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Authors: P.J. Parrish

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BOOK: Thicker Than Water
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“Yeah, court-appointed. Everyone knows how hard they work for people like us.”

“People like who?” Louis asked.

Cade paused to take a drink and wiped his mouth with the back of his calloused hand. “Look, I do lawn maintenance for a living. My kid and me live in a double-wide over on Sereno. I ain't had many breaks in my life and I don't blame anybody for that. But the law don't work the same for everybody.” He paused again. “Do I have to start singing a sad song for you here?”

Louis glanced around the restaurant. He had seen the news about Spencer Duvall on TV. A big-shot lawyer getting gunned down in his own office late at night would be news anywhere, let alone Fort Myers. He had seen the film of a man being hauled away in handcuffs, the talking head saying the suspect had been recently released from prison. Louis had just chalked it up to a revenge thing gone bad. Now here was the guy's kid, begging for someone to believe his dad didn't do it. Interesting. But not interesting enough that he could afford to work for near free.

“Look, Mr. Cade, I don't think I—”

Cade leaned forward. “He's my
father,”
he said. “I'll give you anything I have.” He reached in a pocket and slapped a business card on the table. “Look, I've got my own business, I got a truck—”

Louis shook his head. “Sorry, man.”

Cade stared at Louis for a long time, then grabbed his beer and quickly drained it. He stood up slowly, digging for money in the pocket of his jeans.

“Forget it,” Louis said. “It's on me.”

Cade didn't move. His eyes flitted around the restaurant, then came back to Louis. “I lost him,” he said tightly.

“What?” Louis said.

“My father. He went to prison. I lost my father for twenty years.” Ronnie Cade's eyes glittered in the florescent lights. “My father wasn't there when I graduated high school, when I got married or when I had my boy. Twenty years, man. He just got out and now this.”

Louis didn't reply, the sounds of the restaurant suddenly dull and thick.

Cade shook his head slowly. “Fuck, you haven't got the faintest idea what the hell I'm talking about, do you?”

He started away.

“Hey, Cade,” Louis called out.

The man turned.

“I'm not making any promises, okay? But I'll look into it.”

Cade stared at him for a moment, then nodded briskly. He left, the screen door banging behind him. Louis picked up the business card.
J.C. LANDSCAPING.
It was dirt-smudged and the phone number was inked out and a new one scribbled in. He slipped it in his shorts pocket.

Bev came over, setting the grouper sandwich down in front of him. “What was that all about?” she asked.

“A job offer,” Louis said, picking a fry out of the basket.

“For what?”

“The guy's father was arrested for murdering a lawyer.”

Bev's eyes darted to the door where Ronnie Cade had disappeared. “That was Jack Cade's kid?”

“I guess. He didn't say what his father's name was.”

“Jack Cade. He just got out of prison and now they're saying he killed Spencer Duvall,” Bev said, excitement creeping into her voice. “What, you don't watch the news?”

“I saw it.” Louis took a bite of the sandwich.

“Don't you think it's kind of weird?” Bev pressed.

“Bev, I think all cons dream of killing the guy who put them away. Maybe this one made his dream come true.”

“But why would Jack Cade kill his
own
lawyer?”

Louis looked up at her, wiping his chin with a paper napkin. “Duvall was Cade's
defense
lawyer?”

She nodded. “Twenty years ago. When Cade was on trial for murder.”

Louis set his sandwich back in its plastic basket. “Who did Cade murder?”

“A girl.” Bev's brow furrowed. “Kathy something, I think. No, Kitty, her name was Kitty. She lived over in Fort Myers. It was big news around here at the time. I was working at the HoJo's on Cleveland and the cook had this TV in the back and we followed it on the news. It was pretty bad stuff. That girl . . . he raped her, too, and left her body in a dump.” She paused. “So you gonna take the case?”

Louis looked up at Bev. “I'm not sure.”

“Why not?”

“He can only pay me five hundred.”

Bev shook her head slowly. “You should have taken it.”

“Why?”

“End of the month. I gotta collect on your tab, hon. Five hundred bucks can buy a lot of grouper sandwiches.”

