I knelt down beside the bed. Joy had been a fighter, and I could not envision this happening without some struggle. I looked at her hands. The left was clenched into a fist; the right wide open. The knuckles of the left were bruised. Joy had punched her attacker as he'd killed her, and left her mark on him.
“We'll get him,” I told her.
I rose from the floor. I wanted to cover her but was afraid of contaminating the crime scene. I went into the kitchen to call 911. As I punched in the numbers an envelope on the kitchen table caught my eye. It was addressed to me.
I dropped the phone into the cradle, then picked up the envelope and tore it open. Inside was a handwritten letter. It was from Joy, dated two days earlier. She was breaking off the affair we'd never had. My hands began to tremble. Her killer had made her do this.
As I slipped the letter into my pocket a numbing realization swept over me. Joy had been killed in an effort to set me up. That setup included Melinda Peters telling Neil Bash that Joy and I were having an affair. As hard as it was for me to believe, Melinda was part of this.
I searched the house for anything else linking me to Joy. Finding nothing, I wetted a paper towel in the sink and wiped down everything I'd touched. This included the phone, but only after I dialed 911 and heard the call go through.
It was dark when I returned to the Sunset. The new TV was sitting over the bar, and the Dwarfs couldn't stop commenting about the sharpness of the picture. I bellied up to the bar and motioned to Sonny. He came over, and I handed him ten hundred-dollar bills to cover my double tabs and my rent. The sight of the money made his jaw drop.
“You don't have to pay me all at once,” he said.
I was tempted to take some of it back.
“Keep it,” I said.
Sonny slid a cold can of Budweiser toward me. “A reporter called for you earlier, said she wanted to talk about Melinda Peters. I've got her number in the till.”
I groaned, and everyone in the bar looked at me.
“Shitty day,” I said.
I killed the beer, then started to leave.
“Remember what the prophet said, Jack,” Whitey called out.
I stopped in the doorway. “What's that?”
“In the land of the blind, a one-eyed man will be king.”
“Hear, hear,” several of the Dwarfs said.
Climbing the stairs to my room, I wondered if Whitey was right. Perhaps I was a one-eyed man, seeing only those things I chose to see.
Joy's murder was going to haunt me. Russo would want to question me about her murder. If he didn't like my answers, he'd arrest me as a suspect. Since I couldn't post bail, I'd go to jail for a few weeks, or even longer.
Melinda's lies were also going to haunt me. Not only was Skell going to walk, but the Midnight Rambler case would be reopened. This time, the scrutiny wouldn't be focused on Skell. It would be on me, and how I'd handled the investigation.
I entered my room and switched on the light. I was in a world of trouble. So much so that I found myself counting the people I could ask for help: Kumar, Sonny, my wife, and my daughter. Not a big group, but better than nothing.
My cell phone rang. I dug it out of my pocket. Caller ID said it was Jessie. I sat on the bed and kicked off my shoes. Then I answered it.
“How's the world's best basketball player?” I answered.
My daughter was sobbing. It made my mind return to that horrible day on Hutchinson Island.
“How could you?” she wailed.
“How could I what?” I asked.
“I was in my dorm watching CNN, and they showed your photo and a photograph of some stripper. They said you were screwing her and had fabricated evidence and all sorts of horrible things. How could you do this to me and Mommy?”
“It's all lies,” I said emphatically.
“Then why are they showing it on TV?”
“It must be a slow news night.”
Jessie didn't see the humor and screamed at me. I tried to explain, but she refused to listen. Finally I hit my tolerance point and jumped in.
“Lower your voice, or I'm hanging up this phone,” I said.
My daughter grew quiet, and I continued. “Whatever you might think of me at this moment in time, I'm still your father, remember?”
“Yes,” she said softly.
“Good. Now, let me ask you a question. When have I ever lied to you?”
My words were met by a short silence.
“Never,” she replied.
“That's right. Never, ever have I lied to you.”
“Not that I know about,” she chimed in.
“Never, ever,” I said. “What you heard on the TV was a pack of lies.”
“But that stripper said you had an affair with her, and another woman as well.”
I could hear my teeth clench. I didn't give a rat's ass if the rest of the world thought I was slime, but with Jessie it mattered.
“None of it is true,” I said.
“You need to talk to Mom,” my daughter said. “She heard it on the news in Tampa. She's awfully upset.”
“I'll call her right now.”
“Promise?”
“Yes, I promise. I love you.”
“I love you, too, Daddy.”
I ended the call. Then I spent a minute gathering the courage to call Rose.
I'd always blamed myself for our breakup. My wife was from Mexico and deeply religious. In her faith, the spirits of the dead hung around long after the body was gone. Many times she'd told me that Skell's victims were clinging to me and that she couldn't compete with them. Like a fool, I didn't argue, so she left me.
I punched her number into my cell phone.
“Hey, Rose,” I said when she answered.
“Who is this?” she asked suspiciously.
“It's me. Jack.”
“What do you want?”
“To apologize.”
“It's too late for that.”
“No, listen. Everything you heard on TV is a bunch of crap.”
“I don't believe you.”
“You have to believe me.”
“No, I don't.”
I put my hand over my eyes. “Rose, please, listen to me.”
“I'm filing for a divorce.”
“What? No. Please don't do that.”
“Tomorrow. First thing in the morning. I already have a lawyer. I'll send you the papers. Now I have to go to bed.”
My heart felt ready to break. I could not let her go.
“You can't give up on me,” I said.
“Give me one good reason why.”
“Because I need you, and because I love you.”
I heard my wife's sharp intake of breath.
“Go to hell, Jack Carpenter,” she said.
I had no answer for that, and heard her hang up.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
At four a.m. my alarm clock went off. I dragged myself out of bed and rousted Buster. My dog rolled over, expecting to get his tummy scratched. Instead, I tugged on his hind leg.
“Road trip,” I said.
Five minutes later we pulled out of the Sunset's parking lot. Tampa was three hundred miles away, and my goal was to reach my wife's place before she left for work, and beg her for another chance. We'd been married for twenty years, and I wasn't going to let it end with a phone call.
Driving through the streets of Dania, I found myself wondering if I'd ever return to south Florida. I'd never run away from a fight before, but this fight was destroying me. I needed to regroup and come up with another strategy. Then I would come back.
But before I did any of those things, I needed to see Rose.
A1A took me to 595, which led to the Florida Turnpike. My car was old enough to have a tape deck, and I popped in a collection that I fondly called the soundtrack of my youth. It included songs by the Doors, the Allman Brothers Band, the Eagles, Crosby Stills Nash amp; Young, the Grateful Dead, and Led Zeppelin performing at New York's Madison Square Garden.