April checked her watch. Smiling, she made a small motion of her head at Woody. Separate these kids. "God, I'm tired. Come on, Brandy, let's sit down for a minute." She headed for an empty bench, talking as she walked.
The girl followed her at a skip. "Can I see your gun? Please. I won't shoot it or anything."
Back on the gun. April ignored the request. "You know, I'm thinking about yesterday. It rained in the afternoon. It didn't rain at night. Maybe you went out for a while in the evening and forgot about it. You look like you enjoy a good party, drink some beer, smoke a little pot. What else?" April's tone was neutral.
"Oh no, no, no. You got the wrong person. My dad doesn't let me out at night." Brandy shook fingers decorated with black nail polish at her. "I don't do anything like that. Don't you know how bad that stuff is for you?"
"Do you live at your dad's?" April asked.
Brandy hesitated for a beat. "I live mostly with my mom. She just had surgery, though. She's kind of out of it." Finally, Brandy threw herself down on the bench, keeping a worried eye on David. "What's that guy asking him?"
"Same thing I'm asking you-what you did and what you saw in the park last night. What you do for entertainment, that kind of thing."
"Nothing. I told you, we weren't in the park last night, and I don't do drugs. My parents would kill me."
"Oh come on, everybody does it. I know what it's like."
Brandy gave her a sharp look and a little shake of the head. "Don't get me in trouble."
"Why would I get you in trouble? You look like a nice girl to me."
"Ha," Brandy said, but she was pleased.
"Anybody with half a brain could guess what a pretty girl like you would be doing in the park with your boyfriend."
Brandy blushed and swung her legs. "He's not my boyfriend."
"He looks like he's crazy about you."
"Doesn't mean he's my boyfriend. And I wasn't in the park," Brandy added.
"That's not what the officers over there said you told them."
"Look, we were in my dad's apartment. We saw the SAR dog. We came down because we wanted to play with the dog, that's all. I know how to work with dogs. I could give you some tips."
"What kind of tips?"
Brandy shrugged. "I know about dogs, that's all."
"How do you know about dogs?"
"I'm a dog trainer."
"No kidding. Who did you train with?"
"John Zumech-ever heard of him?"
April was stunned. She'd not only heard of Zumech, she'd worked with him. She looked at the kid with sudden interest. Maybe Brandy wasn't a complete flake. The girl yawned, and April caught sight of the tongue pierce. Okay, what was she seeing? A girl whose parents were just divorced; her mother was taking care of her own business, having her face lifted. The kid was acting out with alcohol and pot. But a lot of kids did. Right now Brandy looked wistful.
"Brandy, I can see you've taken something. If I took you into the station and searched you, would I find anything on you I shouldn't?"
Brandy laughed uneasily. "You're a cop. I bet you like to hurt people. Are you going to arrest me and beat me up? That would be so cool. My mom and dad would have your ass."
April's face didn't change. "Brandy, I'm with the good guys. I don't hurt people. I help them."
"Well, if you want to help that guy, you should try another dog. This one doesn't know shit."
April tended to agree with her. "Okay, it's getting late. I'm going to let you go home now. But I'm going to talk with Sergeant Zumech about your dog-training skills, and also your parents."
"Wow, do you know Sergeant Zumech?"
"Yes, I do."
"You know Peachy?" Brandy was stunned.
Peachy was Zumech's Doberman. "Yes, I know Peachy," April told her.
"Wow. My mom calls this kind of coincidence synchronicity."
"No kidding, your mom must be a smart lady."
Moodily, Brandy stared at David and Woody. "Not really."
April smiled in spite of herself. No daughter thought her mother was smart.
"He took my picture, why?"
"We're looking for a girl in a pink sweater, fits your description."
"Wow." Brandy frowned. "I saw a girl in a pink sweater yesterday. I saw her today, too. Real thin, long black hair, is that the one you're looking for?"
"Might be. If you see her again, will you give me a call?"
"Sure, I will, sure. I love to help."
April and Brandy exchanged phone numbers.
Then she met up with Woody.
"Anything?" she asked.
"They're high, but I don't think they know anything. Want to bust them?"
"It's an option for later. Right now I want to check Maslow's office," April told him. "It's up on Eight-nine and CPW. Let's go."
They hurried out of the park. The show was over. Central Park West was moving. The barricades were down, the media circus had moved somewhere else, and the park was open to the public again.
Twenty
As the light faded to black, Maslow moved his arm for the first time and realized that he was not bound. Where he was lying, flat on his back, was damp and rocky, but the puddles he'd felt around him before were gone now. His mouth was dry and he was starving. He inhaled deeply, trying to get control of the weakness, the dizziness and pain in his head. He was like the old man with a brain tumor he'd seen in the hospital just a few days ago. Every exchange, every moment had taken ages. Ten minutes to raise his arm, to pick up a foot, answer a question. "Give me a minute," he'd say. Maslow was like that now.
He told himself in a few minutes he would explore his prison. When he was ready. Now he would try to think. He could trace the events of his last day. He remembered waking up and worrying about the date he'd had with Vivian last week, how much he'd liked her. He remembered how upset he'd been that they'd argued. He'd been worrying about it for a week, obsessing about whether he should call her back. After a week, he wondered if it was too late to call her. Would she be insulted that it had taken him so long? He wasn't sure he liked her anymore. But then, she called him and left a message. The message was she'd left her pen somewhere. It was a blue pen, a gift from her mother. She asked if he remembered it, if he'd seen it. He hadn't seen it, didn't remember it. He wondered if the call was just an excuse to talk to him. For two days he'd played the message over and over trying to figure it out. Did she like him, did he like her? What should he do about it in either case?
That day he'd had classes, had lunch, saw two psychiatric patients, and had his session with Allegra in his office-the one that upset her so much. He'd called Jason, gone home, and changed for jogging. He remembered the rain. It had been raining all afternoon. When he came out of his building, he'd seen Allegra. She was sitting on a bench outside the park. In that moment when she came up to him and didn't let him pass her by, he knew she really had been following him for some time.
That was all he remembered. Nothing after that. He'd been with Allegra and now he was here. He had an ache in his throat, as if he'd been punched there and lost his voice. His chest hurt, and it was hard to breathe. Maybe a collapsed lung, maybe cracked ribs. He couldn't tell. He realized he was shivering. He knew he had to get moving, drink, and eat something. He put his hand out and felt a crumbling surface, like the beach at low tide, inches from his face. At his sides the space widened a little, but only a little. Even if he were able to sit up, there was no room to do it.
Panicked, he felt for his chest and stomach. It was then that he realized the fanny pack he'd taken with him when he left home was still on him. Lying on his back, moaning with terror, he groped around in it for his cell phone. With the phone he could call someone and get out of there. He found the phone, felt the talk button, pushed it, and heard a beep. He moved it up his chest and raised it to his face. There was no flashing light to indicate how much life the battery had left. That's how he knew he'd been in his grave longer than eighteen hours. He didn't know how much longer he could last.