Read Parker 05 - The Darkness Online
Authors: Jason Pinter
watching their savings dwindle, waiting for one call that
probably won't come."
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Chester looked out the window as he said those last
words, but Morgan could tell they were directed at him.
Talking about many like him. Morgan stayed quiet.
Didn't want Chester to know what he was thinking.
"Think how many of those people," Chester continued,
"would give anything for the chance to replace that income." He stopped. Looked at Morgan. "And then some.
What would you do for that chance?"
Morgan's eyes met Chester's directly. Without hesitation, he said, "Anything."
"We'll see."
13
"I, uh...I think I'll go check my mail," Pam said.
Abigail looked at her and said nothing. Paulina said,
"That's not a bad idea. If you wouldn't mind giving us a
few minutes."
"She doesn't have to do anything she doesn't want to,"
Abigail said, her eyes burning a hole through her mother.
"No, she doesn't. That's why I'm asking. And," Paulina said, digging into her pocketbook and producing a
twenty-dollar bill, "I'll pay for her next beer run."
"Classy, mom," Abigail said. She sighed, looked at
Pam. "This won't take more than fifteen minutes."
"Half an hour," Paulina said. Abigail looked at her
mother as though no greater torture had ever been imposed upon man or beast. Paulina stared right back.
"Fine. Half an hour. And take the money."
"I really shouldn't..." Pam said.
Abigail continued, "Trust me. It doesn't begin to cover
what she owes me."
Pam reluctantly took the money and left the room,
leaving Paulina and Abigail alone.
"Can we talk inside?" Paulina said. She peeked into
the dorm room. It was a flat-out mess. The floor was
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covered in strewn paper, dirty clothes and burnt incense
sticks. Their furniture was comprised of two beanbag
chairs, a twin bed with a frame that looked as stable as
Paulina's ex-husband, and a ratty couch that some homeless person had probably sold to them for less than the
twenty she just gave to Pam. Whatever, Paulina thought.
She didn't have to live in this mess. If her daughter chose
to, so be it.
"Fifteen minutes," Abigail said, checking her watch.
"Then I want you out of here."
"I don't like being here any more than you like me being
here," Paulina said. "Trust me, I'll make it as quick as I can."
They nodded, and Paulina entered the room. She took
a look at the beanbag chairs, then pulled out the tiny desk
chair. She eased herself onto it, and watched as her daughter launched herself into a blue beanbag chair. Abigail
pulled out a cigarette and lit it, opening the window
slightly to let the smoke drift out.
"When did you start smoking?" Paulina asked.
"When did you start caring?" Abigail answered.
"You're not going to make this easy, are you?"
"Is that what you want? You want me to make this
easy? Sure, why not? I mean, we have all these great
memories to fall back on, all these great mother-anddaughter moments we both cherish." She said the last
words with biting sarcasm. "Why are you here, Mom?"
Paulina leaned forward, put her face in her hands, took
a breath. "I need to ask you a few questions."
"Is this for, like, one of your newspaper articles?"
"No, it's nothing like that. Just promise me you'll answer
me, and be honest. I don't care about the answers and I won't
judge you. I just need to know it for safety reasons."
"Safety reasons? What the hell are you talking about?"
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"There's a photo, of you. It was taken at the beach. I
need to know how someone could have seen it?"
"I go to Jones Beach every weekend during the summer," Abigail said. "You'll have to be more specific."
"You're wearing a pink bikini. Yellow sunflowers on
it. You look like you dug some sort of big hole, and...you
look happy. And you were still a blonde."
Abigail thought for a moment. Then she smiled, too.
"Like two months ago," she said. "I went to Jones Beach
with some friends, and buried this guy named Ryan in the
sand. He's dating our friend Marcia. Good times."
"How could somebody else have gotten a hold of that
photo?" Paulina asked.
Abigail's scornful look disappeared, and suddenly
she became concerned. "Why are you asking that?
What happened?"
Paulina leaned back in the chair, the wood stiff and
playing hell with her neck. "There's some guy...he's
trying to get to me, to threaten me, and he said...well, and
he found that photo of you somehow. I need to know
where he could have gotten it."
Abigail's fright took center stage now. She cupped her
hands together, started breathing into them. Paulina was
unsure of what to do at first, but the sight of her only
daughter terrified was too much to bear. She stood up
and went over to her daughter, placing her hands on
Abigail's shoulders.
"Listen, Abby, I would never let anything in the world
happen to you. You might hate me, and you might have
reason to hate me. But I'd sooner let my body be ripped
limb from limb than let anything happen to you."
Abigail choked back a laugh. "Can't we just avoid both?"
Paulina laughed. "Hopefully."
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"I posted a set of those photos to Facebook," she said.
"Maybe a month ago. I'm not sure."
"So who could see the photos?"
"Anyone I'm friends with online."
"How many friends do you have on Facebook?"
"Hold on, I'll check."
Abigail went over to the desk and sat in the stiff chair.
She turned on the laptop, waited for it to boot, tapping her
dark, polished fingernails on the desk. When the computer
started, Abigail opened Internet Explorer and logged on
to her Facebook account. Paulina saw that Abigail's
profile photo was a close-up of her face, specifically her
left eye and cheek. It was so close you could see every
individual pore. It looked faux artsy, the kind of thing you
took with a webcam and thought it to be poignant.
"A hundred and ninety-six," she said.
"Jesus," Paulina said. "A hundred and ninety-six
people have access to photos of you in a bikini."
"You want to judge me, Mom? I've heard some stories
about you."
"This isn't about me. Somebody used one of these
photos. Is there any way to see who's accessed the set?
