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AliNovel > The Lover's Children > Chapter 132 – Autumn’s Fury – Part 24

Chapter 132 – Autumn’s Fury – Part 24

    Chapter 132 – Autumn’s Fury – Part 24


    JAMES


    Klempner watches, arms folded, legs akimbo as the medicsy Mitch on a stretcher, drawing over


    nkets. As they take her away, Charlotte with them, he turns his back, head bowed, a palm mped


    over his mouth, a shiver running over his shoulders.


    Stanton strides forward. “Mr Waterman, thank you for your assistance. We need to…” … but he falters


    as Klempner pivots, fixing on him.


    Behind his eyes, the Monster rages, burning like ck fire.


    Stanton steps back again, palms raised. “Mr Waterman… Lars… Larry… It’s me. Will Stanton. I’m on


    your side. Remember? And Mitch’s.”


    I move between them,ying my hand across Will’s chest. “Don''t,” I murmur… “Let him get it back


    under control.”


    Klempner, pallid, shiny-faced, hurls a wild look at me.


    “Larry, it’s me. James...” I step forward, but cautiously…“… Larry, do you know me?”


    For long moments, the Monster raves and snarls…


    … then Klempner inhales…


    … his face clears…


    And the Monster retreats, fading away into the shadows.


    His breathing slows. He blows air.


    Then, straightening up, rolling his shoulders as though nothing had happened, “Commissioner,” he


    drawls. “I would like to speak with your prisoner. Just for a moment.”


    *****


    MICHAEL


    “Commissioner,” drawls Klempner, suddenly all casual self-assurance. “I would like to speak with your


    prisoner. Just for a moment.”


    Stanton raises brows, cocks his chin to Harkness. “Go on, then.”


    “A private word.”


    Stanton eyes him sceptically. “You expect me to leave you alone with him?”


    “No, of course not.” Klempner smiles, quite charmingly… “…But I give you my word, I’ll noty a finger


    on him.” As though to make a point, he shoves his hands into pockets.


    Stanton hesitates. Klempner continues, “I’m sure you recall, Commissioner, that a number of people


    you know well, have assured you that my word is good.”


    Stanton havers, then raises a hand in a brief get-on-with-it gesture.


    The smile flickers out. His expression etched in ss, Klempner strolls across. Harkness, hunched,


    head drooping, flickers his gaze at the approaching man. Klempner halts, leaning forward, stooping a


    little to murmur something to the cringing prisoner…


    He keeps talking, a low rumble of words that can be just heard, but not discerned…


    … and the seconds stretch out…


    Harkness screams, his wrist yanking against the clutch of the cuffs and the police officer holding him.


    “Get him away from me! Get him away. I got rights!”


    Klempner clicks his tongue, unperturbed. “Goodbye, Ricky. I doubt we’ll meet again…” He widens his


    eyes, giving Harkness a jack-o''ntern grin. “…But I’ll follow your progress with interest.”


    “Progress?” barks Stanton. “What progress? Kle… Waterman, if you…”


    Klempner makes a show of removing his hands from the pockets, moving slowly and deliberately. “As I


    promised, Commissioner. I neverid a finger on him. I never will.”


    Stanton eyeballs him. “That is my prisoner!”


    Klempner sniffs, moves to lounge against a tree, legs crossed at the ankle, “As you say, Commissioner.


    All yours. Why don’t you take him away and put him… wherever it is you n to put him…”


    Stanton scowls, then, “Get him out of here.”


    They haul Harkness away, screaming. “I want protection. I know my rights.”


    Stanton drips irony. “I’m sure he does.” Casting a brief toxic nce at Klempner, he turns to follow.


    “Erm… s’cuse me…” If a hamster made an apology, it would sound much the same. We all turn.


    It’s Walter, some kind of container clutched in his hand.


    “Ah,” says Klempner, stepping forward, hand outstretched. “I owe you my thanks. I…”


    But the little man’s not listening. “I’ve got them,” he blurts. “I found them.” He casts fearful eyes at


    Stanton… “I know it’s interfering with evidence but…” He disys the container: a stic seal-top,


    several hard somethings swilling around inside.


    … “I put them in milk,” he says. “I saw it on the inte. If you put them in milk, sometimes they can fix


    them right back.”


    “The teeth?” I say. “You’ve got Mitch’s teeth in there?”


    “That’s right.” Face anxious, he looks between us. “I hope I did the right thing?”


    Stanton swings an arm to the nearest uniform. “You. Get in your car and follow the ambnce. Put


    your foot down. Get those to the hospital and tell them they belong to Mrs Waterman. You… Mr…?”


    “Walter Bracegirdle.”


    Content rights belong to N?velDrama.Org.


