Read Parker 04 - The Fury Online
Authors: Jason Pinter
shorts and a T-shirt. I was six foot one depending on the
shoes, a hundred and ninety pounds of lean, mean, vendor
hot dog-eating machine. My brown hair was getting a
little longer, and I made a mental note to stop by Quik
Cuts tomorrow during lunch. I warmed up a plate of
leftover chicken masala Amanda had cooked over the
weekend. In my place, leftovers were made to last.
I sat down and began to eat, washing the food down
with a glass of iced tea. I splayed a few newspapers in
front of me and read while I did. The
Gazette
's pages
looked naked without the familiar byline of Jack
O'Donnell. I hoped wherever he was, he was getting the
treatment he needed.
Dinner was a long affair. I made the pasta last, and
made the newspapers last. I gorged myself on every
word, fascinated at just how many stories there were
within this small teeming city.
When I finished, I was getting up to put my dishes
in the sink when the phone rang. I picked it up. Didn't
recognize the caller ID.
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I clicked Send and said, "This is Parker." I'd strug
gled with my greeting for a long time. Since this was
my work phone as well as personal, saying hello felt too
casual. As did "Henry." I considered, "Parker, Henry
Parker," but Amanda threw a dirty sock at me the first
time I tried it. "Parker" sounded nice, succinct.
"Is this Henry Parker?" the voice on the other end
said.
"Yes, who is this?"
"Henry, I'm Detective Makhoulian with the NYPD.
Are you busy right now?"
I looked at my watch. It was nearly ten o'clock. What
the hell did the cops want with me at this hour? I wasn't
working on any stories that had NYPD involvement,
and I didn't speak to any cops on a regular basis with
the exception of my friend Curt Sheffield.
"Detective, it's pretty late and I just got home from
work. What's this about?"
"I apologize for the hour, but I was hoping you could
answer a few questions."
Not wanting to appear defensive, I said, "Question
away."
"Does a man fitting this description sound familiar?
About six-two, thin as a bone. Brown hair, hazel eyes,
the look of a serious drug problem, among other issues,
much of which involve hygiene. That ring a bell?"
I felt my pulse quicken. "Actually, a man fitting that
description was waiting for me outside my office when
I left work tonight. I didn't really speak to him. A col
league of mine was recently assaulted by a disgruntled
reader, and from the look of this guy he wasn't much
of a conversationalist."
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23
"Interesting," Makhoulian said. And he genuinely
sounded interested. "Listen, Mr. Parker, I need you to
come down to the county medical examiner's office
tonight. You know where it is?"
"Thirtieth and first. I've been there before. I'm a
reporter with the
Gazette,
I've spoken with the medical
examiner. Leon Binks still works there, right?"
"Yes, he does. And I know who you are, Mr. Parker.
This has nothing to do with any previous involvement
you may have had with the NYPD." He didn't need to
say it, but I could tell Makhoulian was speaking about
Joe Mauser and John Fredrickson, the two cops who
were involved in my being hunted across the country
for a murder I didn't commit. "I'm going to need you
to meet me at the M.E.'s office in one hour. Will that be
a problem?"
"No, but I would still like to know what all this is
about. Like I said, tonight was the first time I ever saw
this guy. If my night is being interrupted, please have
the decency to tell me why."
"This man I'm speaking of, he was found two hours
ago in an apartment in Alphabet City, dead from two
gunshot wounds to the head. We have reason to believe
you were the last person to see him alive."
"Okay," I said, my stomach beginning to turn. Dead?
What exactly had that guy wanted to talk to me about?
While the last thing I wanted was to get tied up in
the murder of some junkie, I felt some sense of
remorse. "Listen, Detective, no disrespect, but this guy
probably saw one of my stories and figured a reporter
might be more inclined to listen to him than a cop.
Maybe he just wanted attention. And now he's dead,
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and while it really is a shame, I don't know what I can
offer to help the investigation."
There was silence on the other end. Then Makhou
lian said, "This man's name was Stephen Gaines. Does
sound familiar?"
"No, sir, it doesn't."
"That's very interesting." I was beginning to worry.
Why was that interesting? "I'm still going to need you
to meet me at the M.E.'s office. One hour," Makhoulian
said, "because according to his birth certificate and
medical records, Stephen Gaines was your brother."
3
There are times in your life when you walk forward
despite knowing that something unexpected, even dan
gerous, lies just around the corner. This allows you to
steel yourself; to prepare for it. You go over the different
permutations in your mind, positive and negative,
weighing how each might impact you. Then when the
blow comes, you're able to soften it a bit. Retaliate if nec
essary.
When Detective Makhoulian said those five words--
Stephen Gaines was your brother
--they hit me,
knocked the wind out of me. I had no time to prepare,
no time to soften the blow.
At first I didn't believe it. Or I didn't want to. But
I'd heard the name Makhoulian before. I'd spent enough
time with cops, mainly my buddy Curt Sheffield, that
it rang with a modicum of familiarity. If Curt men
tioned him, that was a good sign. The man spoke ear
nestly, a minimum of sympathy. Like a cop.
Sitting in the back of a taxi, I tried to wrap my head
around it. I'd never heard of a Stephen Gaines before.
The last name did not sound familiar.
Gaines.
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Jason Pinter
On the street earlier, Gaines looked older than me by
four or five years. Of course, considering how strung
out he looked, it could have swayed a few years in
either direction. But if he was older, it meant he was
gone from my life long before I was aware of his exis
tence. I had too many questions to ask, and unfortu
nately Leon and Detective Makhoulian wouldn't be
able to answer them. At least not all of them.
