Watch Them Die

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Watch Them Die Page 12

by Kevin O'Brien


  Dumbfounded, Hannah stepped aside and opened the door wider. “I really don’t need anyone staying with me—”

  “Oh, relax, I’m here,” Scott said. “I can crash on the sofa. I brought along Sixteen Candles. We’ll do each other’s hair and try on each other’s makeup. It’ll be a blast.” He glanced around. “Hey, I like your place.”

  He set his backpack on her counter. “Britt said you have a stalker, some kind of weirdo sending you videotapes.”

  “She told you?” Hannah asked,

  He nodded. “She said you were in trouble with the cops, too.”

  “What?” Hannah murmured incredulous. “I swore her to secrecy.”

  Scott rolled his eyes. “Oh, Britt’s the worst. I thought you knew that. Telephone, telegraph, tell-a-Britt. She sang to me the minute you left work tonight. Anyway, don’t worry about me. I can keep a secret.”

  Hannah gave him a wary look. “Aren’t you going to ask why I’m in trouble with the police?”

  “Do you want to tell me?” he asked pointedly.

  Hannah frowned. “No, not really.”

  “Fine. It’s none of my goddamn business. I won’t ask. But if you—”

  There was a knock at the door. Hannah and Scott looked at each other. “Were you expecting someone else?” he whispered.

  Hannah shook her head. She went to the door and checked the peek hole. It was Craig. She was suddenly very grateful for Scott’s company. She opened the door.

  Craig stared past her shoulder at Scott; then he looked at her again. “Hi. I know it’s late,” he said, smiling awkwardly. “I would’ve called first, but you never gave me your number.”

  “How did you get past the lobby door?” Hannah asked.

  “It was open,” Craig said.

  “It was open when I came in, too,” Scott volunteered. “But I closed it.” He extended his hand to Craig. “Hi, I’m Scott. I work with Hannah.”

  Craig shook his hand. “Hi, yeah. I recognize you from the store.”

  Hannah cleared her throat. “I’m sorry I can’t invite you in. Scott and I are in the middle of something.”

  “Well, could I talk to you for just a couple of minutes?” Craig asked. “Maybe out here on the balcony?”

  Hannah gave Scott a look over her shoulder. She put the door on the latch and stepped outside.

  “I didn’t mean to intrude,” Craig said, leaning against the walkway balcony’s railing. “It’s just, I had to see you and talk to you; otherwise I couldn’t hope for any kind of sleep tonight. I keep thinking about our lunch date today. Did I do anything to upset you?”

  “Actually, I was upset about something else.”

  “And it had nothing to do with me?”

  Hannah rubbed her arms from the chill. “It may have,” she admitted. “That man you threw out of the store, he was murdered yesterday.”

  Craig appeared genuinely stunned. “What?”

  Hannah nodded. “Somebody shot him. I read about it in the newspaper at lunch today, while you were using the rest room.”

  Craig frowned at her. “Do you think I had something to do with it?”

  “I’m not sure.”

  “Hannah, I didn’t even know the guy. The last time I saw him was when I tossed him out of the store. You say somebody shot him?”

  “Yes. He was shot in the eye.” She shivered a bit, and rubbed her arms harder. “Craig, how did you find out where I live?”

  He seemed stumped for a moment. He stared back at her, then shrugged. “Hannah, I—I’m just trying to help you, for chrissakes.”

  “You’ve been following me around, watching me, haven’t you?”

  “God, no. It’s not like that at all—”

  “How did you get past the door downstairs?” she asked. “Have you done it before?”

  “What kind of question is that? Hannah—”

  Staring at him, she backed toward the door. “I think you’d better go now.” She opened the door.

  “Oh, c’mon, please. Don’t be this way.”

  Scott came up behind Hannah. “Everything okay here?” he asked.

  “Craig’s just leaving,” she said.

  “Hannah, you’re wrong about me,” Craig said, frowning. He shook his head, then turned and stomped toward the stairwell.

  “Funny, he’s not so good-looking to me anymore,” Scott said, putting an arm around her shoulder. “Plus, he’s wearing sandals with black stretch socks. What was he thinking?”

