Earthbound : A gripping crime thriller full of twists and supernatural suspense Fynn Perry (if you liked this book TXT) đ
- Author: Fynn Perry
Book online «Earthbound : A gripping crime thriller full of twists and supernatural suspense Fynn Perry (if you liked this book TXT) đ». Author Fynn Perry
The words of the employee and detective echoed around Johnâs head as he tried to make sense of them. It was clear this guy was lying, but what could he do? He just stood there silent and invisible. Helpless.
âSo, wait here and weâll get our sketch artist to do another composite,â Williams offered.
âI really canât remember anything of his faceâitâs all a blur.â
âYou said you had a good look when we first asked you!â Williams persisted.
âIâm sorryâI canât help you.â
âIf I find out youâre concealing the attackerâs identity, Mr. McGinty, this wonât end well for you. This is an attempted murder charge. Do you understand?â
âYes,â McGinty answered, his voice small now.
âYouâre free to goâŠfor now.â
John felt his anger rise. The OâDonnellâs employee had just become the focus for all his frustration. Leaving the detective and Jenniferâs father to their follow-up meeting, John caught up with McGinty outside the precinct. He followed him down the crowded street, weaving in and out between the mortals: a mother kneeling to attend to her small child who had fallen over; roller skaters slaloming through seemingly stationary pedestrians; fast-walking, suit-wearing business types and dozy tourists with gaping mouths and city guides in hand. Some seemed to attract the attention of passing spirits, others did not.
As McGinty crossed a side street, a battered blue Chevy Caprice pulled up, blocking his path. Both he and John bent over to get a look at the driver. It was Jim Donovan.
âGet in!â Donovan ordered.
As McGinty got in, so did John by passing through the rear passenger door. Streams of Whiskey by The Pogues was playing inside the car until Donovan turned the music down.
âWell? Took you long enough!â he snapped, staring at McGinty as he drove on.
âThey had a composite photo of the guy I saw.â
âWhat?â
âFrom another witness.â
âShit! But you didnât confirm it was him, right?â
McGinty said nothing.
âRight?â Donovan pressed, his voice now louder.
âNo, of course not. I did like you said.â McGinty paused a moment. âIâm taking a risk for you, lying to the policeânâall.â
âAre you fuckinâ trying to blackmail me, because I know you ainât got a conscience. If you wanna keep slinging dope in my pub, youâll do what I tell you to. Do you really want to cross me, you little shit?â
The car screeched to a halt. âGet the fuck out. Remember, I know people.â
The employee nodded apologetically and got out.
John remained seated as Donovan drove off. He was in shock. His fatherâs best friend was involved in his stabbing? How was that possible?
The engine rattled and grated as Donovan angrily gunned it, cussing to himself. The route they now followed suggested they were going to OâDonnellâs.
OâDonnellâs sat low among its taller neighbors in the Queens borough of Jamaica. The Star-Spangled Banner, soaked and heavy from the previous nightâs rain, hung by the main entrance at the midpoint of a row of green canopies. Each one of the etched glass windows beneath the canopies bore an elaborate pattern of curlicues framing either the words Public Bar or Fine Food & Spirits. The âfine foodâ part, in Johnâs opinion, was a gross misrepresentation and the spirits, he suspected, were watered down.
Donovan parked at the rear next to Johnâs BMW, which was still where John had left it on the night of the attack. He loved that car. His father had bought it for him the same day he got his own Maserati. Not a day went by without him appreciating how fortunate he and his father had been. If his father hadnât sold acres of Irish farmland to Hewlett Packard in the eighties just at the right time, he wouldnât have had the money to invest in the subsequent property deals that made him even richer. They wouldnât be living in a luxurious condo in New York, he would never have driven that BMW, and he wouldnât be in line to inherit a successful property development business.
John had never taken the time to look at the rear of the pub during the day, but as he waited for Donovan to haul himself out of the car, he noticed that âthe old girl,â as Donovan called the place, was peeling paint from rotting timbers and the lack of mortar in places gave the illusion of some of the bricks not being fixed but floating in the walls.
John had found out only a few months ago why his father had continued to invest in the pub after generously helping Donovan to buy it when the man was nearly broke, and when it clearly had become a money pit. Recently, he had confronted his father after finding in his study some of the half-baked financial reports, showing consistently poor results that had been sent by Jim once a year. When heâd suggested that Donovan was either a terrible businessman or suffering from a drinking problemâor bothâhis fatherâs response had shocked him.
He told his son that Jim Donovan had saved his life in what could have been a fatal car accident when they had both been teenagers, and that that kind of debt could never be repaid. Embarrassed, his father went on to explain how he had crashed the car into a tree following a drinking binge. Jim, who had been following behind, had pulled him out in the nick of time, before the vehicle had caught fire.
Donovan now wandered toward the door at the back of the pub. Unclipping a bunch of keys from a belt loop on his jeans, he thumbed his way through them and opened a series of locks with the systematic efficiency of a prison guard. John followed him in, past kegs of beer and boxes of dubious-looking French wine, all stacked against one wall of a narrow corridor. John recalled Jim explaining that the wine had been bought âfor the ladies and stuck-up buggers.â The Irishman definitely wasnât going to fit with the ongoing gentrification of this area, where gourmet prepared-food delis and
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