Read Parker 05 - The Darkness Online
Authors: Jason Pinter
plenty of guys who did everything right: held the door
open for her, pulled her chair out at dinner, chewed with
their mouth closed. But these men were nothing but
painters, carpenters, covering up holes in the frame with
pretty wallpaper or a fresh coat of paint. Eventually the
hole would reveal the truth, and the facade would crumble. With Henry there was none of that. He wore his holes
proudly.
Still, she wondered when they might take the next step.
Amanda was never one of those girls who dreamed about
her wedding when she was six. She didn't name her unborn
children, or buy
Modern Bride
magazine. If love came, she
would deal with it then. For years, love to Amanda was like
taxes. You only thought about it when you had to.
The Darkness
153
Yet Henry had changed that. Every so often she would
think about what he would look like in a tuxedo, and
thought about who would be her maid of honor. She caught
herself smiling at things she once found cheesy, and more
than once had felt that terror-and joy-filled moment of anticipation when she thought he might pop the question.
Yet she didn't want to rush him. Or rush herself. She
wasn't sure if she was ready to commit, and wanted to
make that decision when the time came.
Still, it felt nice to think about it. If only once in a while.
Amanda heard someone jiggling the doorknob. She
stood up, glass in hand, and watched as Henry entered the
apartment. His sport jacket was rumpled, slacks dirty
around the cuffs. There seemed to be some sort of dirt or
substance, something gray and ashy on his lapels. He saw
her and smiled, and that was enough to make her smile, too.
"Hey, hon," he said, dropping his briefcase on the floor
and joining her. She felt his arms wrap around her, and
she hugged him back. "You smell like tannins."
She held up the glass of Pinot. "Got started early. That
kind of day, you know?"
"Do I know." He went into the kitchen and took out a
glass. Not a wine goblet, but a regular drinking glass.
Then he went over to the dining room table where she'd
put a stopper in the open bottle. He wrenched out the plug
and filled his glass up nearly three-quarters of the way.
Then Amanda watched in both horror and admiration as
he downed the entire thing in one gulp. But when he
went back for a refill, that's when she stepped in and took
the bottle.
"Let's talk first," she said. "That first glass was enough
to knock you out."
He looked at her, then back at the bottle, debating
154
Jason Pinter
whether it was worth arguing over. Eventually he nodded
and went over to the couch, plopping down and emitting
a deep sigh as he plunged his head into the soft leather.
"So," he said, his eyeballs straining to see her from his
position. "Tell me about your day."
"The Morgansterns were in today. They've been trying
to keep custody of their adopted daughter for the past few
months. The birth mother was a crack addict, and her
daughter was taken away from her after she left her in an
alley wrapped in newspaper. Apparently the mother
managed to clean herself up, get a job, and most importantly marry a man with enough money to make a go at
challenging for custody. It's going to be long and it's
going to be ugly."
"Do you think you can win?" Henry asked.
"I hope so. The adoptive parents deserve to keep the
girl. The mother...she might have cleaned up, but there
are certain people who you know aren't good parents. I've
met her twice, and neither time did she look me in the eye.
Her husband does all the talking. She stands there, hands
folded across her lap, like she's almost embarrassed."
"You think he's pressuring her to try and get the
daughter back."
"That's what I think."
"Yeah," Henry said. "You're gonna win."
Amanda smiled. Moved over to Henry, clasped his
hand, leaned over and gave him a kiss on the cheek.
"You think so?"
"I know so."
"Thanks, babe," Amanda said, moving back to talking
distance. "So how was your day? Any good stories? Jack
keeping you on your toes?"
Henry looked at her, and immediately Amanda felt a
The Darkness
155
sinking feeling in the pit of her stomach. Her smile disappeared. She'd seen that look before.
"There was an explosion today, on Park Avenue. An
apartment..."
"Some lawyer, right?"
"That's right. Brett Kaiser."
"I saw that on the news. Terrible. The police are saying
they think somebody murdered him."
Henry looked at her. "I was there."
Amanda recoiled slightly. "Wait, what?" she said, incredulous. "What do you mean you were there? Like,
when the news crews came after the explosion?"
"I mean I was at the explosion. At Brett Kaiser's apartment building. Kaiser was tied into the story Jack and I
have been chasing, and I was at his building trying to get
some comments from him. When he left me, he went
upstairs to his apartment, and a minute or two later everything just erupted."
"Oh my God," Amanda said. She held her hands to her
heart, her mouth hanging open, dry. "Oh my God, Henry,
are you okay?"
"I'm fine," he said. "A little ringing in my ears, but it's
going away."
"You were...there?" she said. He didn't say anything.
Then Amanda wiped at his lapel, her hand coming away
with gray dust. "Is this..."
"Christ," Henry said, jerking up and going into the
bathroom. She heard the water running, and a few minutes later Henry came back out wearing shorts and a
T-shirt. Normally she'd make some sort of suggestive
comment about how he looked in shorts, but her mind
couldn't even fathom levity right now. "Sorry about that.
I didn't even realize it."
156
Jason Pinter
Then Henry actually laughed a little bit. Amanda
wanted to join him, but her mouth wouldn't work. "Hey,
baby, you okay?"
Amanda shook her head. She felt her face grow hot,
her eyes beginning to water. No, she told herself. She
refused to cry. This was what their relationship was. This
was what Henry was.
She couldn't protect him. Not right now. Maybe not
ever. If he'd been closer to the explosion...if Kaiser had
invited Henry upstairs for an interview...if a chunk of
brick or concrete had come down at the right angle...he
wouldn't be here right now.
