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Authors: R.J. Ellory

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'And
if he's not your man? If you're spending all this time looking in the wrong
direction?'

'Hell,
that's police work. That's what being a detective is all about. You keep on
looking and looking until there's nothing left to see, and then you look
somewhere else. Right now he's the only contender I've got, and until I prove
that he's
not
the one, then he continues to be my
main source of interest.'

'And
do you have a gut feeling?'

'Yes.'

'And
what would that be?'

'He's
involved. I
feel
that much. I don't know if he's the
killer,
but I feel he is involved. Hell,
he could be involved in something else that makes him look guilty, but there's
a feeling about this that I can't shake off.'

'And
you trust that feeling?'

'I
have
to. Few times it's been the only thing that's got me through a case.'

'Okay,
Frank, we'll leave it for today. I want you to think about how you're approaching
this. I want you to avoid obsessing on it, take a few minutes every once in a
while to remember that there are other things going on in your life that are
just as important as Richard McKee—'

'Such
as?'

'Well,
if you have to ask me that then I see that we still have a great deal more work
to do.'

'Good
enough. If that's the way it is then that's the way it is. For me, at this
moment, there isn't anything else as important as Richard McKee. The only thing
that could come close is Caitlin, and I don't think that she'd even give me the
time of day right now. That's something I'll deal with when this thing is
finished.'

'And
if it doesn't finish?'

'Oh,
I think it'll finish, Doctor Griffin. One way or the other it's going to
finish.'

FIFTY-SEVEN

 

It
was eleven by the time Parrish arrived at Carole Paretski's
home. Across Broadway and east
two blocks and he would be outside the home of Karen Pulaski.

Radick
was in one of the bedrooms with a uniform. When Parrish reached the top of the
stairs he heard Carole Paretski's voice somewhere in the background. It sounded
like she was talking on a cell phone.

Radick
nodded at Parrish, looked up at the corner of the room and pointed.

Parrish
followed his line of sight and saw nothing but a small hole that sat immediately
in the corner. It was no bigger than a cent.

'This
is the daughter's room,' he said. 'And that hole is man- made. I stuck a pen in
it and it goes right through.'

'You're
thinking what I'm thinking?' Parrish asked.

'Could
well be.'

Radick
was out on the landing as Carole came off the phone. 'We need to get up there,'
he said, and indicated the attic.

Carole
backed up and showed Radick the trap in the ceiling outside the bathroom door,
it's only half-boarded,' she said. 'He started it, never finished it. There was
some bullshit about the permit. Be careful or you'll come through.'

'Did
Richard go up there a lot?' Parrish asked her.

'Often
enough. He kept a lot of paperwork up there, things from work that he needed to
refer to.'

'And
why keep them in the attic?'

'Security,
he said. Didn't want them lying around the house.'

Radick
looked at Parrish. Parrish shook his head almost imperceptibly.
Say nothing,
the gesture said.
Not yet.

In
the crawl space they found it just as Carole had said.

Half-boarded,
dusty, cramped. Parrish made his way to the corner where the hole had been
pushed through. He lay down, unconcerned about the state of his clothes, and
managed to get his eye close enough to the hole to see through it. Right down
into the girl's bedroom, no question. Radick had a torch. He scanned along the
rafters, found small staple-holes every once in a while.

'A
cable feed,' he said. 'You reckon he had a camera up here?'

Parrish
was up on his haunches, keeping his head low so as not to hit the roof-beams. 'Christ
only knows,' he said matter-of- factly. 'But I'm starting to think that maybe
we have a live one here. You like him for filming his own daughter, maybe her
friends as well. Daughter has girlfriends around for a sleepover. Dad's up here
with a fucking video camera?'

Radick
said nothing. He backed up and started down the ladder. Parrish followed him,
took a moment to brush himself down. He looked like he'd been dragged backwards
through a tornado.

'Something?'
Carole asked.

'Nothing
to get excited about,' Parrish said, though he
was
excited. He could feel it in his lower
gut, in the way his fists involuntarily clenched and unclenched, the way his
pulse was moving a little faster, the way the sweat had broken out across his
scalp. He
itched
with anticipation. He believed he had
McKee - if not for the deaths of the girls, but for involvement, some sort of
involvement for sure.

'They
won't be much longer,' Parrish told her. 'The uniforms. Jimmy's going to stay
here until they're done, and make sure they leave everything as we found it.'

Parrish
started towards the stairs. Radick hung back, but Carole followed Parrish down
to the kitchen. She cornered him by the back door.

