was so real. And then I heard his killer.”
“His dealer?” Quinn asked.
He was really pushing Tyler, Danni thought. Testing him.
Tyler thumped a hand on the table. “His
killer
,” he repeated. “I heard him talking to Arnie just before he shot him up so full of poison that he died within minutes. I heard him, I’m telling you. I heard him say, ‘ You’re dead, buddy. You’re dead.’”
Danni and Quinn turned to look at each other, silent for a moment.
“Are you saying the sax...talked?” Quinn asked.
Tyler closed his eyes, looking as if he was in pain. “No. I was playing the sax,” he said quietly. “But while I was playing I saw what Arnie saw, felt what he felt, heard what he heard.”
“You didn’t happen to see the killer, did you?” Danni asked.
He stared at her. “Are you mocking me?”
“I swear, I’m not,” she said softly. “But if you really believe that he was murdered, why didn’t you go to the police?”
“The police?” Tyler asked drily. “Yeah, right. I wish you could see the way
you’re
looking at me, and you’re open-minded enough to believe me. The police... I can just imagine the snickers. I’m not sure they’d even
try
to keep straight faces. You both said you read the newspaper articles about his death, so you know what they’re saying. The same crap you hear everywhere. ‘He just hadn’t adjusted. He was like so many soldiers. Strong, stoic, not about to admit to having nightmares he couldn’t handle, nightmares so bad that he’d turn to drugs to wipe them out.’ Especially not a marine like Arnie. Admit it. That’s all stuff you believed about Arnie when you read he was dead. And like everyone else, I bet you thought, ‘What a waste, what a tragedy. A man comes back from the war and takes his own life. Makes you stop and think.’ But no one stops to think, ‘Hey, whoa, maybe he
didn’t
kill himself.’”
Tyler was certainly passionate in defense of his position, Danni thought. Of course, he’d been Arnie’s friend. His best friend, she imagined.
“Tyler, how long have you had the sax?” Quinn asked him. “You said it’s special, but would anyone else know that?”
“Probably,” Tyler said and then shrugged. “I don’t know. He told everyone in the band back in high school it was special, that his grandma told him so. I’ve had it since about a week after he died. His mom said she had to give it to someone who would love it the way Arnie had loved it, would take care of it the way he did. She used to love to listen to him, and then she’d laugh. She told us both that Arnie got to be as good as he was because of the sax. His grandmother told him it was special, kind of...magical. But according to his mom, the magic was because he believed it. Plus he loved playing, and he practiced all the damned time. And practicing made him the musician that he was.”
Quinn nodded. “I read in the paper that the family intended to sell his sax, along with his other instruments, and donate the money to a foundation helping veterans.”
“Arnie had a bunch of saxes. They planned to sell some of them, but not this one.”
“What do Arnie’s parents think? Would they tell you if they suspected he’d made any enemies?” Quinn asked.
“Arnie’s parents think he was murdered, too. But there’s nowhere they can go with that any more than I can. They know the police would think they were crazy, too, if they tried to convince them some random killer had hunted Arnie down and killed him with an overdose of heroin.”
Quinn pushed his plate aside and leaned on the table, his attention focused entirely on Tyler.
“Were you with him the night he died? Do you know who he was hanging around with, what might have been going on in his life?” he asked.
Tyler shook his head. “I wasn’t with him the night he died. Wish I had been!” he said fervently. “I was working in the Quarter that night, too. Arnie had been sitting in with my band, getting