Read Let It Burn Online

Authors: Steve Hamilton

Tags: #Mystery

Let It Burn (16 page)

BOOK: Let It Burn
2.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“What kind of leverage could they have? You’re talking about going away for murder. What else could they do to you?”

“Prison is better than them killing me. Or, say, killing someone in my family. I’d confess to anything if it meant saving one of my kids from harm.”

“Okay,” I said. “That makes sense.”

“Or maybe it was my wife who committed the murder,” he said. “In that case, nobody’s actually threatening anybody, but I know what will happen to her if they find out she’s guilty. So if I’m a good husband, I might confess to the crime to save her.”

I thought back to the stone-cold look on Darryl King’s face. The first scenario was possible,
maybe,
if somebody was threatening his family. He had a mother who loved him, a little sister, a little brother. As for the second scenario, taking the fall for someone else … I could rule out the mother and the sister. The little brother, from what I could recall, looked like he’d have trouble killing a mosquito.

Would he take the fall for a close friend? Someone he grew up with? That was always possible. But I kept coming back to that face. The way he looked at me from the other side of that fence. Was that the face of a man who would give up his freedom to save someone else?

“Or maybe I confess because I’m being tortured,” Leon said. “That’s actually quite common, I’m sure.”

“You’re just being questioned by a homicide detective,” I said. “You’re not being tortured.”

“There’s more than one type of torture, Alex. You lock me up in a room for twelve hours, you make it boiling hot in the room, you don’t give me anything to drink, then you start yelling at me … I’m sure you could turn that into a real hell. I might break and confess just to make that all stop.”

“I know what you’re saying,” I said, thinking back to Bateman’s account of the interrogation. “I think we can rule that out in this case.”

“Well, then, there’s just one more reason,” he said. “I might confess because I honestly don’t think it matters one way or another.”

I stopped on the sidewalk. We had walked all the way down to the power canal that cut through the heart of the city, and now we were standing just before the two-lane bridge that ran across it.

“Say that again,” I said.

“I confess because I know it doesn’t matter what I say. So I might as well get it over with.”

“Because you’re a black kid in Detroit, and the victim was a white woman from the suburbs. You know they’re going to pin it on somebody, because that’s how you think the whole system works. Besides, you’re one
bad
man and you can handle it. You can handle prison standing on your head.”

“Now we’re getting specific,” he said. “Someone you know?”

“Someone I helped put away.”

“Now you’re thinking you should try to get him out?”

“I don’t have to. He’s getting released in a few days.”

Leon shook his head and smiled. “Tell me the whole story.”

We turned around and started walking back to the brewery. I laid it all out for him, from the day I chased Darryl King down the railroad tracks to the day we got our break and finally caught him. Then I told him about the confession, as related to me that very day by the retired detective. He stopped me in the same places where I had stopped Bateman. Why had he thrown away the bracelet? Why did he wait until later to throw away the knife?

“This guy sounds like a badass and a half,” Leon said when I was done. “Even if he was only sixteen.”

“That’s why I’m thinking your last scenario makes the most sense. He knew he was going away, no matter what. If he did it or if he didn’t do it.”

“He was an angry young man going in,” Leon said. “Now all these years later, what ends up coming out? Is he older and wiser? Or is he a ticking time bomb?”

“I guess we’re about to find out.”

*   *   *

I thanked Leon and let him get back to work. Then I drove home to Paradise. I was exhausted by the time I went to bed, after all of the miles. I still had this feeling that there was something I was missing. One little piece of the puzzle that, if I found it, would make everything else fit together.

I fell asleep listening to a barn owl sounding its otherworldly complaints. I think I dreamed about diamonds at some point. Floating in the sky, falling in slow motion.

Then I woke up. It was after three in the morning. I opened my eyes, sat up in my bed, and suddenly I knew something. I
knew
something for a fact that I had only suspected before. Simple as that, just like Mrs. King had told me. This was the bone truth.

Darryl King went to prison for a crime he didn’t commit.

 

CHAPTER TWELVE

 

On the third day after the murder, I got to the station early again, expecting to do more legwork with the detective. More time on the street, more knocking on doors, more running down anonymous tips, hoping for that one lead that isn’t a dead end.