'You
think he's . . .'

Parrish
smiled wryly, and shook his head. 'I think nothing, Mrs Paretski, I think
nothing. In this game I either know or I don't.'

'But
you have your suspicions. You have to have suspicions otherwise there'd never
be anything to follow up.' She looked anxious; if not concerned for her own
welfare, then for the welfare of her kids. Even the suspicion, even the rumor
that their father was involved in something like this could have potentially
devastating consequences for their well-being and safety. This was the kind of
thing that impelled families to move state and change their name.

Parrish
hesitated for a moment, and then he said, 'Can we sit down for a moment?'

Carole
Paretski backed up to the kitchen table and sat down. Parrish followed suit. He
took a deep breath and then exhaled slowly. 'Sometimes,' he said, 'there are
certain things you can say, and once you've said them there's no going back. I
could say a lot of things right now, and frankly none of them would serve any
purpose.' He smiled, looked away for a moment. 'My wife used to accuse me of
not listening. But I was. That's what I do. I look, and I listen. I pay
attention to everything that's going on around me, and sometimes it takes a
good while before I see or hear anything that connects with something else.'
Parrish paused; there were tears in Carole Paretski's eyes. 'I don't know if
he's done anything, Carole. I really don't. All I know is that I have a number
of dead girls, and the circumstances and nature of their deaths suggests very
strongly that they are linked. Aside from that there is only one other
connection, and that takes us to Family Welfare. Now, it may be that Richard
has nothing to do with this at all - I have no evidence right now that he does
- but I'm looking at the people there, and I'm listening to what they're
saying, and I'm trying to find one thing that connects to another thing. From
there maybe I'll find one piece of this puzzle, and that will give me an idea
of the picture I might end up with. You understand me?'

'You
want me to say nothing, right? You want me to carry on like nothing has
happened? You want me to let him come over here and take the kids away . . .'

'I
can only assume that this arrangement was sanctioned by the courts in your
divorce?'

'Yes,
it was.'

'Then
you have no choice, and if you have no choice then . . .'

'But,
what if . . .'

'What if
means nothing, Carole. I can't tell you anything because there is nothing to
tell you.
If
Richard is involved in this thing,
directly or indirectly - and right now it's only an
if -
then all I can tell you is that I will do everything in my power to make sure
that he does not harm you, and he does not harm the children. But any
indication you give him that we've been here - and I have to stress this with
the utmost importance . . . any clue he gets that we have been here will only
make my job a lot harder. All I can tell you is that I will work as hard as I
can and as fast as I can, and if I find anything that makes me believe you or
your children are in danger, then I will act decisively to prevent that from
happening. Beyond that, I will also let you know when we have confirmed that he
is not involved so your mind can be at rest on the subject, okay?'

Carole
Paretski didn't speak for a while, and when she looked up at Parrish there was
something in her expression that he saw all too rarely.

'How
do you do this?' she asked. 'You have kids. Okay, they're older now. They're
more independent than mine, but you are a father. You must feel what everyone
else feels. You must see what other people are going through.'

'There's
an old saying. It's about working in Homicide. It goes along the lines of
"When your day ends, my day starts."'

'That's
terrible. I can't even begin to understand what this job must do to you.'

Parrish
smiled. 'I can't understand it either, and these days I try not to.' He started
to get up.

Carole
Paretski reached out and took his hand. 'Seriously,' she said, her voice
urgent, emotional. 'Seriously ... if you find out that he's been involved in
anything like this, I need you to tell me right away. That thing that happened
. . . when that girl accused him of saying those things to
her
...
I think he did that. I
believe
he
did that. He got away with it because it was her word against his, but I
knew
...
I looked in his face and I knew.' She
let go of Parrish's hand to wipe a tear from her cheek. 'I don't know why I
didn't leave him then . . . hell, yes I do. I didn't leave him because of the
kids. They were eight and nine years old. I was still looking after them,
hadn't gone back to work, and there was no way I could have supported them
alone . . .' Her voice trailed away, as did her gaze. She looked through the
window to the street. Parrish said nothing to interrupt her thoughts.

When
she turned back she appeared to have gathered herself together somewhat.

'You
need to go,' she said. 'Thank you for your time, and for understanding.'
'Trying to understand,' Parrish replied.

'No,'
she said, 'I know you understand, Detective Parrish. If you didn't you wouldn't
be here.'

FIFTY-EIGHT

 

 
Back at the precinct Parrish debriefed Valderas
on where they were at.

