Andie wanted to return fire, but she couldn’t see well enough to take a shot at a moving target. Staring into the spotlight, she was more likely to miss Merselus and hit the police at the other end of the alley with a stray bullet.
Merselus was approaching hard and fast, so close now that Andie could hear the pounding of his footfalls on the pavement. The alley was ablaze with the high-powered spotlight, and Andie was within twenty feet of an armed serial killer, unable to see her target. In another moment he’d be on her, and if Andie didn’t act fast she knew she’d be his hostage or dead. Two more of his bullets grazed the wooden pole she was hiding behind. When a third round cracked the brick wall beside her, Andie dived from behind her cover and logrolled to the center of the alley, coming to a stop on her stomach. In one continuous motion, she raised her Sig Sauer and took aim from a worm’s-eye view-a completely different angle that took the blinding spotlight out of her line of sight-and squeezed off a single round. She heard one last gunshot, followed by an unmistakable thud on the pavement.
She was eye to eye with Merselus as the alley went eerily silent.
Chapter Sixty-One
Jack’s front lawn was aglow with the flash and swirl of blue and amber beacons. An MDPD squad car was behind Jack’s car in the driveway. An assistant deputy sheriff opened the rear door, and Ellen Bennett climbed into the backseat without resistance, her head down and her hands cuffed behind her back.
Parked on the street in front of Jack’s house was an ambulance, though it wasn’t needed. This was a job for the medical examiner’s office, and the ME’s team was already on the scene. A white sheet covered Geoffrey Bennett’s body on the lawn, and the ME’s gurney was on the walkway, ready to receive the so-called victim.
Jack avoided using that word-victim-in his witness statement to the police. He was standing on his front porch with the first officer on the scene, recounting the worst night of his life. Or at least one of them.
“Just to be clear,” said the officer, “you’re not Mrs. Bennett’s attorney, are you?”
“No. Definitely not.”
Jack’s cell rang. It was from Sydney’s iPhone-the same number that had started his run from Bayfront Park to the Metromover, and that had transmitted that final text message: Check the bench. Jack stepped away from the officer and took the call, bracing himself to hear Merselus’ voice. It was Sydney.
“Jack, where are you?” she asked, her voice filled with urgency.
“At home. Are you okay?”
“Yeah, pretty much. I’m with the FBI.”
“Is Andie with you?”
“No. She went-”
Sydney stopped in midsentence, which alarmed Jack. “Sydney, answer me. She went where?”
“She went chasing after Merselus,” said Sydney.
Jack’s heart sank. That wasn’t what he wanted to hear.
“But I think I see her coming now,” said Sydney. “Yeah, that’s her. She’s-”
“See if she can come to the phone,” said Jack.
There was silence in Jack’s ear, but Jack could tell that the line was still active. A moment later he heard Andie’s voice.
“Jack?”
“Hey, are you okay?”
“Yes.”
“Thank God. Anyone hurt?”
“One officer from Miami-Dade was shot, but I’m told he’ll make it. A poor old man who lived in the same apartment complex as Merselus was not so lucky.”
Jack took a moment to absorb the bad news. “What about Merselus?”
“One bullet to the heart. Dead.”
“Sniper?”
“Uh-uh,” said Andie, “no sniper.”
Jack could hear it in her voice, so he didn’t need to ask the follow-up. But after a deep breath that crackled over the line, she told him anyway.
“It was someone you love.”
Chapter Sixty-Two
BNN and the Faith Corso Show crammed a month’s worth of sensationalism into the next two days. The most surprising thing to Jack was how much of it they managed to get right. The least surprising-and most troubling-was what BNN refused to acknowledge: that the demise of Merselus and his Internet buddy Geoffrey Bennett was of no help to Celeste Laramore and her family.
Jack flew to New York to do something about that. Hannah went with him. The trip was in some ways deja vu, reminiscent of Jack’s disastrous settlement conference with BNN’s lawyers on the eve of filing Celeste’s lawsuit against BNN. This time, however, Jack brought Sydney Bennett along.
For five days, the media had been hounding Sydney and her lawyer. They all wanted the same thing: the exclusive interview that would finally reveal the truth about Emma’s death, and even better, expose the darkest secrets of the Bennett family. On Jack’s advice, Sydney refused to speak to any of the TV talk-show hosts, with one exception: Faith Corso.
“Thank you so much for coming,” said Corso.
They were in the main conference room on the thirty-third floor, just like Jack and Hannah’s previous meeting with BNN. This time, however, there were far fewer lawyers in the room-most notably, no Ted Gaines. Corso sat with hands folded atop the polished walnut conference table, her back to a floor-to-ceiling window and the panoramic view of Midtown. To her left was Kay Dollinger, the energetic producer of the Faith Corso Show. To Corso’s right was the gray-haired Stanley Mills, BNN’s general counsel and vice president of legal affairs. Jack sat directly across the table from Corso, flanked by Hannah and Sydney.
“What a pleasure it is to finally meet you,” said Jack. Hannah shot a quick glance in his direction, as if to see if his nose was growing.
