Silent Screams - C. E. Lawrence [72]
“Oh, that’s better,” he said, taking another deep drag before settling back down on the bench. The hand holding the cigarette was still, resting on his bony knee, but the other one danced about nervously. He picked at the green chipped paint on the bench, and that seemed to calm him somewhat. His eyes roamed the park, as if trying to spot potential spies and saboteurs. The only people in sight, though, were a young mother rolling a baby in a stroller, and an old man walking a decrepit Boston terrier. Owner and dog shuffled along, both of them arthritic, the dog’s bulbous eyes cloudy with age. The man was wrapped in a red wool scarf under his parka, and the dog wore a little red wool coat made from the same material.
The pair didn’t escape Willow’s roving gaze. “Look at that!” he said. “Like master, like dog.” He muttered something under his breath and took another drag of the cigarette, pulling at it with his whole body. He held in the smoke and then let it snake slowly out through his nostrils.
Eddie sat next to him. “So you told my friend that you had something for us? Some information—something you saw.”
“I see a lot of things,” Willow said, almost to himself. “I see a lot of things.”
“Yeah, I know,” Eddie replied. “But there was somethin’ in particular you saw that we was interested in, remember?”
Instead of answering, Willow dug another cigarette from the pack and lit it with the first one, which he tossed over his shoulder. Lee’s hopes sank—this man was a washout, a dead end. He had come all the way out to Prospect Park to watch a homeless schizophrenic smoke himself to death.
But then, to his surprise, Willow nodded. Looking around one last time, he lowered his voice even more. “Okay, I’ll tell you what I saw, right?”
“Right,” Eddie said.
“If you promise not to tell the Feds. CIA, FBI—they all want to get me, you know?”
“Yeah,” Eddie assured him. “Don’t worry, we won’t tell anyone.”
“Plant microchips in your brain, that’s what they do when they get you, you know. Did you know that?”
“I heard something’ about it, yeah,” Eddie said. “Now what was it you saw?”
“Well, it was this guy, you know, and what was weird about it was that he was taking trash into the church. I thought that was odd. Thought maybe he was one of the ones after me—I’m always on the lookout.”
“Right, right,” Eddie encouraged him. “This is All Souls Church, right?”
“Yeah.”
“When was this?” Lee asked.
“Well, it was last Saturday night. I know ’cause that’s the day they have their soup kitchen, and I always go. Well, sometimes they throw stuff out later in the day, so I was just poking around, you know—nothin’ illegal.”
“No, of course not,” Lee reassured him.
“So it’s Saturday evening and there’s really no one else around, and then I see this guy.”
“What he look like?” Eddie asked.
“Little guy—runty, you know? Like if he was a pup in a litter they woulda drowned him. Only they didn’t, ’cause there he was.”
Lee had the uncomfortable thought that it might have been better for everyone if someone had drowned the man they were pursuing.
“Runty like how?” said Eddie. “You mean deformed or something?”
“Naw, nothin’ like that. Just small—short, you know—and skinny. Not as thin as me, maybe, but pretty damn skinny, I’ll tell you.”
“Did you get a look at his face at all?” said Lee.
Willow shook his head, loosening the sock holding his gray ponytail. Lee didn’t want to think about what might be living inside that greasy nest of hair.
“Not real well—too dark. No moon that night, and one a’ the street lamps was burned out—has been for a while. But I did see the light across the street shine on his forehead. He had a big forehead. High, y’know, like his hair is receding.”
“This trash can he was carrying,” Eddie said, “did it seem like it was full?”
“Yeah, that’s the other weird thing,” Willow said, scratching his head. “Who brings a full trash can into a building, you know?