Chapter Nine

After they left, Sherwood slipped back into the interrogation room, shutting the door.

He took out his cell and pressed the number for the hospital over at County, worriedly thumbing the edge of Evan Erlich’s file.

Stories like his happened every day out there. Gang executions, drug ODs. Runaways. They all had mothers who wept and didn’t understand. Suicide or accident? What did it really matter? The kid was dead. A tragedy was a tragedy. If it hadn’t ended like this, the next time – and there would have been a next time, Sherwood knew – he would have likely taken the mother and father out too.

His job was to try to make sense of the rotten outcomes. Just not too much sense.

Tomorrow, sure as sunrise, there’d be two more.

The hospital operator answered. Sherwood placed the phone to his ear. ‘Dr Derosa, please.’

He knew about tragedies. And not just on the job. He thought of his son, Kyle, more than twenty years ago, and his wife, Dorrie – almost two years now. He had this new liver. A gift. From a minister. Edward J. Knightly. Now he even peed righteous, Sherwood sometimes said with a laugh. This whole new chance at life. This new lease. What the hell was it even for?

How do you make sense of others’ tragedies when you can’t even figure out your own?

A voice came on the line. ‘Dr Derosa here.’

‘It’s Sherwood,’ he said, leaning back in the chair. ‘I’m calling about that Erlich kid. That jumper …’

‘Yeah …’ The doctor sighed, as if he didn’t need to be reminded. ‘We’re all really sorry about that one here. I got a call this morning from some relative of his. A doctor.’

‘And how did you handle it?’

‘How we always handle it, Don. You know we don’t put ourselves directly involved.’

‘Yeah, well maybe you want to get yourself a bit more directly involved. At least in this one.’

The psych ward doctor cleared his throat. ‘What do you mean?’

‘They want a look at his medical records. They’re right, of course. Funny, they want to know how the hell their son was dropkicked back on the street and a day later ended up dead. And you know what?’

What?’ The doctor sounded a little peeved.

‘I can’t say I really blame them on this one, Mitch. Just thought you’d want a heads-up.’

‘The kid was a ticking time bomb, Don. We do our best to stop ’em. This one went off.’

‘Well if I were you, Mitch, you might want to look at it again. That it’s all buttoned up.’

Buttoned up?’ The doctor’s tone now had an edge of irascibility to it.

‘Any loose ends …’ Sherwood stared at the file, at the copy of Evan’s medical records included there.

Ones the poor, grieving family would never see.

They didn’t need anyone tugging on loose ends here. Not the family; not some pushy outsider from New York. The problem with loose ends was, once pulled, you just never knew what would tumble out.

‘I think you know what I mean.’