by Harlan Coben
I moved over to the desk, bent down, and reached into the back of the bottom drawer. I pulled out the velour box, took a deep breath, and opened it.
The ring's diamond was one-point-three carats, with G color, VI rating, round cut. The platinum band was simple with two rectangle baguettes.
I'd bought it from a booth in the diamond district on 47th Street two weeks ago. I'd only shown it to my mother, and I had planned on proposing, so she could see. But Mom had no good days after that. I waited. Still, it gave me comfort that she'd known that I had found someone and that she more than approved. I had just been waiting for the right time, what with my mother dying and all, to give it to Sheila.
Sheila and I had loved each other. I would have proposed in some corny, awkward, quasi-original way and her eyes would have misted over and then she would have said yes and thrown her arms around me. We would have gotten married and been life partners. It would have been great.
Someone had taken all that away.
The wall of denial began to buckle and crack. Grief spread over me, ripping the breath from my lungs. I collapsed into a chair and hugged my knees against my chest. I rocked back and forth and started to cry, really cry, gut-wrenching, soul-tearing cries.
I don't know how long I sobbed. But after a while, I forced myself to stop. That was when I decided to fight back against the grief. Grief paralyzes. But not anger. And the anger was there too, lingering, looking for an opening.
So I let it in.
Chapter Twenty-Two.
When Katy Miller heard her father raise his voice, she stopped in the doorway.
"Why would you go over there?" he shouted.
Her mother and father stood in the den. The room, like so much of the house, had a hotel-chain feel to it. The furniture was functional, shiny, sturdy, and totally lacking in warmth. The oils on the wall were inconsequential images of sailing ships and still lifes. There were no figurines, no vacation souvenirs, no collections, no family photographs.
"I went to pay my respects," her mother said.
"Why the hell would you do that?"
"I thought it was the right thing to do."
"The right thing? Her son murdered our daughter."
"Her son," Lucille Miller repeated. "Not her."
"Don't give me that crap. She raised him."
"That doesn't make her responsible."
"You never believed that before."
Her mother kept her spine stiff. "I've believed it for a long time," she said. "I just haven't said anything."
Warren Miller turned away and began to pace. "And that jackass threw you out?"
"He's in pain. He just lashed out."
"I don't want you to go back," he said, waving an impotent finger. "You hear me? For all you know, she helped that murdering son of a bitch hide."
"So?"
Katy stifled a gasp. Mr. Miller's head snapped around. "What?"
"She was his mother. Would we have done differently?"
"What are you talking about?"
"If it was the other way around. If Julie had killed Ken and needed to hide. What would you have done?"
"You're talking nonsense."
"No, Warren, I'm not. I want to know. I want to know if the roles were reversed, what would we have done? Would we have turned Julie in?
Or would we have tried to save her?"
As her father turned away, he spotted Katy in the doorway. Their eyes met and for the umpteenth time in her life, he could not hold his daughter's gaze. Without another word Warren Miller stormed upstairs.
He made his way into the new "computer room" and closed the door. The "computer room" was Julie's old bedroom. For nine years it had remained exactly the same as the day Julie died. Then one day, without warning, her father had gone into the room and packed up everything and stored it away. He painted the walls white and bought a new computer desk at Ikea. Now it was the computer room. Some took this as a sign of closure or, at least, moving on. The truth was just the opposite.
The whole act was forced, a dying man showing he can get out of bed when all it really did was make him sicker. Katy never went in there.
Now that the room had no tangible signs of Julie, her spirit seemed somehow more aggressive. You relied on your mind now instead of your eyes. You conjured up what you were never meant to see.
Lucille Miller headed into the kitchen. Katy followed in silence. Her mother began to wash dishes. Katy watched, wishing also for the umpteenth time that she could say something that would not wound her mother deeper. Her parents never talked to her about Julie. Never.
Over the years, she had caught them discussing the murder maybe half a dozen times. It always ended like this. In silence and tears.
"Mom?"
