Brad Parks - Eyes of the Innocent
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- Название:Eyes of the Innocent
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- Издательство:Minotaur Books
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- Год:2011
- ISBN:0312574789
- Рейтинг книги:3 / 5. Голосов: 1
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Eyes of the Innocent: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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It gave me the window I felt I needed to see if I could bait her a little.
“You and your husband didn’t seem to spend much time together,” I offered.
“We were both very busy,” she said, trying to dismiss it easily.
I didn’t let her.
“I know this is difficult to talk about,” I pressed. “But I have to ask: Were there problems between you and Mr. Byers?”
Rhonda glanced nervously at her sister, who had been sitting in the room quietly listening.
“I … I wouldn’t say problems…”
She was faltering, if only slightly. This was my chance to see if I could start playing with the dials on her thermostat and add a few degrees to that icy blood of hers.
“Well, what would you say then?”
“Is it … is it really necessary to bring my … my marriage into this? Into your article?”
“At this point, everything is relevant,” I insisted. “I don’t mean to be rude”-actually, I did-“but I have to ask the question: Is it possible your husband was having an affair?”
Finally, the sister exploded.
“How does that matter?” she demanded. “The man’s been kidnapped!”
“It’s-” I began but was drowned out.
“You have a lot of nerve-”
“Jeannette, I’ll handle this,” Rhonda insisted.
Jeannette leaned forward as if she was going to object some more, but Rhonda held up a hand, “I’ll handle this.”
“Young man,” she said, turning toward me, having already cooled herself back down. “Can we talk off the record?”
“Sure,” I said, and put down my pen, which up to this point had been waving furiously.
“Are you married?” she asked.
“No.”
“Well, Wendell and I have been married for twenty-eight years,” she said. “After a while it gets … well, it’s not like I thought it would be.”
“How so?” I asked, and resisted adding, you mean on your wedding day you never envisioned murdering him in cold blood and making it look like he disappeared?
“I don’t know how it happened, but we drifted apart,” she said. “We were in love when we were younger. I really believe that. But it was always hectic, with me chasing after the children and him in politics. After the kids were out of the house, I thought it would get better because we’d have more time to spend together. But it got worse. He did his thing. I did mine. Separate worlds.”
“So why not divorce him?”
“I don’t know,” she said, sighing and looking away. “I think you have to be angry with someone to go through all the trouble of getting a divorce. And I couldn’t summon enough feeling for him to hate him that much. But to say we had a marriage anymore?”
She shook her head.
“Yet I’m told you always went to the council meetings,” I said. “Why?”
She stopped and thought for a moment.
“I guess I found it interesting,” she said. “That was maybe the one area where we still shared a common interest. We could talk about that. I’d like to think he … I guess I think he valued my opinion on those matters.”
Uh-huh. Probably Windy was like Tommy. He needed Rhonda to explain stuff to him.
“But other than that, you barely saw each other?” I asked.
“That’s true,” she said, shaking her head again. “I can’t believe I’m saying it, but it’s true.”
“So, and again I hate to be rude”-no, really, I didn’t-“but is it possible your husband has met someone else and is off with her somewhere right now? It happens, you know.”
Yes, Mrs. Byers, your husband just ran off. No, Mrs. Byers, I’m sure you didn’t do anything untoward. Wasn’t that the illusion she wanted the world to believe? Isn’t that the story she hoped I would buy? The offer was on the table. All she had to do was take it.
But she didn’t. Maybe she was too smart to be that obvious.
“I … I don’t know,” she said. “I’m so … More than anything, I’m sad for him. I worry he’s gotten himself in trouble. I just hope he’s all right.”
She looked at me and blinked, like she was trying to keep tears from tumbling out her eyeballs. Maybe she was. She was so convincing, I actually believed her for a moment.
God, I felt like a cub reporter. Where was my cynicism? My natural suspicion? That little voice in my head that told me to distrust everything I heard? What was I, going soft?
“Do you think you have enough for your story?” the sister asked, finally taking control of the situation.
“Enough for now,” I said, because we had been at it for an hour and I wanted to leave while I still had my disbelief.
“Then I think it’s time you go,” she said. “My sister has been through too much already.”
And this time Rhonda didn’t object.
Neither did I. Short of a tearful confession-which Rhonda Byers was far too cagey to give me-I had gotten what I came for. Raines and I could go over everything now. It was time to leave.
I bid the Byers sisters farewell and led myself to the door, with Jeanette close on my tail. As I walked through the foyer, I lingered slightly, pretending to fumble with my jacket until I saw what I was looking for: a big, smudgy streak of blood, about two feet long and as obvious as a snake on a sidewalk, on the molding near the floor.
It seemed odd Rhonda Byers hadn’t cleaned it up yet. Perhaps the police had instructed her to leave it undisturbed, in case they needed to do more testing. I was glad they did because it gave me the chance to study it.
I’m no forensics expert, but it looked like the kind of smear you’d get if you were dragging a bloodied body out the door.
Primo cultivated his relationship with Councilman Wendell A. Byers slowly, having learned from other failures not to push too far too fast.
The important thing was to keep the initial favors small: a phone call to the city engineering department to prod them for an approval; or a letter to the water authority to speed up a permit for a sewer hookup; or an introduction to a fellow council member, with a few kind words about Primo as a developer.
All the while, Primo kept the contributions coming. A Newark council campaign was a surprisingly expensive endeavor. Sending out mailings, making local media buys, maintaining campaign offices and staff, printing posters and lawn signs-it all added up. Even a longtime incumbent like Byers had to shell out $250,000 or more to hold his seat. What’s more, keeping a healthy campaign fund in between elections helped fend off the wolves. Would-be candidates weren’t keen to challenge a well-financed opponent.
So the need for cash was constant. And Byers was no different from most politicians in that he hated fund-raising-the glad-handing, the overpromising, the grubbing for money from friends. That’s where Primo came in. The more money Primo gave, the less Byers had to raise himself. It was easy and, above all, it was addictive. Any candidate would enjoy having to spend less time with his hand out.
Once Byers was hooked on the money, the size of the favors steadily grew. And it became more quid pro quo. Do this, I’ll give you that. Influence for sale. And beyond the help in navigating the city bureaucracy-which saved numerous headaches-was the real golden goose. Land.
In a place like Newark, city-owned land was abundant. For many decades, owners who fled to the suburbs-or absentee landlords who decided to cut their losses-simply abandoned their properties rather than continue to pay the taxes on them. After a few years of nonpayment, the city would seize the property. After a few more years, when whatever structure left on the property had been vandalized beyond the point of repair, the city knocked it down.
It all had the effect of making the city of Newark far and away the largest owner of empty, developable land within its own boundaries. For a long time, the land was essentially worthless. But then, as Newark’s building boom began in the late nineties and then picked up momentum after the turn of the millennium, it rapidly began increasing in value. And, under statute, the sale of this land was the purview of the city council, which had to approve all deals.
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