Richard Montanari: Four Novels of Suspense (45 page)

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Authors: Richard Montanari

Tags: #Fiction, #Suspense, #Thrillers, #Police Procedural, #Mystery & Detective

BOOK: Richard Montanari: Four Novels of Suspense
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“Her name?” he asked.

It was a stall. Shepherd had him. Shepherd then got closer, looking at the scratch. “What is it, a pet bobcat?”

“Excuse me?”

Shepherd stood up, leaned against the wall. Friendly, now. “See, Dr. Farrell, I have four daughters. They absolutely
love
cats. Love ’em. In fact, we have three of them. Coltrane, Dizzy, and Snickers. That’s their names. I’ve been scratched, oh, at least a dozen times in the last few years. None of the scratches looked anything like yours.”

Patrick looked at the floor for a few moments. “She’s not a bobcat, Detective. Just a big old tabby.”

“Huh,” Shepherd said. He rolled on. “By the way, what sort of vehicle do you drive?” John Shepherd, of course, already knew the answer to this question.

“I have a few different vehicles. I mostly drive a Lexus.”

“LS? GS? ES? SportCross?” Shepherd asked.

Patrick smiled. “I see you know your luxury cars.”

Shepherd returned the smile. Half of it, anyway. “I can tell a Rolex from a TAG Heuer, too,” he said. “Can’t afford one of them, either.”

“I drive a 2004 LX.”

“That’s the SUV, right?”

“I guess you could call it that.”

“What would you call it?”

“I would call it an LUV,” Patrick said.

“As in Luxury Utility Vehicle, right?”

Patrick nodded.

“Gotcha,” Shepherd said. “Where is that vehicle right now?”

Patrick hesitated. “It’s in the back parking lot here. Why?”

“Just curious,” Shepherd said. “It’s a high-end vehicle. I just wanted to make sure it was safe.”

“I appreciate it.”

“And the other vehicles?”

“I have a 1969 Alfa Romeo and a Chevy Venture.”

“That’s a van?”

“Yes.”

Shepherd wrote this down.

“Now, on Tuesday morning, according to records at St. Joseph’s, you didn’t go on duty until nine o’clock in the morning,” Shepherd said. “Is that accurate?”

Patrick thought about it. “I believe it is.”

“Yet your shift began at eight. Why were you late?”

“Actually, it was because I had to take the Lexus in for service.”

“Where did you take it?”

There was a slight rap on the door, then the door swung open.

In the doorway Ike Buchanan stood next to a tall, imposing man in an elegant Brioni pin-striped suit. The man had perfectly layered silver hair, a Cancún tan. His briefcase cost more than either detective made in a month.

Abraham Gold had represented Patrick’s father, Martin, in a high-profile malpractice suit in the late 1990s. Abraham Gold was as expensive as they come. And as good as they come. As far as Jessica knew, Abraham Gold had never lost a case.

“Gentlemen,” he began, using his best courtroom baritone. “This conversation is over.”

 

“W
HAT DO YOU THINK?” Buchanan asked.

The entire task force looked at her. She searched her mind for not only the right thing to say, but the right words to say it. She truly was at a loss. From the moment that Patrick had walked into the Roundhouse an hour or so earlier, she knew this moment would arrive. Now that it was here, she had no idea how to deal with it. The notion that someone she knew might be responsible for such horror was bad enough. The notion that it was someone she knew
intimately
—or thought she did—seemed to immobilize her brain.

If the unthinkable was true, that Patrick Farrell was indeed the Rosary Killer, from a purely a professional standpoint, what would it say about her as a judge of character?

“I think it’s possible.” There. It was said out loud.

They had, of course, run a background check on Patrick Farrell. Except for a pot misdemeanor in his sophomore year in college, and a penchant for driving well above the speed limit, his record was clean.

Now that Patrick had retained counsel, they would have to step up the investigation. Agnes Pinsky had said that he
could’ve
been the man she saw knocking on Wilhelm Kreuz’s door. A man who worked at a shoe repair shop across from Kreuz’s apartment building
thought
he recalled a cream-colored Lexus SUV parked out front two days earlier. He wasn’t sure.

Regardless, there would now be a pair of detectives on Patrick Farrell 24/7.

65

FRIDAY, 8:00 PM

T
HE PAIN WAS EXQUISITE, a slow rolling wave that inched up the back of his neck, then down. He popped a Vicodin, chased it with rancid water from the tap in the men’s room of a gas station in North Philly.

It was Good Friday. The day of the crucifixion.

Byrne knew that, one way or another, this was all probably coming to an end soon, probably tonight; and with it, he knew he would face something inside himself that had been there for fifteen years, something dark and violent and troubling.

He wanted everything to be in order.

He needed symmetry.

He had one stop to make first.

 

T
HE CARS WERE PARKED two deep on both sides of the street. In this part of the city, if the street was blocked, you didn’t call the police or knock on doors. You definitely didn’t want to blow your horn. Instead, you quietly put your car in reverse, and found another way.

The storm door of the ramshackle Point Breeze row house was open, all the lights burning inside. Byrne stood across the street, sheltered from the rain beneath the tattered awning of a shuttered bakery. Through the bay window across the street he could see the three pictures that graced the wall over the strawberry velvet Spanish modern sofa. Martin Luther King, Jesus, Muhammad Ali.