"It's okay, honey."
Katy stepped closer. Her mother scrubbed harder. Katy noticed that her mother's hair had more streaks of white. Her back was a little more bent, her complexion grayer.
"Would you have?" Katy asked.
Her mother said nothing.
"Would you have helped Julie run?"
Lucille Miller kept scrubbing. She loaded the dishwasher. She poured in the detergent and turned it on. Katy waited a few more moments. But her mother would not speak.
Katy tiptoed upstairs. She heard her father's anguished sobs emanating from the computer room. The sound was muffled by the door but not nearly enough. Katy stopped and rested her palm on the wood. She thought that maybe she could feel the vibrations. Her father's sobs were always so total, so full-body. His choked voice begged, "Please, no more" over and over, as if imploring some unseen tormenter to put a bullet in his brain. Katy stood there and listened, but the sound did not let up.
After a while she had to turn away. She continued to her own room.
Then she packed her clothes in a knapsack and prepared herself to end this once and for all.
I was still sitting in the dark with my knees up against my chest.
It was near midnight. I screened calls. Normally I would have turned off the phone, but the denial was still potent enough to make me hope that maybe Pistillo would call and tell me it was all a big mistake.
The mind does that. It tries to find a way out. It makes deals with God. It makes promises. It tries to convince itself that maybe there is a reprieve, that this could all be a dream, the most vicious of nightmares, and that somehow you can find your way back.
I had picked up the phone only once and that was for Squares. He told me that the kids at Covenant House wanted to have a memorial service for Sheila tomorrow. Would that be all right? I told him that I thought Sheila would have really liked that.
I looked out the window. The van circled the block again. Yep, Squares. Protecting me. He had been circling all night. I knew that he would not stray far. He probably hoped that trouble arose just so he could unload on someone. I thought about Squares's comment that he had not been all that different from the Ghost. I thought about the power of the past and what Squares had gone through and what Sheila had gone through and marveled at how they'd found the strength to swim against the riptide.
The phone rang again.
I looked down into my beer. I was not one for drinking away my problems. I sort of wished that I were. I wanted to be numb right now, but the opposite was happening. My skin was being ripped off so that I could feel everything. My arms and legs grew impossibly heavy.
It felt as though I were sinking under, drowning, that I would always be just inches from the surface, my legs held by invisible hands, unable to break free.
I waited for the answering machine to pick up. After the third ring, I heard a click and then my voice said to leave a message at the beep.
When the beep sounded I heard a semi-familiar voice.
"Mr. Klein?"
I sat up. The woman on the answering machine tried to stifle a sob.
"This is Edna Rogers. Sheila's mother."
My hand shot out and snatched the receiver. "I'm here," I said.
/> Her answer was to cry. I started crying too.
"I didn't think it would hurt so much," she said after some time had passed.
Alone in what had been our apartment, I started rocking back and forth.
"I cut her out of my life so long ago," Mrs. Rogers continued. "She wasn't my daughter anymore. I had other children. She was gone. For good. That's not what I wanted. It was just the way it was. Even when the chief came to my house, even when he told me she was dead, I didn't react. I just nodded and stiffened my back, you know?"
I didn't know. I said nothing. I just listened.
"And then they flew me out here. To Nebraska. They said they had her fingerprints already, but they needed a family member to identify her.
So Neil and me, we drove to the airport in Boise and flew here. They took us to this little station. On TV they always do it behind glass.
You know what I mean? They stand outside and they wheel in the body and it's behind glass. But not here. They brought me into this office and there was this .. . this lump covered with a sheet. She wasn't even on a stretcher. She was on a table. And then this man pulled back the sheet and I saw her face. For the first time in fourteen years, I saw Sheila's face...."
She lost it then. She started crying and for a long time there was no letup. I held the receiver to my ear and waited.
"Mr. Klein," she began.
"Please call me Will."
"You loved her, Will, didn't you?"
"Very much."
"And you made her happy?"
I thought about the diamond ring. "I hope so."
