Roni clapped her hands. “Dude, that was sweet!”
I sat in a chair across the table from hers. “You have no idea how much trouble you could be in, do you?”
Her mouth and eyes stretched wide. “Me? I told you, I didn’t do anything!”
“Listen to me. I’m not your lawyer. I know a fair amount about criminal law because I put a lot of crooks away, but I’m not an expert on criminal procedure or the rules of evidence and I’m lousy at reading juries. So I can’t help you shape your testimony so that you slide by on some narrow ledge between innocent and guilty. Nothing you tell me is privileged. I get called before a grand jury or summoned to testify in court, I’ll have to tell them everything you tell me.”
Her cheeks lost their pink. “What are you doing? Are you trying to scare me?”
“Just shut up and listen. Don’t talk until I’m finished. Here are the known facts. Yesterday you shot Frank Crenshaw, and then you came to the hospital to see him and were told you couldn’t. You came back tonight, after visiting hours, and raised a ruckus when you were told the same thing you were told the day before. Then you made enough noise that the cop guarding Crenshaw came running, giving the killer a clean shot at him. Quincy Carter is no dummy. It isn’t hard for him to connect the dots and tie you and the shooter together like a tag team setting up the hit on Crenshaw. Then your boyfriend shows up, saying he thought it’d be fun to hang out at the hospital.”
“He’s not my boyfriend.”
“Maybe not on your dance card, but that’s how Carter sees him.”
“I can’t help that. Sometimes, he drives me crazy.”
“And now Carter is going to turn him inside out to see if he might have finished what you started at LC’s. Case like this, the first one to make a deal serves the shortest sentence. Carter won’t care which one of you flips, so long as one of you does. So you telling Carter and me that you had nothing to do with anything won’t cut it.”
She went from pale to red hot in a flash, coming out of her chair, planting her fists on the conference table.
“I shot Frank Crenshaw to save my life and yours, and I haven’t kept a meal down or slept since. I don’t know who killed him, but it wasn’t Brett. He was hanging out with my mom and grandma tonight until he came over here. So, fuck you if you don’t believe me!”
“He’s not your boyfriend, but he hangs out with your mother and grandmother?”
“Sometimes he is my boyfriend. Just not when we fight.”
“Then what was he doing hanging out with you and your family?”
“My grandmother likes to have people for Sunday-night dinner. She invited him.”
I liked that she was mad. I liked that she didn’t curl up into a ball and cry, and I liked that she didn’t tell me to call a lawyer. I didn’t like that her family was Brett Staley’s alibi because families are the first to lie to protect loved ones, and, if Staley was spending his evening with her mother and grandmother, odds were he’d get the family treatment.
“What time did he leave your house?”
She straightened, throwing one hand at the walls before wrapping her arms around her chest.
“I don’t know. We had dinner and sat around talking and watching TV. I said I was going to see Frank, and he tried to talk me out of it because they wouldn’t let me see him yesterday. We got into it, nothing serious, just yelling like we do all the time, and he says if I go, he isn’t going with me, like I even invited him. So I left him there.”
“You want me to call a lawyer?”
She dropped her arms to her side, her initial outburst spent. “How can I need a lawyer when I’m innocent?”
“The system doesn’t always get it right.”
“But if I get a lawyer, it will look like I’ve got something to hide, and I don’t. Besides, I can’t afford a lawyer. It costs a lot of money to take care of my mom. She didn’t have health insurance when she had her stroke. She’s in a wheelchair, and her speech is pretty garbled.”
“I’ll find someone who will work with you on the fee.”
She came back to her seat, folding her arms on the table. “Why are you doing this for me?”
I smiled. “Like you said, you saved my life.”
She reached across the table, taking my hand in hers. “Well, at least I did one thing right.”
I patted her hand, letting go and easing back in my chair. “What about the lawyer?”
She chewed her lip, focusing on the table, then swiveled in her chair, looking out the windows to the west. The torch at the top of the Liberty Memorial was lit, a ring of fire glowing in the dark. She wheeled around, facing me, hands in her lap, her face cool and calm.
