The Darkness (2009)

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The Darkness (2009) Page 22

by Jason - Henry Parker 05 Pinter


  wants another ten. Home base said to expect a lot of

  Darkness deliveries today.”

  “Another hundred and fifty bucks for five minutes’

  work,” Theo said. He tried to whistle, but again it came

  out more like an aborted attempt at a raspberry. “Let’s not

  keep the man waiting.”

  “Agreed,” Morgan said. He felt a strange sensation,

  and for a moment couldn’t place it. Then, as they were

  about to reenter the brownstone, it occurred to Morgan

  the last time he’d felt that singular feeling of joy, confidence and ambition.

  The day he got his first paycheck at his old job. That

  was the first day he truly felt like he was going to

  conquer the world.

  “Let’s hurry it up,” Morgan said. “But this time let’s

  take the stairs.”

  29

  “Always makes me smile a little,” Jack said.

  “What does?”

  “Tourists. They spend thousands of dollars to see this

  city, but they really know nothing about it. You don’t get

  a sense of Manhattan by taking pictures or sitting on a

  double-decker bus.”

  “Not everyone has had the fortune of being at gunpoint

  in Vietnam,” I said. “For some people this is as close as

  they can get.”

  “I suppose,” Jack said, “but sometimes I wonder if I

  even understand the city after all these years.”

  “Are you still thinking about Paulina’s article?” I asked.

  “A little. I never used to get scooped, Henry. Every time

  I went out for lunch, I could feel a dozen eyes on me,

  hating me. They were other reporters, and they were staring

  daggers through me because they knew I was working on

  stories that they’d never get. They’d be working mop-up

  duty on yesterday’s page seven while I was breaking news.

  It’s a great feeling to be hated for doing your job well. And

  right now, I hate Paulina Cole. Not because she tried to ruin

  my life, but because she got a story that I didn’t. So not only

  do I hate her, but I hate her for making me hate her.”

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  “That’s a lot of hate to be carrying around,” I said. “But

  what we’re working on could squash that.”

  “You aren’t going to know that until we follow the

  bread crumb trail to the end. Maybe we find something,

  maybe we don’t.”

  “I know there’s something at the end,” I said. “My

  brother didn’t die for nothing. Somebody had him killed.

  And I know whoever had him killed knows what 718 Enterprises is.”

  “You told me your brother was a courier,” Jack said.

  “Right?”

  “I think so. He was somewhere on the drug ladder, and

  not at the bottom.”

  “You think it’s a coincidence your brother gets killed—

  you claim by someone higher up on the food chain than

  he was—and then such a short time later this story breaks?”

  “I don’t know,” I said.

  “I think you have a feeling, the same one I do.You talked

  to Butch Willingham, you know my reporting on the Fury.”

  “I know you didn’t have enough to go on to report

  more than you did,” I said. “And that wasn’t much. If the

  Fury even exists.”

  Jack stared me down, backed me down, knowing what

  we both full well believed.

  “Twenty years ago,” Jack said, “I thought I was certain

  that there was some sort of kingpin, some sort of Wizard

  of Oz named the Fury. And for whatever reason, that

  person was eliminating midlevel drug dealers.”

  “Yeah, so?”

  “Paulina might have beaten us to the story, but I don’t

  think she got the full story. Not even close. If the Fury

  exists, he came to power in the eighties, right around the

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  time the crack epidemic was strangling the life out of

  New York. I don’t think that’s a coincidence.”

  “Go on,” I said. I felt that familiar rush.

  “Twenty years later, your brother is killed. Then this

  guy Ken Tsang is killed. Both around the same age, both

  likely somewhere on the totem pole in the drug game. And

  then Paulina’s article about this new drug, the Darkness,

  gets printed. Two dealers killed. A new drug hitting the

  streets. I think this person was instrumental during the

  eighties, and is now taking it to a whole new level.”

  “History repeats itself,” I said. “But this isn’t the same

  city as it was twenty years ago. I mean, between Giuliani

  and 9/11, you can’t argue that we’re not more secure.”

  “Security is all relative,” Jack said. “When the economy takes a turn for the worse, especially when it nosedives like it has, it breeds crime and corruption. They’re

  both sides of the same coin. You get one you get the

  other. You know the expression, ‘can’t see the forest for

  the trees,’ right?”

  “Of course.”

  “Right now, this city is staring at the forest. It’s looking

  at the big picture. Terrorism, biohazards, all noble and important things to be watching out for. In the eighties and

  nineties, we didn’t have to worry about things like that. So

  guys like Giuliani, Ray Kelly and Bill Bratton could look

  at it from the street level, the trees. There’s a reason Fortysecond Street looks like Walt Disney threw up all over it

  and not like hooker paradise anymore. Twenty years ago,

  the cops could look at the city through a microscope.

