“Why’s that?”
“There are no books or articles on display, which means you’re unpublished. What kind of big money psychiatrist is unpublished at your age?”
N. Crouch pursed her lips. “I see,” she said. “Anything else?”
“Your sons are off in college or working and they don’t call as often as you’d like. To compensate, you keep two dogs as pets.”
“What,” she said. “Not the breed?”
I smiled. “Akitas,” I said. “Japanese dogs brought to our shores by returning American servicemen, after WW2. Twin dogs from the same litter.”
I bowed and sat back down on the leather throne chair. I may have smirked.
“That’s amazing, Mr. Creed,” she said. “Truly remarkable.”
“Why thank you, Ms. Crouch.”
She said, “You took all the evidence on display and managed to get every single fact wrong. Every fact but one.”
I smiled and said, “Bullshit.”
N. Crouch stood. “I’m in my early sixties, not fifties. I don’t think I’m smarter than my friends, though none have surpassed me professionally. The pictures on the desk are my sister’s adopted children. I’m not divorced because I’ve never been married. I’m not from the Midwest, I’m from Miami. My contemporaries didn’t graduate from prestigious colleges because psychiatrists graduate from medical schools, not colleges. Speaking of which, Pittsburgh Medical happens to be the number one medical school in the country. In 2005 alone they received one hundred and eighty NIHA’s—that’s National Institute of Health Awards—totaling more than seventy-six million dollars.
“And by the way,” she added, reaching into her lower desk drawer, “I don’t hide my first name and I am published.” She held up a book titled Cognitive Remediation in Neuropsychological Functioning and pointed to the author’s name: Nadine Crouch, PhD.
She stopped for a minute and said, “What are you grinning at? You look like the village idiot.”
Then it hit her.
“Shit,” she said. “You just got me to tell you all about myself.”
“Don’t take it too hard,” I said.
“You probably already knew about the book.”
“I Googled you before setting the appointment.”
“I’m going to have to keep an eye on you, Mr. Creed,” she said. “You’re quite the manipulator.”
“Thank you.”
“You take that as a compliment?”
“What’s the one thing?” I said.
She looked puzzled.
“You said I was wrong about everything but one.”
She smiled.
“Wait,” I said, sharing the smile. “I know what it is. I was right that you’ve been beautiful your whole life.”
She grinned, and I cocked my head at her.
“Ms. N. Crouch,” I said. “Did you just wink at me?”
And thus began my professional relationship with Nadine.
Chapter 8
The word on Teddy Boy Turner was that the gambling bug bit him long before he scored the bartending gig at the Grantline Bar & Grill in Darnell, West Virginia. As a teenager, he mowed lawns and washed cars until he amassed enough money to start betting the sports book.
In gambling, winning early in life usually leads to financial ruin down the road, and Teddy Boy’s experience was no different. His current losing streak had put his life in serious jeopardy. He was deeper in debt than his Grantline salary could ever pull him out—to Salvatore Bonadello, no less, one of the biggest and most notorious crime bosses in the country.
Teddy Boy lived in the constant fear that one day soon the goons would walk in around closing time and demand payment. He was prepared to get a broken arm or leg, maybe some cracked ribs. What he wasn’t prepared for was a personal phone call from Sal Bonadello himself.
According to Sal, the call went this way:
“I been looking over your account,” Sal said.
“I’m doing my best, Mr. Bonadello. I just need a little more time.”
“How would you like your—whatcha call—slate cleared?”
Teddy Boy thought about that. “I can smack someone around with a baseball bat for you, but I’m not a professional,” he said. “I never took a life or nothin’.”
“Naw, not like that,” Sal said. “I need some information and a favor. You do a good job, maybe I wipe your slate clean. How would that be?”
“It’d be like getting a new lease on life, Mr. Bonadello. Not to complain, but I’m working day and night just to pay the vig. I haven’t been able to make a dent in the loan.”
“You know this kid, Charlie Beck?”
“Everyone knows Charlie.”
“He a friend of yours?”
Teddy Boy paused. “Not unless you say so, Mr. Bonadello.”
“Good answer. You seen him in your place with any girls?”
“Yeah, sure. He gets a lot of action. Looks sort of like Tom Brady.”
“Ever seen him with a high school girl? Short blond hair, name of Kimberly Creed?”
“Not that I know of,” Teddy Boy said.
Sal said, “Ted, you disappoint me. I was hoping to help you out with your—whatcha call—lethal problem.”
There was a long pause and then Teddy Boy cleared his voice and said, “Well, there is a rumor going around.”
“Ted?”
“Yes sir?”
“Gimme something I can use.”
Chapter 9
Ned Denhollen awoke confused and disoriented. He looked at one arm, then the other, trying to get his bearings. Ned probably remembered setting the alarm, closing up the drugstore and walking across the parking lot toward his car. Now here he was, lying on his back on the floor of a room he couldn’t possibly recognize, and—could this be possible?
His wrists were in cuffs, chained to eyebolts in the floor.
He lifted his head and saw me sitting on a chair positioned above his legs.
Ned lashed out, tried to kick the chair over. And realized his feet were also chained to the floor.
He shook his head angrily, pitched his torso upward a few times in an effort to show he was a fighter, a man not easily intimidated. But in fact Ned was not a fighter and he was easily intimidated, which is why he soon gave up posturing and began to blubber and cry.
“Who are you?” Ned wailed. “What do you want? Why have you done this to me?”
I sighed. “Ned, the reason we’re here, I’m worried about my daughter.”
Ned abruptly stopped whimpering. No doubt he thought me a lunatic. “Excuse me?”
“I’m Donovan Creed, Kimberly’s father. I’d shake your hand but...”
Yeah, of course you would, Ned must have thought, but it’s chained to the floor!
Ned studied me, as if trying to place me by inventorying my facial features. For Ned, it was a given I was unstable. But was I capable of murder? He wouldn’t want to find out. “Mr. Creed, I don’t know your daughter and that’s the God’s honest truth. I’m happily married. I think you must have me mixed up with someone else.
“You’re the pharmacist?”
“Yes sir, I work at Anderson’s Drug Store here in Darnell.”
“What makes you think we’re still in Darnell?”
“Oh, sweet Jesus!”
“Ned, let me tell you what’s happening here. You and I are going to put an end to what’s been going on in Darnell. Before it affects my daughter, or her friends.”
“Mr. Creed, I don’t understand why you’re doing this.”
I sighed again. “If you think I’m enjoying this…” I paused.
Ned began shivering.
“Are you comfortable, Ned?”
“I beg your pardon?”
“I can get you a pillow and blanket if you like.”