David Ellis - Breach of Trust

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On Monday, Christmas Eve, I got it into my head that I was going to dismantle Emily Jane’s room-remove the crib and the custom rocking chair and changing table, tear down the Beatrix Potter wallpaper, repaint the walls something neutral, and move on with my life. I got as far as walking into the room before my blood went cold and the breath was whisked from my lungs.

It was odd to me how it all worked. On a daily basis, it was Talia who came into my mind more frequently. We’d spent so much time together, so many memories and experiences. Emily came in just at the end, a last, brief chapter in the book-three short months, most of which I spent tied up in the Almundo trial. I didn’t remember her face like Talia’s. Little things didn’t remind me of Emily like they constantly did of my wife.

And yet, if I thought of Emily less often, it was more jarring when I did. It’s easy to say the obvious thing, the absolute grotesqueness of a life lost after only three months. Barbaric enough to shake your faith, as it had mine. Sure. Of course. But there was more to it. We hadn’t connected enough, Emily and me. Not yet. I can say all the right things-my love for her, my utter devotion-but the truth, I think, is that that kind of bond develops over time, and I simply hadn’t had the time. I didn’t love Emily Jane in the same way I loved Talia, or as much as I would have loved her over time. That, I had come to realize, is what bothered me as much as anything: I didn’t get the chance to love my daughter as much as I was supposed to.

When the doorbell rang, I lifted my face out of the comforter on my bed. It was dark outside my window, which meant it was probably five in the evening, at least. I didn’t know how long I’d been asleep, or if I’d even been technically asleep at all. I went to the mirror and saw hair standing in every direction, swollen eyes, and a line running south to southwest across my cheek from the pillow. But I made up for it with a fashionably wrinkled t-shirt and cut-off sweats. The doorbell rang again, and then I heard my cell phone buzzing where I had left it apparently, on the floor of Emily’s bedroom. Whatever. I figured the phone caller was the impatient person at the front door, and it took me one second to narrow the candidates down to one.

I was wrong. It wasn’t Shauna. It was Charlie.

“Jesus, kid,” he said when I opened the door. “Did I wake you?”

He was in an expensive coffee-colored coat and cream scarf. A bit more nattily attired than I.

“I was giving myself a pedicure.” It fell flat. Shauna would have laughed.

“Merry Christmas,” he said. He handed me a package in silver wrapping. A shoe box.

I shook it. “And here I didn’t get you anything. You want to come in?”

“No. Wife’s waiting in the car.” He nodded at me. “Go ahead. Open it.”

I did. It was a shoe box. But it didn’t contain shoes.

It was cash. Crisp, clean hundred-dollar bills wrapped neatly in bands.

Five thousand dollars in cash.

“Charlie, I–I-”

“You’re doing great, kid. That’s a thank-you. We’re gonna have a great 2008.”

“Charlie-”

“Get something for your lady friend,” he said. “Shauna, right? The one you went to the movies with Friday night?”

Our eyes met. This wasn’t a casual remark. He wanted me to know.

“You two close? Share each other’s secrets? That kind of thing?”

“Charlie,” I said, “are you tailing me?”

He made a compromising noise from his throat, like I was overreacting. “I’m protecting my investment.”

“Don’t,” I said.

“What do you tell her about us?” he asked.

“I don’t. I don’t tell her anything about what we’re doing.”

“You’re sure.”

“I’m sure that you better stop tailing me, Charlie.”

“Listen, kid.” He spoke out of the side of his mouth. “I know she’s a great piece of ass, and I know you want to show her what a swell guy you are. But I’m telling you, women? They come and go. What’s a secret today is something she’ll tell all her friends tomorrow. And who knows? It ends badly? Maybe she calls a reporter or a cop or something.”

“Charlie, I don’t want you-”

He waved me off. “You want me paranoid, kid. You need me that way. And I need you that way. Just make sure Shauna doesn’t have any idea what goes on between you and me. Don’t make her a liability.”

He clapped his hand on my shoulder. “Hey, all this seriousness. I really just wanted to give you that present. You deserve it. There’s gonna be a lot more where that came from.”

He headed for the door.

“Don’t go near Shauna, Charlie,” I said.

He waved as he walked out the door.

“Don’t give me a reason to, kid,” he said.

38

The weather outside was delightful, but my mood was rather frightful. Christmas Day. The air was crisp and the temperatures low. The sun was making an occasional appearance that lit up the light blanket of snow. All in all, it was a nice day outside, which sort of pissed me off. I went for a pretty good run through the quiet neighborhood streets of the city. When I got back, spent and sweaty, I had nothing else to do with my day.

So I got in my car and went for a drive. Talia and I used to do that on weekends. We’d drive around the various neighborhoods and check out their vibe, look at homes for sale and even walk through their open-house tours. Thinking about our next place to live, something I couldn’t afford on an assistant county attorney’s salary at the time, but it was fun to dream.

I thought of Charlie’s friendly visit last night, letting me know he was watching me. I checked my rearview mirror but there was pretty much nobody driving. I wasn’t being followed.

I drove in a different direction than usual this time. I drove to the southwest side. It was exceptionally quiet, almost barren, on Christmas Day. The area was overwhelmingly Latino and, therefore, overwhelmingly Catholic. Nothing was open. The housing was humble. Small and packed tightly together. I drove past Liberty Park, the scene of Ernesto Ramirez’s death, a shiver passing through me. Then I turned left-south-and drove a couple of blocks, then west for another couple, then south again and looked for the signs for 6114 South Hastings.

Ernesto Ramirez’s family lived on the bottom floor of a three-story brick building. Beyond a waist-high fence and a very tiny garden, dormant this time of year, was a concrete walk-up and side-by-side red doors, one for the Ramirez family and the other for the staircase leading to the upper floors.

From my view in my car, I could see a Christmas tree in the window of the Ramirez apartment. A tiny figure passed by, a head full of dark hair and pigtails. Presumably the daughter, the six-year-old, Mercedes. I got out of the car, went through the gate, and took the walk-up to the front door. I could hear them from my perch, the muffled sounds of children shouting and adults laughing inside the apartment. I was glad, almost relieved to hear it. This couldn’t have been a good holiday for the Ramirez family. I poised my finger over the button for RAMIREZ but decided against it. I left the shopping bag on the stoop and walked back down. I was walking around to the driver’s side of the car when I heard her voice.

“Hello.”

I turned around. Essie Ramirez was standing where I’d just stood, her arms folded to keep warm. She was wearing a forest-green turtleneck and blue jeans. Her breath lingered in the frigid air outside.

I waved to her. “Merry Christmas.”

“Same to you.” She looked down into the shopping bag. “Presents?”

“For your kids,” I said.

“Come in,” she said.

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