“I told you I have nothing to say to you about this.”
“Hanna’s dead.”
It was like I’d hit him in the head with a two-by-four.
Stunned silence at first, then, “What?”
“Hanna Rodomski’s been murdered. I found her body under a bridge. Someone put their hands around her neck and choked the life out of her.”
Still dumbfounded, he reached for the banister to steady himself. “That’s not — my God, that’s not possible.”
“I can take you there if you don’t believe me. I doubt they’ll be moving the body for a while yet.”
“This is... this is horrible.” To himself, more than me, he said, “Doesn’t make any sense, just doesn’t...”
“Of course it doesn’t. Why the hell would it make sense?”
“I just can’t... There’s no way they’d go this far.”
“Who?” I asked. “Who are you talking about?”
“A drink,” he said, pushing himself away from the stairs and heading off to the kitchen. “I need a drink.”
He opened the cupboard and took out a small glass and a bottle of scotch, poured himself three fingers and downed it in one gulp. He went to pour another, but I grabbed his hand and forced the bottle back onto the counter.
“Tell me what the hell’s going on, Sanders.”
“I don’t know who killed Hanna,” he said. “I swear I don’t.”
“What about Claire? Where is she?”
He placed his hand over his forehead, as though all this was giving him a nuclear-grade migraine. But then, almost instantly, he got over it, and gave me a devilish smile.
“Oh, I get it. I get what’s going on here.” The grin turned into a short laugh. “Very good. You almost had me.”
“Had you? You think this is a joke?”
“Not a joke. A trick.”
“Really? Come on, then.” I grabbed a fistful of robe at his shoulder. “I’ve got a cab waiting. We can go down and have a look at her. At least what’s left. The dogs had some of her for lunch.”
He shook me off, the robe sliding down his right shoulder and almost to his elbow. He pulled it back up with a theatrical flourish, trying to preserve his dignity, but he was too shaken.
“Dear God, dogs?” He put his hand to his mouth, like maybe he was going to be sick, but then pulled it away. “Okay, even if what you say about Hanna is true, there’s no good reason for me to trust you. I’ve got a good idea what your game is. You think by telling me about Hanna you can scare me into telling you where Claire is.”
“So she’s hiding out somewhere?”
“Not hiding. Just... away.”
“When’s the last time you heard from her? For Christ’s sake, Sanders. Your daughter’s best friend is dead. If Claire were my kid, I’d be getting her on the phone right now to make sure she’s okay.”
“If there’d been a problem, she’d have called...” He was talking more to himself than to me.
“If Claire’s in trouble, she might not be able to call.”
“No, her mother. She would call. Everything’s fine. Everything’s okay.” Sanders nodded hurriedly, looking like a bobblehead.
“Claire went to stay with her mother? In Canada?”
He put his hand over his mouth again, mumbling, as though he didn’t want me to hear him thinking out loud.
“Talk to me,” I said. “Is that where she is?”
He took the hand away. “I know Augustus Perry’s your brother-in-law. You think I don’t know he’s using you to find out where she is?”
“Are you kidding?” I said. “He just had my fucking car towed. And what’s Augie got to do with Claire?”
Sanders said nothing, but kept looking at me, wide-eyed.
“Look, I told you how I became involved in this, and it has nothing to do with the chief. Claire asked me for a ride. She and Hanna pulled off their little stunt with my help, and now Hanna’s dead. I’ll find out what’s going on with or without your help.”
“I’ve nothing to say to you,” Sanders said.
“Tell me she’s alive. Do you know that much?”
Before he could answer, lights swept past the living room from outside, casting a glow as far as the kitchen. Sanders broke away from me and ran to the window, pulling back the lace curtain for a better view of the street.
“What is it?” I said.
“There’s a car sitting out there, with the lights off. Someone’s inside.”
“It’s my taxi. I told her to wait.”
“But the lights—”
“Probably just another car driving by,” I said. “The woman next door said the police have been parked on the street lately. Like they’ve been watching your house.”
He glared at me. “You’ve been talking to my neighbors? And you’re trying to tell me you’re not in on it?”
“In on what? Why are the police watching you? Why do you think the chief’s involved in this?”
When he wouldn’t respond, I tried a more conciliatory tone. “Mr. Sanders, I swear, I’m trying to help you here. I’m trying to help Claire. If she’s running from something, tell me what it is so we can deal with it, so she can come back.”
He studied me in the dim glow of the light filtering down from the second floor. “How long you lived here, Mr. Weaver?”
“A few years. Six.”
“Happy here?”
“I used to be,” I said.
He picked up something in my voice. “Your son,” he said. “I know about your son.” He swallowed. “I’m sorry.”
I didn’t have to ask how he knew. Everyone in Griffon knew. It was a safe bet Claire had mentioned it to her father at some point.
“But before your... your personal tragedy... were you happy in Griffon?”
It was hard to think back to what our world was like before two months ago. There had been troubled times with our son for a year or more, but even through that there had been good times as well. And before Scott found comfort in substances that clouded his judgment, I suppose we were what you’d call happy. Content, maybe.
But I didn’t feel like getting into that with Bert Sanders. “I don’t see your point.”
He said, “Have you felt safe here?”
I hesitated. “I guess.”
“The Griffon cops — they do a helluva job, right?”
I thought of the petition. “Our cops are tops.”
That actually made him smile. “Have you signed?”
I shook my head.
He nodded admiringly. “That’s a surprise.”
“I don’t know what this has to do—”
“Down in the park one night, there was a kid with one of those air horns — you know, the kind that look like an aerosol can? One of Griffon’s finest went down there, held the horn right over that kid’s ear, and let it go. Kid may not get his hearing back. His parents tried to come after us, but guess what? Your brother-in-law’s got three cops who say the kid was so drunk he put the horn up to his own ear and did it himself.” Sanders gave me a withering look. “You ask just about anyone in town here whether that kid got what was coming to him, and they’ll tell you yes.”
I said nothing. He was right.
“If it’s just cops getting a little carried away once in a while, we can all look the other way and pretend it’s not happening. That’s the prevailing view in this town. Some punk gets the shit beat out of him and finds himself dumped outside the town line, who’s going to lose sleep over that? But if Augustus Perry’s storm troopers are willing to bend the rules there, what else are they capable of? What do you think happens to drugs and illicit cash they seize? If there’s no trial, there’s no need for evidence. Why do they turn a blind eye to what goes on at Patchett’s? You think Phyllis Pearce isn’t spreading a little cash around?”
“You have proof of any of that?’
He laughed. “Proof. Yeah, sure.”