What Doesn't Kill Us--A McKenzie Novel David Housewright (shoe dog free ebook TXT) đ
- Author: David Housewright
Book online «What Doesn't Kill Us--A McKenzie Novel David Housewright (shoe dog free ebook TXT) đ». Author David Housewright
âMcKenzie,â he said.
âMcKenzie,â Deese repeated. âAfter I found out about all of this, I decided, you know what, screw it. I wasnât going to say anything to anyone. T called and asked if I took the test and Iâd say, âWhy would I want to do that?â I could tell, though, that it wasnât all fun and games anymore. She was really bugged. She didnât tell me what she was bugged about, but I knew. Of course, I knew. I knew because she had sent Dee Dee a message the same day that my DNA profile was posted. The website allows DNA relatives to contact each other on the website and T sent Dee Dee a message asking if sheâT assumed Dee Dee was a woman. She sent Dee Dee a message asking if she was interested in learning more about the connection between them. Dee Dee replied sayingââDeese closed his eyes and bowed his head. He waited for a few beats before he opened them againâââThank you. I have a family.â I just couldnâtâI love my family, Bobby. If all of my uncles and aunts and cousins and my sister discovered that Iâm notâŠâ
âOf course you are,â Barbara said. âWhatever else, youâre your motherâs son.â
âItâs a little more complicated than that.â
âWhy is it complicated?â
âI inherited half of my fatherâs business.â
âThe business where youâve been working since you were sixteen; the business that you helped expand; the one that youâre running now?â
âDad didnât leave it to me and T, to David and Theresa. The will said he left equal shares to his children. The will was written a long time ago. I guess he thought heâd have more than just me and T.â
âSo?â Barbara asked.
âLegally, there might be issues.â
âHave you asked anyone? A lawyer?â
âNo.â
âWhy not?â
The shrug he gave told Barbara the answerâhe was afraid the answer would go against him.
âMcKenzie,â Bobby said again.
âMcKenzie, yeah,â Deese said. âI couldnât make myself call an attorney, but I could call McKenzie.â
âWhy?â
âAfter a while, a week, I donât knowâI just couldnât shake this, all right? Not knowing who I really wasâŠâ
âYouâre David Deese,â Barbara said.
âNot knowing who my real father was and why he was my real fatherâŠâ
âJames Deese was your real father,â Barbara said. âThe man who raised you.â
âYou say that, Barb, and itâs exactly what I want to hear. I wish my father and mother were available to tell me that. ButâŠâ
âBut what?â
âI wanted to know the truth of my life. Itâs like those superhero movies that they keep remaking, Spider-Man, Superman. I wanted to know my origin story.â
Deese paused again and in the silence Bobby understood.
âYou said that you had seven matches,â he told Deese. âTheresa, a first cousin, and two second cousins make four.â
âThere were three others,â Dees said. âOne half sibling, a first cousin, and a second cousin on my birth fatherâs side. They all have French ancestry like me; no connection to T at all.â
âAndâŠâ
âAnd I wanted to find out about them. Find out who they were without them finding out who I was.â
âThatâs when you called McKenzie,â Bobby said.
âYes.â
âWhat did he say?â
âWhat does McKenzie always say when a friend asks him for a favor?â
âHe says, âSure.ââ
Detective Jean Shipman was working her notes up for a Supplementary Investigation Report, in case one was needed, when the phone rang. It turned out that members of a motorcycle gang had assaulted a bouncer in a club on the East Side called Haven. It was called Haven because all members of all motorcycle gangs were welcome there as long as they didnât wear their colors. The fight allegedly startedâcops love the word âallegedlyââbecause members of one gang who were told they couldnât wear their colors in the bar and be served claimed that they had seen members of a rival gang wearing their colors. Chaos ensued and Shipman thought, Finally, a real crime to investigate.
It was late when Bobby left Deeseâs house and getting later, which is why he decided to go home instead of back to the hospital. He had left orders to be contacted if my condition changed and since he hadnât heard anythingâŠâCourse, he wasnât a relative and the staff at Regions Hospital didnât work for him.
Bobby parked on the street in front of his house directly across from Merriam Park. The front porch light was on and the back porch light was on and the kitchen light was on. Bobby was big on keeping lights burning and insisted his wife and daughters strictly abide by his idiosyncrasyâand donât get me started on his deep affection for locks. The rest of the house was dark, though, and he wondered briefly if Shelby had returned home or was still at the hospital; certainly his daughters were in bed. At least they had better be, he told himself. He stepped out of his car and made his way across the narrow boulevard to the sidewalk.
He saw them before he heard them. Two black men approaching; they were easily identifiable under the streetlamps. His hand went immediately to the Glock holstered at his waist even though one of the black men was in a wheelchair.
âWho are you?â Bobby asked.
Herzog and Chopper glanced at each other, knowing damn well that Bobby knew who they wereâI had introduced them.
âYou donât remember us, Commander Dunston?â Chopper asked.
âI remember you, Mr. Coleman. Mr. Herzog.â Bobbyâs hand continued to rest on the butt of the nine-millimeter. âWhat do you want?â
Chopper smiled.
âWe canât talk like old friends?â he said.
âAre we friends?â
âWe have friends in common.â
âThatâs not the same thing, is it?â
âFuck, Chopper,â Herzog said. âWhat we doinâ here?â
âGood question,â Bobby said.
âMcKenzie was shot tonight,â Chopper said.
âMe and my people are already on it,â Bobby told him.
âHeâs our friend, too. We want to
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