  Hannah stepped toward the railing and glanced down at the sidewalk and the parking lot below.

  “Think he’s your stalker?” Scott asked.

  Hannah shrugged. “I don’t know. I’m not sure of anything anymore.” She watched Craig, three stories below, walking away from her building.

  “I’ll bet he saw me coming up here,” she heard Scott say. “He probably wanted to check out the competition.”

  “Maybe,” Hannah muttered. She saw Craig head into the parking lot, which was reserved for tenants only. She noticed an old white car that she’d never seen in the lot before: a big, sleek, metal monster of an automobile from the mid-sixties.

  “Oh, my God,” she whispered.

  Craig walked in front of the car. Its headlights suddenly went on; high beams. Craig seemed to freeze.

  “No!” Hannah cried, grabbing Scott’s arm.

  Helplessly, she watched the big car lunge forward. With tires screeching, it plowed into Craig. He seemed to fold over the hood. The car didn’t slow down at all. Carrying Craig’s prone body on its nose, the old automobile barreled into the back of a minivan parked in the lot. Hannah turned away and buried her head in Scott’s shoulder.

  “Holy Jesus,” she heard Scott murmur, over the smashing glass and twisting steel. A car alarm went off, blaring in the night. Tires squealed, and the old car’s motor roared once more. There was another loud crash.

  Hannah pulled herself away, but still held on to her friend as she peered down at the parking lot. She could see Craig Tollman’s crumpled, broken body on the pavement. He was lying in a pool of blood that looked black in the night.

  She knew the automobile would hit him again. Poor Craig was obviously already dead. But the automobile had to hit him three times because that was how it happened in Wait Until Dark.

  Its engine grinding, the car lurched toward Craig’s corpse one more time. Hannah automatically turned her head away. Then she heard another crash. When she looked down at the lot again, the car was heading for the street. Its smashed, crumpled front hood was covered with Craig’s blood.

  She and Scott were no longer alone on the balcony. Several residents from her building had come out of their apartments, drawn by all the noise. Within a couple of minutes, about a dozen people had gone down to the parking lot. They slowed down to a stop as they approached Craig’s corpse. They seemed reluctant to get too close to him.

  Hannah was numb. She wanted to do something, but she couldn’t even move. It was too late to help him. Craig was dead. She just stood there, her hands gripping the railing.

  Scott tried to talk, but he couldn’t seem to get any words out. His face was the color of chalk. He kept shaking his head.

  “Mom?”

  She turned and saw Guy, in his Spider-Man pajamas, coming toward the door. He rubbed his eyes. “What’s all that noise?” he asked.

  Hannah rushed toward him before he could reach the door. She scooped him up in her arms. His body felt warm. “It’s only a car alarm, honey,” she said, a tremor in her voice. “Nothing for you to see. C’mon, let’s get you back to bed. Say good night to Scott.”

  “G’night, Scott,” he said, his arms and legs wrapped around Hannah.

  Scott just nodded and gave Guy a pale smile.

  Tears in her eyes, Hannah carried Guy down the hall.

  “Mom, are you crying?” he asked.

  “No, I’m fine, honey,” she lied.

  He needed to go to the bathroom, then asked for a glass of water. By the t
ime Hannah got him settled back in bed, she heard the police and ambulance sirens. Through Guy’s bedroom windows, she could see a red whirling light from the emergency vehicles outside, three stories below.

  To her amazement, Guy started to drift off within a couple minutes, despite all the noise. Her legs a little unsteady, Hannah wandered out of his bedroom and up the hallway. She wiped her eyes and tried to focus on Scott.

  He stood in the doorway, nervously smoking a cigarette. “So—aren’t we going to talk to the police?” he said.

  “I can’t get involved,” Hannah said. She felt so ashamed and scared. All she wanted to do was run away—from this murderer, from the police, from everything.

  “Your trouble with the cops,” Scott said. “It’s really serious, isn’t it?”

  Hannah sighed. “You said you weren’t going to ask.”

