Free Novel Read

The Girl in White Pajamas




  THE GIRL IN WHITE PAJAMAS

  CHRIS BIRDY

  Copyright © 2013 by CHRIS BIRDY

  Publish Green

  212 3rd Ave North, Suite 290

  Minneapolis, MN 55401

  612.455.2293

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written prior permission of the author.

  ISBN: 978-1-62652-226-8

  Table of Contents

  Cover Page

  DISCLAIMER

  DEDICATION

  PROLOGUE

  1 IT'S A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD

  2 NIGHT CRAWLERS

  3 BREAKFAST OF CHAMPIONS

  4 THE BLUEBIRD OF SADNESS

  5 I’M COMING HOME

  6 GUNS AND NOSES

  7 HERE COMES THE BRIDE

  8 A CUP OF JOE, A GLASS OF LIES

  9 HOW MUCH DID YOU SAY YOUR NAME WAS?

  10 LOVE—LOSE—REPLAY

  11 NEIGHBORHOOD HERO

  12 REMEMBERING IS EASY, FORGETTING IS HARD

  13 SO MANY QUESTIONS, SO FEW ANSWERS

  14 ALL IN THE FAMILY

  15 IS THERE A MARY POPPINS IN THE HOUSE?

  16 JOY RIDE

  17 ROUND AND ROUND SHE GOES

  18 FIXING THE WINDOW TO THE SOUL

  19 A TALE OF TWO SISTERS

  20 THE MAN IN THE NEW SUIT

  21 SEND IN THE CLOWNS

  22 ASK ME NO QUESTIONS, I’LL TELL YOU NO LIES

  23 SHUT YOUR MOUTH WHEN YOU’RE TALKING TO ME

  24 WAKE ME WHEN IT’S OVER

  25 BURY THE LIVING AND THE DEAD

  26 NOBODY SAYS GOOD-BY ANYMORE

  27 GROWING MUSHROOMS AND PUMPKINS

  28 GUILT – THE GIFT THAT KEEPS ON GIVING

  29 WHEN FACTS DON’T FIT THEORY, CHANGE THE FACTS

  30 THE REAL ISABELLA

  31 WHY I HATE MY JOB

  32 A FRIEND, MY KINGDOM FOR A FRIEND

  33 CURIOUSER AND CURIOUSER

  34 APPLES FROM THE TREE

  35 CHRISTMAS IN APRIL

  36 MANY QUESTIONS, NO ANSWERS

  37 WARRIORS – OLD AND NEW

  38 A DAY LATE AND A DOLLAR SHORT

  39 EVERYBODY’S BUST’N ON ME

  40 GETTING TO KNOW YOU – AGAIN

  41 STRANGERS IN THE NIGHT

  42 EARLY CHILDHOOD SEX EDUCATION

  43 PIECES OF MY HEART

  44 SURPRISE!

  45 BACK IN TIME

  46 LET THE LIES BEGIN!

  47 TURNING OVER ROCKS

  48 THE EMBARASSMENT OF BEING ME

  49 TRUTH OR DARE

  50 TRUTH IN COUPLING

  51 PLANTING IDEAS

  52 WHY I HATE MY JOB –PART II

  53 TIME FOR A WATCH

  54 THE CAT WITH NINE LIVES AND TWELVE BURIALS

  55 MY FANS AND FAMILY

  56 RIDING DEAD HORSES

  57 KIM IS MIA

  58 CALLING AAA

  59 CELEBRATE

  60 THE AFTER PARTY

  61 LIE, LIAR, LAWYER

  62 STEALING AWAY

  63 AU REVOIR AND ADIEU

  64 SWEET HONEYMOON SUITE

  65 CAT TALES

  66 KILL BILL

  67 THE SMARTEST BEAR OF ALL

  68 SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION

  69 EITHER THE WINDSHIELD OR THE BUG

  69 I JUST CALLED TO SAY I LOVE YOU

  EPILOGUE

  ACKNOWLEDGDMENTS

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  DISCLAIMER

  This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or used fictionally. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is coincidental.

