The Good Boy

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The Good Boy Page 21

by Schwegel, Theresa


  “A witness says a dog jumped the fence and bit someone. She thinks that’s what caused the shooting. I went back to the scene. I found dog hair. It was Butch’s. They were there—”

  “How could you know?”

  Pete raises his right hand. “Expert testimony.”

  Ri shakes her head back and forth. “No,” she says. “No.”

  “The kid who’s taking the rap for the shooting isn’t talking. The kid who got shot isn’t talking. But what I’m piecing together is that the victim is covering for the shooter, and the shooter is covering for someone else. And I think that someone else is part of a group of fucking Four Corner Hustlers.”

  “Hustlers in Uptown? I thought the Black P Stones and the Vice Lords were the only ones left killing each other there.”

  “These guys came from the west side. Associates of the shooter.”

  “But they’re on the radar, right?”

  “There is no radar. Shit: there are no witnesses.”

  “What about the girl who saw Butch?”

  “Deemed unreliable as soon as the state’s attorney heard the shooter’s confession. He made a quick deal.”

  “What about the kid who got bit?”

  “Might as well be a ghost.”

  “McKenna?”

  “She didn’t see anything. She was too busy trying to get unconscious.”

  “Nobody else from the party?”

  “Nobody.”

  “There is another witness,” Rima says.

  Pete knew she’d get it. “I’m afraid…” he starts to say; this time he stops because he knows she gets that, too. Joel. She means Joel.

  Rima studies him like she’s trying to read his mind and then she says, “You’re the only one looking for him.”

  “Sarah called the police.”

  “So you’re the only one looking now.”

  “She thinks he ran away. I think he’s on the run. I guess we’re covering both angles.”

  “What do you want me to do?” She knew that, too.

  “The shooter knows at least one of the Hustlers from when he did time. They went to York together. I need the class list. You know anybody down there?”

  “I don’t, but I know who does. What’s the shooter’s name?”

  “Zack Fowler.”

  “Zack Fowler,” she repeats, then gets up and disappears into her bedroom.

  Pete sits there, the ceiling fan lifting the edges of the newspaper pages on the coffee table. Funny: Ri must’ve known about Ja’Kobe White when Pete came in; could be why she bird-caged the paper. He wonders where the front page is, and thinks of Butch. The thought—the dog out there with Joel—gives him hope.

  “Peoples,” he hears Ri say, her side of a conversation. He loses the next bit, her voice muffled by the three-quarter wall.

  Then she says, “York Alternative. I don’t know, last year? Year before? Fowler. Zack.”

  And then: “How about every kid who picked up a pencil when he was there.”

  After that, she goes silent, and Pete wonders if she’s on hold or if she struck out.

  When she comes out of the bedroom, she’s wearing a red leather coat over her shoulders and one glossy blue rain boot, the other in her free hand. With the flour-dusted pants and the winter cap, she looks like a deconstructed American flag.

  She says, “I love you too,” to the phone; she’s so affectionate and also so sarcastic, Pete can’t tell which note she hit there. Then she hangs up and says, “Leroy Peoples will help.”

  “Who’s Leroy Peoples?”

  “My parole officer. Or—you know—he’s the one who gives me the manatees.” She pulls on her other boot.

  “What are you doing?”

  “I’m taking you to him.” She gets her bag. “I mean, you’re taking me to him.”

  * * *

  Rima backseat drives from the moment she gets in the car until Pete exits the Kennedy and parks in front of Skybridge, the Loop high-rise that Leroy Peoples calls home. It’s about forty stories of steel connected by glass bridges, an architectural achievement with a thousand bird’s-eye views.

  “Nice digs for a PO,” Pete says.

  “Leroy used to have a seat at the Merc. Said he got tired of working with rich crooks. Now he works with regular ones.”

  Pete looks up through the windshield. The building reaches farther than he can see. Tomorrowland. “Joel would love this place.” He kills the engine.

  “You stay here,” Ri says, unbuckling her seat belt. “Call Sarah.” She gets out, leaving room for a pretty empty argument.