I stepped out at the corner of Thirtieth and First in
Manhattan's Kips Bay. The medical examiner's office
had a facade of light blue, the stone dirty, as if the
building refused to modernize. It was a block away
from Bellevue Hospital, one of the more notorious
medical centers in the city. Prisoners from Riker's
Island, as well as criminals from New York's central
booking requiring medical attention, were among the
most frequent guests. And if you happened to be in the
emergency room late at night, you'd be in the company
of numerous men in orange jumpsuits and chains,
armed police at the ready. Just a few blocks away were
a coffee shop, a bookstore and a multiplex movie
theater. Scary to think that while you were busy
munching on popcorn, evil lingered so close by, cloaked
in formaldehyde.
I approached the entrance tentatively. Who was I
going to ID? I'd never met this man before last night,
and now I was expected to point him out, feel some
deep-down emotion like I'd known him my whole life?
I'd never bonded with this person. Never done things
most brothers did. Never played catch. Snuck a drink
from Dad's liquor cabinet. Never smuggled dirty maga
zines under our covers, or smoked cigarettes until our
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27
lungs burned. I was identifying a stranger, yet expected
to act like he was my blood. Impossible.
Pushing the door open, I went up to the receptionist.
He was wearing a white lab coat, and didn't look a day
over twenty-five. I figured he was some sort of medical
intern, manning the phones while studying for his
exams.
"May I help you, sir?" he asked. His name tag read
Nelson, Mark. He chewed on a pen while he waited
for my answer.
"I'm here to see Binky...er Dr. Binks," I corrected.
No sense ruining the illusion that Binks was a sane and
respected member of the medical profession.
"And you are..."
"Henry Parker," I said, taking my driver's license
from my wallet. "I'm here to identify Stephen Gaines."
The name felt foreign on my tongue, yet Nelson's eyes
melted with sympathy. He looked down at his desk,
pursed his lips.
"Right," he said. "I'm sorry for your loss."
I didn't bother to point out Nelson's faux pas. That
it was a little premature to console someone for their
loss before they'd actually identified the body. Or that
I felt no loss at all. How could I? Nevertheless, I told
him I appreciated it. He asked me to have a seat while
he paged Dr. Binks.
I took a seat on a light blue couch. It was hard. There
was a small table in front of me. No reading material.
This wasn't your typical waiting room. If you were
here, I supposed not even
Golf Digest
could take your
mind off of what lurked below.
After several minutes, I heard the
ding
of an elevator
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and out strode Leon Binks. Binks was in his late thirties,
graying hair matted against his brow. His eyebrows
were as messy as his hair, a collection of short pipe
cleaners bent every which way. The medical examiner
was perpetually disheveled, as though he cared no more
about his appearance than those corpses he worked on
would. His hands always seemed to be moving, offering
gestures that his dialogue (and lack of social skills) pre
sumably could not. I imagined that if, like Leon Binks,
my whole life was spent amongst the dead, I might
have some personality idiosyncrasies as well.
"Mr. Parker," Binks said, approaching me with his
hand outstretched. I went to meet him, and he shook it
vigorously. An awful smell wafted off of Binks, iodine
perhaps. I didn't want to ask, but I hoped he showered
before attending any dinner parties. "Thanks so much
for coming. Detective Makhoulian is downstairs
already." Then Binky's eyes lowered, and he said, "I'm
sorry for your loss."
I sighed, thanked him. "Can I see the body?"
"Oh, of course," Binks said. "Follow me."
Binks led me into a gray metal elevator. He took a
key chain from his pocket, inserted it into a slit next to
the sole button. Once turned, he pressed the button, and
the doors opened. Once inside, he pressed a button
marked M. For Morgue. The doors closed, and we
traveled in silence, down several flights. Finally the
elevator stopped and the door slid open.
Whatever odor had been stuck to Binks was even
stronger down here.
Outside of the elevator, the hallway divided into two
separate pathways. A plaque mounted on the wall had
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29
arrows pointing in either direction. To the left, the arrow
read, Morgue. To the right, the arrow read, Viewing
Room.
Binks began walking toward the right.
I followed behind him as he opened a door and led
me into a small room. A man was waiting for us inside.
He was about five-eight and built stocky and muscular,
like one of those NFL linebackers who had trouble
seeing over the center but could deliver a hit like
nobody's business. His skin was dark, a neat goatee, and
he wore a dark gray suit. He looked at me as we entered.
"Detective?" I said.
"Detective Sevag Makhoulian," he said. He ap
proached and shook my hand. "For short, people call me
Sevi."
"Makhoulian...what background does that name
come from?" I asked stalling for time.
"It's Armenian," he answered patiently.
"Were you born here?"
"I was born in Yerevan, my parents emigrated here
when I was very young." His accent was noticeable but
not thick, and his suit was as American as they came.
"Gotcha, don't mean to pry."
"I know it's your job to do just that, Mr. Parker. I do
appreciate your coming down here on such short notice.
And I must say I enjoy your work. Insightful, not to
mention how nice it is to see a young man achieving
success based on something other than setting fire to
hotel rooms. It's a shame we had to meet under these
circumstances. Curtis Sheffield speaks very highly of
you."
"How's Curt doing?" I asked.
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Jason Pinter
"Aside from the bullet in his leg? He's just peachy."
Makhoulian said this with a slight smile. Last year Curt