Murder on the Lunatic Fringe (Jubilant Falls Series Book 4) (21 page)

Read Murder on the Lunatic Fringe (Jubilant Falls Series Book 4) Online

Authors: Debra Gaskill

Tags: #Fiction & Literature

“So why did you punch Jerome Johnson?” I asked.

“A man’s got a right to express an opinion doesn’t he? I’m expressing mine and that nigger takes offense at me calling it the way it is? The man hit me first! Then I don’t know who that other asshole was who jumped in, but Jesus.” His words trailed off.

“What about the goats?”

“What goats?”

“Two cashmere goats were decapitated and gutted at Johnson’s farm after you got in the fight with Johnson. You didn’t do that?”

Doyle scoffed at me. “Hell no.”

It must have been the Russians, then, trying to send a message to Katya Bolodenka. Does Addison know that, I wonder?

“I left a message for that white woman who lives there, though.”

“What kind of a message?”

Grinning, Doyle stopped twirling the gun and pulled a knife from his boot, the same knife he had in his hand at the Travel Inn.

“What did you do?”

“Paper said she was sleeping with that Johnson guy.”

“Did you hurt her?”

He smirked and with a sharp motion flung the knife between my feet. I gasped as it shot into the dirt, vibrating slightly.

“Like I said, I left a message for her. I cut up every piece of furniture in that place, just to let her know that kind of race mixing won’t be tolerated here. She’ll think twice before she leaves a door unlocked again.”

On the floor, my phone rang. Doyle reached over and picked it up; it was Roarke’s cell phone number. Doyle slid his finger across the screen and held the phone in front of my face. “Go ahead. Talk.”

“Hello?”

“It’s Sheriff Roarke. Are you OK, Graham?”

I looked at Doyle, who nodded. “I could be better.”

“What do you need? Do you need food? Medical attention? We’re trying to do everything we can to get you out.”

Doyle pulled the phone away from me. “He’s not coming out alive any more than Benny or me,” he snapped.

“Don’t let it end this way, McMaster,” Roarke said. “Don’t let anybody get hurt and it will go easier for you.”

“If you let me go, I can tell your story,” I said. “I can’t tell your story if I’m dead.”

“Bring him out, McMaster,” Roarke said. “Let him come out. “

Benny stepped back from the door. “We open those doors and the cops will kill us all.”

“Who is that?” Roarke asked on the other end of the call.

“Benny Kinnon, Sheriff,” Benny said.

“Well, Mr. Kinnon, we have the barn surrounded. We’ve searched your truck. We found the heroin you hid in the wheel well. If you come out peacefully, with Graham, I’ll personally guarantee your safety. I’ll talk to the prosecutor about a reduction in charges.”

“I open these doors and we all die in a hail of bullets. I’m not stupid.”

“I promise you. Bring Graham to the barn door and let him go. You give yourself up peacefully and nobody dies.”

Benny glared at him as Doyle ended the call.

“You got me into this,” Benny said. “You better get me out.”

“I’ll bring him up to the front of the barn, but I ain’t guaranteeing anything once those doors slide open,” Doyle said. Roughly, Doyle pulled the knife from the ground and cut the rope from around my wrists and ankles. I cried out in pain as both men yanked me to my feet.

In front of the barn door, they let go of me. I sank to my knees, stars swirling in my head, and my breath coming in painful gasps. I couldn’t have run if I wanted to. Doyle tied my hands behind my back again as Benny held the cold shotgun against my head. When he was done, both men stood with their hands on a sliding door, Benny on the left, Doyle on the right.

I swallowed hard and looked up toward the rusted track that held the two doors closed. Would they even open? Tears began to fill my swollen eyes and roll down my bruised cheeks.

This was it. I would never know my son. Elizabeth would tell him I died chasing a damned story, I thought. She was right. I’d do anything to get a byline. And for what? After a few years, they’ll move on. She’ll get married and her husband will adopt him and unless he asks about his real father, I’ll just be a footnote in his life history.

Benny called out. “We’re at the door.”

“On the count of three, open the door,” Roarke answered. “One… two…”

With a groan, the barn doors slid apart and the floodlights blinded me.

“Hold your fire! Everyone! Hold your fire!” I heard Roarke yell. On my right, Doyle cocked his pistol in slow motion.

