Gone, Baby, Gone - Dennis Lehane [47]
The people who’d entered this house that last day or night of his life had known they’d kill Kimmie and Wee David. That was a professional execution back in that kitchen. Kimmie’s throat had been sliced as a last-ditch effort to get Wee David to talk, but she’d also been killed with a knife, out of prudence.
Neighbors will almost always attribute one gunshot to something else—a car backfiring, maybe, or, in the case of a shotgun blast, an engine blowing or a china cabinet falling to the floor. Particularly when the sound may have come from the home of drug dealers or users, people who are known by their neighbors to make odd sounds at all times of night.
No one wants to think they actually heard a gunshot, were actually witness—if only aurally—to a murder.
So the killers had killed Kimmie quickly and silently, probably without warning. But Wee David—they’d been pointing that shotgun at him for a while. They’d wanted him to see the curl of the finger against the trigger, hear the hammer hit the shell, the explosive click of ignition.
And these were the people who held Amanda McCready.
“You want to trade the two hundred thousand for Amanda,” Angie said.
There it was. What I’d known for the last five minutes. What Poole and Broussard were unwilling to put into words. A cataclysmic breach of police protocol.
Poole studied the trunk of the dead tree. Broussard lifted a red leaf off the green grass with the toe of his shoe.
“Right?” Angie said.
Poole sighed. “I’d prefer that the kidnappers not open a suitcase full of newspaper or marked money and kill the child before we get to them.”
“That’s happened to you before?” Angie said.
“It’s happened to cases I’ve turned over to the FBI,” Poole said. “That’s what we’re dealing with here, Miss Gennaro. Kidnapping is federal.”
“We go federal,” Broussard said, “the money goes into an evidence locker, and the Feds do the negotiating, get a chance to show how clever they are.”
Angie looked out at the tiny yard, the dying violet petals growing through the chain-link fence from the other side. “You two want to negotiate with the kidnappers without the Feds.”
Poole dug his hands into his pockets. “I’ve found too many dead children in closets, Miss Gennaro.”
She looked at Broussard. “You?”
He smiled. “I hate Feds.”
I said, “This goes bad, you’ll lose your pensions, guys. Maybe worse.”
On the other side of the yard, a man hung a throw rug out his third-story window and started beating it with a hockey stick that was missing the blade. The dust rose in angry, ephemeral clouds, and the man kept whacking without seeming to notice us.
Poole lowered himself to his haunches, picked at a blade of grass by the mound. “You remember the Jeannie Minnelli case? Couple years back?”
Angie and I shrugged. It was sad how many horrible things you forgot.
“Nine-year-old girl,” Broussard said. “Disappeared riding her bike in Somerville.”
I nodded. It was coming back.
“We found her, Mr. Kenzie, Miss Gennaro.” Poole snapped the blade of grass between his fingers at both ends. “In a barrel. Soaked in cement. The cement hadn’t hardened yet because the geniuses who killed her had used the wrong ratio of water to cement in the mix.” He slapped his hands together, to clear them of dust or pollen or just because. “We found a nine-year-old’s corpse floating in a barrel of watery cement.” He stood. “Sound pleasant?”
I looked over at Broussard. The memory had blanched his face, and several tremors spilled down his arms until he put his hands in his pockets, tightened his elbows against the sides of his torso.
“No,” I said, “but if this goes wrong, you’ll—”
“What?” Poole said. “Lose my benefits? I’m retiring