heâd informed them there he did not wish to return back home upon release. They process thirty or forty people a week through that ward. They found a bed for him at a smaller facility, where heâd receive proper attention . . .â He turned back to Charlie and Gabriella. âI promise you, everyone is extremely sorry about what happened.
âIn the meantime,â he said, placing a folder on the table, âI do have some things for you . . .â
He took out a large manila envelope and pushed it across the table. âYour son had these in his possession at the time . . .â
Charlie and Gabbyâs eyes stretched wide.
There was a large plastic bag inside. I saw a couple of dollar bills and some loose change. A metal-link key chain with a single key attached. A crumpled candy wrapper. And something else. . .
Gabby pulled it out.
It looked like one of those cheap plastic holograms that came from a Cracker Jack box. An eyeâwide open if you looked at it straight on. Then it closed, in a kind of wink, when it was shifted the other way.
âEvan was always picking up stupid stuff off the street.â Charlie shook his head forlornly.
âHe went around collecting recycling,â said Gabby, eyes glistening. âFor the money. He would go through peopleâs thingsâtheir garbage. Bring things home. Peopleâs shit. You wouldnât believe what was important to my son . . .â
She picked up the bag and held it like a cashmere cloth against her cheek. âI can feel him, my Evan. I know he didnât kill himself. He would never do that to me . . .â
âYou have to look into that sneaker,â Charlie said, his eyes fixed on Sherwood, as if it was the missing piece of a puzzle. He jabbed his finger. âThat could be the key.â
âI promise, Iâll do my best.â The detective nodded obligingly. He stood up and caught my eye. âGot a second?â
I stood up across from him. âOf course.â
He went around and opened the door and walked me outside to the hallway. âYour brother said youâre a doctor?â
âVascular surgeon. At the Westchester Medical Center. In Valhalla.â
âVascular . . .â He nodded thoughtfully. âYou work on hearts?â
âVeins, predominantly. Endovascular repairs. I keep the works flowing. Guess you could call me more of a plumber than a mechanic.â I smiled.
Sherwood nodded. âIâm a liver recipient myself. Going on two years now. So far so good, I guess. Iâm still here.â
âGood for you,â I said. Liver transplants resulted either from cirrhosis from booze or from hepatitis, the C kind, the killer, but something made me suspect the first.
âNow all I got is this TMJ.â He massaged his jaw. âHurts like the devil whenever things get stirred up. In fact, Iâm starting to feel it now . . . You say youâre from back in New York . . .â
âWestchester.â I nodded.
âI got a cousin back there. Nyack.â
âThatâs across the river. In Rockland County.â
âWell, wherever it isââthe detective looked at me directlyââtrust me, Dr. Erlich, itâs a whole different world out here . . . Look, I donât want to hurt anyoneâs feelingsâIâve been doing this a long time, and I know how hard it is to hearâbut this kid plainly wanted out of the game. You know what Iâm saying, donât you? Heâd made statements that he wanted to end his own life. He claimed to the doctors that the gun he was looking to purchase was intended expressly for him. I shouldnât go into this yet, but your nephewâs toxicology report came back. He was clean. Nothing in him at the time of his deathâ nada . Not even Seroquel, doc. You catching what I mean . . . ?â
I caught exactly what
Serenity King, Pepper Pace, Aliyah Burke, Erosa Knowles, Latrivia Nelson, Tianna Laveen, Bridget Midway, Yvette Hines