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Stone Cold js-4

Page 18

by Robert B. Parker


  “But if I love him …”

  “He’ll get over it,” Jesse said.

  “I hope my mother isn’t mean to

  him.”

  “That would be a bad thing,” Jesse said.

  “Can you talk to your

  father about that?”

  Candace nodded.

  “Daddy says she won’t be mean.”

  “Your mother probably loves you,” Jesse said.

  “Of course she does.”

  “Then we should be able to bring her around if we have to,”

  Jesse said.

  “Can I change his name? I hate Goldie for a name.”

  “Sure, just go slow. Wait until he’s used to

  you.”

  “I have to think of a new name anyway.”

  “You might ask your mother to help you think of a new name,”

  Jesse said.

  “So she’d feel like he was hers

  too?”

  “Something like that,” Jesse said.

  They were still for a minute. The heater still on, the motor still running, Candace looking through the car window at the motionless dog.

  “It’ll be all right?” she said.

  “It will,” Jesse said. “But you

  have to give it

  time.”

  They sat silently for another moment.

  Then Candace said, “Can we get him now?”

  “Sure.”

  They got out of the car and walked through the old unlovely snow

  toward Valenti’s front door. The dog watched them for a moment, and

  then stood and came down the fence line toward them.

  61

  Parking on Beacon Hill was impossible in mid summer. In winter,

  with plowed snow choking the narrow streets, it had become unthinkable. Jesse finally settled for a hydrant on Beacon Street down from the State House, and walked in along Spruce Street, carrying a flowered bottle of Perrier-Jouet.

  Rita lived at the Mt. Vernon Street end of Louisburg Square in a

  high narrow brick townhouse with a dark green door and gold-tipped wrought-iron fencing across the tiny front yard. Jesse rang the bell, and in a moment Rita opened the door.

  “Criminal law pays good,” Jesse said as he stepped into the dark

  red foyer.

  “Better than working for the Norfolk County DA, which is what I

  used to do,” Rita said.

  They went into her living room. There was a fireplace with a fire going. The room was done in a strong yellow with gold drapes striped with dark red. Rita was all in ivory: pants and blouse, and three-inch ivory heels.

  “I don’t know which is more

  impressive,” Jesse said. “You or the house.”

  “Me,” Rita said and took the champagne bottle from

  him.

  “Will you join me in some of this?” she said.

  “No. I’ll have some club soda, with

  cranberry juice if you have

  it.”

  “I noticed,” Rita said. “I also

  have orange

  juice.”

  “I’ll start with the cranberry and

  soda,” Jesse said. “If the

  evening gets really rousing, I’ll step up to the OJ.”

  “I expect it to get rousing,” Rita said.

  She made Jesse’s drink and poured herself some champagne.

  “How is my disgusting client doing at his community service?”

  she said.

  “He’s there every afternoon after

  school,” Jesse said. “He and

  Drake treat Feeney like the fink-out that he is, but they’re too

  scared to do anything about it.”

  “So what are they doing?”

  “Make-work mostly. Wash the floors, clean the toilets, polish

  doorknobs. Molly finds stuff for them.”

  “They probably ought to get more punishment than that for

  gang-raping a young girl.”

  “They had good legal counsel,” Jesse said.

  Rita smiled.

  “You know the argument as well as I do. In order for the justice

  system to work, every one has the right to the best legal representation they can get.”

  Jesse nodded.

  “Doesn’t mean I liked any of

  them.”

  “I don’t either,” Jesse said.

  “How’s the girl doing?”

  Jesse shrugged.

  “She and I went out and adopted a dog for her.”

  “You and she?”

  “It belonged to one of the serial victims. I was trying to find

  it a home.”

  “Did that make her happy.”

  “I don’t think it made her happy. It did give her something to

  care about.”

  “What would make her happy?”

  “I don’t know,” Jesse said.

  “Maybe a couple years with a good

  shrink.”

  “Is that going to happen?”

  “I gave her a name,” Jesse said.

  “My goodness,” Rita said. “Cop

  for all seasons.”

  “I know a shrink,” Jesse said.

  “You think she’ll see the

  shrink?”

  “Most people don’t,” Jesse said.

  Rita nodded.

  “I did,” she said, “after my

  last divorce.”

  “You’ve had more than one?”

  Rita smiled and poured herself more champagne.

  “I’ve had three,” she said.

  “And after each one, I was inclined

  to fall deeply in love with the next guy I dated.”

  “You still do that?”

  “No,” Rita said. “But it

  doesn’t mean I won’t.”

  “After my divorce,” Jesse said,

  “I wanted to fall in love with

  someone else and couldn’t.”

  “You’ve only been divorced once?”

  “Yes.”

  “The more it happens, I think,” Rita said,

  “the more desperate

  you get, and the more likely you are to grab at the first loser that strolls by, which makes it more likely that this marriage will fail, too.”

  “And you’ve learned not to do

  that.”