Or who's printed them out?"
Abigail shook her head. "Nope. Privacy issues."
"Privacy my ass. Listen, Abby, I need you to print out
a list of all your friends on this thing, anyone who has
access to those photos."
"No way, Mom. Other people have privacy, too."
"Trust me, these other people would prefer this than
the alternative."
Abigail looked her mother in the eye, huffed and said,
"Okay. Fine. But nobody else sees them besides you."
"You have my word. And if these 'friends' have e-mail
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addresses, that would be helpful. I'm not looking to pry,
I just want to be sure. I promise once I'm done it'll all be
shredded."
"You gave your word," Abby said.
"One more question, then I'm done," Paulina said.
"Have you recently seen a man around campus--tall,
blond hair, about ear length? Late thirties or early forties
and well built?"
"Doesn't ring a bell. Sure he's not one of 'your'
friends?" she said pointedly.
"No. He's not."
"I haven't seen anyone like that. Trust me, he'd stand
out on this campus."
"All right then."
Paulina stood up. Abigail did not. Paulina waited to see
if her daughter would, to see if there was any chance at a
last embrace before she left. Abigail was already opening
her page and scrolling through photos. Paulina leaned in
closer. Abby was staring at one of her and Pam, standing
in front of a gushing fountain, holding hands and smiling.
When she noticed her mother was looking, Abigail
covered the screen with her hand.
"I'll scan it and e-mail it to you," Abigail said. "You'll
have it by tomorrow morning."
"Thank you," Paulina said. "You know, Abby, I don't
even have your cell phone number."
Paulina laughed at this. Abby did not. It took a moment,
but Paulina understood why that wasn't quite so funny.
"That's not a surprise," Abigail said, "considering I
hear from you once a year. I figured either you didn't have
my number or you just couldn't find more than five
minutes every twelve months."
"I know I could have done a better job, could have
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been a better friend. Consider this my attempt to make it
up to you."
Abigail considered this for a moment, then said, "Fine."
Paulina took out her cell phone, plugging in the numbers as her daughter spoke them.
"That's it?" Paulina said.
"That's it."
"Thanks, hon, I promise I'll call soon."
"Mom?" Abigail said.
"Yes, Abby?"
Abigail's face looked far more pale than it did when
Paulina first entered. Eyes wider, more fearful. A pang of
guilt ripped through Paulina, knowing her daughter
wouldn't have to deal with any of this if that blond bastard
hadn't needed her to promote his sick agenda. She knew
many more lives were at stake than Abby's...but this was
her daughter.
"That photos set I mentioned," Abby said. "The picture
you mentioned was in that set. It was Pam's favorite
picture. She told me she loved it, and she said she wanted
to keep one just for us."
"Wait," Paulina said. "What are you saying?"
"I never posted that photo online. That guy you're
talking about...somebody else must have given it to him."
14
"Nothing," Jack said, slamming down the phone in
disgust. "I've called his office, his cell phone, his secretary, his publicist, his wife, his alleged mistress, and
nobody will connect me to Brett Kaiser. Please tell me
you have something."
I shook my head, discouraged. "I've spent the entire
morning trying to reach Marissa Hirschtritt and Joel Certilman. Nothing. They won't talk to me, or refer me to
anybody who will. And they said that if anything is
printed about their firm, their official position is 'no
comment.' At least until they sue us for whatever libel
they seem certain we're going to print. That firm is locked
up like a vault. And the worst part is that they know we're
looking into them, so they can already start preparing."
"And knowing our good-hearted chairman, he's not
going to want to pay thousands of dollars in legal fees to
fight a law firm over a story that we have no backing to
go on yet." Jack paused, thought for a moment. "When
people aren't responding to you, there's only one way
around it."
"What's that?" I asked.
Jack stood up. Picked up his briefcase. "You walk
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right into the enemy's camp, lay down your weapons and
ask to speak to their leader."
"You learned this, where, reporting from the jungle?"
"Vietnam, actually."
"No kidding. I never knew you reported from Vietnam."
"Spent most of my time in Laos," Jack said. "Worked
a lot with a great photographer named Eddie Adams. You
enjoy photojournalism?"
"A little. Back in Oregon," I said. "Before I was old
enough or smart enough to really understand history, I
used to love flipping through old magazines just for the
photo inserts. A great picture can be a snapshot of a time
or place that words could never fully describe." Jack
nodded, agreeing. "I used to really admire a photographer
named Hans Gustofson. I remember he took this fantastic photo of President Reagan standing next to the 'You
Are Leaving' sign that had just been removed from along
the Berlin Wall."
"Great eye, Gustofson. Didn't he die a few years ago?"
"Yeah," I said, shifting uncomfortably. "Badly."
Jack nodded.
"Eddie Adams," I said. "Why does that name sound
familiar?"
"Nguyen Ngoc Loan," Jack said.
"Excuse me?"
"General Nguyen Ngoc Loan. Chief of the National
Police of the Republic of Vietnam. You say you liked historical photographs, you might remember that one. Loan
was the commanding officer during the arrest of a Viet
Cong political operative. The national police mistakenly
identified the prisoner as having plotted the assassination
of numerous Viet Cong police officers. And so on February first, nineteen sixty-eight, in the middle of a des-110
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olate street in Saigon in broad daylight, with the unarmed
man's arms tied behind his back, General Loan took out
a pistol, put it to the prisoner's head and pulled the trigger.
Eddie Adams was the man who took that photograph.
That one snapshot, taken right as the bullet entered the
innocent man's brain, was one of the catalysts that singlehandedly changed American perception of the war in