    “Mr Bracegirdle… We’re going to need a statement from you…” Awarding Klempner a final re,


    tapping into his mobile, he strides after the running officer. “Harkness is under arrest. Get the sweepers


    out here…”


    I sidle across to Klempner. “What the hell did you say to Harkness?”


    He nts me a nce. “Just hinted at what he can expect once he’s inside.”


    James shoots an rmed nce. “For Christ’s sake, Klempner, it''s still murder, even if someone else


    is…”


    He snorts. “He’s not going to die. Not by my hand at least. If I have my way, that bastard’s going to live


    a long, long time.”


    “So… what did you say?”


    His nonchnce is surely faked. “I exined he’d better practice his yoga technique. He’s going to


    spend a lot of time gripping his ankles.” Klempner’s insouciance fades.


    He presses fingers to his forehead. “Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to the hospital.”


    I jingle keys. “I’ll drive.”


    *****


    JAMES


    A cool autumn evening, and the family gather around the fire.


    Mitch has reverted to ‘knitting mode’. The worst of previously brutal bruising and swelling has faded


    and she’s all but lost the slurring in her speech. But still, it will be some while yet before she can look in


    a mirror and see her own true face.


    asionally, I see her staring into the distance, But we’ve all learned that the best cure for that is


    Cara. She’s old enough to understand that Gammy Mitch is sad.


    So now, Mitch works on hertest project, her needles click-clicking over something in primrose yellow.


    By her armchair, the Bag-of-Holding-All-Things bulges, spilling yarn in bird-blue, cotton-candy-pink and


    apple-green.


    The beneficiary of said project shares the couch with Charlotte and Michael, the pair watching some


    old ck-and-white flick, he with one arm slung around her shoulders and the other hand on her


    swelling stomach.


    Richard has half an eye cocked on his newspaper, and the other on Beth. In theory, she’s reading the


    glossy that came with the paper. In practice, at ground level, she’s doing battle with Adam, who wants


    to use Daddy’s trouser leg as a climbing frame.


    I gave up the fight some while ago. Cara upies the spot on my knee intended for myptop, so I


    read from my tablet instead; Jack Reacher once more takes on the Bad Guys.


    As ever, Klempner sits to the rear of the room, watching Mitch, appearing quite contented as, silently,


    he nurses a brandy.


    A brandy…


    Hmmm…


    The front door Bing-Bongs.


    Michael arches brows, casting around the room as he untangles from Charlotte and makes for the hall.


    “We expecting anyone?”


    nk looks and shrugs all around.


    He returns half a minuteter with a familiar figure. “Visitor for you, Richard.” Will Stanton follows him


    into the room, his bulky figure dominating the space.


    Richard blinks and makes to stand… “Good evening, Will… “…but Stanton waves him down.


    “Don’t disturb yourself, Richard. In fact, it was Mr Waterman I came to see.” Some undercurrent runs


    through his voice.


    I wrestle Cara off myp and set her down by Adam. “I was about to pour myself a drink, Will. Can I get


    you something? Or are you on duty?”


    “Thank you, James. A scotch if you have some. And no, I’m not on duty. I’m here in an unofficial


    capacity…” His gaze once more sharpens onto Klempner. “…More or less.”


    Klempner sips at his ss, swishing it around his mouth. “Is there something I can do for you,


    Commissioner?”


    Stanton moves to the hearth, rubbing his palms together, then turns to stand with his back to the fire,


    hands sped behind. “I thought you would be interested in an update on the progress of Harkness…”


    Mitch hisses in a breath, putting her knitting down. Klempner flicks eyes to her, his face impassive. “Do


    go on, Commissioner.”


    “Not just you of course,” he continues. “Given events, I imagine all of you will be interested.” He


    pauses. “Mrs Waterman… Mitch… If you prefer that I don’t…”


    Her words are crisp. “No. Thank you, Will. I think I’d like to hear what you have to tell us.”


    I push a tumbler of scotch into his hand. He inhales, then drinks. “My information is that Harkness, now


    in maximum-security confinement, is not doing well under incarceration.”


    “Did you expect him to?” A stone would wear more expression than Klempner. “I imagine he’s having


    trouble adapting. A coward like him would go under very quickly.”


    “You might say that.” Stanton awards him another hard stare. “Not just quickly. Immediately. The very


    day he arrived, Harkness was targeted by a number of the other high-security cases; one in


    particr…”


    Klempner cocks a brow. “Really? Hardly unexpected, of course. It’s routine when a new prisoner


    arrives that he will be… tested… by the other inmates.” His lips quirk.


    Will chisels his words from the air. “Tell me, Mr Waterman, does the name Kd Reichmann mean


    anything to you?”


    Klempner remains silent, but something shifts behind his eyes. As it bes clear he''s not going to


    reply, Stanton huffs exasperation, fingers drumming against his ss.