'I
can't disagree with your suspicions, Frank, but essentially you have nothing.'

'I'm
aware of that. I just plan to keep on looking until I have something definite.'

'Just
get him back in here for more talking,' Valderas suggested. 'Get under his
skin. When you ask the public to co-operate they're kind of obligated, aren't
they? Otherwise they just end up looking guilty.'

'I've
thought of
that. . .'

'So
do it. Don't push him too hard, but just enough so if there's something to give
way it will. They always cave under pressure. It's just a matter of the
pressure being so subtle they don't feel it until it's too late.'

 

Parrish
called Radick, told him to wind things up at the Paretski place and get back to
the precinct. He then called Foley, got Lavelle, asked for them to let McKee go
early once more. Lavelle didn't question Parrish's request, merely said that
McKee could leave at lunchtime. Once Radick returned Parrish sent him over to
pick McKee up, and when he arrived it was evident that McKee was on edge.

'I
don't know what you want from me,' were his first words when Parrish showed him
through to an interview room. 'I've told you everything I know, everything I
can remember about these cases, and I just don't see what else I can tell you.'

Parrish
said nothing for a few seconds. He took off his jacket and sat down. He asked
if there was anything he could get for McKee.

'I
just want to go back to work, or go home,' McKee replied. 'What I do
not
want to do is sit here talking to you.'

Parrish
smiled. He nodded at Radick and Radick sat down on a chair near the door. He
was behind McKee, a position designed solely to unnerve and unsettle the
interviewee. McKee glanced over his shoulder at Radick. Radick smiled. McKee
turned back to Parrish.

'Tell
me what happened in June of 2002, Richard.'

'What?
What the hell are you talking about?'

'The
little girl, Richard . . . the one in the playground.'

'Oh
for God's sake, you can't be serious. That was six years ago, and besides,
nothing came of it. It was bullshit, and I don't know it was ever considered
anything more than some ridiculous and unfounded fantasy by a naive little girl
. . .'

'Tell
me what happened.'

'What
the hell for? If you know about it then it's on file, and it shouldn't be. I
was never arrested, and there was no formal complaint, and I was not charged.
It's irrelevant.'

'Humor
me, Richard.'

McKee
looked back at Radick. Radick was cold, expressionless.

'I
used to take the kids to the park. I used to take them every couple of days. I
met a woman there, just someone who used to take her daughter. This woman's
daughter and Sarah used to play together. This girl, nine, ten years old
perhaps, told her mother that I said something sexually provocative to her.'

'What
did you say?'

'I
didn't say anything, that was the whole point of it. I didn't say a goddamned
thing.'

'Okay
then, what did the girl
say
you said to
her?'

'I
don't like the intonation in your voice, Detective, I really don't.'

'What
intonation would that be?'

'You
know very well what I'm talking about. Your tone implies that what the girl
said might have been true.'

'I
apologize, Richard. I didn't mean for it to sound like that. I wanted to know
what this girl told her mother, that was all.'

'It's
disgusting. It repulses me to have to repeat
it—'

'Please,
sir, if you don't mind.'

'She
said . . . she told her mother
that. . .
Jesus, do I really have to say this? I don't get why I'm here. I really am not
very comfortable at all with this, Detective. I cannot see what possible
motivation you might have for bringing me here. I am supposed to be at work.
You're not charging me with anything, right? Right?'

'No,
Richard, we're not charging you with anything. Is there something that you feel
we should be charging you with?'

McKee
laughed condescendingly. 'You're unreal. What the fuck did you say that for?'
He shook his head. 'Enough already. You want me to answer any more questions
then I want a lawyer here.'

'This
is the last thing we're asking of you, Richard. Just tell me what the little
girl accused you of saying.'

'I
can't bring myself to say
it. . .'

'I
read the reports, Richard,' Parrish interjected, all-too-aware that he himself
was now lying. 'I read the complainant's statement.'

'So
you know what I'm supposed to have said. Why are you asking me to repeat it?'

'Because
if it's so untruthful, if you really didn't say those things, then I believe
you could talk about it quite rationally, quite calmly, and though I appreciate
that it might be distasteful to you, I still believe that we could discuss this
quite amicably—'

McKee
looked away for a moment. He sighed audibly and then he looked back at Parrish.
'Apparently - and this is only the little girl's imagination - I am supposed to
have told
her ... I am
supposed
to have told her that I wanted her to sit on my face.'

'That
was all?'

'That
I told her I wanted her to sit on my face so I could put my tongue inside her.'

'And
you didn't say this to her?'

