Marcus Sakey - Good People

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A family, and the security to enjoy it: that’s all Tom and Anna Reed ever wanted. But years of infertility treatments, including four failed attempts at in-vitro fertilization, have left them with neither. The emotional and financial costs are straining their marriage and endangering their dreams. So when their downstairs tenant – a recluse whose promptly delivered cashier’s checks were barely keeping them afloat – dies in his sleep, the $400,000 they find stashed in his kitchen seems like fate. More than fate: a chance for everything they’ve dreamed of for so long. A fairy-tale ending.
But Tom and Anna soon realize that fairy tales never come cheap. Because their tenant wasn’t a hermit who squirreled away his pennies. He was a criminal who double-crossed some of the most dangerous men in Chicago. Men who won’t stop until they get revenge, no matter where they find it.

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Strange situation. A lot to weigh, and not enough information to do it. Just a cryptic telephone call and his instincts. Still. Risk nothing, get nothing.

Malachi leaned forward, slid off his jacket, then slipped out of the shoulder holster and passed the Sig to Andre. “Put that in the case in the trunk. Yours too.”

The big man got out. Malachi waited till the trunk was closed before he stepped out himself. The police needed probable cause to search a vehicle, and permission or a warrant to open a locked case found in the trunk. He didn’t see that as the play, but always best to be safe.

The front desk was manned by a bored brother with a scraggly mustache. Malachi nodded as he approached, said, “Think you’re holding a key for me?” The dude passed him a small manila envelope.

“Elevator?”

“Back and to your right.”

They rode to the fifth floor in silence, then exited into a bare hall lit by fluorescents. Malachi passed the key, and Andre bent down to fit it into the lock and haul the door up. “Moth-er-fucker.”

On the floor in the center of the small locker was a pile of bundled hundreds. An envelope sat atop. Malachi stepped inside and shut the door, then eyeballed the pile, figured it about three. Andre looked at him, eyebrows raised.

“Grab me that envelope. Don’t touch nothing else.”

It was a standard number ten, unsealed. Malachi opened it, took out the folded paper, shook it open.

No more choosing sides.

This is poison.

We don’t want it.

That was it, just three lines, typed on plain white paper and unsigned. Malachi read it twice, then folded the letter and tucked it into his jacket pocket. “Huh.” The fluorescents buzzed overhead.

“What you want to do?”

Malachi looked over at his man, shook his head. “You kidding? Pack that shit up.”

Poison he knew.

JULY 2007

22

THE SMELL OF FADING LILACS mingled with the faint salt tang of the sea. Tom sat on the wooden bench. He’d read somewhere that lilac was good for headaches, but it never helped his. Dr. Carney said the migraines were something he’d have to live with. “What,” she’d said and shrugged, “broken nose, fractured cheekbone, teeth knocked out, concussion, you expect your body to throw a party?”

It didn’t matter. He leaned back, pinched the bridge of his nose between two fingers, ignored the wobbly necked feeling of needles in his eyeballs. When he thought about that night, a year gone now, two thoughts warred. The first was the memory of Anna shouting his name, and how, in that moment, he came back to life, resurrected by her. He liked that part.

The other was the memory of pointing the gun at Jack Witkowski and pulling the trigger. That he didn’t like. Not because he regretted it; on the contrary, he hoped there was a hell so Jack could burn in it. But Tom was afraid that that moment would be the one that would define his life, would outweigh every precious thing. That on the day he died, what he would remember was not Anna’s eyes or Julian’s smile, but Jack Witkowski, still leering as half his head was torn away.

The sky was fading orange to purple, the moment of dusk that seemed darker than night. He liked the quiet here, in the garden behind their little house near the shore. It was a good place to think. For a while the world he’d believed in had turned to smoke, and it took effort to rebuild.

The poor police, he’d almost felt sorry for them. Between the Shooting Star and Century Mall, they had had two major incidents in less than a month, both in upscale, politically connected areas. Dead cops and dead citizens and an orphaned child. Two dangerous bad guys who had escaped, only to be killed by two completely normal people – completely normal people they suspected had stolen a lot of money. A mess.

At first he and Anna had started to tell the whole truth. The detective had stopped them, left them in the interview room for a long time. When the door opened again, a different kind of cop came through. He still wore a star on his hip, but the suit that covered it cost a lot more, and he talked like a lawyer.

It took twenty minutes of his careful leading before Tom realized that the police wanted nothing to do with the whole truth. Not on this case. Because with Jack and Marshall dead, all they could hope to do was recover the money for a millionaire who wouldn’t admit it had been stolen, who would happily pay the same amount again to keep things quiet. In trade, they’d convict two civilians who had avenged the death of several of their own, and land a one-year-old in foster care. All of which was secondary to their real concern, of course – that the whole affair would play out on the front pages and the five o’clock news.

So solid ground had turned to smoke, and suddenly he and Anna were free to go, taking with them an unsubtle suggestion to keep their mouths shut. The truth was that sometimes the truth wasn’t enough.

Afterward, things had gotten worse. There was Sara’s funeral, the agony of coming face-to-face with what they’d done. Anna, shaking and pale as milk, staring at her sister’s waxy, too-pink face against the casket pillow. Reporters waiting at the cemetery. Pictures in the paper, people recognizing them on the streets, staring with vampire eyes. The discovery of what Jack had done to their home, burning the last connection to the people they used to be. And worst of all, the lonely midnight hours when the demons whispered that they weren’t done paying. That there was more to come.

But there were also the quiet spaces when they held each other, talking and crying and making love. And there was Julian. He was a joy, and he was a duty, and he was maybe all that kept them going. The demons whispered most about him, about what would happen, someday, when they – It didn’t matter. If there was one thing he and Anna could promise, even in this world, it was that Julian would be loved intensely. That was all that mattered.

Overhead, the stars were coming out. A backward way to think, of course. They’d been there all the time. He just hadn’t been able to see them.

JULIAN SAID, “Momma, gobba la,” and smiled.

“That’s right,” Anna said. “Mommy gobba la.” She buttoned his onesie, bright green with an orange monkey, and pulled the cotton blanket up to his belly. Sometimes when he cried there was nothing she could do to console him, no matter that she held him and whispered and swayed, and in those moments, she couldn’t help but wonder if he was crying for his real mother. If there was some smell or sense of safety that she would never be able to duplicate, not quite. Tonight, though, he was happy.

Anna flipped on his night-light and turned off the lamp, then got his favorite stuffed animal, a one-eyed, tentacled thing worn and spotted with drool. He reached as soon as he saw it, little hands opening and closing. She touched his cheek, felt the smoothness of it. Every day he seemed more perfect than the one before. Softly she began to sing, going with the last thing she’d been listening to, Kevin Tihista, sweet and sad, “Do-o-n’t worry baby, I’ll keep an eye on you, till you know what to do.” Julian stared, eyes sparkling and then, slowly, closing.

She sat by the crib and listened to him, and to the sounds of a South Carolina night drifting in the open window. After a while she heard the screen door creak and bang, and she tiptoed out of the bedroom. She found Tom in the kitchen, one cabinet open, shaking Advil into his palm. “Headache?”

“It’s nothing.”

She pressed herself to his back, arms around his chest, rising and falling with his breath. He leaned into her, put a hand up to cover hers. For a moment they stood silent, just the buzz of the fridge and their thoughts.

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