    I break the stalemate. “Enlighten us, Will. Who is he?”


    “Kd Reichmann. He''s a high-security prisoner. A lifer with no possibility of parole. He''s in for armed


    robbery, assault, murder; you name it. He''s as hard as theye, and sadistic with it. He upies a


    cell on the samending as Harkness, calling the shots there. Along with half a dozen cronies of simr


    ilk, he terrorises and rules the remaining inmates.”


    He turns square-on to Klempner. “Perhaps you have crossed paths with Reichmann in the past?”


    Klempner sips his brandy, inhaling from the ss, apparently savouring both vour and aroma. His


    throat ripples, his voice neutral. “Perhaps I have.”


    I exchange a nce with Richard; another with Michael. The women watch with wary interest.


    Klempner refuses to meet any eye.


    I wind a circle in the air with my forefinger. “Carry on, Will.”


    The look Will casts Klempner’s way wavers between anger and frustration, then settles on resignation.


    “As said, it''s routine that a new inmate will be challenged by the existing… hierarchy. The weaker ones


    usually go quickly under. Effectively, they be ves to the stronger inmates…”


    “…When Harkness arrived, Reichmann took an immediate and apparently personal interest in him…”


    Again, he res at Klempner, who again refuses to take the bait…


    “…As we all know, Harkness is a coward and a weakling. There was no possibility he could stand up to


    the likes of Reichmann, and no real suggestion he tried. But his treatment was savage. Within hours of


    arrival, he was in the infirmary with half his teeth kicked out. Most of the rest had been removed with


    pliers stolen from God-knows-where…”


    … His gaze skims Mitch, her fading bruises, her still-swollen mouth and cheeks.


    Klempner clucks, nodding. “Almost bound to happen, prison wolves being what they are.”


    A short, pregnant silence, then Beth pipes up. “Larry, what’s a ‘prison wolf’? A senior prisoner?”


    Klempner softens his tone. “More than that, Beth. A prison wolf is…” He pauses, choosing his words


    perhaps… “… a straight prisoner who… engages in sex with other men whilst under incarceration.”


    “You mean he…” Beth raises a hand to her mouth… “Oh!”


    Klempner cants his head, lips twitching. “Yes. Exactly. ”


    Stanton Harrumphs, inspecting his shoes.


    Charlotte’s voice is strident. “But Will here just said that they took his teeth. Not that they raped him.”


    Stanton raises eyes to the ceiling… pauses… perhaps waiting for her to join the dots herself. Then


    when she remains nk-faced, “Charlotte, the fact is that it’s not umon for…”


    He palms the back of his neck, looking away, then… “… not umon for the underdogs to have their


    teeth knocked out so they’re better able to service their Masters.”


    Klempner leans forward, elbows on knees. “What the Commissioner is trying to exin, Jenny, very


    inartictely, is that Harkness is going to make some shower-stalker a very happy man. Probably


    several of them. He’s going to spend much of the rest of his life with a good tight hold on his ankles.


    Most of the rest, he’ll be on his knees. And that’s why some lifer bad-ass would take his teeth.”


    He sits back again, swishing brandy around the balloon ss. “If it hadn’t been Reichmann, it would


    have been one of the others.” A smile skirts his lips that has little to do with humour. “Perhaps


    Harkness thought he got off lightly. Arrested rather than killed. But he’s going to do hard time. The very


    hardest.”


    Stanton’s voice is acid. “And do we suppose it’s aplete coincidence that immediately on entering


    the penal system, Harkness has been subjected to this treatment?”


    Klempner’s eyes crease. “Coincidence, Commissioner?”


    Will strolls across the room, standing over the seated Klempner, perhaps deliberately looming.


    “Reichmann''s already been inside for over ten years. Any money from his previous criminal activities is


    long gone. His family who, credit where it’s due, are the one thing he does disy any affection for,


    have been living on the edge for years. Living on benefits and handouts…”


    “…However, it appears that his wife is suddenly able to afford a pleasant City apartment. And his


    daughter, who was scratching a part-time living as a waitress, has somehow found the money to attend


    art college.”


    Klempner leans back in his seat, looking up, but apparently un-loomed. “As you say, Commissioner.


    Quite the coincidence.”


    “And the money?”


    He tugs at an earlobe. “Well… that’s the entrepreneurial society for you, isn’t it.”


    Stanton stoops, eyeballing Klempner. “Harkness is inside. Right? Serving his sentence. Life-long. He’s


    not going to breathe fresh air again. I don’t want to hear that he has any unexpected idents.”


    “I agree with you, Commissioner.” Klempner raises his ss in a sort-of toast. “I hope Patrick Harkness


    will have a very long and very instructive life.”
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