Every Dead Thing by John Connolly
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Synopsis
Haunted by the unsolved slayings of his wife and daughter, former New York City Detective Charlie Parker is a man consumed by guilt, regret, and the desire for revenge. When his search for a missing woman leads him to the man who destroyed his family, Parker knows payback time has come at last.
Every Dead Thing
By
John Connolly
The first book in the Charlie Parker series Copyright 1998 by John Connolly
I
For I am every dead thing I am re-begot
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Every Dead Thing by John Connolly
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Of absence, darknesse, death; things which are not.
John Donne
A Nocturnall Upon S. Lucies Day
PROLOGUE
IT IS COLD in the car, cold as the grave. I prefer to leave the a/c on full, to let the falling temperature keep me alert. The volume on the radio is low but I can still hear a tune, vaguely insistent over the sound of the engine. Its early R.E.M., something about shoulders and rain. Ive left Cornwall Bridge about eight miles behind and soon Ill be entering South Canaan, then Canaan itself, before crossing the state line into Massachusetts. Ahead of me, the bright sun is fading as day bleeds slowly into night.
The patrol car arrived first on the night they died, shedding red light into thedarkness. Two patrolmen entered the house, quickly yet cautiously, aware thatthey were responding to a call from one of their own, a policeman who hadbecome a victim instead of the resort of victims.
I sat in the hallway with my head in my hands as they entered the kitchen of ourBrooklyn home and glimpsed the remains of my wife and child. I watched as oneconducted a brief search of the upstairs rooms while the other checked the livingroom, the dining room, all the time the kitchen calling them back, demanding thatthey bear witness.
I listened as they radioed for the Major Crime Scene Unit, informing them of aprobable double homicide. I could hear the shock in their voices, yet they tried tocommunicate what they had seen as dispassionately as they could, like good copsshould. Maybe, even then, they suspected me. They were policemen and they,more than anyone else, knew what people were capable of doing, even one oftheir own.
And so they remained silent, one by the car and the other in the hallway besideme, until the detectives pulled up outside, the ambulance following, and theyentered our home, the neighbors already gathering on their stoops, at their gates,some moving closer to find out what had happened, what could have been visitedon the young couple beyond, the couple with the little blond girl.
Bird? I ran my hands over my eyes as I recognized the voice. A sob shudderedthrough my system. Walter Cole stood over me, McGee farther back, his face 2 of 321
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bathed by the flashes of the patrol car lights but still pale, shaken by what he hadseen. Outside there was the sound of more cars pulling up. An EMT arrived at thedoor, distracting Coles attention from me. The medical technicians here, saidone of the patrolmen as the thin, whey-faced young man stood by. Cole noddedand gestured toward the kitchen.
Birdman, Cole repeated, this time with greater urgency and a harder tone tohis voice. Do you want to tell me what happened here?
I pull into the parking lot in front of the flower shop. There is a light breeze blowing and my coattails play at my legs like the hands of children. Inside, the store is cool, cooler than it should be, and redolent with the scent of roses. Roses never go out of style, or season.
A man is bending down, carefully checking the thick waxy leaves of a small green plant. He rises up slowly and painfully as I enter.
Evening, he says. Help you?
Id like some of those roses. Give me a dozen. No, better make it two dozen.
Two dozen roses, yessir. He is heavy-set and bald, maybe in his early sixties.
He walks stiffly, hardly bending his knees. The joints of his fingers are swollen with arthritis.
Air-conditioning is playing up, he says. As he passes by the ancient control unit on the wall, he adjusts a switch. Nothing happens.
The store is old, with a long glass-fronted hothouse along the far wall. He opens the door and begins lifting roses carefully from a bucket inside. When he has counted twenty-four, he closes the door again and lays them on a sheet of plastic on the counter.
Gift wrap em for ya?
No. Plastic is fine.
He looks at me for a moment and I can almost hear the tumblers fall as the process of recognition begins.
Do I know you from someplace?
In the city, they have short memories. Farther out, the memories last longer.
Supplemental Crime Report
NYPD
Case Number: 96-12-1806
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Offense:
Homicide
Susan Parker, W/F
Victim:
Jennifer Parker, W/F
Location:
1219 Hobart Street, kitchen
Date:
Dec. 12, 1996
Time:
Around 2130 hrs
Means:
Stabbing
Edged weapon, possibly knife (not
Weapon:
found)
Reporting
Walter Cole,
Officer:
Detective Sergeant
Details:
On December 13, 1996, I went to 1219 Hobart Street in response to a request by Officer Gerald Kersh for detectives to work a reported homicide.
Complainant Detective Second Grade Charles Parker stated he left house at 1900
hrs following argument with wife, Susan Parker. Went to Toms Oak Tavern and remained there until around 0130 hrs on December 13. Entered house through front door and found furniturein hallway disturbed. Entered kitchen and found wife and daughter. Stated that wife was tied to kitchen chair but daughters body appeared to have been moved from adjacent chair and arranged over mothers body. Called police at 0155 hrs and waited at scene.
Victims, identified to me by Charles Parker as Susan Parker (wife, 33 years old)and Jennifer Parker (daughter, 3 years old), were in kitchen. Susan Parker was tied to a kitchen chair in center of floor, facing door. A second chair was placed beside it, with some ropes still attached to rear struts. Jennifer Parker was lying across her mother, faceup.
Susan Parker was barefoot and wearing blue jeans and white blouse. Blouse was ripped and had been pulled down to her waist, exposing breasts. Jeans and 4 of 321
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underwear had been pulled down to her calves. Jennifer Parker was barefoot, wearing a white nightdress with blue flower pattern.
I directed Crime Scene Technician Annie Minghella to make a full investigation.
After victims were confirmed dead by Medical Examiner Clarence Hall and released, I accompanied bodies to hospital. I observed Dr. Anthony Loeb as he used rape kit and turned it over to me. I collected following items of evidence: 96-12-1806-M1: white blouse from body of Susan Parker (Victim No. 1) 96-12-1806-M2: blue denim jeans from body of Victim 1
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