  McKenna answers on the fifth ring. “Hello.”

  “Where’s mom?” Pete asks.

  “Outside talking to the neighbors.”

  “Have the police arrived?”

  “Not yet.”

  “What are you up to?”

  “Oh, you know, sitting here wishing I’d been the one who took off.”

  “You’re still in trouble, if that’s any consolation.”

  “Whatever. You know when you bring Joely back you guys won’t even be pissed at him for one second. And I’m the one who’s in trouble? This is so fucking stupid.”

  “I can tell you what’s fucking…” Pete clenches his teeth and he could crush the phone in his hand. He holds it away from his face and takes a deep breath. How can she be so flip at a time like this? When you bring Joely back you guys won’t even be pissed at him for one second. How does she know they won’t be pissed?

  And how does she know Pete’s going to bring him back?

  She knows something. She’s not saying. Just like Joel, when he was covering for her.

  He puts the phone to his ear. “McKenna. Do you remember when I picked you up from Zack Fowler’s, and you started to tell me what happened?”

  “You said you didn’t want to know. You didn’t want me to be a witness.”

  “That was before your brother went missing.”

  “You’re the police, can’t you figure it out?”

  “If you know something, McKenna, and it could help find Joel—”

  “Well, I don’t know where he went.”

  “Was he there, at the party?”

  Silence.

  “McKenna. Did you see your brother there?”

  “No. But someone said—there was a dog. I tried to tell you, but you told me not to—”

  “I know what I said, McKenna. I’m asking now. Was it Butch?”

  “I don’t know—no—why would they go there?”

  “Looking for you.”

  “That’s ridiculous,” she says, but she’s trying so hard to play it off that she sounds like she’s agreeing with him.

  “I wouldn’t expect you to admit it if you thought he did, McKenna, because then you’d have to wonder whether any of this falls on you. Isn’t that right?”

  “Me? What about you? You’re the one who put us here.” She probably means the house; she hates the house. Still, the way she said it: he put them there. Like he set them down, little dolls, and left.

  And maybe he did.

  “McKenna,” he says.

  “What?”

  “Go get your mother.”

  Pete hears the phone clatter on the counter. He feels like an asshole, the interrogation—he must’ve hurt McKenna’s feelings—also, it didn’t work. If she knows something about Joel, Pete isn’t going to get it out of her—just like Joel, she’s no snitch. Jesus. Did he teach them that?

  He checks his rearview, noticing the stream of customers in and out of the coffee shop behind him. He could use another cup. Might put his brain back in charge, get rid of the snivels.

  “Pete, where are you?” Sarah asks when she picks up, concern taking the edge off.

  “I’m downtown.”

  “I don’t understand. What’s downtown? You think Joel is downtown?”

  “No. Listen. I’ll be back soon. Are the police there?”

  “You got my message.”

  Obviously.
<
br />   She says, “I’m still waiting for them. After I called they told me to go to the station, like you said. After I filed the report, the officer I spoke to assured me he was sending someone over. But now I can’t get a hold of him, and nobody else with a nightstick seems to know who’s supposed to be here.”

  “Do you want me to act surprised?”

  “No, thanks.”

  “So what’s next?”

  “I have no idea. Another casserole? Mrs. Moeller just left—from across the street? She’s the third neighbor to bring food—like what, our son goes missing and we suddenly crave bread?—she’s also the third neighbor to remark about how I’m handling this so well. Do you think I’m handling this well? I’m a fucking mess. All this time I’d been thinking there’s something wrong with Joel and now I can’t picture him doing anything wrong. I just can’t believe he’d leave us. What if he’s—”

  “Sarah,” Pete stops her. “Don’t play what-if.”

  “What do you expect? It’s part of the waiting game, Pete.”

  “Is there anybody on the list you haven’t talked to?”

  “There is that girl, Molly Skinner—the one Jo Jo plays with on the other side of Rosehill? She lives with her grandma, and I haven’t been able to get an answer there all morning. I was thinking of leaving McKenna and going over, except that she’s been a fucking mess today.”

