The Heavens May Fall (2 page)

Read The Heavens May Fall Online

Authors: Allen Eskens

Tags: #Thrillers, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Police Procedural, #Fiction, #Legal

BOOK: The Heavens May Fall
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For months now Max had carried the Pruitt case around with him, its reflection looking back at him from the mirror, its scent infusing the air he breathed, its rough hem tucking up around his shoulders as he fell to sleep at night. He’d bestowed life upon this investigation, animated it in a way that gave it a presence in his world. He felt that presence at his side when he took his seat on the witness chair. But when he left the witness stand, he left alone.

Sanden had cut him up pretty good—made Max look like he’d trained his crosshairs on Ben Pruitt from the very beginning and shut out all other possible suspects. But had he?

Max opened his investigation file and began sifting through the reports, looking for the beginning, that day when they found the body. But then he closed the file. He didn’t need notes to take him back to that morning, He remembered that morning all too well. It was a broken morning, torn apart by the memories that visited him every year on the anniversary of his wife’s death.

Chapter 2

On that day, the last Friday in July, Max Rupert woke well before dawn. He opened his eyes and waited a moment to let wake and sleep separate in his head. A shadow in the shape of a cross floated on the wall beside him, cast there by a yellow streetlight bleeding through his window pane. Outside, the air conditioner clicked on and whirred as if this was just another day. But it wasn’t just another day.

He reached a hand to her side of the bed, touching the undisturbed sheets, feeling the slight rise where the mattress remained unaffected by four years of her absence. He grazed his fingers across the soft cotton and felt the pain in his chest grow and ebb with each breath.

She used to wake up before him, a morning glory to his night owl. In so many ways, she brought balance to his life. Nobody but Jenni could cut through his wall of self-control and expose the childlike happiness he kept locked away. He’d never laughed so hard as when they were alone and she felt free to unleash her cutting wit. And she loved pretty things. Porcelain dolls, silver candlesticks, and china teacups still filled the shelves and covered the fireplace mantle. He’d learned to take care of her flowers, the chrysanthemums she’d planted in front of the house. He remembered that first year when they bloomed, how he wanted to tee off on those flowers the way Bill Murray had done in
Caddyshack
. He didn’t, of course. And now, every year, Max tended to those flowers the way she had done for so long.

But there were other ways in which Jenni and Max were not counterweights but a perfect blend. She loved fishing as much as he did. They both loved black-and-white movies and heavily buttered popcorn. And they enjoyed sitting in silence together. Whether it was reading books or just swinging on the porch swing, it didn’t matter as long and she was there.

Those moments of tranquility sometimes reminded him of their first date and how he fell in love with her. He no longer remembered the homecoming dance itself or the dinner before, but he remembered how stunning she looked. He remembered the way her simple dress accentuated her natural beauty in the same way that dew can make a rose sparkle. But what he remembered the most from that night was what happened after the dance.

They’d gone to a party at a friend’s house. Some kids talked, others made out, and still others navigated the waters between budding relationships and breakups. He remembered sitting on a couch with Jenni, caught up in the only moment of awkward silence they had come across all evening. He had his arm stretched across her shoulders, his palm dangling in the air. He wanted to kiss her. His thoughts tangled around the logistics: how to create an opening for the kiss, how to move in—open-lipped or closed. He contemplated what he would do if she kissed him back or, God forbid, if she didn’t. He had never been more nervous.

Then she moved, turning into him just enough to lay her head on his shoulder. She put her hand on his chest and sighed—not the sigh of a tired high-school girl, but the sigh of a young woman, content with the world. The struggles in Max’s head vanished. He no longer thought about angles and lips and reactions. All he wanted to do was hold her. He lowered his dangling hand until it rested on her hip, his fingers gently pressing against the soft cotton of her dress. At that moment he felt more deeply for her than he’d ever felt for anyone ever before. He tenderly kissed the top of her head, and that was enough.

How many times over the years had they sat in that exact same position—slowly rocking on the porch swing or watching TV from their couch? How many times had he kissed the top of her head and told her that he loved her. And to himself, he would whisper the promise that he would always protect her. He would never let anything bad happen to her.

It had been four years to the day since he broke that promise.

On that first morning when he woke up without her, he could barely pull himself out of bed, and when he did, he crawled to her closet and wrapped himself in her sweaters and blouses, things she’d worn, things waiting to be washed on the day of her death. He pressed the fabric to his face and inhaled her essence until his last tear fell and he could again put on the façade of strength that he wore for everyone else. He returned to that closet a few times over those first months, repeating his ritual until the scent in Jenni’s clothes surrendered to the dust and decay of time.

As months turned to years, he found a way to live with the sadness, but he never learned to live with the guilt. A picture on the wall, his wife smiling down at him, reminded him every day that her death had gone unsolved. Not his case. Couldn’t be his case. He was the husband, and the husband can’t be involved in the investigation. Rules kept him locked out, and so the hit-and-run driver got away.

Max stood, walked to his bathroom, and splashed his face with cold water. He knew from experience that he would not be able to get back to sleep. Instead he would go for a run. He would put in five miles before the sun crested the horizon, five miles of listening to the rhythm of his own breathing and the pounding of his feet on concrete, and nothing else.

July mornings in Minnesota were perfect for such a run.

After the run, Max showered, brewed some coffee, and went outside to sit on his porch swing and eat biscotti. From there he watched the day rise from behind a cluster of rooftops in his Logan Park neighborhood. He quietly absorbed the tranquility and beauty of that slow turn of the earth. She told him once that sunrise was her favorite part of the day, and now it was his.

Max finished his biscotti and was downing the last tepid sips of his coffee when the chimes of his phone went off. He could see that the call came from Dispatch, so he answered by saying, “Max here.”

