Burying Ben (42 page)

Read Burying Ben Online

Authors: Ellen Kirschman

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

BOOK: Burying Ben
7.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He hasn

t chased a crook in years. His forehead is glistening with sweat as tho
u
gh he had oiled hi
m
self for a weight lifti
n
g conte
s
t. He pulls a folded piece of
paper from
his pocket and spreads it open on the podiu
m
. “Thank you everyone for co
m
i
ng today on such short notice. It has been
m
y honor and privilege to serve and p
r
otect the people of Kenilworth for so
m
a
ny years. No matter where I go or how far I tra
ve
l, Kenilwo
r
th will
a
lways be my ho
m
e and the good people of the Kenilwo
r
th police
d
epart
m
ent will always be
m
y fa
m
ily.”

“Bull shit.” Eddie stu
m
bles down the ce
n
ter aisle and flops into a seat. He’
s wearing his dress uniform. The jacket hangs
open and his shirt gapes
at
the
buttons.
His chin is pocked with gray stubble and he

s not wearing socks. “You don

t deserve to wear the unifor
m
, you ignoranus.”

The sheen on Baxter

s forehead tinges with pink. His nostrils fla
r
e, in and out, like
m
i
niature bellows. He s
m
iles broadly, splitt
i
ng
h
i
s face in two.

“Allow
m
e to introduce Eddie Ri
m
b
auer, one of my
m
o
st senior officers.”

“Know why you

re an ignoranus, Baxte
r
?
Not only are you stupid, you

re an asshole too.”

Eddie doubles over with laug
h
ter,
tipping
sideways
out of his seat. A slender thread of drool falls from
his lower
lip onto the floor. Manny appears at the back of the roo
m
, vaults down the aisle and pulls Eddie to his feet.

“Manny, you young
turk. My best ever recruit. Helluva cop.”

Eddie raises Manny

s hand like a winning boxer and tries to turn him
around for the audience.
Manny retracts his hand, presses it fir
m
ly against Eddie

s broad back, and pushes him
toward the door.

Baxter watches their exit, staring after
the
m
, his flinty eyes sparking in the overhead lights. His face is a
m
ask, except for the rhyth
m
ic twitching of his nostrils. Silence fills the room
like glue, viscous and sticky.

Baxter snaps to attention and parries the
m
o
m
ent to his advantage. “Know w
h
at I

ll
m
i
ss about this place?
The laughs. Nothing like cop hu
m
or. That Eddie R
i
m
bauer is a
m
aster co
m
ic. Kept me in stitc
h
es for years.”

He looks down at his notes, dragging h
i
s thick fingers over the page, until he finds his place.
P
eople are shifting in their
s
eats. The
m
ayor steals a look at his watch.

“If
m
y health proble
m
s weren

t the way they are, I

d probably stay on the job forever. But that

s not to be. So let
m
e cut to the chase. I

ve been to a lot of retire
m
ents. Nothing but long speec
h
es, bad food and even worse jokes. People have
b
een asking
m
e what I want for a parting gift and I told them
nothing. This community has already given
m
e
so much.
W
hat I want is to give so
m
e
thing back. Therefore it
is
m
y privilege to announce the fo
r
m
ation of the Robert Baxter
Foundation for the prevention of police suicide.” He pulls an envelope from
his po
c
ket. “
T
o kick things off,
I
’m
going to contribute $60,000 of my own
m
on
e
y.” There
is a s
m
attering of applause. “The foundation will fund progra
m
s to provide education and co
u
nseling to officers and t
h
eir
f
a
m
ilies. To design and
a
d
m
inist
e
r this progra
m
, I’ve asked Dr.
Dot Meyer
h
o
f
f
to end her sabbatical and continue in her pos
i
tion as depart
m
ent psychologist.”

He turns to where I am
sitting in the
audience with the Go
m
e
z f
a
m
ily and
m
otions for
m
e to join him
on the stage. It ta
k
es
m
e a
m
i
nute to
c
atch on because I’m still
s
t
u
n
ned at his chutzpah, firing me and calling it a sabbati
c
al. I
c
li
m
b to the stage a
n
d o
ff
er
m
y hand, hoping to avoid having to hug hi
m
. He
rejects
m
y hand with feigned hurt and pulls
m
e forward, e
m
bracing
m
e with his bulbous
ar
m
s, digging his stubby fingers into
m
y back. The cold
m
etal
m
i
crophone presses against
m
y neck like a gun. His breath hisses in my ear. I squirm
and he tightens his grip, pressing his body against
m
i
ne, stretching the mo
m
ent into so
m
ething lurid.

I know
what he

s
doing, he

s teasing the press, encouraging them
to speculate that there is so
m
ething p
r
urient about the way I got my job back. He releases
m
e and shoves the
m
i
crophone into
m
y hand. My cheeks are infla
m
ed and my heart is pounding. I can’t hide
m
y breathlessness. I turn to
the audience and exaggerate my panting.

“That

s a hug I won

t fo
r
get.” They twitter politely, looking at
m
e with a collective expec
t
ant eye, wondering what the t
w
o of us have been up to. I turn
m
y back to Baxter and walk to the
f
r
ont of the stage.

“I’m
honored to continue serving the nee
d
s of the officers and civilians who work at the Kenilworth Police Depart
m
ent and to serve as coordinator of this new program
for the prevention of police suici
d
e. I’ve discovered so
m
ething for
m
yself in the ti
m
e I’ve been here. I like working with cops more than I like writing about the
m
.”

There’s a burst of applause from
the cops in the audience.

“As ad
m
i
nistrator of t
h
is progra
m
, my first official act is to rena
m
e the foundation in
honor of Benj
a
m
in Go
m
ez, the young officer who took his life several
m
onths ago. Ben

s suicide was the first in this depart
m
ent

s history.
It
is
my
m
ission
to
see
that
it
is
the
last.”

There
is
an
e
ddy of
m
ove
m
ent in the front row as Mrs. Go
m
ez
stifles a sob with
her handkerchief.

“I want
to
acknowledge Officer Go
m
ez’ grandparents, Lupe and Ra
m
on Go
m
ez. Their presence
today
is
a re
m
inder th
a
t this
o
ccup
a
tion a
ff
ects
f
a
m
ilies. Police o
ff
icers, like oth
e
r emergency responders, could not
w
ork the
long hours or take the physical and e
m
otional risks they do without the understa
n
ding and su
p
port of those at ho
m
e. It will be
m
y job to see that police o
ff
ic
e
rs take as g
o
od care of
t
h
eir
f
a
m
ilies and the
m
selves as they do of
the re
s
t of us. I thank you for this opportunity.”

I hand the
m
i
crophone to the
m
ayor who invites the crowd for cake and coffee. I lea
v
e via a
s
i
de
door to avoid Baxter and the press. Over my shoulder I see people swar
m
i
ng the Go
m
ez
f
a
m
ily, offering their condolences. They are nodding,
s
m
iling, shaking hands. Baxter is
standing by hi
m
self, waiting for so
m
eone to cut the c
a
ke.

Other books

Stages by Donald Bowie
Barbara Metzger by Rakes Ransom
Wish You Were Here by Catherine Alliott
Delta Bear (Rogue Bear Series 2) by Meredith Clarke, Ally Summers
Family (Reachers) by Fitzpatrick, L E
The Scotsman by Juliana Garnett
Rescue Breathing by Zoe Norman
Fetish by Tara Moss
Hot Prospect by Cindy Jefferies