“Look out!” I screamed. I tried to roll away as Doyle’s gun flashed. I groaned as the bullet exploded in my right thigh. There was another shot, this one from my left, and Doyle fell to the ground, his chest an open cavity of fabric, blood and deer shot. Benny, my father, stepped forward into the glare of the floodlights, dropping the shotgun as he raised his hands in the air.

 

 

 

 

Chapter 34 Addison

 

The blue of a computer screen was the only light in the newsroom as I made my way upstairs, the horror of Katya’s bloody face still fresh in my mind.

It was nearly two in the morning. I could have gone home, slept a few hours and then come back to do this story. No one else had it, not the big metro in Collitstown, not any of the TV stations. If I wrote it now and threw it up on the website, maybe even sent it to the Associated Press, everyone would have it by dawn.

I didn’t care. Two people were dead and a federal agency was partially responsible for their murders. I was going to write this story and expose how serious errors in judgment led to both deaths. Everyone in Plummer County, if not the state of Ohio, should know why that happened. Once I slapped this story up on the website and across the front page, everybody would have a piece of it and I hoped they did.

Earlene could fire me for not going after the barking dog story first—or for whatever damned reason she wanted.

I flipped on the overhead lights, sat down at the nearest computer and logged onto the editorial system. The computer beeped, letting me know it was ready for me to start. It was time to hang one Agent Robert Peppin out to dry.

 

By ADDISON MCINTYRE
Managing Editor

A Youngstown Road woman linked to the murder of a federal agent Tuesday has herself been shot, the latest in a case reportedly linked to a string of questionable New Jersey pain clinics, allegedly run by Russian organized crime figures.

Although law enforcement officials would not release the details of the murder, the body of Ekaterina Bolodenka was identified early Thursday morning at the Plummer County Morgue. She was shot at least two times in the face.

On Tuesday night, sheriff’s deputies found a U.S. Marshal known as Jerome Johnson dead on the porch of the farm that Bolodenka owned.

Bolodenka was the wife of Kolya Dyakonov, who reportedly ran a chain of fraudulent Medicaid pain clinics where doctors on his payroll dispensed painkillers such as Oxycontin and Oxycodone to members of the homeless community. New Jersey authorities have linked these clinics to an explosion of drug overdoses and deaths in the area.

Bolodenka was placed in witness protection by federal authorities after she reportedly witnessed her husband killing a homeless man in her Brooklyn neighborhood of Brighton Beach.

She was the only witness against her husband, according to Agent Robert Peppin.

“Without her, we have no case,” he said.

Originally relocated to the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, Bolodenka ignored orders from her keepers that she was no longer allowed to stay in touch with her sister Svetlana, Svetlana’s husband Alexis and their infant daughter Nadezhda, called Nadya.

When members of the Dyakanov’s gang reportedly heard Katya had been in contact, all three, including the baby, were reportedly killed when Svetlana and Alexis would not reveal Bolodenka’s location.

Following their murders, Bolodenka was relocated here to Plummer County and the Youngstown Road farm, along with a number of llamas and alpacas from another witness, where an agent reportedly named Jerome Johnson was assigned to protect her.

Just as Bolodenka had secrets, so did the man protecting her.

Johnson, who’s real name was Terrell Simms-Reed, was a former Marine, assigned to the American Embassy in Moscow. He spoke Russian and was trained as a military policeman, according to his parents, but his military career was cut short when his commanding officer found he was involved with Russian prostitutes.

Simms-Reed received an honorable discharge and following his return to the States, found a job with the U.S. Marshal Service, where he was assigned, often under assumed names, to provide protection for Russian-speaking witnesses, such as Bolodenka, until they could testify.

Bolodenka told members of the
Journal-Gazette
staff that she and the man she believed to be Johnson were romantically involved.

Agent Robert Peppin, who is heading up the investigation, would not comment on where or how Bolodenka was killed, but suggested that a
J-G
story last Saturday on Bolodenka was responsible for her death.

The
Journal-Gazette’s
first story was about Bolodenka’s background, and how she had won at the state fair. She later admitted that the Witness Protection program fabricated the information she provided for that story. She also identified Johnson as her farm manager.

