Dan Metheny rolled off the park bench, weapon in hand, shouting, “Freeze, motherfucker!”
But Diane was already running, and kept running as Metheny fired off five quick shots.
Parker screamed at him, “Don’t shoot! Don’t shoot!”
He pointed at the ground as he ran past and shouted at Metheny, “Keep him alive!”
He sprinted after Diane as hard as his legs would pump, shouting her name over and over.
She had twenty yards on him, and was athletic and fast. She was going to make it to her car.
She skidded around her Lexus, yanked open the door, and got in.
The engine fired as Parker drew close, then the car was coming at him.
Parker went up on the hood, losing his gun, grabbing on with both hands as Diane spun the wheel. The turn was lurching and awkward, and threw Parker off the side like a bull in a rodeo.
He hit the ground and skidded and rolled, coming up on his feet.
But the Lexus didn’t make it a hundred yards. Jimmy Chewalski’s black-and-white came screaming from the other direction and skidded to a stop, blocking her escape.
Parker reached the back of the car, panting, as Diane flung herself out of it. She stumbled, went down on her knees, scrambled back up, and turned to face him. A gun was in her hand.
“Diane,” Parker said. “Jesus Christ, drop the gun.”
Chewalski and his partner both had their weapons out, and were yelling.
Standoff.
Diane looked at them, looked at Parker. Her expression was one of anguish, and a kind of pain Parker had never imagined until now. He thought that her face was mirroring the emotions tearing through him.
“God, Diane, please,” he begged. “Drop the gun.”
Diane felt as if she were standing outside of her body, watching this happen to someone else.
She was holding a gun. Cops were pointing their guns at her.
She had shot a man in the head.
She had paid a man to kill her former lover’s wife.
She had no idea who this person was, this person inside of her who could do those things.
Her need for his love had turned her into something she hated. She had told him more than once she would do anything for him—lie for him, die for him, subjugate her pride, give up all she had. The idea made her sick.
“Diane, please,” Parker said, holding out a hand to her. The emotions on his face broke her heart. “Put the gun down.”
How could I have done this? she asked herself. How could I have come to this?
It was too late for answers. It was too late to change any of it. It was too late. . . .
50
Tyler felt all his blood drain to his feet when the shooting started.
“Jace!” he shouted. He grabbed the radio and pressed the button. “Scout to Leader! Scout to Leader!”
He turned to Andi Kelly. Her eyes looked as wide as his felt.
The person from the Lexus ran out of the park, running for the car that was left way down the street from them. Someone came chasing after, closing ground. He sprinted through a cone of light from a street lamp. Parker.
“Jace! Jace!” Tyler screamed his brother’s name over and over. He shoved open the car door and started running for the plaza as fast as his legs could carry him.
“Tyler!” Andi Kelly called.
She caught him from behind, grabbing him by the arm. Tyler struggled and kicked and yanked, shouting, “Let me go! Let me go!”
But the woman didn’t let go. Instead, she pulled him against her and held tight. His screams became sobs, and he went limp in her arms.
They call it “suicide by cop.” Someone wants to die but doesn’t have the guts to stick the gun in their own mouth and pull the trigger, so they get the cops to do it for them. If the person wants it badly enough, there isn’t any way to stop them. All that person has to do is turn the gun on the cops and start shooting.
Parker’s heart was in his throat as he held his hand out to Diane. “Diane. Honey. Please put the gun down.”
The despair in her face was a terrible thing to see. She was giving up right before his eyes. He took a step closer.
Behind him, Jimmy Chew said, “Kev, don’t get close.” Chew was worried Diane would turn the gun on Parker.
Parker took another step.
The streetlight shone silver over the tears on her cheeks. She looked at him and said, “I’m so sorry. I’m so, so sorry. . . .”
He took another step.
Shaking and weak, she tried to lift the gun out to the side. It wobbled in her hand like a dying bird.
“It’s okay,” Parker whispered. Stupid thing to say. What was okay about any of this? What would be okay after this moment had passed? Nothing. But he said it again anyway. “It’s okay, honey. It’s okay.”
The gun dropped from her limp hand, and she melted into his arms, sobbing.
Parker held her as tightly as he could. He was shaking. Tears burned his eyes. He held her and rocked her.
Behind them, he could hear the radio chatter coming from the black-and-white. Chew’s partner was calling for backup, asking to have a supervisor and detectives sent.
Parker hoped to God they didn’t send Ruiz, or Kray.
An ambulance siren was already wailing, coming from the other side of the plaza. Metheny also would have called them in, and requested backup, and asked for detectives and a supervisor. In a very short time the plaza would be ablaze with lights, alive with people. He wished he could make it all recede and go away. He didn’t want people seeing this. Diane was a proud and private person. She wouldn’t want anyone seeing her like this.
It was a strange thought, he supposed. She had shot a man in the head. She had as much as confessed to having paid Eddie Davis to murder Tricia Crowne-Cole. But he didn’t know the person who had done those things. He knew the woman he held. He wished he had known her better.
Jimmy Chew put a hand on his shoulder. “Kev,” he said quietly. “They’re coming.”
Parker nodded. He led Diane to the black-and-white and put her in the backseat. Chew handed him a blanket from the trunk of the car, and Parker wrapped it around her and kissed her cheek, and whispered something to her that even he didn’t understand.
As he straightened away from the interior of the car, he turned to Chewalski and said, “Jimmy—uh—can you just see that no one bothers her? I—uh—have to go over there. . . .”
“Sure, Kev.”
Parker nodded and tried to say thank you, but his voice didn’t work. He walked a few steps away, rubbed his hands over his face, took a deep breath, and let it out. He had a job to do. That was the only thing that was going to keep him from falling apart.
He walked away from the black-and-white without looking back, and returned to the plaza, where Metheny knelt on the ground, with Eddie Davis’s head in his big hands.
“Is he alive?” Parker asked.
“So far.”
Metheny pressed a thumb against bullet holes on either side of Davis’s forehead. Diane’s shot had gone in one side and out the other, straight through the frontal lobes. Davis appeared to be surprised, but Parker couldn’t tell if he was actually conscious or not. Still, he was breathing.
Metheny looked up at him. “I feel like the damn little Dutch boy plugging the dike. If I take my thumbs away, this guy’s brains are gonna run out.”
“Eddie. Can you hear me?” Parker asked, leaning down to him. Davis didn’t respond. “Shit.”
“That chick was a wild card, man,” Metheny said. “Did you see that coming?”
“No,” Parker said. “I didn’t.”
“I didn’t get a good look at her. Do you know who she is?”