Right in front of him, in the rusted Pontiac, the kid sat alone in the backseat, completely oblivious to Byrne, smoking a blunt, rocking gently to whatever was coming through his headphones. After a few minutes he butted the blunt, opened the car door, and got out.

He stretched, flipped up the hood of his sweatshirt, straightened his baggies.

“Hey,” Byrne said. The pain in his head had settled into a dull metronome of agony, clicking loud and rhythmically at either temple. Still, it felt as if the mother of all migraines was just a car horn or flashbulb away.

The kid turned, surprised but not scared. He was about fifteen, tall and rangy, with the kind of body that would serve him pretty well in playground hoops, but take him no further. He wore the full Sean John uniform—full-cut jeans, quilted leather jacket, fleece hoodie.

The kid sized up Byrne, assessed the danger, the opportunity. Byrne kept his hands in plain sight.

“Yo,” the kid finally offered.

“Did you know Marius?” Byrne asked.

The kid gave him the twice-over. Byrne was way too big to mess with.

“MG was my
boy,
” the kid finally said. He flashed a JBM sign.

Byrne nodded. This kid could still go either way, he thought. There was a simmering intelligence behind his now bloodshot eyes. But Byrne got the feeling the kid was too busy fulfilling the world’s expectations of him.

Byrne reached slowly inside his coat—slowly enough to let this kid know there was nothing coming. He removed the envelope. The envelope was of a size and shape and heft that could only be one thing.

“His mother’s name is Delilah Watts?” Byrne asked. It was more like a statement of fact.

The kid glanced at the row house, at the bright bay window. A thin, dark-skinned black woman in oversized gradient sunglasses and a deep auburn wig dabbed at her eyes as she received mourners. She was no more than thirty-five.

The kid turned back to Byrne. “Yeah.”

Byrne absently thumbed the rubber band around the fat envelope. He had never counted the contents. When he had taken it from Gideon Pratt that night, he had no reason to think it was a penny less than the five thousand dollars they had agreed upon. There was no reason to count it now.

“This is for Mrs. Watts,” Byrne said. He held the kid’s eyes for a few, flat seconds, a look that both of them had experienced in their time, a look that needed no embellishment, no footnoting.

The kid reached out, cautiously took the envelope. “She gonna want to know who it’s from,” he said.

Byrne nodded. Soon the kid understood that no answer was forthcoming.

The kid stuffed the envelope into his pocket. Byrne watched as he swaggered across the street, up to the house, stepped inside, hugged a few of the young men standing sentinel at the door. Byrne looked through the window as the kid waited briefly in the short receiving line. He could hear the strains of Al Green’s “You Brought the Sunshine” playing.

Byrne wondered how many times this scene would be played out across the country this night—too-young mothers sitting in too-hot parlors, presiding over the wake of a child given to the beast.

For all that Marius Green may have done wrong in his short life, for all the misery and pain he may have spread, there was only one reason he was in that alley that night, and that play had nothing to do with him.

Marius Green was dead, as was the man who killed him in cold blood. Was it justice? Perhaps not. But there was no doubt that it all began the day Deirdre Pettigrew met a terrible man in Fairmount Park, a day that had ended with another young mother with a ball of damp tissue in her hands, and a front room full of friends and family.

There is no solution, just resolution,
Byrne thought. He was not a man who believed in karma. He was a man who believed in action and reaction.

Byrne watched as Delilah Watts opened the envelope. After the initial shock set in, she put her hand to her heart. She composed herself, then looked out the window, directly at him, directly into Kevin Byrne’s soul. He knew that she could not see him, that all she could see was the black mirror of night, and the rain-streaked reflection of her own pain.

Kevin Byrne bowed his head, then turned up his collar and walked into the storm.

66

FRIDAY, 8:25 PM

A
S JESSICA DROVE HOME, the radio predicted a huge thunderstorm. High winds, lightning, flood warnings. Parts of Roosevelt Boulevard were already inundated.

She thought about the night she had met Patrick, so many years ago. She had watched him work in the ER that night, so impressed with his grace and confidence, his ability to comfort the people who came in those doors, looking for help.

People responded to him, believed in his ability to relieve their pain. His looks certainly didn’t hurt. She tried to think rationally about him. What did she really know? Was she able to think about him in the same terms she had thought about Brian Parkhurst?

No, she was not.

But the more she thought about it, the more it became
possible
. The fact that he was an MD, the fact that he could not account for his time at crucial intervals in the time line of the murders, the fact that he had lost his kid sister to violence, the fact that he was a Catholic, and, inescapably, the fact that he had treated all five girls. He knew their names and addresses, their medical histories.

She had looked again at the digital photographs of Nicole Taylor’s hand. Could Nicole have been spelling out
F A R
instead of
P A R
?

It was possible.

Despite her instincts, Jessica finally admitted it to herself. If she didn’t know Patrick, she would be leading the charge to arrest him, based on one immutable fact:

He knew all five girls.

67

FRIDAY, 8:55 PM

B
YRNE STOOD IN THE ICU watching Lauren Semanski.

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