But no, Detective Bateman had another plan. Or rather someone else had plans for both of us.

He asked me to ride along in his car. He wasn’t saying anything else yet. I could see the tension in his arms and in his face as we left the station and drove west for a few blocks. Then we got on the freeway and headed northwest, out of the city.

“At some point,” I said, “you’re going to tell us where we’re going.”

“Elana Paige’s parents want to have a word with us. Both of us.”

“Detective, you have this habit of not telling me what’s going to happen until we’re already in the middle of it. A heads-up now and then is all I ask.”

“I apologize,” he said. “This trip has me a little worked up.”

“How so?”

“Well, for one, it’s taking us away from what we really need to be doing. And two…”

I waited for him to continue. He was doing eighty miles an hour in the far left lane, his eyes dead ahead.

“And two,” he said, “I don’t like not having any news for them. We’re honestly no closer to catching this guy today than we were that first night.”

“So what are you going to say to them?”

“I was hoping you’d figure something out by the time we got there.”

We crossed under Eight Mile Road, and just like that we were out of the city. All of a sudden you had a mall, and a golf course, and nicely manicured lawns. Grocery stores and restaurants instead of a cheap fast-food wasteland.

The Graysons lived just off of Twelve Mile Road. Exactly four miles from the city line, it might as well have been a different country. There were houses packed in tight on every street, this being one of the original suburbs, where space was at a premium, but the Graysons had one of the larger lots on the northern edge of Southfield, with a long tree-lined driveway.

Detective Bateman parked the car and sat there for a moment, working his hands together. “Okay,” he said. “Let’s go talk to these poor people.”

We walked up to a big brick house with tall white columns on either side of the door. The detective rang the bell. We waited for a while. Then a Hispanic woman opened the door. She wasn’t wearing a maid’s uniform, but we saw the dynamic immediately. This woman probably lived down the road in the Mexicantown section of Detroit, came up here every day to take care of the white people’s big house. She probably thought it was a great job. All things considered, it probably was.

She led us through the living room and the dining room. It was all a bit too stuffy for my taste, with too many glass cabinets filled with little figurines and crystal goblets, but I couldn’t argue with how immaculate everything was. This woman obviously did her job well. There was a sunroom in the back of the house. That’s where Mr. and Mrs. Grayson were waiting for us.

It had been three days since their daughter had been murdered. They both looked like they had aged ten years. Mr. Grayson stood up and shook our hands, his eyes red, his grip weak. Mrs. Grayson stayed put in her chair. She was wearing sunglasses.

“Mr. and Mrs. Grayson,” Bateman said, “I’m so sorry to see you again under these circumstances.”

Coffee was offered and declined. We were finally all seated. Mrs. Grayson looked down at her hands. Even with the sunglasses, I could tell she was crying. Mr. Grayson slid over a box of tissues on the glass table. I wondered how many boxes they’d already gone through.

“We asked you to come here,” Mr. Grayson said, “so you could share any progress you might have made at this point.”

“You know you can call me at any time,” Bateman said. “Day or night.”

“I wanted to hear it in person. I wanted you to see how important this is to us.”

The detective started to say something, then stopped himself.

“We’ve thought of nothing else since it happened,” I said. “Literally nothing else, night and day. I know we can’t even imagine what you’re going through…”

“No,” Mr. Grayson said. “I don’t think you can.”

“Granted,” I said. “But you have to know, this is our only mission in life right now. Both of us.”

Bateman looked over at me and gave me a quick nod. “Officer McKnight speaks the truth,” he said. “Every waking hour, it’s all we’re doing.”

“Okay, fair enough,” Mr. Grayson said. “So how far have you gotten?”

“We’ve been running down many leads,” Bateman said. “We still don’t have anything solid. But I’m confident we will.”

“As I understand it, the first forty-eight hours are crucial in an investigation like this. When someone is…”

He paused, took a breath, gathered himself, and continued.

“When something like this happens,” he said. “The trail gets cold very fast after that. Am I correct?”

“In most cases, you want to develop your information quickly, yes. That’s always going to be the best way to go. But we’re confident that if we keep doing what we’re doing…”

“You seem to have a lot of confidence,” Mr. Grayson said. “You had confidence that first night, too. Just how long is that going to last?”