  Nowadays, they need to look at it via satellite. And when

  you look at things from a macro perspective, when you’re

  looking at rooftops and airplanes, you miss the rat holes.

  Beneath our noses, there’s something big brewing. And

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  whoever’s behind it is smart enough to know that this is

  the right time, and that we might be defenseless.”

  “Paulina’s story,” I said, “all it’s going to do is create

  demand for the product.”

  “Without a doubt. Nothing gets people motivated like

  being told they shouldn’t do something. Word of mouth

  takes a match to ignite it. For all of Paulina’s moxie in

  getting this story, I worry that she’s going to inadvertently

  do the exact opposite of alarming the public—she’s going

  to make them want it even more.”

  I suddenly felt nauseous. When I’d met with Paulina, she

  told me there was a quid pro quo with the man who kidnapped her and threatened her daughter. She would have

  to do something for him in order to keep her daughter safe.

  Now I knew what that quid pro quo was. And why

  it was asked.

  The blond man, the same one who’d killed Brett

  Kaiser, had told her to write the article. He’d gotten her

  all the information she needed, perhaps even fabricated

  a few quotes, and those were her “unnamed sources.”

  I’d never seen Paulina scared, and I’d never seen her

  lie. In the last few days I’d seen both. And they scared the

  hell out of me.

  Whoever the man was that asked her to write the ar
ticle

  knew that it would create an automatic demand for the

  product it featured. Paulina’s weapon was words, and

  he’d given her ammunition to forge something dangerous and potentially deadly.

  I had to tell Jack. This was getting too big. This man

  had scope and vision and knew exactly what getting to

  Paulina would do. Jack needed to know.

  And he was staring right at me. Knew full well I was

  thinking something.

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  But to my surprise, the look on Jack’s face wasn’t full

  of wonder at what I was thinking…it was one of disappointment because he knew I was hiding something.

  “Time to spill it, Henry,” he said. Jack’s face turned

  to stone. This was a look I hadn’t seen before, and immediately I felt awful, lying to the man I’d idolized for

  so long. The man who’d been my partner on this story,

  who was motivated to come back to work because of

  what I’d uncovered.

  I left that man in the dust, but now he’d caught up to me.

  “After the explosion at Brett Kaiser’s apartment…” I

  said, trying to look at Jack but finding it hard. Finally I

  met his eyes. “I got a call.”

  “From who?” Jack said. He said it as much just to get

  me to admit it as he did to find out the answer.

  “Paulina Cole.”

  If Jack’s face had been stone, this caused it to crack a

  bit. His eyes opened wider, mouth opened just enough to

  show the surprise on his face.

  “Paulina,” he said. “Why in God’s name…”

  “She was kidnapped,” I said, the dam bursting. But

  truth be told, it felt good.

  “Kidnapped? By who? And why the hell would she

  call you?”

  I could see Jack’s eyes reddening, but his anger at

  learning the truth was now tempered by his desire to

  know the full story. And he’d get it.

  “She doesn’t know,” I said. “But the man who did it

  threatened to kill her daughter.”

  “You know I always kind of assumed Paulina was

  some sort of devil spawn. I’m moderately surprised to

  learn that she has a reproductive system.”

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  “She thinks the guy who did it has connections in the

  NYPD. He said if she went to the cops he’d know.”

  “So she goes to you because you know cops you can

  trust.”

  “Partly, yeah.”

  “So what does she want from you?”

  “To help her find the man who did it.”

  “And in return, let me guess, you get the story.”

  I nodded. “That’s right.”

  “Jesus, Henry,” Jack said, tilting his head back, wiping

  his forehead with the tips of his fingers. “The story she

  wrote this morning, did you know it was going to run?”

  “No, I swear I didn’t.”

  “But?” Jack said.

  “But she told me she had to do something for him.

  That was the deal for him not to harm her daughter. My

  guess is the story this morning was what she promised,

  what he made her do.”

  “That would explain why the cops don’t know anything and why nobody would go on the record. Strange

  that for an article about a potential drug epidemic nobody

  from the narcotics division was quoted, or even knew

  about it.”

  “Or why the cops patrolling the streets haven’t heard

  about it.”

  “Today,” Jack said, taking a breath, “was the comingout party for this drug. Paulina’s story was the spark to

  get the Darkness into the mainstream. A cover story in a

  major New York newspaper will be read by over two

  million people, and another few million will see the

  headline and remember it.”

  “Word of mouth,” I said. “Best marketing in the world,

  and they got it for free.”

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  227

  Jack lowered his head. “They used us.”