“I’m not guilty of anything, and I’m not going to act like I am. Tell Detective Carter I’ll answer his questions.”
I nodded. “You know it’s not always enough to be innocent. Sometimes it’s smarter to be innocent and have a lawyer to make sure you stay that way.”
“I’ve got you. That makes me smart enough.”
“Okay, then. Let’s run through it a few times. Make sure I know what you know.”
She was a solid witness, recalling details as we went through it until she had it nailed down, serious until I gave her a taste of a bad-cop interrogation, leaning on her. She bit the inside of her cheek to keep from giggling, gave up, and dissolved into laughter.
“Hey, I’m not practicing my stand-up routine, here.”
She wiped tears from her eyes and sat up straight. “Sorry, I couldn’t help it. I promise to be really scared when Detective Carter asks me how I’m going to like being a girlfriend on a chain gang.”
“All I said was that you could go away for a long time, maybe the rest of your life.”
She started laughing again. “I know. I know. I can’t help it. What can I say? You kind of scared me at first, but now you don’t. Is that a bad thing?”
My head tilted back, my chin elevating past the perpendicular, my neck telescoping and leaving me hanging until the spasm evaporated and I found Roni’s eyes again. They were narrow and sober, her lips pursed as if she had been twisting beside me. I took a deep breath, restoring order for both of us.
“Only if you don’t listen to me. That could really get you in trouble.”
She nodded. I opened the door and told our sentry that we were ready to talk to Detective Carter. A few minutes later, Officer Fremont appeared at the door. I looked past him at Joy, who was standing alone at the entrance to the administrative suite.
“We’re ready,” I said.
“Detective Carter said to tell Ms. Chase that she can go home. He’ll give her a call tomorrow and set something up.”
Roni and I exchanged glances. Her quick smile vanished when she realized the same thing I did.
“What about Brett Staley?” I asked.
“Detective Carter says Ms. Chase shouldn’t wait up for him.”
“What? No way!” she said. “He didn’t do anything wrong, and I’m not leaving without him.”
“I’m sorry, miss. He’s already gone.”
“Gone! Where? With who? Is he under arrest?”
“You’ll have to talk with Detective Carter about that, miss.”
I grabbed Roni’s arm when she bolted for the door, clamping her to my side.
“Tell Carter I want to talk to him.”
“Next time I see him.”
“What do you mean next time you see him?”
“Detective Carter packed it in for the night. Said if you wanted to talk to him to call and leave a message. He’ll get back to you soon as he can.”
Officer Fremont walked us to the lobby and watched as we stood outside the hospital entrance. Roni called Brett’s cell phone and left a message when he didn’t answer, doubling up by sending him a text. She hugged me, and I made her take a blood oath not to talk to Carter alone.
She nodded, squinting, her brow furrowed, half-listening and looking over my shoulder as if Brett would emerge from the shadows. We were parsing the same puzzle, neither of us certain what had just happened or why, the worry lines around her eyes and mouth telling me the one thing that was certain: Despite her protests, she would let Brett buy her funeral dress, though not for a long, long time. I watched until she got into her Toyota Highlander and drove away.
Joy didn’t add much to what we knew. Soon after Carter and I left to talk with Roni, Fremont told her to leave. The last time she saw Brett Staley he was still sitting on the bench next to the fourth-floor elevators. She waited for us in the lobby until she saw Fremont and followed him into the administrative suite.
My movement disorder does more than put me through impromptu and involuntary gymnastic routines. It stresses the rest of my brain, sometimes gumming up the gears and making it impossible to concentrate, other times giving me jelly legs. When that happens, I’m no good to anybody. I closed my eyes on the drive home, my questions bogged down in neural quicksand. Joy held my arm as I stumbled into the house, staggering up the stairs and into bed.
“You’ll figure it out tomorrow,” she said, turning off the light.
“Too late. Whatever’s happened has happened.”
“It’s never too late, Jack Davis. Not for any of us.”