“Until we find out who’s responsible,” Bateman said. “That’s how long.”

“I understand that a reward can be helpful in a case like this. Has that been your experience?”

“It’s often helpful, yes. Were you considering—”

“A hundred thousand dollars,” Mr. Grayson said. “To whoever provides information leading to the apprehension of the animal who took away our Elana.”

Mrs. Grayson stood up at that point, knocking her shin on the coffee table. Without saying a word, she left the room.

“She’ll be okay,” her husband said. “I’ll go see her in a moment. I just want to know what else I need to do to make the reward happen.”

“That’s a lot of money,” Bateman said. “You probably don’t need to—”

“It’s nothing, Detective. Now that our daughter is gone … it’s literally nothing to us.”

“Well, I’ll get right to our PIO. Sorry, that’s the public information officer. He’ll make the arrangements, and we’ll make sure it’s publicized.”

“Today?”

“Yes, today. We can make sure it’s on the news this evening.”

“Okay, good. Let’s make that happen. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I need to go see how my wife is doing.”

He left us there. The maid reappeared and showed us out the front door.

“I don’t know how Mister and Missus are going to survive this,” she said to us. Her eyes were red, too. “Elana meant everything to them.”

“I understand,” Bateman said. There wasn’t much else to say.

“You’re going to find out who did this, right?”

“Yes,” he said. “Yes, we are.”

“Okay, thank you.”

Then she closed the door. The detective closed his eyes and let out a long breath.

“That’s a big reward,” I said. “It has to help, right?”

“Yes and no. It’ll get us more calls, but if we get a thousand of them all at once…”

His thought was interrupted by a car coming up the driveway. It was a silver Jaguar. The driver pulled up alongside the detective’s car. The door opened and out stepped Ryan Grayson. Elana Paige’s brother.

“Sorry, we were just leaving,” Bateman said to him.

“You came with news?” The man was a bit of a mess. More red eyes. I’d pulled over enough DUIs to recognize the loose way he was walking and talking.

“No, we came to talk to your parents about a reward.”

“As opposed to just doing your job and catching this guy. It’s been what, four days now?’

“Hey, let’s not get on the wrong track here,” Bateman said. “We all want the same thing, as soon as possible.”

“Yeah, sure,” the man said. He came up to the front door, took a wrong step, and launched himself right into me. Fortunately, I caught him.

“Easy,” I said. “Come on, you know you shouldn’t be driving that vehicle if you’re impaired. You get in an accident, that’s not going to help anybody.”

“So arrest me.” His face was close to mine, and his breath took away any reasonable doubt.

“I’m not going to do that,” I said. “I’m going to let you go inside and sleep it off.”

“Do you have any idea…” Then he trailed off. He would have sagged to the ground if I hadn’t been holding him up.

“We’re doing everything we can,” I said. “I promise.”

“You want to know what happened to my sister?”

I looked over at the detective.

“What are you talking about?” I said.

“I’ll tell you what happened to her. She married the wrong guy. Kinda guy who would let her walk around by herself in goddamned downtown Detroit. He’s out playing golf while she’s being…”

That’s the same line he had the first time I met him, I thought. He’d probably take it with him for the rest of his life, never letting his brother-in-law off the hook.

“I was going to be a fireman, you know that? You know why I’m not?”

“No, why?” I said, wondering just where this drunken conversation might go next.

“Because I’m white. Because I took the test and aced it and had to wait in line so they could hire a bunch of black guys and fill their quota.”

This is going downhill fast, I thought. I really don’t need to hear this, no matter how broken up he is.

But before he could take it any further, his eyes rolled back in his head and then he threw up all over the front porch. I dodged most of it. When he was done doing that, he started crying. We opened the door and walked him back inside. The maid took him into the kitchen to clean him up. We could still hear him sobbing as we left.

BOOK: Let It Burn
2.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Pearl Harbour - A novel of December 8th by Newt Gingrich, William R. Forstchen
Claimed By Chaos by Abigail Graves
Midnight Never Come by Marie Brennan
The Soul Thief by Charles Baxter
After the Ex Games by J. S. Cooper, Helen Cooper
The Ocean Between Us by Susan Wiggs
Fool for Love by Beth Ciotta
The Time Garden by Edward Eager