psy
c
hobabble so
m
ewhere else. I’m
not leaving without that folder. And, by the way, I’m
really pissed that you gave away all the antiques I refinished.”

He walks behind his desk and sits down.

W
hy
i
s it so i
m
portant for you to see his te
s
t
r
esult
s
?
” The th
e
rapeutic
s
il
k
i
n
ess in his voice has dried to a crisp.


W
hy do you think?
To ease
m
y conscience. To help
m
e defend
m
yself
t
o the Board of Psychology.”

“And if I refuse to give them
to you
?

“I

ll go to the newspaper. You passed an applicant two other psychologists found unsuita
b
le. I bet so
m
e reporter o
u
t t
h
ere will find
that interesting. The press will be on you like white on rice.
S
o will his fa
m
ily.”

“They’ll be on you too.”

“They already are. Haven

t you noticed?
Give me his file.”


W
e

re going paperless. Everything

s
b
een converted to electronic trans
m
ission. Unfortunately,
m
y co
m
p
uter guy accidentally deleted a bunch of records, including Ben’s. I
m
i
ght be able to get him
to retrieve it, but that’s expensive and ti
m
e consu
m
i
ng.”

“I don

t believe you. You wouldn

t lose Ben’s file, not with a pending lawsuit. Melinda will know where it is.”

I open the door
and start down the hall toward Melinda’s office. Mark
catches up to
m
e and grabs
m
y a
r
m
.
The applicants raise their heads in alarm
like a f
a
m
ily of prairie dogs.

“Stop, he says, “I

ll talk to
m
y law
ye
r about letting you
see the file. Leave Me
li
n
d
a a
l
on
e.”

 

As soon as I get back to my car,
m
y cell phone goes off, jangling like a live thing in my hand. It’s April.

“The baby ca
m
e early. My blood pressure
was way high and there was a whole lot of other stuff wrong. So they induced. I was freaked.”


W
here are
you
?

“I hate it here. It’s like prison. Hang on a
m
i
nute.” I can hear conversation in the background, several people talking at once. “
S
o
m
eon
e

s here. I gotta get off the phone.”

She hangs up. I get the nu
m
ber from
my
cell phone and call ba
c
k.
It
rings
several ti
m
es before a wo
m
an answers. “Good Shepherd
Ho
m
e,
m
ay
I
help
you?”

 

I Google Good Shepherd ho
m
e. It’s in
East Kenilworth,
p
art of
C
hurches United, a place of cari
n
g and respite for un
m
arried mothers. I didn

t think such places e
x
isted any
m
ore. I
c
all B
e
lle Patc
h
er.
S
he answers on the first ring.

“I know where April is.”


W
he
r
e
?”

“Not on the phone.
Co
m
e to Kenilworth. You and your husband. Do you know where Fran’s café i
s
?
M
eet
m
e there at 7:00 p.m.”

I wasn

t going to let either one of them back in
m
y house.

“Meet with
m
e alone,” she says. “I don

t know
i
f
I can g
e
t in touch with Vinnie. He’ll just be angry. You know how he is. It’s better if I co
m
e alone.”

“No. I want to talk to y
o
ur husband face to face
.

I call Eddie. He

s right. I need to keep him
info
r
m
ed, not just for
m
y sake but for his too. The technology of voice
m
a
i
l can

t disgu
i
se the slurry thickness in his voice. “Not ho
m
e. Don’t leave a
m
essage. Got a proble
m
?
Call 911.”

Other books

Helix and the Arrival by Damean Posner
Wild Honey by Terri Farley
Locked Out of Love by Mary K. Norris
Soft Skills by Cleo Peitsche
Cut and Run by Carla Neggers
Uncle Dynamite by P.G. Wodehouse
Runaway Mortal by Komal Kant
My Nasty Neighbours by Creina Mansfield