The Darkness (2009)

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The Darkness (2009) Page 29

by Jason - Henry Parker 05 Pinter


  “Jack, come on…”

  “It’s us or nothing now, Henry,” he said. “I don’t trust

  anyone in this city and I won’t until we know what the

  hell is going on.”

  I heard my cell phone beep. I took it out, saw I had a

  text message. It was from Curt Sheffield.

  Four people dead in midtown hi-rise. Looks like a

  triple murder-suicide. Bags of the Darkness found all

  over the place. One of the victims was Lil’ Leroy.

  I snapped the phone shut. “This is not good,” I said.

  “What happened?”

  “According to Curt, they found four bodies, one of whom

  was LeRoy Culvert, also known as the rapper Lil’ Leroy.”

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  “Damn,” Jack said. “He’s famous enough that even

  I’ve heard of him.”

  “He was found with three other bodies, and they’re all

  dead, drawn and quartered. I mean the place looks like a

  bloody Rorschach test. And apparently the cops found

  drugs at the scene. Darkness.”

  Jack lowered his head.

  “There’s something else…” I said. “Somebody wrote

  ‘Fury’ on one of the walls. In blood.”

  “Just like Butch Willingham. This is how the bloodshed

  begins. This is how it starts. Things will only get worse.”

  “This will be all over the papers tomorrow,” I said.

  “Front-page stuff, probably, and it will go national. The

  Fury only killed dealers. And once people know what

  kind of drugs Culvert was killed over…”

  “People all over the country will want it.”

  “Guy had to be worth millions,” I said. “Always saw

  him drinking expensive champagne and hanging out on

  yachts. Guy like that only indulges in the good stuff.

  Killing him creates instant demand. This is the best marketing money could buy.”

  “I’ve never seen anything like this,” Jack said. “Even

  crack…it took a while to seep in. This drug sounds like

  it’s already swimming in the city’s bloodstream, polluting it from the inside out.”

  “And people are literally dying to get their own

  taste,” I said. Then I went into my wallet and pulled out

  a piece of paper.

  Jack’s eyes widened. “You didn’t give that to the

  cops?” he said.

  I opened the money order made out to Morgan Isaacs,

  looked at it.

  “Like you said, I don’t trust anybody either now. This

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  is our only lead. And even though I trust Curt, I don’t trust

  the whole department. We lose this, it might never be

  seen again.”

  “Henry, this is dangerous,” Jack said. “You could get

  in trouble for that.”

  “I don’t care,” I said. “This isn’t about a story anymore.

  It’s about stopping whatever the hell is happening to this

  city.”

  “Leonard Reeves,” Jack said. “Who the hell is he?”

  “Let’s find out. His name is on this order. He has to

  live and work in the city. And I’ll bet he has some connection to 718 Enterprises. And maybe to my brother.”

  “So, what, you think we can just dial four-one-one and

  the operator will connect us?” Jack said.

  “No, but guy like this has to be connected. He has to

  have access to a large amount of money, or at least people

  who can get it. I want to use my LexisNexis account, see

  what we can find.”

  “Great, let’s go to the office.”

  “No way,” I said. “Like you said, trust no one. We’re

  doing this from my apartment.”

  “Your apartment? Won’t your lady friend mind?”

  “Her name is Amanda,” I said, slightly annoyed.

  “You’ve met her. You know that.”

  Jack nodded. “You’re right. I’m sorry. You guys

  doing well?”

  “Just fine,” I said.

  “Glad to hear it.”

  I laughed. “Come on, Jack. We both know it wasn’t too

  long ago you told me to dump her in so many words. And

  I stupidly listened to you, and it almost ruined my life to

  do it. I trust your relationship advice as much as I trust

  your recommendations on aftershave.”

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  “You do what you want,” Jack said. “I’m in no position

  to judge anyone. I do seem to remember you standing

  over me in a puddle of my own puke.”

  “Glad you remember that,” I said. “Not exactly either

  of our finer moments.”

  “Not something I’ll want brought up in my eulogy.

  Come on, let’s see what we can find out.”

  “You’ll behave yourself?” I said.

  “What do you think I am?” Jack said, finishing the last

  of his coffee and dropping a few singles on the table. He

  wiped at his shirt where a few drops of black liquid had

  stained it. “Uncouth?”

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  I turned the key in the lock. Amanda was staying at my

  place tonight. Odds were she was asleep and I didn’t

  want to wake her.

  But when I turned the knob and opened the door,

  Amanda was sitting on the couch, a beer in her hand,

  staring at the door like she’d been patiently waiting for a

  toaster to go off.

  The room smelled like flowers, and I could tell she’d

  been burning one of her scented candles. A copy of a Nora

  Roberts book lay dog-eared on the table, and a spoon

  covered in chocolate lay next to it.