Lucy called at seven-thirty Tuesday morning.
“I wake you?”
“Roxy and Ruby beat you by an hour and a half.”
“Simon told me you want to hire Roni Chase, give her a shot at one of our cases. Not that I’m surprised, but how’d that go?”
“Hard to tell.”
I gave her a rundown on my day and night.
“Some people are trouble magnets.”
“I don’t know. Maybe Roni was just in the wrong place at the wrong time. Twice.”
“Not her, moron. You. That’s what you get for trying to fix the world one messed-up kid at a time.”
“I thought I did okay with you, but keep giving me grief and I may have to rethink that.”
“Wait until I tell you who called me yesterday.”
“Who?”
“It’s a beautiful morning. Go outside and play with the dogs, and I’ll pick you up in thirty minutes.”
Fall in Kansas City is a season of gentle regret, evoking good times past and trials yet to come as summer surrenders to September and October’s fiery leaves drape the city in a fragile rainbow canopy back-lit by the sun, low and sharp, nature’s high-definition broadcast. November’s cold, cleansing rain readies us for December’s frozen, pale shroud, the promise of spring faint, distant but certain.
I waited for Lucy in the front yard, the dogs swirling around me, chasing squirrels because that was their job. They were unburdened by the past, oblivious to the future, living in the moment while I straddled all three dimensions.
Lucy was wrong about one thing. I wasn’t trying to fix the world one messed-up kid at a time. I was trying to fix me, put the pieces back together that were shattered when Kevin and Wendy died. There was nothing gentle about my regrets, nothing soothing about my dreams. Memories of my children were a saw-toothed reminder of broken promises. If I could help Roni Chase and if I could find Evan and Cara Martin, I might save myself.
My cell phone rang. It was Roni.
“Detective Carter wants to meet me at my house at three o’clock. Can you make it?”
“Sure. Don’t start without me.”
Lucy pulled up just as I finished talking with Roni.
“Had breakfast?” Lucy asked when I got in her car.
“Coffee.”
“Good. We’re going to the Classic Cup.”
“Because?”
“Because we’re having breakfast with Ethan Bonner.”
“Jimmy Martin’s lawyer?”
“One and the same.”
“Who’s buying?”
“He is. Jimmy told Bonner we came out to the Farm to see him on Sunday. Bonner called me yesterday afternoon. I thought he was going to chew me out, tell us to stay the hell away from his client. But he didn’t. Instead, he asked us to meet him for breakfast.”
“How’s a blue-collar guy like Jimmy Martin afford a lawyer like Ethan Bonner?”
“Beats me.”
The Classic Cup is on the Country Club Plaza, Kansas City’s Spanish-inspired signature shopping district, located in midtown. There’s enough power at its breakfast tables to light the shops at Christmas.
Bonner was waiting for us, his scuffed shoes propped on an empty chair, glasses halfway down his nose, long hair pushed behind his ears, reading the
New York Times
. He was wearing jeans and a corduroy blazer over a Grateful Dead T-shirt and a three-day growth of beard. He was a solo practitioner, mixing criminal defense with plaintiff’s personal injury work; winning more cases than most with strategy and tactics few had the balls to use when someone’s life was on the line.
He had the perfect Kansas City pedigree. He grew up in Mission Hills, home to old money and older mansions. He graduated from Pembroke Hill, the city’s premier private school, before going to Yale and then Harvard for law school. He worked for the law firm his grandfather had founded and his father ran for an entire week before he quit and opened his own shop, his father saying that his son didn’t just march to the beat of a different drummer; he was playing an instrument no one had ever heard before.
Bonner dropped his feet to the floor, shoving the chair away from the table, folded his newspaper in half, and waved us to our seats.
“Jack,” he said, extending his hand, “I haven’t seen you since the Janice Graham case. You remember her?”
“Sure. She and her husband were in the residential mortgage business. She was charged with stealing Social Security numbers belonging to dead people and selling them to illegal immigrants so they could get fraudulent home loans.”
