CHAPTER
FIVE
They all listened
as Wally and Mimi returned. The two of them said nothing as they removed their
jackets, put down the purse, put the car keys on a hook by the door. They went
their separate ways after that. Mimi went to the downstairs bathroom, and
although she tried to be quiet, the toys could hear her subdued sobs.
Wally went to his
den, and when he came back he held a bottle of scotch. He thumped up the stairs
and paused just outside Joey’s room.
Shit, Nightbeat thought. I forgot to open the door again. Hopefully
he doesn’t notice.
Wally opened the
door and shuffled into the room, casting his gaze around at all the toys on the
floor. He stepped around them and sat on Joey’s bed. Angel was up there, and
Wally picked him up, looking at him.
“God, Joey,” Wally
whispered. He set Angel aside and popped the cork on the scotch. He took a long
deep swallow and blew his breath out, grimacing. “What the fuck am I going to
do? How could this have happened?”
He took another
heavy drink and started to sob. His hands went to his eyes, covering them from
no one.
“Joey,” he
whispered. “I’m so sorry. I should have been there. Please. Please. Can you
ever forgive me? I beg of you.”
Another swig of
scotch. And again.
How long is he going to sit there?
Nightbeat thought. He itched to move even at the cost of exposing himself to
Wally. The investigation had him by the throat, and he knew he had to get
working. The longer he stalled, the colder the case became. He had to find a
way out of this.
It never occurred
to him how nasty these thoughts were.
Mostly he hoped
that Mimi would come up here. He didn’t know why. She had to be in a similar
state, and she seemed to bear some animosity toward her husband due to Joey’s
death. Maybe it was his quick acceptance of it, no matter how much grief they
were both in.
An hour passed.
Wally talked to his son not just like he was trying to conjure up his spirit,
but as if he already had. For all Nightbeat thought, Joey’s specter probably
hovered in front of his father’s pale and stricken face.
Wally drank more
and more until he was three-quarters through the bottle. Then and only then did
he set the bottle aside. He turned so he could lie down on the bed, his head on
Joey’s pillow. He inhaled deeply as if trying to get some impression of his
son. He closed his eyes, muttering to himself under his breath. In his sleep he
kept saying Joey’s name over and over again.
Nightbeat thought
it might be safe to move, but he didn’t dare do it. No matter how drunk Wally
was, there was no telling when his eyes might inch open. Who knew what his
reaction would be like upon this horrifying discovery that Joey’s toys were
alive when his son wasn’t?
It turned out that
this decision had been a solid one. Moments later, the door widened and Mimi
stepped in. She took one look at her husband, and Nightbeat thought she might
have been irritated with him or disgusted. Maybe she’d wanted to come up here
to luxuriate in her memories of Joey, but instead she’d found this miserable
fucking drunk in her son’s bed.
She retreated, and
Nightbeat could hear her in the upstairs bathroom, unhooking the medicine
cabinet. The rattle of pills. The faucet for just a moment. And, undoubtedly,
bliss at having the pain taken away if only for a brief period.
Wally snored, and
Nightbeat glanced up at him. He saw dark movement behind Wally, but he couldn’t
tell what it was. It became apparent a moment later: Cat slithered out of the
darkness and onto Wally. He lapped gently at Wally’s tears, grinning. The tears
of the grieving must be very satisfying to that bastard.
Time passed, and
Nightbeat knew both Wally and Mimi were deep in their self-medicated slumbers.
He didn’t think he could hold back any longer. He needed to see the crime
scene. He needed help, though. He crawled like a soldier under barbed wire
until he found Angel. The vampire puppet played dead.
“Hey,” Nightbeat
whispered.
“Go away,” Angel
said. Though he took his booze through blood, he still stank of whiskey.
“I need your
help,” Nightbeat said. “I need to see the crime scene.”
“Don’t be stupid,”
Angel said. “You’d get caught.”
“Not with your
help.”
“What do you
mean?”
“Stand guard for
me,” Nightbeat said. “All you gotta do is sit by the door. If you see Wally
start to wake up, or you hear Mimi approaching, just make some kind of sound as
a warning. I’ll take care of it from there.”
Angel finally
moved, if only to glance at Nightbeat. “What if Wally notices I moved?”
“Come on,”
Nightbeat said. “He drank almost an entire fifth. The guy has no tolerance.
He’s a two-beer guy, and that’s only on Friday, maybe Saturday, too. He’s so
plastered he wouldn’t know dick about it.”
Angel stared at
the ceiling for a while, turning his head back and forth as if weighing the
pros and cons. Finally: “Okay. I’ll stand watch. But that’s all, all right?”
“Deal,” Nightbeat
said.
Both of them crept
up to the door, and Angel took up his position. Nightbeat nodded to him as he
carefully stepped out into the hallway. He looked back and forth and decided it
was okay to stand. He knew which floorboards creaked, and though he was too
small to set them off, he avoided them just to be safe.
Traversing the
stairs was a bit difficult. Due to his height he had to lower himself down each
step as quietly as he could. When he got to the bottom, he glanced around. It
didn’t take him long to find the puddle of blood. No one had bothered to clean
it up yet. Nightbeat saw that it had not been an arterial injury due to the
lightness of the stain. No spray, just leakage. If it was an accident, it was
very coincidental that Joey landed in just such a way that he would die
instantly.
From this vantage
point, he looked back up the stairs, seeking anything that might be out of
place. Halfway down he saw a scuff mark that continued down each step. He
thought it might have been made by Joey’s head. It implied in his mind that
Joey had been thrown down the stairs and only hit halfway down. He wasn’t a
forensic specialist, but it felt right in his detective’s heart.
Murder, sure
enough. But who did it? Why?
“Hey!”
Nightbeat looked
up the stairs. He recognized the whisper as Angel’s. That could only mean one
thing. Nightbeat jumped to the side of the stairs and hid himself in the nook
between the step and the wall.
Footsteps thumped
on the stairs. They were labored and uneven. Nightbeat thought it had to be
Wally. A moment later he saw Wally’s lean form stagger into the kitchen,
probably looking for something to kill the hangover. Or maybe he was still
drunk. Nightbeat thought now might be a good time to sneak up the stairs and
play dead in Joey’s room.
Unfortunately, he
had to jump to get onto each new step. It took a lot of energy out of him, and
he was grateful when he finally rolled himself up over the top step. He lay on
his back, staring exhausted at the ceiling.
“Uh . . .”
Nightbeat whipped
his head up and saw Mimi staring at him. Oh
shit. She had obviously seen him move. Was it too late to play dead?
She rubbed her
eyes and shook her head, and Nightbeat thought she might believe she’d
hallucinated. He stopped moving just as she looked back down at him. She stared
for a while and then nudged him with her foot. Nightbeat didn’t move a
centimeter.
“Huh,” she said to
herself. She bent down to pick up Nightbeat, and she looked at him closely. “I
must be fucked up.” She unceremoniously tossed Nightbeat into her son’s room.
He landed flat on his back on the carpeted floor, no worse for the wear. He
caught a glimpse of her moving down the stairs. He heard a distant conversation
between husband and wife, but he couldn’t tell what they said.
“Did you find
something out?” Angel whispered.
Nightbeat nodded.
“I wasn’t entirely sure it was murder before. Now I know it’s murder.”
“Who do you think
did it?”
“I don’t know.
Yet. I’ll have to continue the interviews later. Why? You suddenly interested?”
Angel shrugged.
“Just want to be in the know.”
Right. Nightbeat
figured he’d done enough for today. He relaxed and let slumber take him. He had
a big day planned for tomorrow.