  She wasn’t one of those girls who did that kind of thing

  often. She didn’t eat ice cream when she was depressed,

  didn’t have a weakness for chick flicks or romance

  novels. At least not for the same reasons as most people.

  Amanda only did those things when she was nervous,

  when taking her mind far away from the real world. When

  reality was too frightening a place to be in.

  When she saw me, Amanda slowly stood up, came

  over and threw her arms around me. I felt a cold splash

  of beer drip down my back, but I didn’t care. I closed my

  eyes and hugged her back.

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  “I’m going to have to install a GPS device on you,” she

  said. I laughed. Then she pulled her head from the crook

  of my neck and kissed me hard. I pressed my lips against

  her, held her tight.

  I felt her hand travel down my lower back until she was

  cupping my butt. It felt great, and for a moment I totally

  forgot that I hadn’t come home alone.

  Then Amanda saw him and shrieked.

  “Mr. O’Donnell?” Amanda said, her arms still around

  me, but her hand jerking away like she’d touched a hot

  stove.

  “Sorry to intrude, Ms. Davies,” he said. “Your boyfriend and I have been through a lot today, and we unfortunately have to take up a little more of your time.”

  “Henry?” she said. “What’s going on?”

  “We found something at the scene,” I said. “A document

  that we hope will connect the guy who killed Hollinsworth

  to 718 Enterprises. We just need to find out who he is.”

  “And then what?” she said. “
You’re going to call the

  cops?”

  I looked at Jack. He shrugged, as if to say this is all yours.

  I turned back to Amanda. Her arms had slipped from

  my shoulders. I took her hand, held it, but she was reluctant to hold on.

  “Not yet,” I said.

  “Why not?”

  “Somebody knew we were meeting Hollinsworth. I

  don’t know how they found out, but until we know who

  did it we’re going to play this pretty close to the vest.”

  She nodded, understanding it though it was clear she

  wasn’t happy about it.

  Then she looked at Jack, said, “How are you? Feeling better?”

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  Jack smiled. “I am. Thank you for asking.”

  “So get on with it,” Amanda said. “If you don’t mind,

  I stopped reading in the middle of a really good sex scene.

  Have you ever heard the term ‘purple-headed warrior’?”

  “Uh, no,” I said, “but whatever floats your boat.”

  “I think the warrior in this book does float,” she said, “at

  least according to the narrator. His ‘mast’ sounds big

  enough to sail down the Amazon. Anyway, good luck,

  guys.”

  Amanda went back to the sofa, lay down, kicked her

  feet up and dove back into the book.

  “She’s a pistol,” Jack said.

  “Sure is. Here, we can sit at the table.”

  Jack took a seat at our meager dining room table as I

  hooked up my laptop. Once I powered it on, I accessed

  LexisNexis and did a search for Leonard Reeves.

  Half a dozen hits came up. I opened the first one.

  It was from The Daily Princetonian, the student newspaper at Princeton University. We searched through the

  highlighted article and finally came across the name

  Leonard Reeves. The passage read:

  The Princeton economics department, spearheaded by

  Professor Sheila DeWitt, has seen its fair number of notable

  professionals in the fields of finance and economics.

  The article was accompanied by a photo of a middleaged black woman who must have been Professor DeWitt.

  She was standing at the front of a small classroom. Two

  students were visible in the front row. One was a girl, early

  twenties, with a ponytail and wearing a skirt and blouse.

  The man was dressed in slacks and a button-down shirt,

  his hair short, and he wore glasses. The caption read:

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  Rachel Vine ’93 and Leonard Reeves ’94 are capti-

  vated by the renowned professor.

  “Is that him?” Jack said.

  “I don’t know. Let’s see the next article.”

  I pulled up the next search result. It was from Crain’s

  business daily. The article was from 1998, and the headline

  was: Economic Boom Sees Rise in Dot Com Investors.

  We found Leonard Reeves’s name halfway through the

  piece. It read:

  Flush with cash, many young men and women who

  have prospered during unparalleled growth are putting their money into what many consider to be

  risky investments—namely Web sites and Internet

  domains. Leonard Reeves, a graduate of the Princeton economics department and executive at Morgan

  Stanley, admits to finding thrill in such a venture.

  “You don’t get into this industry to watch from

  the sidelines,” said Reeves. “The people who take

  the biggest risks reap the biggest rewards.”

  Reeves, who already owns three apartments in

  New York City, says he plans to take his earnings

  from Internet ventures and invest even further in the

  housing market.

  “Man, that can’t have worked out too well for him,”

  Jack said.

  “Holy crap,” I said.

  “What?”

  “Look, there.” I pointed to the next article. The headline said it all.

  The piece was from 2001, and was published in the

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  Wall Street Journal. It read: Reeves Named as Liaison to

  New York City Department of Finance.

  The article was also accompanied by a photograph. It

  was definitely the same guy from the Princetonian article.