  DEDICATION

  To my brother Edward

  The Teacher

  Lord, make me a channel of your peace.

  Where there is hatred, let me sow love;

  Where there is injury, pardon

  Where there is doubt, faith;

  Where there is despair, hope;

  Where there is darkness, light;

  And where there is sadness, joy.

  O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek

  To be consoled as to console;

  To be understood as to understand;

  To be loved as to love.

  For it is in giving that we receive;

  It is in pardoning that we are pardoned;

  And it is in dying that we are born to eternal life. Amen

  Prayer of Saint Francis of Assisi

  PROLOGUE

  Saturday night and downtown Boston was deserted but not quiet as an early April storm kept most revelers hunkered down indoors. The wind shrieked between the tall buildings on Washington Street and forced the freezing rain into a sideways path of destruction. The temperature dropped each second, and the rain became ice. The sides of the buildings, street and sidewalks all glistened with a layer of ice as the wind picked up speed and continued to howl like a wounded animal. Anything that could be lifted was picked up by the wind and tossed down the street.

  A Cadillac parked across the street from One Boston Place swayed as it was beaten with the ice and pushed by the wind. Bud McGruder sat in his car with the engine turned off trying to ignore the pounding and the chill working its way into his bones. Bud glanced at his Rolex, a memento from his father. The watch showed one minute had passed since he last checked it at ten o’clock. The wind and rain pelted the windshield as he tried to focus on the lights shining on the glass facade of the forty-story building.

  On the twenty-sixth floor, Bailey Hampfield sat at her desk looking over the stack of exhibits she would use for Tuesday’s deposition while the wind howled and pounded against the large windows behind her. She sighed, pushed her wild copper-colored hair away from her ear and called her brother. “I’m ready to leave, Jack. If you’ve finished your work, I can meet you out front.”

  Bailey’s hands shook as she ended the call and walked across the office to grab her coat. The main part of the office was dark except for a dim light in the glass-walled conference room. As she walked to the door, Bailey felt fear wash over her again as a vision of Isabella’s white cat came to her mind. Bailey shuddered as she remembered looking out the kitchen window and seeing Fluffy hanging by a noose from the tree. Bailey’s only thought was to cut down the poor animal before little Isabella saw her. But when she heard the blood curdling cry from upstairs, Bailey knew it was too late. A tear slid down her cheek, and she quickly brushed it away.

  Bailey locked up the office and walked down the half-lit hallway on her way to the elevator. She reminded herself that she didn’t have the luxury of tears. She’d made her decision and would stick with it. That monster was not going to destroy her already chaotic life. Bailey wouldn’t let him. She would go back home and have all day Sunday to spend with the only one in the world who mattered, her precious Isabella. He was not going to win!

  Bud McGruder speed dialed a number on his cell phone. As soon as the other party answered, Bud saw the ‘Ice Queen’ emerge through the glass front door of the glistening tall tower. “I’ll get back to you in five,” he said and disconnected the call.

  Her face was hidden in the folds of a white hooded coat, but there was no mistaking that wild, red hair flying around the edges of the hood. She inched her way across the large stone blocks holding her coat closed while she tilted her head away from the bitter wind. Bailey grabbed one of the truncated, bullet-shaped metal ground columns with her cold bare hands as she started to slide, then took tiny steps over the ice to mak
e her way across the street.

  Bailey glanced to her right as she looked for her ride and moved toward the charcoal-colored sedan parked at the curb beside The Devonshire Building. She caught the front of the car for support as she slipped.

  In a flash, Bud opened the driver’s door, got out and moved in her direction. His nylon jacket flapped and his dark hair glistened with frozen flecks that dripped down his face as he smiled with no warmth. “Working late, Counselor?” he asked as he moved closer to her.