  “Why?”

  “Worried, of course. And hung over, I would guess. She looks it. And get this: she actually turned away a couple of boys who came by today—this weasel Danny Sanchez and another I’ve never met…”

  Something about Sarah—her composure, maybe—makes Pete wonder if she’s lost her mind. He remembers her standing in McKenna’s doorway last night with his phone, his coffee. He thought she must’ve heard them talking about the party, or the diet pills, at least. The look on her face was a picture of hurt that would be etched in his brain for years, the way images are when emotions are amplified. How can she be so seemingly normal now?

  “… Said he’d just moved from Texas. He seemed nice enough but McKenna’s reaction was weird, weird, weird. I thought maybe she was embarrassed—she hadn’t showered—but I also thought she’d have it in her to tack up her hair and tell them about Joel. I never thought she’d duck a social call by her own free will—”

  Rima throws open the car door and sits down. She’s unfocused and blinking rapidly and breathing through her mouth and she doesn’t look at him, which is the one thing that worries him.

  “Sarah,” he says, “I have to go—”

  “Are you kidding? You haven’t told me where you are. I need to know what’s going on. What am I supposed to tell the police?”

  “What?” Pete asks Ri, over Sarah.

  “Hang up,” she says; in her hand, she clutches what is presumably the list.

  “Who’s that?” Sarah asks.

  “Let me call you back.”

  “Oh no, Pete, you can’t just leave me in the lurch here—”

  “We both want him home, Sarah. I’ll call you back.”

  He ends the call, turns to Ri, and asks again, “What?”

  She turns over the top of three stapled pages and hands them over. “I’m sorry.”

  The second page reads, “Consuella B. York Alternative High School Summer Program: June 11–July 27.” Pete skips over the inmate numbers and scans the alphabetically listed names until he finds Fowler, Zack.

  Then he goes back to the top, waiting for a name to stick out at him; the only one is near the end of the list.

  It’s White, Bernard.

  “Oh. Rima. White? It’s a common name. You don’t think he’s related—”

  She holds a fingertip to her blue lips. “You think Joel’s on the run. Sarah thinks he ran away. Me? I think someone took him.”

  The same suspicion must have been lurking somewhere deep in Pete’s brain, maybe because of Sarah, because now that Ri said it out loud, it seems all too possible.

  He starts the engine to fire up his Toughbook, fishes ten bucks from his pocket, and hands it to Rima. “Get us some coffee and we’ll sit here and run the names through ICLEAR.”

  “Can we do that?”

  “Do you mean legally or actually?”

  “I mean, won’t it take forever? These guys are all criminals.”

  “You have a better idea?”

  “I have an idea about Bernard White. It probably isn’t better.” She gets out of the car.

  Pete waits until she’s out of sight to absorb the shock.

  18

  Joel wakes up with drool strung from his lip to where it’s pooled on the Rand McNally directory, this afternoon’s pillow. He sits up, wipes his mouth, and feels the imprint the map’s spiral binding left on his cheek.

  The sun is in the western sky now, glinting white off the river and finding new angles to shine through the tree cover. The water’s soft ripple softens the racket of traffic bounding over the Diversey Bridge.

  He stretches his arms and finds Butchie at his side, tail going.

  “Hey, Lieutenant Commander,” he says. “You get some shut-eye?”

  Butchie hunkers down, ears back, submissive.

  “What’s wrong?” Joel starts to ask, a big yawn interrupting the question.

  He checks his watch: it reads 1400, which means he’s been out for two hours. “You shouldn’t have let me sleep so long.”

  Butchie rolls onto his side, top leg limp, exposing his belly.

  That’s not submission; that’s guilt.

  “What happened?”

  Butchie could wag his tail all day, but it’s no answer.

  The answer happens to be behind Joel, on the ground, where the contents of his backpack have been pulled out, strewn, picked over. There, among his sweatshirt, White Fang, and the walkie-talkie sits the chewed-through cellophane that used to be a bag and used to contain the remaining kaiser roll.