"I'm staying overnight in Lincoln. I want to fly to New York tomorrow morning."
"That would be nice," I said. I told her about the memorial service.
"Will there be time for us to talk afterward?" she asked.
"Of course."
"There are some things I need to know," she said.
"And there are some things some hard things I have to tell you."
"I'm not sure I understand."
"I'll see you tomorrow, Will. We'll talk then."
I had one visitor that night.
At one in the morning, the doorbell rang. I figured it was Squares. I managed to get to my feet and shuffle across the floor. Then I remembered the Ghost. I glanced back. The gun was still on the table.
I stopped.
The bell sounded again.
I shook my head. No. I was not that far gone. Not yet anyhow. I moved toward the door and looked through the peephole. But it wasn't Squares or the Ghost.
It was my father.
I opened the door. We stood and looked at each other as if from a great distance. He was out of breath. His eyes were swollen and tinged with red. I stood there, unmoving, feeling everything inside me collapse away. He nodded and held out his arms and beckoned me forward. I stepped into his embrace. I pressed my cheek against the scratchy wool of his sweater. It smelled wet and old. I started to sob. He shushed me and stroked my hair and pulled me closer. I felt my legs give way. But I did not slide down. My father held me up. He held me up for a very long time.
Chapter Twenty-Three.
Las Vegas Morty Meyer split the tens. He signaled the dealer to hit both. The first came up a nine, the second an ace. Nineteen on the first hand.
And blackjack.
He was on a roll. Eight straight hands had gone his way, twelve of the last thirteen up a solid eleven grand. Morty was in the zone. The ever-elusive winner's high tingled down his arms and legs. It felt delicious. Nothing like it. Gambling, Morty had learned, was the ultimate temptress. You come after her, she scorns you, rejects you, makes you miserable, and then, when you're ready to give her up, she smiles at you, puts her warm hand on your face, gently caresses you, and it feels so good, so damn good.... The dealer busted. Oh yes, another winner. The dealer, a hausfrau with over treated hay like hair, swept up the cards and gave him his chips. Morty was winning.
And yes, despite what those bozos at Gamblers Anonymous tried to peddle, you could indeed win at a casino. Someone had to win, didn't they? Look at the odds, for chrissake. The house can't beat everyone.
Hell, with dice you can actually play on the house's side. So, of course, some people won. Some people went home with money. Had to be.
Impossible any other way. To say no one won was just part of the overreaching GA crap that left the organization with no credibility. If they start off lying to you, how can you trust them to help?
Morty played in Las Vegas, Las Vegas the real Las Vegas, the city itself, no strip-strolling tourist trade in pseudo-suede and sneakers, no whistling and hollering or squeals of joy, no faux Statue of Liberty or Eiffel Tower, no Cirque du Sole, no roller coasters, no 3-D movie rides or gladiator costumes or dancing water fountains or bogus volcanoes or kid-appeal arcades. This was downtown Las Vegas. This was where grimy men with barely a mouth of teeth per table, the dust from their pickups still coming off them with each shoulder slump, lost their meager paychecks. The players here were bleary-eyed, exhausted, their faces lined, their hard times baked on by the sun. A man came here after slaving at a job that he hated because he did not want to go home to his trailer or equivalent, his abode with the broken TV, the screaming babies, the let-herself-go wife who used to stroke him in the back of that pickup and now eyed him with naked repulsion. He came here with the closest thing that he would ever know to hope, with that wispy belief that he was one score away from changing his life. But the hope never lasted. Morty was not even sure it was ever really there. Deep down, the players knew it was never meant to be. They would always be on the toe end of the kick. They were destined for a lifetime of disappointment, for slouching with their faces forever pressed against the glass.
The table changed dealers. Morty leaned back. He stared at his winnings and the old shadow crossed over him again: He missed Leah.
Some days he still woke up and turned to her, and when he remembered, the sorrow consumed him. He would not be able to get out of bed. He looked now at the grimy men in this casino. When he was younger, Morty would have called them losers. But they had an excuse for being here.