  She looked up, took in a quick breath and gasped before she said, “God dammit, Bud! What do you want from me!?” She yelled over the wind not expecting an answer to her question. Bailey shouted, “Stop stalking me!”

  “I want you to give me a chance. Don’t want you to do anything...” Bud stopped speaking. His heart raced, and his eyes opened wide as he heard a familiar metallic click behind him. As the trigger was engaged, he dived toward her, knocking Bailey to the ground. The bullet entered the back of his head and exited the front, taking brain and bone fragments with it. Bailey lay motionless where she had fallen with Bud’s body slumped on top of hers.

  There was a loud cry just before a dark blue BMW exited the Pi Alley parking garage on Washington Street next to One Boston Place. Its headlights illuminated a figure holding onto a wall near the glass-enclosed ATM machine. The form stared into the glare then blended back into the shadows.

  The Beamer skidded and came to rest close behind the Cadillac. The driver screamed as he witnessed the carnage on the ground.

  Bud’s Rolex read 10:06 p.m.

  1 IT’S A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD

  Florida

  Staring at the clear aqua water in the swimming pool surrounded by palm trees, Bogie McGruder tried to relax as he stretched out on his chaise lounge and inhaled the scent of the freshly mowed grass. This was his ‘One’ Party – one cigar, one drink, one hour - his time to enjoy Johnnie Walker Blue, puff on a Cuban cigar and listen to Frank Sinatra sing:

  The song is ended.

  But the melody lingers on

  You and the song are gone

  But the melody lingers on...

  It always made him want to cry, and it allowed him time to submerge himself in self-pity while he thought about the woman he loved, the one who broke his heart. What was she doing this fine, sunny morning? Was their little daughter happy? Did Isabella know he existed? Bogie puffed on the Cohiba and looked over his empire.

  Four years earlier this place was an eyesore in a residential neighborhood. Three dilapidated, twelve-unit apartment buildings surrounded a damaged swimming pool. The pool was filled with chicken wire and debris to remind the crack addict residents that they shouldn’t think about diving into an empty pool. In front sat a tiny house about the size of a guard shack. It served as the rental office.

  After Bogie bought the property dirt cheap, he slowly made it his own. The small structure facing the street was demolished and replaced with a large one-story building with wide glass doors in the front and back offering perspective renters and the neighbors a view of the centerpiece of the property–the reconstructed pool lit up at night. There was an enormous lobby that held pastel colored leather sofas and overstuffed chairs. Marble-topped tables were placed near the chairs and a large round clear glass coffee table separated two facing couches. A good-sized office was located on the right. Beyond the office was a hallway leading to the living quarters that consisted of his master bedroom, his daughter Amanda’s room, two bathrooms and a small guest room. The kitchen was no more than a kitchenette since Bogie didn’t have time to cook, and his teenage daughter had no interest. Getting her to clean her room was a battle. Since he usually worked on his computer in the evening, Amanda had the run of the lobby to entertain her friends. They were both happy with this arrangement. It gave Amanda the illusion of independence while Bogie believed he was able to keep close tabs on her.

  Bogie broke open a vitamin E capsule and ran it down his chest. He thought the scar was almost gone although Amanda insisted the scar only lived in his mind. He thought of Amanda and grew angry again. This was his Sunday morning pity party, and Amanda was ruining it. Where the hell was that girl? He waited all night half sleeping, half pacing and fully pissed off. But every time he thought of her, he remembered a different Amanda. Sometimes he envisioned the beautiful eighteen-year-old who thought she was ‘rocking’ with her extra short shorts and thin tee shirts that showed off her Victoria’s Secret underwear. He’d flash back to Amanda the baby with large dark eyes, black curly hair and a wide toothless grin every time he lifted her in the air. He’d remember the scared little girl crying while he held her hand as they walked to school for her first day. He had a flash of the adolescent Amanda with arms and legs too long for her body, followed by the moody teenager Amanda. He loved each one of those Amandas, but wanted to smash this Amanda’s cell phone which she shut off whenever it suited her.

