Linwood Barclay - Parting Shot

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When a young girl from Promise Falls is killed by a drunk driver, the community wants answers.
It doesn’t matter that the accused is a kid himself: all they see is that he took a life and got an easy sentence. As pack mentality kicks in and social media outrage builds, vicious threats are made against the boy and his family.
When Cal Weaver is called in to investigate, he finds himself caught up in a cold-blooded revenge plot. Someone in the town is threatening to put right some wrongs...
And in Cal’s experience, it’s only ever a matter of time before threats turn into action.

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That morsel of wisdom had produced more than three hundred likes, and about sixty comments. Some supportive, others not so much. As I scanned through them, I guessed that about eighty per cent of them were negative. One typical reply: And some mothers need to start teaching their kids not to run people down.

The next day, Gloria had written: It’ll be good to get out of town. It’ll be good to go where they always have to let you in.

I was no English major, but I recognized a version of the Robert Frost line about going home.

“This one,” I said, pointing, “is basically telling everyone you’re going back to your home town.”

Gloria became defensive. “But I don’t say where it is.”

I went up to search field and typed in, “Where is Gloria Pilford, the Big Baby mother, from?”

Hit Enter.

Up came dozens of news stories. It didn’t take long to find one that mentioned that Gloria had been raised by her aunt Madeline, who lived in Promise Falls. Going back a hundred or more years, this one story went on to say, the Plimptons were among the town’s founders, at one time running a tannery, and in later years starting up the town’s first newspaper. Madeline Plimpton, the story said, often attended Jeremy’s trial.

“There,” I said. “You don’t have to be Sherlock Holmes to figure out where you probably are. And no doubt Ms. Plimpton’s address is easily found on the Internet.”

“Oh Gloria,” said Bob derisively. “You might as well have hired a skywriter to draw a big arrow pointing to the house.”

Madeline Plimpton had put her head into her hands.

I said, “You’re banned.”

“I’m what?” Gloria said.

“If you can’t stop yourself from posting, you need to stay off the computer, your phone, whatever other device you may have, altogether. You’re exposing yourself. You’re putting yourself in danger.”

Gloria bit her lip again and turned away. “You don’t understand,” she said, putting both hands on the counter’s edge, supporting herself. “You don’t know what they’ve put me through.”

None of us said anything.

Without turning around, she said, “I let you all make a national laughing stock out of me. I’m mocked and ridiculed. The coddling, smothering mother who kept her child from learning right from wrong. Okay, it worked. Jeremy didn’t go to jail. And that’s good.”

Slowly, she turned around. Tears had traveled halfway down her cheeks.

“But I paid a price, too,” she said. “And now you want to keep me from telling the world I’m not the person they think I am.”

An unmoved Ms. Plimpton walked across the room, picked up the laptop and held it tightly under her arm.

Bob said, “Give me your phone, honey.”

Gloria looked as though Bob had just asked for a kidney.

“This is humiliating,” she said. “You have no right.”

I said, “I can’t protect Jeremy if there are leaks coming out of this very household as to his whereabouts.”

“You think I’d do anything to hurt my son?” Gloria asked me.

“Not intentionally,” I said. “But those postings are dangerous. Even if you don’t say anything specific, people can tell where you are when you write them.”

Bob said, “Come on, Gloria. Give me your phone.”

Gloria wasn’t ready to surrender. “I need a phone in case there’s an emergency . You get to have your phone, Bob, so you can do all your deals .”

“That’s different,” Bob said. “If I’m not making deals, then I’m not bringing in any money, and if I wasn’t bringing in money, how the hell would I have paid for your son’s defense?”

“I like the way you toss that in,” she said. “ My son.”

“Well, he is your son. I think it shows how much you mean to me that I was willing to help him out despite that fact that he’s not mine.”

“I know, you’re a hero.” It was an out-and-out sneer. “You care so much about him.”

“Your phone?” Bob said.

“I don’t know where it is,” Gloria said, with little conviction.

Bob reached behind a decorative bowl on the island. “For Christ’s sake, it’s right here.”

She lunged for it, but she was too slow. Bob had snatched up the phone, which was in a pale pink cover with tiny white polka dots, and dropped it into the inside pocket of his sport jacket.

“That’s a start,” I said, although I’d have rather held onto it myself. “Now there’s the business of Jeremy’s phone,” I said. “I’m guessing when he isn’t playing games he’s texting with his friends. He may also be telling people more than he should.”

Gloria laughed scornfully. “Good luck taking his phone away.”

She reopened the fridge and brought out the wine bottle.

Ms. Plimpton said, “Gloria, take it easy.”

“I’m fine, Madeline .” Gloria held up the bottle. “The only comfort I get around here is from this. None of you give a shit what I’ve—”

That was when we heard the crash. The sound of breaking glass.

Gloria and Ms. Plimpton let out short screams. Bob and I exchanged quick glances. The sound had come from the front of the house. I ran to the hall. Shards of glass were scattered across the marble floor, and in the midst of them, a fist-sized rock. There were narrow floor-to-ceiling windows on either side of the main door, and the rock had gone through the one on the left.

I flung open the door and saw a long-haired man — late teens, I was guessing — running flat-out to a vehicle idling at the curb. It was a blue van, the side door open.

Before the man leapt in, he glanced back and shouted, “Take that, ya fuckin’ big baby!”

Then he was in the van, hauling the door shut as the tires squealed and the vehicle lurched forward.

I started to run, but there wasn’t a hope of catching a look at the plate. The van was up the street and around a corner in seconds. It looked like one of those older GM vans, of which there are only about a hundred thousand in every town. And the rock-thrower was white, brown shoulder-length hair, maybe a hundred and eighty pounds. Jeans and a blue T-shirt. Not much help when it came to offering police a description.

I walked back into the house, where I found mother, aunt, and Bob Butler standing.

“Who was it?” Ms. Plimpton asked. “Did you see them?”

“A quick look is all,” I said.

What struck me as alarming was not what had just happened, but that all the commotion had not drawn Jeremy from the porch. Even if he’d tucked some buds into his ears, he still should have heard what had happened.

Without another word, I made my way to the back of the house again, marching straight out onto the porch. The screen door to the backyard was half open.

Jeremy was not there.

Eight

Barry Duckworth got back into his own vehicle and pointed it in the direction of Knight’s, which was only five minutes away.

Along the way, he got stuck behind an out-of-state car that was being driven hesitantly. Brake lights coming on, then off, turn signal on, then off. The person behind the wheel of this blue Ford Explorer with Maine plates gave every indication of being lost.

When the Explorer stopped at a light, Duckworth pulled up alongside and powered down the passenger window. The driver, a man in his forties, put down his own window and looked over.

“You folks lost?” Duckworth asked.

“You know how to get to the park where the falls is?” the man asked. “Wife and I are looking for the spot where Olivia Fisher was killed.”

A woman in the passenger seat leaned forward and held up what looked like a newspaper clipping. “We’re checking all the spots related to the town’s mass killing last year.”

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