A visit to the Youngstown Road farmhouse by J-G staff yesterday afternoon found Bolodenka was not at home, but the house had been ransacked and much of the furniture slashed.

Peppin, questioned at the morgue, would not comment.

 

The story needed one more line, one more paragraph to make it complete. I stepped away from the computer to think.

The police radio was quiet, not really surprising at this time of the morning, but out of force of habit, I decided to check it anyway. I walked across the room—it was off.

Shit
, I thought to myself. I knew who did it—Earlene had the weekly cleaning service under orders to turn off anything they found still using electricity when they came through after midnight.

Who cares?
It could stay off until I got back in here for deadline—not that I needed anything else on my plate. I made a mental note to call Graham Kinnon and see how his stepfather was doing after his heart attack. Maybe I could talk him into coming back from family leave a few days early.

Across the newsroom, I heard my cell phone ring deep in my purse.

Probably Duncan, I thought to myself as I walked back to the desk to answer it. I didn’t recognize the number. Was it Peppin? Maybe Dr. Bovir?

“Hello?”

“Addison, it’s me, Elizabeth Day.” Her normally tough voice was quiet and scared.

“What’s up kiddo? Why are you calling me at this time of the morning?”

“It’s Graham. He’s at the hospital. He’s been shot.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 35 Graham

 

“Hey. You awake?” It was a woman’s voice, soft and gentle.

My swollen eyes opened slowly as I felt the stupor of anesthesia temporarily recede. I was in a hospital bed. A nurse touched my shoulder, speaking softly. With the light glowing gently behind her, she seemed angelic. As my eyes focused more, I saw she had red curly hair trying valiantly to escape the bun pinned atop her head, and green eyes that danced in the halo of her smile. She wore a stethoscope around her neck and I wanted to see how far her freckles descended into the V-necked collar of her blue surgical scrubs.

I wanted to tell her, too, how beautiful she looked, but my words were garbled and slurred. I couldn’t move my right leg, but why? The memory of Sheriff Roarke and his deputies rushing into McMaster’s barn returned.

Once again, I heard the gunshots, felt the pain and I saw Ben standing in the glare of the floodlights as he was handcuffed. I remembered EMTs surrounding me, working frantically to stem the bleeding in my leg. I remembered Roarke standing above Doyle McMaster’s dead body, shaking his head as I was placed on a gurney and rolled to the ambulance.

I groaned.

“I’m sorry—just nod,” the nurse said.

I complied.

“You have two broken cheekbones. You also have a pretty good concussion and a broken rib. Do you remember being shot in the leg, Mr. Kinnon?” Now that she knew I was awake, her voice was loud and she over-enunciated her words.

I grunted in assent and tried to reach down to touch the bandages, but I was too loopy to find my leg. She took my hand and placed it on top the covers.

“You’re OK now. Your leg is still there. The bullet went through the outside of your thigh, but doctors had to go in and get some shrapnel. They also checked for shrapnel damage to the artery in your leg, which was fine. That means you’ve had an angiogram, so I need you to lie very still. Are you in any pain?”

I groaned and nodded.

“Hang on here and I’ll give you some medication.”

My redheaded angel injected something into my IV line and patted my shoulder. I caught a glimpse of a gold band on her left hand.
Damn
, I thought drunkenly as I slid back into darkness.

Several hours later, I was back in this universe and allowed to sit up slightly.

Before her shift ended, Red came back to see me and brought me some chicken broth I could sip through a straw and a little bit of soda.

There was a knock at my hospital door.

It was Addison, with today’s paper in her hand.

I waved her in, feebly, trying to give her a lopsided smile through my bruises.

“You look like shit,” she said.

“Thanks,” I mumbled.

“I ought to kick your ass for this latest stunt,” she said, spreading today’s paper across my lap. “But, damn, it’s the best front page we’ve had in a while.”

Two stories, both with Addison’s byline, shared the top of the page. The headline
Farm owner shot
sat on top a story that went down along two columns, with a one-column picture of Katya Bolodenka, cropped from the picture Pat had taken last week.

Next to it, another headline
Reporter wounded in standoff
, filled the remaining four columns, including a photo of McMaster’s barn, still surrounded by sheriff’s cruisers and headshots of me, McMaster and Ben.

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