Silent Mercy

Silent Mercy by Linda Fairstein Page A

Book: Silent Mercy by Linda Fairstein Read Free Book Online
Authors: Linda Fairstein
Tags: Fiction, General, Mystery & Detective
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mother taught at the university for a while—they lived in Hyde Park. Then, like my dad said, she was always trying to find herself.”
    “Naomi’s mother?”
    “Yeah. Her name was Rachel. My dad used to joke that he was glad she did eventually find herself—and that it was as far away from him as possible.” Daniel inhaled and smiled, his affect as inappropriate to the situation as his remarks.
    “Where did they go?” I asked.
    “They made aliyah , Ms. Cooper. You know what that is?”
    “They immigrated to Israel.” I knew the Hebrew word that was a basic tenet of Zionism and would explain the Israeli Law of Return to Mike later on. It allowed anyone of Jewish descent the right to settle in Israel, to return to the Promised Land.
    “Rachel took Naomi away with her? There wasn’t a custody battle?”
    “Not from what my mom says. By that time my father was already—um, he was diagnosed with Lou Gehrig’s disease when I was pretty young. He died when I was twelve, and no, he wasn’t really interested in Naomi. Or me, for that matter. He was too sick to do much of anything.”
    “Did you stay in touch with your sister?” I asked.
    Daniel didn’t seem to object to my calling her that, as separate as he tried to paint their lives. He took a deep drag on his cigarette. “Sometimes. She came back to the States when our dad died. Stayed with my mother and me for a few months, but they didn’t have much to say to each other. Naomi went off to college after that, in London.”
    “Do you know what she studied?”
    “Yeah. Philosophy. Philosophy and religion. I think she wanted to—tried to—have some kind of relationship with me. She used to send me things all the time.”
    “What kind of things?”
    “Letters. Souvenirs and shit like that whenever she traveled.”
    “Tell me about the letters, Daniel.”
    “I don’t remember much. Naomi was trying to be all grown up and intellectual, and me, I was just a goofy kid. Just read them and threw them out.”
    “Shhhhhhh,” Mike said, placing his forefinger against his lips. “Hear it?”
    “Hear what?” I asked.
    “The quiet.” Mike was getting right up in Daniel’s face. “Think of the money you’ll save, Daniel. Plumbers charge almost as much an hour as good defense lawyers.”
    “So what?”
    “So the toilet stopped running. Not a long-standing problem in the pipes, I wouldn’t think. Why won’t you tell me what you flushed?”
    “Maybe I just had to use the john, Detective. Ever think of that?”
    “I did, actually. ’Cause if you’ve got these tiny pieces of paper coming out your ass, you ought to see a doctor.”
    Something had been ripped into shreds and it looked like Mike had picked up a few damp remains and spread them on the countertop, on paper towels, to dry.
    “Daniel, you’ve got to be candid with us. We’re at square one on Naomi’s case. If there’s something about her lifestyle we need to know, if that’s evidence you’re trying to destroy or conceal—”
    “I know what you people are going to do.” He was staring at the torn bits of paper. “You’re going to rip every inch of her private life apart and hang her out in public, like she asked for this.”
    “Nobody asks for this. We’re in here because we’re looking for something that might connect her to the man—to the people—who did this to her,” I said. “What did you try to hide?”
    Daniel turned to the sink and put out the butt of his cigarette under the kitchen faucet. “She’s got nobody, man. You understand that? Even I let her down.”
    “How do you mean?”
    “She wanted me to help her. When things happened.”
    “What things?”
    “Trouble. Not big trouble, but—I don’t want to go there.”
    “Like her arrests?” Mike asked.
    Daniel reached into the cupboard over the sink for a glass and filled it with water. “You already know about that?”
    “Yeah. That’s how she was identified, and that’s the reason we got to you as next

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