They may as well have been born with the loser L branded into their behinds. Morty's parents, immigrants from a shtetl in Poland, had sacrificed for him. They had sneaked into this country, faced terrible poverty an ocean away from everything familiar, fought and clawed all so their son would have a better life. They had worked themselves to an earlyish grave, hanging on just long enough to see Morty graduate medical school, to see that their struggle had meant something, had steered the genealogical trajectory for the better now and forever. They died in peace.
Morty was dealt a six up, seven down. He hit and got a ten. Busted.
He lost the next hand too. Damn. He needed this money. Locani, a classic leg-breaking bookie, wanted his cash. Morty, a loser's loser when you really think about it, had stalled him by offering up information. He had told Locani about the masked man and injured woman. At first, Locani did not seem to care, but the word spread and all of a sudden someone wanted details.
Morty told them almost everything.
He did not, would not, tell them about the passenger in the backseat.
He did not have a clue what was going on, but there were some things even he would not do. Low as he had sunk, Morty would not tell them about that.
He was dealt two aces. He split them. A man sat next to him. Morty felt rather than saw him. He felt him in his old bones, as though the man were an incoming weather front. He did not turn his head, afraid, as irrational as this sounded, even to look.
The dealer hit both hands. A king and a jack. Morty had just gotten two blackjacks.
The man leaned close and whispered, "Quit while you're ahead, Morty."
Morty slowly turned and saw a man with eyes of washed-out gray and skin that went beyond white, too translucent really, so that you felt as though you could see his every vein. The man smiled.
"It might be time," the silvery whis
per continued, "to cash in your chips."
Morty tried not to shudder. "Who are you? What do you want?"
"We need to chat," the man said.
"About what?"
"About a certain patient who recently visited your esteemed practice."
Morty swallowed. Why had he opened his mouth to Locani? He should have stalled with something else, anything else. "I already told them everything I know."
The pale man cocked his head. "Did you, Morty?"
"Yes."
Those washed-out eyes fell on him hard. Neither man spoke or moved.
Morty felt his face redden. He tried to stiffen his back, but he could feel himself wither under the gaze.
"I don't think you have, Morty. I think you're holding back."
Morty said nothing.
"Who else was in the car that night?"
He stared at his chips and tried not to shudder. "What are you talking about?"
"There was someone else, wasn't there, Morty?"
"Hey, leave me alone, will you? I'm on a roll here."
Rising from his seat, the Ghost shook his head. "No, Morty," he said, touching him gently on the arm. "I would say that your luck is about to take a turn for the worse."
Chapter Twenty-Four.
The memorial service was held in the Covenant House auditorium.
Squares and Wanda sat on my right, my father on my left. Dad kept his arm behind me, sometimes rubbing my back. It felt nice. The room was packed, mostly with the kids. They hugged me and cried and told me how much they'd miss Sheila. The service lasted almost two hours. Terrell, a fourteen-year-old who'd been selling himself for ten dollars a pop, played a song on the trumpet that he'd composed in her memory. It was the saddest, sweetest sound I'd ever heard. Lisa; who was seventeen years old and diagnosed bipolar, spoke of how Sheila had been the only one she could talk to when she learned that she was pregnant. Sammy told a funny story about how Sheila tried to teach him how to dance to that "crappy white-girl" music. Sixteen-year-old Jim told the mourners that he had given up on himself, that he'd been ready to commit suicide, and when Sheila smiled at him, he realized that there was indeed good in this world. Sheila convinced him to stay another day.
And then another.
I pushed away the pain and listened closely because these kids deserved that. This place meant so much to me. To us. And when we had doubts about our success, about how much we were helping, we always remembered that it was all about the kids. They were not cuddly. Most were unattractive and hard to love. Most would live terrible lives and end up in jail or on the streets or dead. But that did not mean you gave up. It meant just the opposite, in fact. It meant we had to love them all the more.