A man who looked like the guy in the photo pinned to the bulletin board in Lawrence’s was pacing in the waiting area and, when he heard me ask the cop about Lawrence, approached.
“Are you the one who phoned the restaurant?” he said.
I nodded. “You must be Kent. I’m Zack.”
He extended a hand to me. “Kent Aikens. Thanks for letting me know.”
“I didn’t know who else to call. Has Lawrence got family?”
“Not local. I think his parents are dead, but he’s got a sister named Letitia out in Denver, I think. I’m going to try to locate her, let her know. And when…” He hesitated, not sure whether the word he was looking for was “if.” He composed himself and continued. “When Lawrence wakes up, I can find out from him who else he wants me to call.”
“Sure,” I said. “Have you spoken to the doctors?”
“They don’t want to tell me much. I’m not, you know, family.” He shook his head angrily. “I’m just the faggot friend, the only one who’s even fucking here. But they did tell me that the knife punctured his lung, among other things. They said something about his lung filling up with blood. I spoke to him, like, yesterday. He phoned me. We were going to get together this Friday night, go to a club or something. He mentioned you, that you were some reporter?”
I nodded.
“And that you were hanging out with him. He had good things to say about you.”
I half smiled. “He’s a good guy.”
Kent swallowed, turned away so I wouldn’t notice his chin quivering. I gave him one of my own business cards. “If you need anything, or can let me know how Lawrence is doing, please let me know. That has my work and home numbers on it.”
Kent took the card without looking at it and slid it into the front pocket of his jeans. “Okay,” he said. “I thought, once he was through being a cop, there’d be less chance of this kind of thing happening. Working for himself, not chasing people down alleys, how could something like this happen?”
“It happened at his apartment,” I said. “Someone came looking for him, most likely these people he’d been investigating. They killed another detective a couple of nights ago.”
Kent took that in, said nothing.
I said, “You have any other idea who might have it in for him?”
He shook his head. “It just doesn’t make any sense. Lawrence is a good guy.”
The sliding glass doors to the ER parted and in strode Detective Trimble. Kent caught a glimpse of him and turned away, muttering, “Oh, great. Our hero has arrived.”
“What?” I asked. “You got problems with Trimble?”
“I know the history,” he said. “Lawrence nearly died a few years ago because of that asshole. Look, if I find out anything, I’ll give you a call, okay?” And he walked over to one of the vinyl and chrome waiting-room chairs and took a seat, studying the pile of outdated magazines on the small table next to him.
Trimble strode past me, nodded, and kept walking in the direction of the operating rooms.
It was about one in the morning when I got home. The Camry was in the driveway, pulled up close to the garage. Angie had returned from Oakwood some time ago, I guessed, considering that Sarah had spoken to her when she phoned home from the retreat. I wondered whether my daughter might still be up, but when I came in and did a walkabout, it was clear that both she and her brother were asleep. All manner of interrogations could begin tomorrow, should I choose to conduct them.
I phoned Sarah from the kitchen phone.
“God, I’ve been waiting up for you, hoping you’d call,” she said from her hotel room. “What’s happening?”
“It’s Lawrence,” I said. “Someone tried to kill him in his apartment. I found him. He’s pretty bad. I don’t know whether he’s going to make it.”
Sarah waited a moment, and said, “Tell me everything.”
I gave her the basics, that Lawrence’s attacker was unknown, that it might or might not be related to the smash-and-grab at Brentwood’s, that I had a major story to write first thing in the morning.
“Do you want me to come home?” she asked. “I can bail on this thing. I don’t have to stay. We won’t be learning anything. It’ll all be bullshit, the way these things always are.”
“No, no, it’s okay, there’s not much you could do if you came back.”
“I could be with you,” she said.
I felt a lump develop in my throat. God, it had been a long night.
“Really,” I said. “I’m okay.”
“And the kids? Is everything okay there?” Sarah asked.
“Sure,” I lied, thinking about Trevor’s surveillance of Angie, my surveillance of Trevor and Angie, Angie’s mysterious visit to Trixie’s, Paul’s drinking binge.
“Everything’s fine.”
20
I WAS TIRED ENOUGH to have slept for a week, yet I mostly tossed and turned during what was left of that night. I had a few things on my mind. There was my daughter, who was making secret visits to my dominatrix friend while being stalked all over town by a possibly unstable admirer. There was my son, who, at the age of sixteen, was getting into the booze, a behavior that put him in the company of most sixteen-year-old boys, and evidently my daughter’s stalker was supplying him with the stuff. My new friend lay in the hospital after a near-fatal stabbing. I had impulsively spent $8,900 that we didn’t have on a car that started only when it felt like it, plus another small fortune on a new wardrobe. And there was the fact that I was lying to my wife about just how serious things might be on the home front because it would involve disclosing that I was violating the privacy of a member of my own family.
At least I had those new clothes to wear.
By seven, I was sitting at the kitchen table, that morning’s Metropolitan spread out on the table before me, reaching for my coffee and reading the headlines without registering them.
Paul showed up first, since he had to be at high school before Angie had to be at her first class at the university. He looked tired and bleary-eyed.
“Sit down,” I said.
“Just let me grab some juice,” he said.
“Sit down,” I said, using my Angry Father Voice.
He came over, pulled out a chair, and sat down across from me. He had that look of feigned bewilderment, as if to say, “What could you possibly want to speak to me about?”
I said, “You look a bit rough this morning.”
He swallowed. “I’m good. Just a bit tired is all.”
“What did you do last night?”
“Hung out here. Had a couple of friends over.”
“What’d you do?”
Paul hesitated. “Uh, just, I don’t know, watched some movies, played video games.”
“What do you think the chances are, if I go look out back between the garage and the fence, that there’s still a six-pack there?”
“Huh?”
“Shall we go look? I know it was there yesterday afternoon, and I have a pretty good idea who left it there, and I’m betting it’s gone.”
Paul looked at the table. “It’s gone.”
“And I’ll bet most of it’s been thrown up or pissed away by now,” I said.
Paul swallowed again. No denials there.
“You got a fake ID?” I asked.
Paul feigned indignation. “Oh my God. Don’t you trust me?”
“Of course not. You’re a teenager.” I took a shot in the dark. “Let’s see the ID.”
Paul sighed, took his wallet from his back pocket, opened it up, tossed a piece of plastic across the table at me. It was a reasonably good facsimile, as long as you didn’t look too closely, of a driver’s license, with Paul’s picture on it. It would have to be pretty dark in a bar to fool anyone with.
“This says you’re twenty-one,” I said. “You’re barely shaving.”