  “Butchie,” Joel says, watching him squirm. Joel picks up the slimy, slobbered cellophane, holds it over the dog’s head and asks, “What is this?”

  Butchie turns, nose up, trying to shy away from the evidence.

  “Did you eat this? Did you eat our dinner?”

  “Hurr-erumm,” he says, a poor excuse.

  “Bad dog,” Joel says, his sternest voice.

  Butchie can’t take it: he gets on his feet and skulks away, tail tucked.

  “Bad dog,” Joel says again, even though he knows it’s his fault, too. He didn’t zip his pack before he fell asleep and that means he let the opportunity present itself. Still, the bread was all they had left. And Butchie knows better.

  “Hey,” he says. “You’re in charge of dinner.”

  Butchie looks back, then curls up against the fence, tail over his nose, and lets his eyes get heavy. Doesn’t inspire much confidence in his hunting skills.

  Joel opens Rand McNally to the index and finds the Cook County Circuit Court at 2600 S. California. The court, like every other listing, has a three-part code: one refers to a map, another to something called a CGS, and the third, a grid. He found the map, but he wasn’t able to crack the rest of the code before he fell asleep.

  Now, he figures out the grid is an easier version of longitude and latitude—his latest lesson in geography class—and as he narrows his search to a single grid-cube, he finds two red and yellow gavel symbols between the York Alternative School and the House of Corrections. They must mark the court.

  From there, he traces east until he finds Oakley, then follows Oakley north until the map runs out and a four-digit number—probably the CGS—points to another map.

  That map takes him up Oakley to North Avenue, and the CGS there takes him to a map that pinpoints their location on Diversey. Apparently they are on the other side of the fence from a place called the Lathrop Homes, and apparently it takes only three maps to get from where they are to where they want to be.

  He can’t believe it. A whole complicated book and only three maps? Makes the
trip seem like an inch inside miles and miles.

  “We can make it,” Joel tells Butchie, who lifts his ears, but not his eyelids.

  He dog-ears each map, certain whoever came up with the term didn’t have a German shepherd or a Belgian Malinois—Butchie’s ears don’t bend that way—and studies 2997, the map that shows their current whereabouts and wheretobes. It looks like the best way is over the Diversey Bridge to Western Avenue, though his dad says Western should have a border patrol since crossing over is like going to another country. To Joel, though, the alternatives look much more dangerous: the first takes them back toward the police station and the second, Damen Avenue, goes right past his dad’s friend Rima’s apartment. Joel has only been there once, but he remembers the street is real busy—lots of outdoor restaurants and shopping—and anyway, it’d be just his luck to run right into her.

  Joel decides on Diversey and puts Rand McNally aside.

  He gets the walkie-talkie going, presses the code key and transmits M-O-L-L-Y in Morse. If she’s got her radio on, she won’t be able to interpret the code—she doesn’t know it—but she’ll definitely hear the tone; that way, Joel won’t give himself away if Grandma Sandee hears, too.

  He’s about to retransmit the tones when—

  “Joel!”

  “It’s me.”

  “Oh my gosh,” Molly says. “I was right about to call up your house, even though I’ve been ignoring calls from your house all day—I even turned the ringers off on both phones so my grandma wouldn’t hear. Your mom’s been calling like every twenty minutes. Where are you?”

  She hasn’t once let go of her Talk button, so Joel couldn’t answer even if he wanted to.

  “You have to tell me everything,” she says. “Do you know I watched the news with my grandma this morning? There was nothing about you or the shooting or anything. But then when she went to church I went on the computer and I found a report about the shooting. Zack Fowler is like, incapacitated. He says he did it. Joel?”

  “I’m here.”

  “I thought you said some other boy did it. But Murph, they say Zack’s going to be like, charged as an adult, and that he’s going to jail. This must be, like, payback for Felis Catus. Serves him right—you can’t be mean to animals. I mean, kids who do that turn into serial killers. Like the Green Man who escaped from that mental hospital in the suburbs, remember?”

 

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