  “He worked for the government?” Jack said. “You’ve

  got to be kidding me.”

  I sat there, stunned. How was that possible? Could this

  have been the same guy?

  The other articles were not dated any later than 2004,

  and all were references to Reeves’s job with the DoF. There

  were no other hits for the name, nothing else came up.

  “It has to be him,” I said. “But I don’t get it. If this is

  the same Reeves as on the order made out to Morgan

  Isaacs, what the hell is someone who worked for the government and who worked for one of the biggest brokerage

  firms in the world doing associated with 718 Enterprises?

  I mean, these people are drug dealers, plain and simple,

  and the crap they’re producing is killing people. How did

  someone like Reeves get connected to that?”

  Jack sat there, thinking. Not listening to me, but lost

  in his own thoughts. Then I heard Amanda’s voice from

  the couch.

  “What if Reeves didn’t just use to work for the government?” she said. “I mean, what if he still does?”

  “That’s crazy,” I said. “Obviously Reeves fell on hard

  times somehow and ended up selling his soul for a pile

  of black rocks.”

  “Not necessarily,” Jack said.

  “What do you mean?”

  “Have you ever heard of the name Gary Webb?”

  “It rings a bell, but I’m not sure why.”

  “Okay, well, have you heard of the Dark Alliance?”

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  “That’s a little more familiar,” I replied. “Something

  about Nicaragua, right?”

  “Something like that,” Jack said. “In the eighties, Gary

  Webb was a reporter for the San Jose Mercury News. ”

  “Now it rings a bell,” I said.

  “What does he have to do with this?” Amanda said.

  “In nineteen ninety-six, Webb published a three-part

  series of articles in the Mercury News called ‘Dark Alliance.’ See, in the eighties, President Reagan was embroiled

  in the Iran-Contra affair where it was determined that the

  U.S. government had supplied a group of Nicaraguan

  Contras with financial aid through the sale of weapons to

  Iran, in part thanks to our buddy Oliver North. Our government was supporting the Contras as part of the Reagan

  doctrine, which supported organizations that opposed communistic and socialistic regimes. The Nicaraguan government in the eighties, let’s just say, fit the bill.

  “Webb claimed in his articles,” Jack continued, “that

  not only did we supply the Contras with funds through the

  sale of weapons, but through the sale of drugs as well.”

  “That’s ridiculous. We weren’t selling drugs,” Amanda

  said.

  “We weren’t,” Jack said. “But the Contras were reaping

  millions of dollars through the sale of drugs within the

  United States. Crack cocaine spread like wildfire through

  urban areas in the eighties, and much of the money from

  those sales went directly into fund
ing the Contras. Webb

  claimed that members of the NSC, or National Security

  Council, were aware that money from drug sales in the

  U.S. was being funneled to the Contras. Webb found out

  that not only was our government aware of this, but

  members of the NSC purposefully withheld that information from the Drug Enforcement Agency. They felt that

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  by curtailing drug sales and cracking down on shipments,

  we would effectively stem the flow of money to the

  Contras and in turn hurt their efforts to overthrow Nicaragua’s communist FSLN government.”

  “So in essence,” I said, “they were selling drugs in our

  cities, killing our citizens and choking the national crime

  rates. And we turned a blind eye because we felt it pushed

  our agenda in another country.”

  “Pretty much,” Jack said. “When Webb published

  these articles, he caused a firestorm unlike many seen in

  journalism. It was without a doubt one of the most controversial articles of the past twenty-five years. So what

  happened to Webb? Well, he was completely discredited

  by the government which issued denials faster than meter

  maids issue parking tickets. He was eventually pushed out

  of the Mercury News, and after years in which he failed

  to get another job at a major newspaper, Webb put a gun

  to his head and pulled the trigger.”

  “Damn,” Amanda said.

  “Twice,” Jack added.

  “Twice? How does someone shoot themselves in the

  head twice?”

  “Don’t get your panties in a bunch,” Jack said. I glared

  at him. “Apologies, Ms. Davies. Sometimes I forget that

  I’m around a lady.”

  “This lady thinks she could kick your old ass,” Amanda

  said.

  “Now that’s my kind of lady,” Jack said. “Hold on to

  this firebrand, Henry. Anyway, common thought was that

  Webb had been bumped off. But it turns out Webb was

  genuinely depressed and had written despondent letters

  to his family. And an autopsy and gun residue test proved

  that the man really did shoot himself twice. It doesn’t

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  happen often, but it does happen if the suicidal person

  happens to have lousy aim.”

  “So, what, you think the sale of drugs in New York

  City is being funneled to, who, some shady overseas organization? Some anti-Taliban fighting squad?”

  “Not at all,” Jack said. “If what I’m thinking is correct

  at all, and if this guy Reeves is connected the way I

 

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