conspirator-out of the woodwork to head us in the right direction.
'He didn't do anything to Amber. My Kiernan's a decent kid.'
'You know what happened to her?'
'I know she's dead, Chapman.'
'Murdered.'
'Yeah, I heard that.' Dylan reached for one of the napkins and wiped his sweaty face. 'Kiernan had nothing to do with her. I mean, maybe he met her a couple of times. Stupid of me to let her into the Brazen Head to begin with, but I got rid of her on my own.'
'You what?'
Dylan realized Mike thought he meant something more dramatic.
'Told her to get lost, get out of my life. That's what I mean.'
'Why is that?'
'Look, Chapman, you probably know more than I do. The newspaper articles, they just talk about the temp job she worked. Maybe you and your investigators don't know what else she did to pay the rent.'
Dylan paused to test the waters. 'You know how crazy that girl was?'
'Just crazy enough to keep you interested in her, apparently.'
'Yeah, well, I lost interest, okay? I wasn't into any rough stuff, you know what I mean? It was getting too far- out for me, Amber's shenanigans. And her big mouth, talking to some of these men about-well, about me and her relationships. She was getting to be a loose cannon.'
'She didn't take the breakup very well, did she?'
Dylan didn't answer.
'You must have been scared shitless when she went off the radar screen.'
'I didn't notice. It's exactly what I wanted, that she head back home to Idaho.'
'Then why'd you bother to clean out her apartment?'
'Clean out her apartment? Talk to the Neanderthal superintendent who used to drool over her. You can't pin me with that.'
'Why not? You didn't let Kiernan do it alone, did you?'
Dylan's eyes widened again and he shouted an answer. 'Leave the kid out of this, for chrissakes. He's never been to her apartment. He wouldn't even know how the hell to find it.'
Mike put his forefinger in his ear and shook it up and down. 'Must be something wrong with my hearing. Coop, didn't Kiernan tell us something a little different?'
'What'd he say? What did he tell you? I do everything possible to give that kid every chance I can and now he steps in his own shit? What did he say?'
'Excuse me, Mr. D., but I think it was yours he stepped in.'
'Where is he? Let me talk to him.'
'See, it's a bit late, 'cause Kiernan's already given us some important information, so maybe you should just tell us what you know. Put it in perspective for us. If it makes things go easier for your kid, all the better.'
Jimmy Dylan heard a door close in the hallway and Frankie Shea's footsteps coming toward us.
'Your man ready for us?' Mike asked the young lawyer. 'Look, Detective Chapman. Of course Kiernan wants to do everything possible to cooperate with you in your investigation. What are you charging him with this morning?'
'We're waiting on word from the local precinct about the results of the canvass. Violations for serving alcohol to minors-how many counts and all.'
'So the sign on the door, that's all for show?' Frankie pointed to the gold lettering of the word HOMICIDE.
'Three dead girls, and Kiernan Dylan knew two of them.' Jimmy Dylan took a deep breath. 'Two? Who's the other one?' Frankie Shea ignored Dylan. 'I'm afraid your long ride uptown and the effort at intimidating my client did wonders for all of our sleep deprivation but very little for your case. He's got nothing more to say to you. From now on, you get the idea that you want to talk to Kiernan Dylan, you call me.'
'He's coming home with me?' Jimmy Dylan asked, smiling for the first time since he arrived at the station house.
'No, sir. They'll take him downtown to be arraigned, but he'll be out by the end of the day,' Shea said. 'They've got nothing on Kiernan.'
'Can I see him now, before you take him out of here?' Mike walked away from us to get his prisoner. I knew he didn't want to see an 'I told you so' expression on my face, so I stifled my annoyance at having wasted the opportunity for a more careful interrogation.
Kiernan entered the squad room in front of Mike.
'Pick up your head, boy,' Jimmy Dylan said. 'You got nothing to be ashamed of. You've done nothing wrong. You own a joint that sells liquor, and all this crap goes with the territory. Cops like to throw their authority around when they should have better things to do.' The young man's eyes were bright red. He had obviously broken down while talking with Frankie Shea, perhaps becoming even more embarrassed when he learned from Shea that his father had inserted himself into the middle of the investigation.
Kiernan headed straight for his father. I assumed the emotional older man would embrace his son and wait until later, when they were home, to chide him for talking to us.
'I'm really sorry, Dad. I didn't mean to involve you in this.'
'Do what Frankie says, kid. We'll-'
'Tell me it's okay, what I said to them, Dad,' Kiernan said, starting to blubber as he looked his father in the eye.
I gathered up my notes, trying to glance away from the painful encounter, while Frankie Shea urged his client to stop talking and get the arrest process under way.
'Say something, Dad. I couldn't help what I said about her. I didn't know-'
Jimmy Dylan reached out to grab Kiernan's arm with his left hand, and with his strong right fist he hauled back and punched his numbertwo son squarely on the jaw.
Kiernan Dylan's knees gave out and he fell backwards, smacking his head against the corner of a metal file cabinet.
THIRTY
Mercer was on top of Jimmy Dylan, slamming his body across a desk and pinning him in place while Mike and Frankie checked on Kiernan. I could see that a gash had been opened on the back of his head, and I called down to the patrol sergeant to send someone upstairs with paper towels and Band-Aids
Get Jimmy out of here, Mercer,' Mike said. 'Make sure they know not to let him back in.'
Now the father was trying to apologize to Kiernan.
Mike was having none of it. 'I treat your son with kid gloves, Dylan. Don't put him in cuffs, don't stick him in the holding pen behind bars, feed him, and make him comfortable. I hear one question from the judge about whether the hole in his head is a result of police brutality, you'll all be sorry we've ever met.'
'Save it for later, Mr. Dylan,' Frankie said. 'I'm a witness, Chapman. Let it go.'
'If I were you, Mr. D.,' Mike said, 'I'd be calling that legal hotline so you can give me someone to talk to on your behalf. 1-800-SHYSTER. That's one of your rights, too, pal. Spend as much money as you'd like for the tackiest lawyer you can find. Be sure and tell him you took a whack at your own flesh and blood.'
Mercer steered Dylan out the door, while Frankie Shea made an effort at cleaning up his client's head wound and getting him to his feet.
When Mercer came back upstairs, he told me that two of the cops were standing by to drive me home.
'What about you?'
'Mike's got the collar to deal with. And I'll sleep here on one of the cots. I've got to cover that muster on Governors Island in a few hours. It's Sunday, remember?'
'I feel awful that you have to work today. There's nothing I'm up to doing except going to sleep.'