“Let me tell you what we have in mind,” said Corso, quickly shifting from we to me. “I see this as a two-part interview. Part one will be live in the BNN studio, just Sydney and me. We’ll talk about her arrest, the trial, her release from prison, her short stay with Merselus, her escape from him and recapture, and then her rescue by the FBI. The live segment will end with her telling us where she was when her daughter drowned, how long she knew the truth about Mrs. Bennett’s role in Emma’s death, and why Sydney kept silent about it. We may bring in a psychiatrist at this point-an objective professional to talk about how common it is for children who are the victims of sexual abuse to refuse to name their abusers, how victims are silenced by their own sense of guilt and shame even after they reach adulthood, how this is especially true when the abuser is a parent, and doubly so when the mother is compliant in the abuse of a daughter.”
“No psychiatrists,” said Sydney.
Jack touched her arm, reminding her not to talk.
“The psychiatrist is optional,” said Corso. “Part two will be taped. We’ll visit the Bennett house, where Sydney can walk me through her life under the same roof with a monster like Geoffrey Bennett. We’ll go to the runway at Opa-locka Airport where Sydney met Merselus, the hotel where he attacked her, and the places where she went into hiding before he caught up with her at Bayfront Park. The final segment will be shot outdoors at the Bennett swimming pool.”
“No pool,” said Sydney.
Jack tugged her elbow, another reminder.
“The pool is not optional,” said Corso. “It’s the centerpiece of the story.”
“Here’s a possible solution,” said Jack. “No pool. Instead, we visit the exact spot outside the women’s detention center where Celeste Laramore was attacked.”
Corso made a face. “How is that a solution?”
“It gets us focused on the real story.”
The general counsel spoke up. “Excuse me, Mr. Swyteck. But we are not going to turn this television interview or this meeting into a showcase for your other client’s lawsuit against BNN.”
“I don’t see the two as separate,” said Jack.
“I don’t see the connection,” said Corso.
“The most basic connection is the cost.”
Corso narrowed her eyes. “The cost of what?”
“Of Sydney’s interview,�
� said Jack.
“We agreed to pay her a hundred thousand dollars,” said Corso.
“You offered a hundred thousand,” said Jack. “The cost is five million.”
“That’s ridiculous.”
“Payable to Celeste Laramore.”
The general counsel rose. “I don’t see much point in continuing this discussion.”
“You’re about to,” Jack said in his most serious tone.
“Faith, let’s go,” said the general counsel.
“Have a seat,” said Jack, “unless you have absolutely no interest in a two-minute explanation of why five million dollars is letting you off cheap. And by ‘you’ I mean your boss, Mr. Keating.”
Slowly, the general counsel lowered himself back into the chair. “Two minutes,” he said.
Jack focused his gaze mainly on Corso as he spoke. “Celeste Laramore was paid a thousand dollars to show up outside the women’s detention center looking like Sydney Bennett on the night of Sydney’s release.”
“That’s not news,” said Corso. “We were the ones who broke that story.”
“And you reported that it was Sydney’s defense team who paid her-to be a decoy for Sydney.”
“We stand by that story. We had a source.”
“A source? Really?” said Jack. “What’s interesting to me is that, so far, the only person to confirm that Celeste got paid to be outside the jail on the night of Sydney’s release was Celeste’s roommate. And I know she’s not your source, because I’ve talked to her.”
“I’m not required to divulge our source.”
“Agreed. But here’s my theory. Your ‘source’ is the person who paid Celeste the thousand dollars.”
“Like I said, I don’t reveal sources.”
“I guess that’s especially true when your source works for BNN,” said Jack.
“Excuse me?”
“Let me be more direct: Celeste was paid by BNN.”
The general counsel scoffed. “I’m losing patience for this.”
“Forget patience,” said Corso, shaking her head. “I’m insulted. But let’s put that aside for a second. Why on earth would BNN pay Celeste to be a Sydney Bennett look-alike?”
“Because the entire media world knew that Sydney’s release would be anticlimactic. The expectation was that Sydney would be whisked away in the dark, and a parking lot full of Shot Mom haters would be left with no one to spit on. Not very exciting television. That’s why no other network planned to cover her release the way yours did. But BNN had an angle. For a measly thousand bucks, you were able to give the crowd what it wanted, give the TV audience something to watch, and give the BNN reporters on the ground something to talk about besides an eighteen-year-old redneck in a John Deere cap who wanted to ask Sydney to marry him.”
Corso put on her TV face, her most sanctimonious expression. “We would never stage anything for the sake of television entertainment.”
“Ted Gaines might have something to say about that.”
“What is that supposed to mean?” said Corso.
“Nothing. I digress.”
The general counsel shook his head. “Mr. Swyteck, are you suggesting that BNN somehow planned for Celeste to be attacked and end up in a coma?”
“No. The attack that put Celeste in a coma wasn’t your plan-but it was your fault, and it was your problem. So two days later, you shifted all responsibility from yourself by blaming someone else: me. Before anyone said one word about Celeste getting paid, BNN had the exclusive report that the defense team had hired a college student to be a decoy on the night of the release. You manufactured yet another reason for the American public to hate Sydney Bennett and her lawyer. And you had the whole world blaming someone other than BNN for what happened to Celeste.”