Amanda stood up. She went over to the table, picked
up the wine and took a swig right from the bottle.
When she put it back down and wiped her mouth, she
heard Henry whistle from the couch. "That must have
felt good."
Amanda shook her head. "No. Not really."
"I understand," he said. "I didn't mean to joke about
it. I know what you must be thinking. I'm fine. Not hurt
one bit. They weren't trying to hurt me. Wrong place at
the wrong time."
"Always seems to be that way," Amanda said, feeling
the wine warming her body, her mind going fuzzy. It felt
good, and she didn't try to stop it.
"You know I don't mean for things like this to happen,"
Henry said. He walked up behind her, put his arms around
her waist, leaned in close. She felt her eyes close,
breathed him in, brought her arms around his and held
him tight. She felt his breath on her neck, taking her
away. "I love you, and I also want to be the best at my
job I can possibly be. I'm not scared of chasing stories
like this. Maybe I should be, but I'm not. I've been
The Darkness
157
through enough the past few years, a lot of it with you,
to the point where I know this is what I'm meant to do."
"I know it is," Amanda said. "I'm not sure if I wish it
wasn't, but I know that's what you are and what you do.
And I'm proud of you. I just...you don't know what it's
like to hear the person you love say things like that."
"No, I don't," he said. "And God willing, I'll never
have to."
"I hope not either." She turned around. Kissed him long
and hard. "So, at least tell me this. Did you get anything?"
Henry unwrapped his arms from her and went back to
the couch. He sat down, and she joined him. Henry
scratched his head. She could tell he'd learned something, and was troubled by it.
"I got a call today. From someone I wasn't really expecting to hear from, like, ever."
"Your dad," Amanda guessed.
"No," Henry said, somewhat relieved. "But you're
close. Paulina Cole."
"No freaking way," she said. "Why the hell would that
bitch call you?"
"Something happened to her. Recently. Someone kidnapped her, threatened to kill her daughter."
"Oh God," Amanda said. "What happened?"
"The guy let her go, but asked her to do some sort of
favor for him. She wouldn't tell me what she had to do."
"Was it," Amanda said, grimacing, "sexual?"
"I didn't get that feeling. But she wants to find out who
this guy is, but can't go to the cops. My guess is she thinks
this guy is connected. And maybe he is."
"So she came to you," Amanda said.
"She told me if I found the guy, I could have whatever
story there was."
158
Jason Pinter
"If there is one. If this guy isn't just some loon who
took umbrage with one of her scorch-the-earth columns."
"I get the feeling it was more serious than that. One
thing I know about Paulina Cole, she doesn't scare easily.
This guy was serious, and he scared her so bad that she
won't go to the cops and came to me. I have access to the
cops she doesn't. And I can investigate without drawing
attention, because if this guy does have a mole in the
NYPD he wouldn't expect anything from my end. They're
watching her. Not me."
"But if they find out that someone is asking questions
about this guy, it won't matter who it comes from."
"Curt," Henry said. "I can trust Curt."
"Maybe," Amanda said. "But who can he trust?"
Henry didn't seem like he could answer that, so he just
leaned back. "I don't know."
"Don't you think you might be putting him in danger?"
Amanda said.
"When I talk to him," Henry said, "I'll tell him everything. Including that we think they might have people
inside the PD. Curt is smart. If there's information to get,
he can get it without drawing suspicion."
"And how do you know he'll do it?"
Henry looked at her, his eyes full of confidence.
"Because Curt is like me."
"Yeah," she said. "I suppose he is. What are you going
to tell Jack?"
Henry sighed. Looked back over at the table. Stared
at the bottle of wine, debating pouring another glass. As
much as she enjoyed watching him pass out, watching
him breathe as he slept, she was kind of hoping he'd be
in the mood to fool around a little.
The Darkness
159
"That's a little more complicated." He looked at her.
"I can't tell him."
"About Paulina?"
Henry nodded. "I have to cue Jack in on the lead, but
if he finds out I got it from Paulina, that I'd even spoken
to the woman who tried to ruin his career...he'd never
speak to me again. Plus Jack deserves better."
"From who?" Amanda asked.
"From me. I don't really know. But the bottom line is
that he doesn't need to know. Not right now. If we catch
this guy, it's old news. But for now...I can't do that to him."
"You know him better," Amanda said. "If you think it's
the right thing to do, then trust your judgment. But at some
point you need to tell him, because he'll eventually find out."
"I know and I will. But now's not that time. We're
getting close on this story, and I still need to know who
was really responsible for my brother's death. Somehow
this all connects with the Fury."
"So you
do
believe this boogeyman exists."
"I think there's someone who knew about the plans to
kill my brother before anyone else, and maybe even
pulled the strings. Stephen was working for some sort of
cartel, and in every organization, legitimate or not, there's
someone at the top of the ladder."
"You think that might be this guy?"
Henry shook his head. "The CEOs never get their hands
dirty. They have people below them to do that for them. If
this person does exist, he's been able to hide in the shadows
because he didn't take stupid risks. The blond guy is acting
on this person's behalf. So even if he's not the gold at the
end of the rainbow, he knows where the pot is located."
"So what are you then, some sort of freaky ass leprechaun?"
160
Jason Pinter
Henry laughed. "Got me the luck of the Irish."
"You're not Irish," Amanda replied.
"Yeah, but Jack is. I knew he was back for a reason."
"Come to bed. I hear leprechauns are lucky."
"Are lucky, or get lucky?"
Amanda stood up. Pulled her shirt over her head.