“I thought I was going to lose that one, sure as hell.”
“So did I until you blew our star witness out of the stand. Been so long I can’t remember her name.”
“Kendra Wood. Wasn’t hard once I figured out she was in love with Janice’s husband. She wanted to get rid of Janice so she could run away with him. Turned out she was the one running the scam and had set Janice up.”
“We checked her out six ways to Sunday and didn’t come up with that. Janice’s husband had no idea Kendra felt that way about him. How did you tumble to it?”
“You looked in the wrong places.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“You looked at Kendra from the outside, at all the stuff you could see. She worked for Janice and her husband. Always showed up on time. Always got good performance reviews. She was married with kids, went to church on Sunday, and didn’t stay out late.”
I nodded. “The kind of upright citizen with enough guts to blow the whistle.”
“That’s who you saw. I saw a woman who betrayed the people she was closest to outside of her own family. We weren’t talking about a drug addict that needed a fix or a gangbanger looking to get right with the cops before it was his turn to take the needle. Shit, upright is easy compared to betrayal. Upright takes guts, but betrayal takes loathing and guts. I wanted to know where the loathing came from, so I looked at her from the inside out.”
“How’d you do that?”
“I’m like a magician. I never give up my secrets. Kendra Wood was living a fantasy, and no one knew it because she came across so normal she’d bore you to death. Crazy how people can hide shit like that.”
“Not as crazy as Jimmy Martin killing his kids.”
Bonner leaned back in his chair. “Point taken. Except for one thing. He may not have done it.”
“May not have done it? I thought defense lawyers stuck with innocent until proven guilty.”
“Jimmy Martin is charged with two things: stealing and contempt of court. He stole to support his family, and the judge held him in contempt because he’s pissed at his wife. He hasn’t been charged with killing his kids.”
“Yet,” I said. “There’s a reason the cops are looking at him so hard.”
“You and I both know that doesn’t mean they’re right.”
A server took our orders. Three men in suits, carrying briefcases, filed past our table, one of them telling Bonner he’d see him in court after lunch. Bonner got up, followed the man to his table, wrapped his arm around him, whispered, patted him on the back, and came back to his seat.
“Just settled a case. Now I can pay for breakfast. What if Jimmy Martin didn’t kill his kids?”
“Then he should tell his wife where they are,” Lucy said.
“If it were that easy, we’d all have to find another line of work. Look, I don’t know what happened to his kids. Jimmy won’t talk about them. Not one fucking word.”
“At least he treats you the same way he treated us,” I said.
“I don’t mind. Sometimes it’s better not to know. Lets me sleep at night. This time, I’m not so sure. Best chance I’ve got to get Jimmy a deal on the theft charge is find those kids and hope they’re still alive when I do.”
“Then tell him to talk to us,” Lucy said.
“Won’t do any good. He won’t talk to me about the kids. He’s not going to talk to you. But you guys can still help me.”
“How?”
“His wife Peggy hired you. Tell her to let you work with me. We want the same thing, to get the kids back, and I need investigators Jimmy can’t afford.”
“Can he afford you?”
“Nope. Public defender is refusing to take any new cases. Their workload is so heavy they’re probably committing malpractice every time they answer the phone. The judge asked me if I’d take the case. Looked like a simple deal—work out a plea on the theft charge—and then this thing with the kids came up. Be a big help if we work together.”
“Are you out of your mind?” Lucy asked. “Peggy hates Jimmy. Why should she help him? You’re just trying to find out what we’ve got on Jimmy so you can get him off.”
“That’s what I’d think if I were sitting where you’re sitting,” Bonner said. “So, here’s my offer. I’ve hired someone to help me with this case. Anything she comes up with, you can have. The three of you can work together.”
“You can’t afford to pay investigators. How are you going to pay someone else?” I asked.
“She owes me a favor. Here she comes,” Bonner said, pointing over my shoulder.
I turned around, stood up, and started to shake.
“Hello, Jack,” Kate Scranton said. “How are you?”