David Bell - The Hiding Place

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He paused to chew. Stynes thought he was finished with his rant, but Reynolds leveled his butter knife, pointing it right at Stynes’s chest, and said, “This shit ain’t going to fly with me, okay? I’m not digging into the past and thinking about all the shitheads I put away. This Dante, he got what he deserved. Right? Don’t go there.”

Stynes worked on his fries. He nodded, absorbing Reynolds’s words, letting them rattle around in his brain. As expected, Reynolds didn’t want to hear it, and maybe his old partner was right. Why dig into the past just because Dante Rogers looked like a pathetic piece of shit at the Reverend Fred’s church?

“That’s the longest we put anyone away,” Stynes said. “I mean, outside of guys who pled or were obviously guilty.”

“You did good,” Reynolds said. “You were young, but you did good. You worked well with the Mannings and those little kids. It worked. I only wish the asshole had gone away longer. I wish we’d made it first degree. They were still frying bastards back then. He could have ridden the lightning. Zap . Then we’re not having this talk.”

“And you’d be missing me,” Stynes said.

“Bullshit.” Reynolds threw the last bite of his sandwich into his mouth and wiped his hands. “Listen to what I said. Retirement can be a bitch if you don’t have something to do.”

Stynes sipped his drink, drained it down so only ice was left in the glass. “Do you remember something about that case?” Stynes asked. “The testimony of those kids. When we talked to them at the park, they told us two things. Yes, they told us they saw Justin with Dante and all that. But they also told us that Justin had run off into the woods, alone, chasing a dog or something. But that night when we talked to them, neither one of them remembered that part of it. All they wanted to say was that they saw Justin with Dante. Nothing about the woods.”

“So? They’re kids. Remember Elizabeth Smart? Her kid sister sees the guy come into the room and take Elizabeth. Nine months later, she wakes up one day and says, ‘Hey, I know who it is.’ Nine months. They’re kids. Little kids. Who knows how their minds work? And other people-other adults-saw Dante at the park.”

The waitress brought the check, and Reynolds pointed to Stynes. “It’s his turn. I’m on a fixed income.”

Stynes brought out his wallet and put a twenty down with the check. The waitress collected it and brought him change. “Look,” he said. “There were a lot of adults in the park that day. We talked to all of them, but we pretty quickly started looking for a black guy and dropped any other thoughts because of what those kids said at night, how adamant they were that night. Adamant. Right?”

Reynolds didn’t respond, so Stynes counted out the tip and went on, his voice lowered.

“Who commits most crimes against children?” Stynes asked.

“More Trivial Pursuit?”

“You know as well as I do-sixty-eight percent of the time it’s a parent or family member, right? We may not have known that as much back then, but we sure as hell know it now.”

Reynolds made a circular motion with his hand. Go on.

“And who had access to those kids before we talked to them?”

“We talked to them right in the park and they mentioned Dante, right after it happened.”

“There was a lot of heat on us. Hell, there was heat on every cop in America back then. Crime was up all over. If something happened, everybody freaked out. They acted like the world was ending. Maybe we didn’t pay enough attention to what was said in the park because of the chaos that day. The body was found in the woods, and that’s the direction those kids pointed us to initially.”

“We searched there,” Reynolds said. “Hell, we searched those woods multiple times. We dragged that little pond, turned over every rock. We had to wait for Mother Nature to give that kid’s body back to us.”

“Didn’t you think there was something… off about Bill Manning? We talked about it at the time.”

“Yeah, his kid was missing. That’s enough to make anybody off.”

“Are you going to give me another lecture on how I don’t understand what he went through because I never had kids?”

Reynolds almost smiled. “I’ll let it go.”

“Seriously, there was something going on there, right?” Stynes asked.

Reynolds leaned back. “You mean because of what the Mannings said that day?”

“Yes,” Stynes said. “In the morning, right after Justin disappeared, Mrs. Manning, Virginia Manning, told us that her husband didn’t go to work at his usual time that day. She said that he stayed home, which was unusual. But that night, when we went back to the house to talk to them again, she had changed her tune. She said her husband did leave for work at the usual time, that everything was normal in the morning, and he didn’t come home until they found out that Justin was missing. She called him at work and told him.”

“I remember all this, Stynes.” Reynolds pointed to his head. “I’ve still got it together up here.”

“Well?”

“Well what?”

“When someone contradicts themselves, we see it as a red flag. We push harder.”

“It was a red flag,” Reynolds said. “We both saw it that way. We talked about it then, remember?”

“Yes. And you told me to let it go, to back off the Mannings.”

“Damn right.”

“You said they were scared and upset, and it wasn’t unusual for someone like Mrs. Manning to get her facts mixed up.”

“It’s called being compassionate,” Reynolds said. “Good cops do that. They know how to treat the victims of crimes.”

“But didn’t we turn away from them too quickly?” Stynes asked.

“Too quickly?” Reynolds asked.

“Yeah.”

“As I recall, you pulled Mrs. Manning aside for a little heart-to-heart the night her kid disappeared, didn’t you? You asked her all about this, right? As I recall, you did it without my permission. And what happened?”

“She stuck to the story,” Stynes said. “She said she mixed things up in the morning because she was upset.”

“There you go,” Reynolds said.

“But was it enough? Couldn’t we have pushed them just a little more?”

“Let me ask you something, since you’re so fond of these trivia questions. Who commits most of the violent crimes in Dove Point? And where do most of the violent crimes take place?”

Stynes paused, letting Reynolds’s words sink in. “Jesus, Terry. Are you for real?”

“I’m talking numbers, Stynesie.”

“You’re saying that blacks commit most of the violent crimes, and most of them take place over in East.”

“Amen, brother.”

“So that’s why we looked so hard at Dante Rogers and let the alibi from the Mannings go?”

“We had the witnesses against Dante,” Reynolds said. “Against the Mannings we had what? A woman’s hysterical story about her husband?”

“And the tendency of kids or anyone else to be killed by people they know.”

Reynolds shook his head. “I don’t see it, Stynesie. Take my advice-get a hobby. Become one of those Walmart greeters. Do something. But I have to get out of here-”

“What about Scott Ludwig?” he asked.

Reynolds tightened his jaw, as though biting back on something.

“Ludwig was there,” Stynes pressed. “He was doing that nature walk or whatever for a group of kids. But he left without talking to us. As soon as trouble went down, he was gone. And nobody saw him or could find him.”

“That’s not a crime.”

“It is damn weird if a crime has been committed, and he was at the scene. He’s always been an odd duck-”

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