'God
almighty no! Jesus, what kind of sick bastard do you think I
am?'

'I
don't know, Richard, I really don't know.'

'There!
You did it again! You're taking something I say and turning it round to make me
look like some sick pedophile. Jesus, this is unbelievable! This is verging on
harassment now. I really don't know what kind of authority you think you have
to do this, but I want a lawyer here right fucking now.'

'No
authority, sir, just a simple request for assistance from
a
member of the public—' 'Bullshit! That's just so
much bullshit!'

Radick
got up suddenly as someone outside knocked on the door. He opened it, shared a
few unintelligible words, and then turned back to Parrish. He nodded. Parrish
got up, excused himself, and left the room.

Valderas
was in the corridor. 'Got a call from Joel Erickson at Vice Archives. He thinks
he might have found one of your girls.'

Parrish's
heart skipped a beat. 'Okay, okay,' he said, and then was caught in a moment of
indecision. 'Can you call him back for me? Tell him to hold on, I'll be there
as soon as I can. I need to finish this.'

Valderas
said he would call Erickson. Parrish returned to the room, and at once noticed
the change in aspect in McKee. As with all interviewees and interrogation
suspects, the moment that any words occurred outside of their earshot they
believed those words related to them. You came back in, they wanted to ask what
was going on, what was it about, but they couldn't. To show any concern for
what might be going on outside was to demonstrate a reason to be concerned.

'So,
Richard, you refuted the allegation made by this girl?'

'Of
course I did. It wasn't a matter of refuting it. I didn't have anything to
prove. It was her word against mine.'

'And
she was how old?'

'I
don't know - nine, maybe ten years old.'

'Same
age as your daughter at the time.'

'Meaning?'

'Meaning
that the girl who accused you of saying these things was about the same age as
Sarah was at the time.'

McKee
took a deep breath and exhaled. 'Yes, about the same age.'

Parrish
leaned forward. 'Tell me something, Richard . . . have you ever had any kind of
impulse or urge towards younger girls?'

McKee
laughed awkwardly, smiled, shook his head too quickly. 'Christ no, what do you
take me for?'

'Cheerleaders,
sophomores, college girls . . .'

'Enough,'
he said emphatically. 'Enough, enough, enough—'

'Is
it true that when the Family Welfare offices moved there were a number of
pornographic magazines found in the locker that you used?' 'No, of course not,'
McKee interjected - once again a little too quickly.

'And
that those magazines featured images of girls that couldn't have been more than
sixteen or seventeen years old?'

'No.
Not at all. Who told you that? The only person I ever knew who had magazines
like that was Lester.'

'Lester
Young?'

'Yes,
Lester Young.'

'You
know that he's dead?'

'Dead?'

'Yes,
he died of a heart attack in December last year.'

'No
. . . no, I didn't know that.'

'Well,
being dead he cannot deny any allegations.'

 
'Implying, once again, that I might be lying.'

'Implying
no such thing, Richard.'

McKee
shook his head. 'You don't have the right to do this, Detective Parrish. I'm
going to make some kind of formal complaint against you. You bring me in here
on some sort of pretext that I might be able to help you with this
investigation, and you actually bully and harass
me—'

'You
are free to go, Mr McKee,' Parrish said matter-of-factly. He stood up, took his
jacket from the back of the chair and started to put it on.

'What?'

'You
are free to go. We appreciate your time, we really do. You have been most
co-operative, and we are sorry for any inconvenience we might have caused you.
If you do honestly feel that you have a mindful cause for complaint, then
please ensure that you make a statement to the sergeant at the front desk and
he will find someone for you to talk to.'

McKee
was speechless. He stared wide-eyed at Parrish, then looked at Radick.

'Jimmy
. . . can you make sure Mr McKee is safely escorted back to the lobby.' Parrish
paused for a moment, and then he extended his hand.

McKee
took it involuntarily.

'Thank
you again for your time. You have been most helpful.'

Parrish
left the room. He made his way upstairs to his office and waited for Radick.

Minutes
later Radick appeared; he was smiling, shaking his head. 'Jesus, the guy was a
fucking mess. He didn't know what the fuck was going on.'

'Good,'
Parrish replied. 'The more unsettled he is the better.'

'You
really are starting to think it's him, aren't you?'

'I
was unsure,' Parrish replied. 'I was unsure until I asked him to repeat what he
was supposed to have said to that little girl.'

'He
was embarrassed, Frank—'

'He
wasn't embarrassed, Jimmy, he was turned on.'

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