  “That was before,” Scott replied. He rubbed his forehead. “Jesus, I can’t believe it. He was just standing here talking to us a few minutes ago. Listen, Hannah. I’m not asking about your problem with the cops to be nosey. I’m concerned for you, Han. They’re sure to go through Craig’s pockets, and search his car. He might have your address on him.”

  Hannah numbly gazed down at all the people, police, and flashing emergency vehicles in the parking lot below.

  Scott took a drag from his cigarette. “Hannah, you’re involved—whether you want to be or not.”

  Nine

  The parking lot was still a mob scene.

  They’d managed to silence the car alarms, but there were still engines idling and people talking over one another. Static-garbled announcements came on patrol car radios, and one loud, very angry cop was yelling at everyone to step back.

  About fifty people had gathered at the parking lot entrance. Hannah made her way through the crowd while paramedics loaded Craig’s shrouded body into the back of an ambulance.

  Only ten minutes ago, Craig had been talking with her. And now he was a corpse. Hannah still couldn’t quite comprehend it. Who had been driving that old-model white car?

  Maybe the police knew. It was a long shot, but Hannah tried to listen to their conversations with one another. So far, she wasn’t having much luck finding out anything.

  She thought about what Scott had said earlier. Craig must have had her name and address written down somewhere—in his wallet, his pocket, or in his car. Had the police found it yet?

  She’d left Scott in the apartment. Someone had to stay there in case Guy woke up again. If that happened, Scott was supposed to flick the living room light on and off a few times.

  Hannah kept looking back up at her building. She heard some people talking, and apparently, the police were looking for a white Impala that had been reported stolen late last night.

  Then Hannah overheard one officer tell another that the car had been found two miles away. “Somebody torched it,” he said. “Lots of luck getting reliable prints or DNA samples there. Smart SOB. Y’know, I think—”

  “THERE’S NOTHING MORE TO SEE!” yelled the cop in charge of crowd control, drowning out his coworkers. “COME ON, PEOPLE, GO HOME….”

  Hannah stepped back, and bumped into someone. “Excuse me,” she muttered. Then she looked up at the man and gasped.

  “Hi,” Ben said.

  Hannah numbly stared at him. “What are you doing here?”

  He glanced at the other people around them, then winced a bit. “You won’t like this, but I’ve been looking out after you. Did you know this Craig guy?”

  “What do you mean, you’ve been ‘looking out after’ me?” Hannah asked.

  “It’s hard to explain. I just wanted to make sure nothing bad happened to you.”

  The siren began wailing as the ambulance pulled out of the lot. Ben stopped to look at the vehicle speeding down the street. Then he turned to her again. “Did you know him very well?”

  “Not very,” Hannah replied, her guard up. She glanced over at the puddle of blood on the parking lot pavement.

  “Do you know what he was here investigating?” Ben asked.

  “What are you talking about?” Hannah murmured.

  “Ronald Craig, the guy who just got killed. Do you know why he was here?”

  Hannah frowned. “His name is—was—Craig Tollman.”

  Ben shook his head. “I was one of the first people here, Hannah. I saw the police take out his wallet and identification. I heard them. His name was Ronald Craig, and he was a private investigator from Milwaukee.”

  “He’s from Wisconsin?” Hannah whispered.

  Ben nodded.

  She wanted to grab Guy, pack their bags, and catch the first bus or train out of Seattle. No doubt, Kenneth and his family knew where she was now. Their private detective, Craig—or rather Ronald Craig—had probably been sending daily progress reports back to Wisconsin.

  “I noticed you and him talking outside your apartment,” Ben said.

  Hannah stared at him, eyes narrowed. “Where were you standing that you could see us on the balcony?”

  He nodded toward an alley across the street. “Over there.”

  “Then you must have seen the car that hit him,” she whispered. “Did you get a glimpse of the driver?”

  He shook his head, then pointed to a van parked nearby. “That blocked my view of the lot. I heard it happening, but didn’t see a thing. I only caught a glimpse of the white car as it sped away.” He sighed. “Listen, I think this Ronald Craig must have uncovered something, and that’s why he was killed.”

  Hannah edged away from him. “What are you talking about?”