“I'll settle up at the end of the week, I promise.”

Bev picked up his empty Heineken bottle. “I'll bring you another.” She stopped. “Kitty Jagger, that was her name.” She shook her head absently. “Wow. Twenty years. I can't believe that was twenty years ago. Where's the time go?”

She went back to the kitchen. Louis picked up his sandwich, took another bite and set it aside. He looked out the window, out at the black moonless night and the inky water of the channel lapping against the dock.

Twenty years was a long time. But not long for rape and murder. Spencer Duvall apparently had done a good enough job to have kept his client out of the chair. Why would Jack Cade turn around and kill the guy who had saved his neck?

He fished out the business card Cade had left.
J.C. LANDSCAPING.
Louis guessed the J.C. stood for Jack Cade. Twenty years ago, Ronnie Cade would have been, what?—fifteen maybe? What goes through a kid's head when he finds out his father is a rapist and murderer? How the hell do you forgive that?

He's my father. I lost him. . . .

A green bottle appeared in front of him. Louis looked up at Bev.

“Today's my birthday,” he said.

“No shit?” Bev said.

Louis took a quick swig of beer. “Yeah, no shit.”

Chapter Three

The glass doors to the Lee County jail reflected the sun like mirrors and Louis paused on the sidewalk, still not used to seeing himself in what he had come to think of as his new “uniform.” This morning, it was fresh khaki slacks, a yellow polo shirt and a blue blazer. It was what he always wore when he was meeting a client for the first time.

Not that he was sure Jack Cade was going to be a client.

He had spent a fitful night turning Ronnie Cade's situation over in his head. He couldn't afford to take a charity case, that much was certain. He had just deposited the check from the Bonita Springs case, but there was nothing else on the horizon and he knew he'd have to live off that money for a while. He glanced back at the white '65 Mustang parked at the curb.

He shouldn't have spent so much getting it fixed. New brakes, new transmission, and the body work and paint job. It had taken a huge chunk out of his meager savings. He should have listened to Dodie and junked the old thing and bought something new and reliable.

He shook his head. “Man, I'll walk before I have to drive a damn Civic,” he muttered as he started for the door.

He stopped, spotting the
News-Press
box. The Spencer Duvall murder was the lead story again. This time, however, there was a picture of Jack Cade.

Louis popped in a quarter and pulled out a paper. Jack Cade looked to be on the downslope of fifty, with the same long, thin face and hooded eyes as his son. Louis knew you couldn't read much from a mug shot. Except when the person was innocent. Then you could see it in the eyes, the indignation, shock or bewilderment of the falsely accused. Jack Cade looked simply blank—bored, if anything.

He knew what had kept him tossing and turning all night. It wasn't the money. It was that he didn't think he could get past the fact that Jack Cade had been convicted of rape and murder. But he had made a promise to Ronnie Cade. Maybe if he met the father face to face he could find a good reason to walk away from this.

Folding the paper under his arm, he went in. At the glass window, he tapped lightly on the wall microphone to get the clerk's attention.

“Morning, Zach.”

Zach turned and keyed the mike on his side. Reddish-blond spikes of hair sprouted from a sun-burned square head that melted into the collar of his dark green shirt. Zach Dombrowski was a dead-ringer for Barney Rubble.

“Hey, Louis. Haven't seen you for a while. How goes it?”

“Okay,” Louis said as he picked up a pen to sign in.

Zach leaned close to the mike so the other deputy behind the glass could not hear him.

“I heard a rumor we might be adding guys in February, Louis. Why don't you put in?”

Louis looked at Zach in surprise. The others around here weren't usually so friendly. “I don't think I could work for Mobley.”

Zach nodded. “He has an Eight Ball on his desk. He uses it to make decisions. ‘Should I take a shit? Signs Point To Yes.' ”

Louis smiled and tossed the pen down.

Zach looked at the log. “You here to see Jack Cade?”

“Is that a problem?”

Zach shrugged. “Well, I guess not, except the Sheriff left orders to be notified when anyone visits Cade.”

“Then notify him.”

“He's off duty but he's over at the Dinkle Center.”