“Sorry to wake you, Detective, this is Carmen James in Dispatch.”

“You didn’t wake me, Carmen. What do you have?”

“A body in Kenwood, possible homicide.”

“Kenwood?”

“Affirmative. The deceased is reported to be a white female. Officers on the scene have confirmed the death.” Carmen used the formal tone and language that dispatchers were trained to use for radio calls—that calm, you-can’t-rile-me resonance that gave the same weight to a murder that it did to a stolen bicycle. She read Max the address, an alley off of West 21st Street, and Max tried to remember if he’d ever heard of a murder in Kenwood. Bodies found in alleys usually took him to North Minneapolis—not Kenwood.

“Have they cordoned off the area?”

“They’re doing that now, Detective.”

“Call my partner, Niki Vang, and tell her I’ll meet her there. Then call the ME and Crime Scene and get them on their way.”

“Yes, sir.”

Max ended the call, climbed into his unmarked squad car, and headed in the direction of the Kenwood neighborhood where the body of a dead woman awaited him. And as he drove, he couldn’t help feeling like a monster, like his soul deserved the damnation that undoubtedly awaited him, because deep in his heart he was grateful for the call. For those few minutes, as he drove through the gray streets of Minneapolis, he was glad to have a death to think about—a death other than his wife’s. He welcomed the rush of thoughts that silenced those memories.

Chapter 3

The Kenwood neighborhood—fine china amidst a collection of stoneware—started out as a mosquito-filled swamp on the southern edge of Minneapolis. At the end of the nineteenth century, some forward-thinking city planner saw its potential and convinced the City of Minneapolis to expand. They dredged out a chunk of swampland to make the Lake of the Isles and dumped the dredged-out dirt into the lowlands, raising them up to support parks and tennis courts and curbed streets. When the rich folks saw what was coming, they rushed to Kenwood to build their handsome estates.

Max wound his way through Kenwood on streets that purled past an eclectic mix of big houses and bigger ones, houses built with old money. Not all of the homes were mansions, but there wasn’t a hovel in the bunch. And Kenwood had no main street, no downtown, no plazas or malls. It was completely devoid of the usual clutter of commerce like oil-change shops or Chinese restaurants. No, Kenwood was a neighborhood that prided itself on living well and peacefully, a neighborhood that liked to be left alone.

By the time Max arrived, patrol officers had blocked off West 21st and had crime-scene tape stretched across the mouth of an alley where the upscale locals hid the more unsightly aspects of their lives, like garbage cans and cluttered garages. Max parked a block away, slipped on cloth booties and a pair of latex gloves, and walked slowly toward the alley, taking in what he could.

West 21st held one of the few storefronts in all of Kenwood, a short, half block of commerce that consisted of a bookstore and an art gallery. Max had been in the bookstore once, back when Jenni was looking for a book written in Ojibwe, something to give to a client—probably a child. Jenni considered being a social worker a calling, not just a job. He remembered the store and he remembered the smell of lilacs on that spring evening and the feel of her slender hand in his as they left the store. Those were the tides that moved through his head every year on the anniversary of her death.

The alley opened just to the east of the bookstore, giving access to a parking area in the rear. As he made his way down the alley, he could see his partner, Niki Vang, in the parking lot, talking to a crime-scene technician named Bug Thomas. When Niki saw Max approaching, she nodded her greeting and then nodded toward a bundle of cloth at her feet. She didn’t throw a joke his way as she normally did, a sure sign that she understood that Max carried the extra burden of a thousand memories on his back that day.

Across the alley from the parking lot, the neighbors had cultivated a wall of trees and bushes and vines, a privacy barrier to keep the bookstore patrons and others from gawking into backyards. Max glanced around and wondered if this might be the most secluded location in all of Kenwood.

Bug Thomas knelt beside a dumpster to inspect the ground for footprints or other trace evidence. The dumpster’s lid was open, its belly filled with bags and empty boxes, leaving no room for hiding a body. Max put his hands on his knees to examine the bundle, a blanket edged with a pink ruffle and with horses and stars across its face, the kind of pattern you’d find on the bed of a young girl. It was obvious that the blanket held a body.

“This has to be one of the cleanest alleys I’ve ever seen,” Max said.

“This is Kenwood,” Niki said. “Even their crime scenes are nicer than everyone else’s.”

“Who found the body?”

“An early-morning jogger,” Niki said, pointing to a man wearing a 1970s-styled headband and standing just beyond the crime-scene tape.

Max pulled a corner of the blanket back to uncover the woman’s head. Her hair, a paprika shade of red, was the same color as Jenni’s, and for a razor-thin moment, he saw Jenni’s face peeking out from behind the mess of red hair. He dropped the corner of the blanket and stood up—the movement filling his chest with a queasy sensation as if he’d just stepped up to the edge of a high precipice.

The bedspread had fallen open and Max could see that the woman was not Jenni. He glanced at Niki to see if she had seen his reaction. If she had, she didn’t show it. Max replaced the spread to wait for the medical examiner. “Hey, Bug, you didn’t happen to find a purse or ID lying around by chance?”

Only in his twenties, Bug looked like he just stepped out of a
Dragnet
rerun with his flat-top haircut and thick, black-rimmed glasses. His real name was Doug, but everyone called him Bug. Max had heard that Bug got his nickname by publishing an important paper on insect entomology. Max preferred that explanation to the possibility that some asshole in the department started calling him Bug to highlight the kid’s many quirks: the way he tapped his thumb and fingers together when he thought, or the way he struggled with small talk like it was an unpracticed foreign language.

Bug stopped his examination of the parking lot, pausing as if he had to process the question. Then he stood up, giving his full attention to Max before answering, and said, “I didn’t find anything yet.”

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