  “He was following you. And I think he might have seen someone else who was following you.”

  “Someone else?” Hannah said, with a stunned laughed. “You mean, besides you? What? Is half the city of Seattle following me?”

  Ben frowned. “I’ve seen two men. One was Ronald Craig. I haven’t gotten a good look at the second guy. But I think he’s videotaping you.”

  Hannah shook her head, but she knew Ben was right. There had to be a third person, and he was Craig’s killer. Ben couldn’t have been driving that white car. He’d have had to move awfully fast, coming back to the scene of his crime just minutes after ditching and burning the old white Impala. He didn’t smell of gasoline.

  “Who are you?” she whispered, eyes narrowed at him. “Your name isn’t Sturges.”

  “No. My last name’s Podowski. I came out here from New York last month, I—” He sighed. “It’s a long story, and I can’t go into it now. Just trust me, Hannah. I’m trying to help you.”

  “Craig said he was trying to help me, too.”

  Ben shrugged. “Well, do you want to talk with the police?” He glanced at one of the officers by the parking lot gate. The policeman seemed to be staring back at them.

  “No, I don’t want to go to the police,” Hannah admitted quietly.

  She still didn’t know who Ben Podowski was, or what he wanted. But she figured she had no choice but to let him “help” her, whatever that meant. At least, she’d go through the motions and pretend to trust him. “How exactly do you plan to help me?” she asked.

  Ben looked over at the lot for a moment. “When the police went through Ronald Craig’s pockets, they found a hotel room key. I heard them talking. He was staying at the Seafarer Inn on Aurora Boulevard. I’ll go check this place out, do some snooping around. Maybe I can find out who Craig was working for, and how much he knew about this guy with the video camera. It’s a long shot, but might be worth it.”

  He sighed, then smiled at her. “Could you do me a favor? Could you phone a taxi for me when you get back up to your place? I’ll be waiting out here. I have no other way of getting to this hotel.”

  Nodding, Hannah backed toward her lobby door. “I’ll call a cab for you.”

  “Thanks,” Ben said. “I’ll phone you later tonight. What’s your number?”

  “555-1007. Don’t you need to write it down?”

  “I’ll remember
it,” he said. “Thanks, Hannah.”

  She unlocked the door, then ducked inside. As Hannah wandered up the stairs, her footsteps echoed in the cinder - block stairwell. She could hardly comprehend any of the events in the last hour. She tried to put all the pieces together.

  Hannah could only guess what led Ronald Craig halfway across the country to her. Kenneth and his family probably had detectives tapping her friends’ telephones. Maybe they’d traced one of her rare calls to Chicago and come up with the number of a Seattle pay phone.

  However he’d pulled it off, this detective calling himself Craig Tollman had found her.

  And now he was dead.

  A police car occupied the Seafarer Inn’s “Reservations Only” spot near the front door.

  Ben had thought the place would be swarming with cops, maybe even a few reporters. He’d figured he could get lost in the crowd; listen to what people were saying and pick up some secondhand information. That was how he’d learned about Ronald Craig—by hanging around the parking lot of Hannah’s building.

  But aside from the solitary patrol car, things looked pretty quiet at the Seafarer Inn. Ben hoped at least the desk clerk might tell him something.

  After giving the taxi driver a five-dollar tip, Ben asked him to wait near the edge of the lot. He stopped to check his wallet. He still had Paul Gulletti’s business card from a few weeks ago when he’d first joined the film class. The card had the newspaper’s logo on it, and identified Paul as a “Reporter-Contributor.” Ben slipped the card inside his shirt pocket, then hurried into the small lobby.

  Sitting on a brown sofa by the door was a thin, long-legged redhead with dark eye makeup. She looked Ben up and down, then smiled.

  Ben nodded politely and stepped up to the front desk.

  The lobby was done up in a nautical theme, with old fishing nets draping the walls. Ensnared in the nets were dusty shells, balls of colored glass, starfish, and sea horses. Even the desk clerk looked like an old sea cook. He was stocky, with a weatherworn face and gray mustache. He wore glasses, along with a white shirt and a red vest with anchor emblems all over it.

 

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