“Lucky break for me.”

“I better call him anyway. Hold on a minute.”

As he waited, Louis read the Duvall story. It recapped Cade's arraignment with a few comments from the prosecutor, State Attorney Vern Sandusky, assuring Southwest Florida “that the case was progressing as expected and that I will do everything in my power to make sure that Jack Cade spends the rest of his life in prison.”

Zach tapped the glass. “Sheriff says you can go up, but he wants to see you at O'Sullivan's in an hour.”

Louis nodded, tucking the newspaper under his arm as he headed to the elevator.

The doors opened and a deputy stepped in. He gave Louis the once-over, focusing on his VISITOR badge. Louis glanced at the deputy's name plate. LOVETT. He remembered Lovett had been the arresting officer on a deadbeat father case he had worked several months ago. He felt Lovett's eyes on him and wondered if the deputy remembered him, too.

“Kincaid, right?” Lovett asked.

Louis nodded. He waited, but the deputy's eyes stared straight ahead at the closed doors.

“You remember that case we worked together on a few months back?” Louis said finally.

Lovett's eyes didn't waver. “No.”

Great. The silent treatment again.

“What about Jack Cade? What's the talk?” Louis asked.

Lovett's eyes slid to Louis, then snapped back to the doors.

“The way I see it, killers like Cade are no better than garbage, and lawyers like Duvall are no better than the maggots that feed off it.”

The doors opened. Louis moved to step off.

“You working for or against that asshole?” Lovett asked.

“Neither,” Louis said.

The doors closed with a wheeze of air. The deputy posted on the fourth floor saw Louis and jerked his head to the right. Louis followed him down a dim hall done in the same chipped beige paint as the iron-bar door that clanged shut behind them. The deputy stopped at a metal door and motioned for Louis to go inside.

“He's in five, down at the end.”

A long table split the room, a plexiglass divider running its length with privacy partitions. Louis stopped at the end and looked at the man seated behind the glass.

Jack Cade's head was down, his stringy, ink-black hair shading his face. His arm was slung across the back of the wooden chair and his ankle was propped on his knee. Louis cleared his throat.

Cade lifted his head, running thick fingers through his hair to move it from his forehead. His gray-green eyes peered at Louis from under lazy lids for several seconds before dropping away. He drew his thin lips into a grimace.

“I told them I didn't want to see any reporters.”

His voice sounded hollow, strained through the small holes in the plexiglass.

“I'm not a reporter.”

“Funny. You look like one.”

“I'm a private investigator, Louis Kincaid. Your son Ronnie wants to hire me to help in your defense.”

“Kincaid? Yeah . . .” Cade cocked his head. “Ronnie told me you were too expensive. What changed your mind?”

“Your son makes a compelling argument for family values.”

Cade narrowed his eyes, then flicked his hand toward the empty chair. Louis sat down, studying Cade.

His eyes were dulled with disinterest and his large body, all sinew and muscle beneath the orange jumpsuit, was draped over the chair like he was home watching a football game. Except for his right foot. The foot, propped on his left knee, was moving in a nonstop, rhythmic jerking motion.

“You got any smokes?” Cade asked.

“Sorry.”

“So you working for me or not?”

“I don't know. Talk to me.”

“What do you want to know?”

Louis pulled a small notebook from his back pocket. “I'm coming in cold, Mr. Cade, so you're going to have to start at the beginning. All I know is Spencer Duvall was shot Monday night around nine-thirty in his office and you were arrested the following afternoon.”

Cade didn't reply.

“So why did they arrest you?” Louis asked.

“I went to see Duvall that morning.”

“Why?”

“I went there to tell him I was going to sue him. I had an appointment. You can check.”

“Sue him? For what?”

“He fucked up some legal work he did for me a few years back.”

“What kind of legal work?”

Cade was studying his hands. He began to pick at the skin around his nails. “Criminal.”

“You mean when he defended you twenty years ago?”

Cade snickered. “Can't call what he did a defense, not by any stretch. The asshole cost me twenty years.”

“It could have been worse,” Louis said.