  “There’s more,” I said. “I’m ninety-nine percent sure

  that the guy Chester who kidnapped Paulina is the same guy

  who killed Brett Kaiser. Physical descriptions matched.

  Curt Sheffield is helping me track him down, going off the

  physical info plus access to explosives and drugs.”

  “Do you think this guy,” Jack said, “could be the Fury?”

  “I don’t think so,” I said. “The descriptions from both

  Paulina and Kaiser’s doorman peg the suspect in his late

  thirties or early forties. It’s not impossible but I suspect

  twenty years ago he would have been a little too young

  to run a drug empire.”

  “So then he must be working for somebody,” Jack

  said. “Somebody smart enough to go after Paulina, and

  somebody powerful enough to have their fingers dug

  into the NYPD.”

  “So how the hell do we find out who this guy is?” I

  said. “Sheffield is looking into it, but if Paulina is right

  then most of my contacts in the department are useless.

  Paulina said this guy showed her a picture of her daughter

  that was part of an album posted on a social networking

  site. The way these things work is that the only people

  who have access to the pictures you post are the people

  you accept as friends.”

  “You’re saying this guy would be stupid enough to be

  her friend online?”

  “No,” I said. “But I think he found someone who was

  because this particular photo was left off the site. Paulina

  gave me a list of everyone her daughter is friends with.

  Jack, I know you’re used to typewriters and ink quills, but

  this is going to take some electronic legwork.”

  “I can use the Google,” Jack said.

  “Yeah…I was afraid you’d say that. The list is upstairs.

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  Forget about Victoria Kaiser for now. What we need to

  do is cross-check everyone on that list with Abigail Cole,

  if need be call everyone she’s friends with online.”

  “She’s in college, right? That could be hundreds of

  people.”

  “Good thing you don’t have any children, you won’t

  go into it knowing how damn difficult it is to talk to

  someone in their late teens or early twenties.”

  “You’re not that far from that age, Henry,” Jack said.

  “Yeah, I know. Why do you think I know they’re all

  nightmares?”

  Jack laughed. “Okay, sport, let’s go. Just one thing.”

  “What’s that?”

  “I accidentally spilled coffee on my keyboard. Can you

  ask the help desk for a new one? This would be my fourth

  and I don’t think they’ll give me another one.”

  “Sure,” I said. “Come on, George Jetson, let’s go find

  Mr. Joshua.”

  30

  I forgot what it was like to be a college student.

  Abigail Cole had one hundred and ninety-seven

  friends on Facebook. Many of them had public profiles,

  and from that I was able to glean phone numbers and

  sometimes e-mail addresses. To those who had e-mail addresses, I sent notes asking to speak to them in a matter

  pertaining
to an ongoing investigation. I clearly identified

  myself, hoping one would cop to giving Chester the

  photo.

  At least four of them picked up their cell phone during

  class. I could tell this because someone said quite audibly

  that if the phone wasn’t turned off posthaste, F would be

  merely the first of four letters on that student’s papers.

  When I was in college, one of my dreams was to have

  a beeper some day. As young as I was, sometimes I felt

  pretty old.

  Frustration began to seep in after I’d contacted nearly

  thirty of Abigail’s friends and made no headway. I wasn’t

  even sure how many of these people she was still close

  to, or whether or not they were real friends or just random

  friends-of-friends-of-friends.

  There had to be an easier way to do this. And just

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  when I was about to brainstorm what that was, Jack came

  walking over.

  He had a big smile on his face, the kind of smile that

  you didn’t often see on a man approaching seventy. This

  was more along the lines of a young child who’d accidentally discovered a hidden Christmas present that they

  didn’t expect to be there. Jack almost looked embarrassed

  to be happy.

  “What’s got you so toothy?” I said.

  “I think I found it,” he said.

  “Found what?”

  Jack took a chair from an empty cubicle and pulled it

  over to my desk. He laid a series of printouts in front of me.

  They looked to be from some sort of Web sites. They were

  chock-full of random ruminations, thoughts and pictures.

  “What is this?” I said.

  “Well,” Jack continued, the pride in his voice unmistakable, “I took the list of all of Abigail Cole’s online

  friends. I did every kind of search imaginable—Google,

  Yahoo, LexisNexis, you name it—and cross-referenced

  her name along with Web sites that contained photos. I

  figured if somebody had access to personal photos, they

  might have had access even earlier than when Paulina was

  first taken.”

  “Why would you assume that?” I said.

  “Whoever took Paulina wanted her to write that article

  to help publicize the Darkness. Which means these plans

  have been in the works for a lot longer than the little time

  gone by since her abduction. This blond guy needed to

  know how to get to Paulina well before he actually did

  it, meaning he needed to be sure of who had access to her

  daughter’s photos ahead of time. So when I did all that…I

 

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