  When he saw the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s patrol car pull up in front of the glass doors of the front building, Bogie jammed his lit cigar in the rocks glass and yanked the ear buds out leaving Ol’ Blue Eyes alone to lament:

  You and the song are gone

  But the melody lingers on.

  Bogie moved quickly toward the unlocked gate in the chain link fence surrounding the pool rather than charging through the glass doors of the building. He came around the side of the garage as the young raven-haired woman reached over and gently touched the blonde man’s cheek in a last good-bye gesture. When she opened the passenger door, she was smiling. But the smile froze when she saw her father’s jaw turn rigid and his light blue eyes glisten with rage.

  “Get inside!” Bogie said through his teeth.

  Amanda McGruder knew the look. She said nothing. She just slammed the car door and walked toward the front building.

  Before the driver could pull away, Bogie walked in front of the cruiser and motioned for the young man to lower the window. As he stood next to the car, Bogie placed both hands on the open driver’s window. He glared at the deputy and asked, “How old are you?”

  “I’m twenty-four,” Randy Carpenter answered softly.

  “And you know she’s just a kid in high school don’t you?” Bogie asked angrily.

  “Yes, sir, but she’s almost nineteen.”

  “So you think it’s okay to take an eighteen-year-old girl, excuse me, an almost nineteen-year-old girl out on a date and bring her home the next morning?”

  “Mr. McGruder, I...we…”

  “For God’s sake! Can’t you speak up?”

  As Bogie watched the young deputy’s face redden, he noticed movement from behind the car. Bogie glanced up as a large barrel-chested man wearing a white robe and flip flops walked toward them.

  “Stay out of this, John!” Bogie called out. “This is between me and your son.”

  With his hand in the robe’s pocket, John Carpenter came closer and warned, “Get away from the car and keep your hands where I can see them!”

  Bogie lifted his hands off the car and backed up almost a foot. Without saying a word he pivoted and extended his long leg in one motion. In less than a second, his foot struck John Carpenter’s chin. John fell backward into the street, his robe splayed open. Bogie bent down, grabbed the taser out of John Carpenter’s hand and said, “If you ever try a stunt like that again, I’ll ram this down your fuck’n throat!”

  The cruiser door opened at the same time Amanda rushed out the front screaming, “No!”

  Randy stopped with his hand on the door while Bogie stared at his daughter. “Don’t! Dad! Please!”

  Bogie glanced from Amanda to Randy Carpenter and back then pointed to the man on the ground. “Take your bodyguard home!”

  He walked inside the lobby and inhaled a deep breath of cool air. Bogie then stared out at the chaise lounge and shook his head. A waste of a good cigar and a shot of Johnny Blue!

  Amanda watched as Randy helped his father to his feet. John Carpenter
kept sputtering “son-of-a-bitch”, “asshole” then “cocksucker” as if they were blessings over a meal.

  “Okay, Dad!” Randy finally said. “That’s enough! It’s over.”

  “It’s over?” John Carpenter said incredulously. “It hasn’t even begun!”

  “Cut the shit!” Amanda McGruder yelled. “You’re the one who started it! You came on our property!” She turned to Randy and pointed. “And you used the panic button, didn’t you?”

  He tried to look away, but she insisted, “You did, didn’t you!?”

  John Carpenter shouted, “That’s why he has it! I worked all night and came home to get some rest. Do you think I enjoy getting two hours sleep then coming out in the street to make sure your father doesn’t hurt anybody? I was trying to stop him from—“

  “From what?” Amanda demanded.

  “From killing somebody,” John said defensively.

  “Kill who? Your son? Listen, you asshole, my father’s not walking around with a taser in his pocket. You are!” She turned to the young man. “And you! Grow a pair! You need your father to fight your battles? You make me sick!” She looked at the sparkling new diamond that had been placed on her third finger hours earlier and took it off. Throwing it at the baby-faced deputy, she said, “Here! Shove it up your ass!”