  “Until now,” Rita said.

  Jesse drank. The cranberry and soda seemed particularly insufficient for this moment. They were silent.

  Finally, Jesse said, “Me?”

  “It feels like it,” Rita said.

  “Another loser?”

  “No,” Rita said. “You are not a

  loser.”

  “Thank you, but I’m not so sure.”

  “Because?”

  “Because Jenn,” Jesse said.

  Rita put her glass down and stood, and began to unbutton her blouse. When it was unbuttoned she slid out of it. She stepped out of her shoes and unzipped her pants, and slid them down over her legs and stepped out of them. Her lingerie was ivory. So it won’t show through, Jesse thought. She unsnapped her bra, slid

  out of her underpants, and stood naked in front of him. Jesse smiled.

  “A real redhead,” he said.

  “Or a very thorough colorist,” Rita said.

  She came to the couch and sat beside Jesse and tucked her feet under her.

  “So?” Rita said. “Tell me about

  Jenn.”

  “It’s a little hard to

  concentrate,” Jesse said.

  “My point exactly,” Rita said.

  She shifted somehow and was in his lap, and then they were both

  naked, and then, after a while they lay together on the couch with their arms around each other, waiting for their breathing to slow.

  Finally, with her face next to his, Rita said, “So, tell me

  about Jenn.”
/>   “You are as good-looking a woman as I have ever met,” Jesse said

  carefully. “And I’ve never had sex that I liked better.”

  “Not even Jenn,” Rita said.

  “She’s not better-looking than you

  are,” Jesse said, “and she

  doesn’t make love any better.”

  “So, why her, not me?”

  Jesse eased himself up a little so that his head rested on the arm of the couch. Rita adjusted so that she lay inside his right arm.

  “Why her?” Rita said again.

  Jesse laughed briefly and without amusement.

  “God,” he said. “If I knew that,

  I’d know

  everything.”

  “You’re sort of an addictive

  personality,” Rita

  said.

  “Booze?” Jesse said.

  “And Jenn.”

  Jesse nodded slowly.

  “And Jenn,” he said.

  “You’ve stopped drinking,” Rita

  said.

  Jesse was silent, listening to his breathing, and Rita’s.

  “I know,” Jesse said.

  They lay still, passionless, their naked bodies touching pleasantly. Rita seemed perfectly comfortable without her clothes on.

  “Maybe you can break the addiction to Jenn,” Rita

  said.

  “I love her,” Jesse said.

  “Jesus Christ,” Rita said. “You

  invoke that phrase as if you’d

  discovered the double helix. Love is an emotion, like any other.

  You can get over it, like you do anger or fear, or hatred.”

  “I love her,” Jesse said. “If I

  can be with her, I will

  be.”

  “So,” Rita said,

  “what’s the plan? You fuck me until you can be with her?”

  “Hell, Rita, I don’t have a

  plan,” Jesse said. “I’m just hanging on.”

  “That shrink you know,” Rita said.

  “What does he say

  aboutJenn?”

  “He says that I do my job, that I have women I care about, who

  care about me, that my life moves right along, so why do I need Jenn?”

  “And your answer?”

  “You won’t like it,” Jesse said.

  Rita grimaced.

  “‘Because I love

  her’?” Rita said.

  Jesse nodded.

  “And you don’t love me,” Rita

  said.

  “Actually I do,” Jesse said.

  “It’s just that I love Jenn

  more.”

  Rita was quiet for a time.

  “If you and Jenn ever get together, why couldn’t we love each

  other, too?” Rita said. “Part-time, so to speak.”

  “Rita, I don’t know what’s going

  to happen after I get off this

  couch, let alone who I’ll be in a month or a year.”

  “But it might be possible,” Rita said.

  Jesse shook his head slowly.

  “Maybe not,” he said.

  62

  The note was hand printed in big block letters with blue ink.

  TO FIND OUT ABOUT YOUR SERIAL KILLER, BE AT THE FOOD COURT AT

  NORTHEAST MALL AT 7 PM. THURSDAY.

  ALONE!!!!!!!

  The letters looked a little wavery, as if the writer were old.

  “Probably printed it left-handed,” Jesse said.

  “To frustrate the handwriting experts,”

  Molly

  said.

  “Yep.”

  “Is handwriting analysis really that effective?” Molly

  said.

  Jesse smiled and looked as if he thought it wasn’t.

  “You know that mall?” Jesse said.

  “I’m a suburban mother,” Molly

  said. “Of course I do. Don’t

  you?”

  “I’m not a suburban mother,”

  Jesse said. “I’ll go up there this

  afternoon and scope it out.”

  “You haven’t ever been there?”

  “Only outside,” Jesse said.

  “When I met Candace

  there.”

  “Hard to imagine,” Molly said.

  “Do you think it’s

  them?”

  “Yep.”

  “What are you going to do?”

  “Show up,” Jesse said.

  “It’s Tuesday,” Molly said.