Cade didn't blink. His eyes seemed darker now, the color the gulf had been after the storm.

“The rape and murder,” Louis said. “Tell me about it.”

Cade pressed his lips together and shook his head. “Not important.”

“Tell me or this is over now.”

Cade shut his eyes slowly, like he was tired to the bone. Or bored. His right foot kept up its steady jerking. “I was sent up for raping and killing this girl. There were things that should've been brought up, motions and shit like that. Duvall didn't do any of it and I got fucked. That's why I was going to sue him.”

“How old was ‘
this girl
'?”

Cade shrugged. “Fifteen. Sixteen.”

“How did you kill her?”

“I told you—”

“How was she killed?”

“Who cares?”

“How was she killed?” Louis demanded.

“She was stabbed.” Cade dragged his foot off his knee and turned away, rubbing a hand over his rough chin.

“Mr. Cade—”

Cade spun back. “What the hell difference does it make? This is about Duvall. This is about today.”

Louis stared at Jack Cade, his fingers working gently against the metal clip on the ballpoint pen.
Man, get the hell out of here. You don't need this loser or the five-hundred dollars.
But he wanted to know.

“Did you do it?” Louis asked.

“I didn't kill that cocksucker lawyer.”

“I mean the girl. Did you kill the girl?”

“Why you digging up old stuff no one cares about?”

“Did you kill her?”

Cade leaned forward, the pupils of his eyes barely visible under the heavy lids. “The only thing you need to know is that I didn't kill Duvall.”

Louis was amazed to see a small smile creep into the corners of Cade's mouth.

“You know what?” Cade said. “I should answer your question just because I find your need to know . . . amusing.”

“This isn't funny, Cade.”

The tipped corners of his mouth grew into a grin. “That depends on your vantage point.” He tapped on the plexiglass between them. “You ever looked at anything through six inches of plastic? You ever seen the world through greasy hand prints and scratches and dried spit? Try it sometime. Try it for twenty years. It kind of . . . clarifies things.”

Cade's smile faded.

“Answer the question,” Louis said.

Cade dropped his head, picking again at his ravaged cuticles.

“What you say your name was again?” he asked, without looking up.

“Louis Kincaid.”

“How you spell that?”

Louis spelled his last name and when Cade looked up he was grinning. “Thought maybe we had a distant relative in common for a minute there. Kin-CADE . . . get it?”

“I asked you a question, Cade,” Louis said. “Did you kill her?”

But Cade ignored him again. “Ronnie said he offered you five-hundred bucks,” he said. “That's barely enough to put macaroni on your table, right?”

Louis didn't answer him.

“Would you be so curious about whether I killed that girl if I paid you five thousand?”

“Yes, I would.”

“What if it was ten thousand? Or a hundred thousand?”

Louis just stared at him.

“At what dollar amount does my value as a human being reach the defendable level? How much would it take for you
not
to be so curious?”

Louis closed the notebook. Cade's eyes flitted to it and back up to Louis's face.

“I didn't kill that girl,” he said finally.

Louis locked on Cade's chameleon eyes, hoping to see some hint of the truth there. There was nothing.

A steel door on Cade's side opened and a guard emerged. Cade glanced at the guard and smiled. “Well, I guess the maids are finished with my room.” He unfurled his body from the chair.

“So,” he said to Louis, “you staying for the macaroni?”

Louis rose, slipping the notebook in his back pocket. “I don't know yet. I need to do some research on your case.”

“Yeah, you do that.” Cade turned away.

Louis started back toward the steel door at the other end of the room.

“Kincaid.”

Louis looked back. He could see Cade's face at the plexiglass again.

“Don't ever ask me about that dead girl again,” Cade said.

He disappeared from view. Louis walked back to the steel door and hit a buzzer. Back out in the hall, Louis drew in a deep breath.

“Hey, your name Kincaid?”

Louis turned to the deputy who had called out. “Yeah.”

“Zach says there's someone downstairs who wants to know who's seeing Jack Cade.”

“Who is it?” Louis asked.

“Cade's lawyer. And she's mad as hell.”

BOOK: Thicker Than Water
5.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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