“That’s quite a theory,” said Corso. “But not much evidence.”
Jack glanced down his side of the table. “Hannah, show them.”
Hannah powered on her iPad and handed it to Jack, who then laid it flat on the table between himself and Corso. The image was right side up for the BNN team’s viewing.
“What’s this?” asked Corso.
“Celeste Laramore and three other contestants in a Sydney Bennett look-alike contest.”
“That contest was canceled, I was told,” said Corso.
“The one on the night of Sydney’s release was canceled. But for that whole week before Sydney’s release these contests were quite the rage. This one was at a bar called Pendleton’s in the Design District, five days before Sydney’s release. Celeste won.”
“Good for her,” said Corso.
“Good for BNN,” Jack said. With a touch of the screen, he brought up the next image. “This one is from the same night. It was taken by the security camera at Pendleton’s.”
“Some guy leaving a club,” said Corso. “So what?”
Jack touched the screen again, this time working it with his fingers the way Hannah had taught him. The zoom got tighter and tighter, until finally the only image on the screen was a man’s face.
The general counsel leaned into the table for a closer look. There was enough surprise in his expression to make Jack wonder if he was part of the bigger plan. “That’s Mr. Keating’s bodyguard,” he said.
“Roland Sharp,” said Jack. “I believe he’s affectionately known as the Shadow.”
Corso quickly dismissed the whole thing, which in Jack’s mind only confirmed her involvement.
“So the guy likes to go clubbing,” she said. “What does that prove?”
Jack ignored the question, staying on the offensive. “We found the money,” he said. “A thousand dollars in cash. Celeste hid it in her closet.”
Corso didn’t flinch. “That doesn’t even begin to prove that it came from BNN.”
Jack’s stare tightened. “It was inside one of those plastic dossiers you can buy at any office supply store. I’m told by an extremely knowledgeable FBI agent that plastic is an ideal surface when it comes to lifting fingerprints. That same FBI agent also told me that a certain bodyguard’s fingerprints were found on this particular dossier.”
Corso and the BNN general counsel exchanged uneasy glances, but they said nothing.
“Whoops,” said Hannah.
Jack rose, as did Sydney and Hannah.
“You think about our offer,” Jack said, standing behind his chair. “Five million. Payable to Celeste Laramore. The whole matter can be resolved with or without your interview of Sydney Bennett. Your choice. But Mr. Keating and his thousand-dollar blunder will be part of any interview that Sydney grants. That you can count on.”
Jack and his team headed for the door. Jack opened it, and Sydney stepped out first. Hannah was right behind her, and she was almost out the door when she stopped and did a quick about-face. The four-foot-eleven pit bull was apparently feeling another deja vu moment.
“I told you we were gonna kick your-”
“Hannah,” said Jack, giving her the same down-girl expression that he’d given her at the conclusion of their ill-fated settlement conference.
“Sorry, boss,” she said.
Jack watched her all the way out into the hallway, but he didn’t follow. He stood in the open doorway for a moment, his hand on the brass door handle. It wasn’t that he was searching for something to say. It was simply a message that there was nothing more to be said.
Finally, he stepped out of the conference room, closing the door quietly on Corso, her producer, and one unhappy lawyer.
Chapter Sixty-Three
One month and eleven days after Celeste Laramore slipped into a coma, Jack received a phone call from her father.
“Celeste opened her eyes!”
It was the best news Jack had heard since the check from BNN had cleared. The prognosis was still uncertain, but it was a first step toward a recovery that many doctors had predicted she would never take. It would be a long road, though Jack wondered whose might be longer-Celeste’s or Sydney’s.
Althou
gh Jack’s demand on BNN had been for five million dollars “payable to Celeste Laramore,” it would never be in Sydney’s blood to do anything for free, and the Laramore family agreed to cut a check for a hundred thousand dollars to her on the condition that it go toward the cost of the mental health treatment she needed. Jack’s last conversation with Sydney had been her call from Miami International Airport, two hours before her flight to Utah. She was entering a sixty-day program at a wellness facility for victims of sexual, physical, and emotional abuse. Sydney had sounded determined to succeed, but Jack doubted that she would ever return to Florida-unless, as part of the healing process, she felt compelled to get some kind of explanation from her mother in Florida State Prison.
Jack, too, got a share of the BNN settlement. He had his own idea of “recovery.”
“Dude, you sure you want to do this?” asked Theo.
They were in Theo’s car at the Twelfth Avenue exit from the Dolphin Expressway. Downriver, in the distance, stretched one of the most picturesque vistas of the Miami skyline, but Jack’s near focus was on a seedier stretch of riverfront along the expressway, where so much had happened the month before.
“I’m sure,” said Jack.
“It’s a lotta dough.”
Fifteen percent of anything over a million dollars was the discounted fee arrangement that Jack had given the Laramore family. It was less than half of what most lawyers would have charged, but Theo was still right: a lot of money, especially for a few weeks of work.
“I told Andie to think of this as my way of becoming debt-free,” Jack said.
Blood Money js-10 Page 30