  “We have today and tomorrow to get

  ready.”

  “How crowded would it be on a Thursday evening,” Jesse

  said.

  “Quite,” Molly said.

  “It’s crowded every night, and it’s time to

  be buying the spring wardrobe.”

  “Sure it is.”

  “There are a bunch of exits from the mall,” Molly said. “Not

  counting the ones that the stores use, you know for truck deliveries and stuff.”

  “Be hard to cover them all.”

  “I’m sure the state police will help, and the local cops will

  give us some people.”

  Jesse shook his head.

  “Too many jurisdictions,” he said.

  “I won’t be able to control

  it.”

  “We can coordinate through Vargas,” Molly said.

  “These are smart people,” Jesse said.

  “But surely they don’t think we

  won’t try to catch them,” Molly

  said.

  “They probably like that,” Jesse said.

  “They like it?”

  “Raises the risk, makes it more exciting.”

  “So why not be there in force,” Molly said. “Cover every exit,

  have plainclothes people all over the food court.”

  “They like risk,” Jesse said.

  “But they don’t like certainty.

  They don’t want to get caught. They only want the danger of getting

  caught.”

  “They want to be shot at and missed,”

  Molly said.

  “Exactly,” Jesse said.

  “And you’re afraid that if there are too many different people

  involved, somebody will give it away.”

  “And we’ll lose them.”

  “You’re assuming,” Molly said,

  “that their purpose is to kill

  you.”

  “Yep.”

  “So why do it this way. They know where you live.

  Why not just

  lurk around there and shoot you when you come home?”

  “Same reason they’ve been flirting with me, buying me lunch,

  being my pals,” Jesse said.

  “They are, after all, crazy,” Molly said.

  “I tend to forget

  that.”

  “So not everything they do is logical to us,” Jesse said. “On

  the other hand crazy doesn’t mean stupid. They’ve chosen a public

  place with many exits. The parking lot leads to many roadways that lead in many directions. It is a good place to escape from. It is an easy place not to be noticed. And it is a hard place for us to start shooting.”

  “So we put our people there, early, around the food court,”

  Molly said. “Suit and I can be there as a married couple shopping

  for cruise wear.”

  “You’re ten years older than

  Suit,” Jesse said.

  “Yes. But I do not look it.”

  “True,” Jesse said. “But it

  can’t be Suit. They know

  him.”

  “Well, me and Anthony then,” Molly said.

  “We keep Suit out of

  sight.”

  “I don’t want it to be you,

  Moll,” Jesse said.

  “Why not?”

  “You got kids an
d a husband,” Jesse said.

  “And Anthony has kids and a wife,” Molly said.

  “I was afraid you’d remember

  that,” Jesse said.

  “It’s because I’m a

  woman,” Molly said.

  Jesse was silent.

  “It is, isn’t it,” Molly said.

  “Yes.”

  “Well, it’s lovely and chivalrous of you,” Molly said. “And I

  know you do it because you care about me. But it still demeans me.”

  “I know,” Jesse said.

  “God, you’re irritating. I can’t

  even fight with

  you.”

  “You and Anthony can be snacking in the food court,” Jesse said.

  “Wear your vest.”

  “You too,” Molly said.

  Jesse nodded.

  “Spring fashions,” he said.

  63

  They set up early Molly and Anthony deAngelo, in jeans and winter coats, arrived at 4:30 and began to shop the mall. Molly made several purchases, and Anthony carried her bags and looked bored. They saw no sign of Tony or Brianna Lincoln. Only Jesse and Suitcase Simpson had actually seen the Lincolns. The rest had detailed descriptions. But it was not the same. Outside the mall, Simpson dispersed the other cops, trying to keep all the exits in view. Only Steve Friedman and Buddy Hall were on duty in Paradise.

  At 6:27, Molly and Anthony came to the food court. They put their bags down and sat at a table. They looked from where they sat at the various food stands, appeared to reach a decision, and Anthony stood up and went to get them some pork fried rice. The food court was nearly filled. Looking at the customers, Molly realized that several of them could be the Lincolns. At 6:48 Molly decided that she couldn’t pretend to eat the rice anymore.

  She had

  no appetite, and it was clear that neither did Anthony.

  “I’ll get us some coffee,” she

  said.

  “Cream,” Anthony said, “two

  sugars.”

  At 6:57 Molly took a cell phone out of her purse and called Simpson outside the mall.

  “Hello, honey,” she said.

  “Molly?”

  “Yes. Are you and your brother doing what Nana says?”

  “Any sign of action?” Simpson said.

  Anthony deAngelo looked like a man whose wife spoke often on the

  phone, glancing aimlessly around the food court. Molly smiled.

  “No, honey, Daddy and I are having coffee, we’ll be home in a

  little while.”

  “Do you want me to help you with this?”

  Simpson said. “Pretend

  I’m your kid?”

  “Absolutely not,” Molly said.

  “What have you and Nana been

  doing?”

 

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