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Chapter 8

Michelle Sandler pulled up in front of her father’s Saddle River mansion. The expensive part of northern New Jersey—rumor had it that P Diddy or Jay Z or one of those rappers lived down the street. Michelle had never met him, and probably wouldn’t know it if she did. But her father said whoever he was threw loud parties over the summer and kept everyone on the block from getting any work done.

Frank wasn’t picking up his phone again. He never did when he worked. Michelle wondered if he’d even seen the news. Probably not, he was just out talking with Asians, trading steel with people in Korea or Japan or China. Whatever he did.

She tried John again too, but got no answer. Had everyone decided to go into radio silence once the news broke? With no other options, she decided her father could be the most helpful.

She had to ring the doorbell three times before her dad, dressed in a robe with a glass of scotch in his hand, answered.

“What is it?”

That was his standard greeting. He never asked how she was, never wondered what was going on at work. It was always about what she wanted. She guessed that’s how things worked throughout his career, so he treated everyone that way. Usually it annoyed her, but tonight, she actually wanted something.

“John’s in trouble.”

Robert Sandler’s face broke a little bit, his eyes widening, his mouth curving into a frown.

“Oh, I’m so sorry, Michelle. Come in.”

She stepped through the doorway, pushing past her father and heading into the sitting room. The faint smell of cigar hung in the air, and she could tell her father was doing his best Hugh Hefner impression. Minus the women, of course. As far as Michelle knew, there’d been only one woman since her mom left, and that woman was long gone too. Instead, her father buried himself in business, drank scotch, smoked, and sat around listening to sports on the radio at night.

When she was a kid, she was awed by this room. It was set up to look like a library. Tall bookshelves on all four walls, a long carpet, two big chairs with a round table between them. Near the exit was a bar with three glasses, two bottles of scotch, and a radio. On the bookshelves, however, weren’t books, but files. All her father’s clients, foreign nations, and the arms deals they made. He said looking through the files was like looking through history. He found it relaxing.

Sitting in the chair that faced the entrance, she waited for her dad to catch up. Robert Sandler never hurried. He moved at his own pace, and everyone waited for him. He sauntered into the room, sat in the thick leather chair, took a long sip of scotch, and let a sigh escape his lips. The whole process seemed to take minutes.

“Now,” he said, his voice sounding like an NPR announcer. “What’s the problem?”

She told her father about the picture of John at the Ferry Station.

“We’re talking about your ex, John, right? I can’t believe this, Michelle. He couldn’t kill someone. I don’t even know how he’s able to discipline his students.”

He took another pull of the scotch, finishing the glass. He got up, took a few leisurely steps toward the bar, and poured another.

“Anyway, I assume you want my help. But how?”

“With all the people you know, you can’t call someone? Find out what’s going on. Maybe we can track him down. I’m sure there’s a mistake.”

Robert Sandler smiled. “I’ll make some phone calls. Have you heard from him?”

“No. I tried calling him, but he won’t answer his phone. He called me earlier in the evening, but that was just after dinner. He seemed fine. Maybe you can see if there’s anything the police haven’t let out to the press now.”

“I don’t know sweetheart, I can try. I know some police officers, some state cops, but most of my work deals with people outside the country.”

Michelle took a deep breath and smelled the leather of her father’s chair. She remembered being a kid and sitting on the chair while her dad flipped through the newspaper. She would listen to him read the articles aloud and wonder if he was reading them for her benefit. She now thought he’d just liked to hear his own voice.

“Have they said anything else?”

Michelle shook her head. “Just that five people are dead from the shooting. Where would John even get a gun?”

“Could he have someone with him?”

Michelle hugged herself, rubbing her upper arms as if she were cold. Her father had to have the heat turned up to at least seventy-five, however.

“Ashley broke up with him tonight. He said he just wanted to be alone. I wouldn’t expect him to be with anyone.”

“Ashley broke—” He took a long sip of scotch. “I hope that doesn’t affect her work. Why would he be in Jersey City, then?”

“I don’t know, dad. I was hoping you could help.”

Robert Sandler held up his hands, palms out, as if he were surrendering. “Okay. Okay. Before I do though, are you all right?”

Michelle nodded. “Yeah, Dad, I’m fine. I’m just worried, and I can’t get in touch with anyone.”

Her father said, “You always were brave. Everything’s going to be okay.”

He left the room. Michelle stood there, looking around the library. It felt empty. The files and binders were her father’s work. That had changed since she was a child, when books, classics, always surrounded her.

When did it all change? When her mother left?

Michelle closed her eyes and tried to remember. High school graduation, taking pictures in her cap and gown in front of all the books. Packing for college that summer, just down the Parkway at Rutgers, but moving away nonetheless. The books were still there. She even took a few with her, to impress all the other scholars. All the scholars who didn’t care when she showed the books off, but cared a whole lot more when she broke out the bottle of scotch she’d packed.

No, the books disappeared about when she graduated college five years later. When her mom had finished moving to an apartment in Mawah. After that, her father barely hugged her. Dove into his work. Didn’t care about her own teaching job. The one she got without any of his help, just through her own diligence, her own resume, her own portfolio, and a damn good demonstration lesson on Longfellow.

The books were gone. And after that, so was a part of her father. Which was why her face flushed when he left the room. He wanted to help. Part of his soul still remained.

Robert Sandler came back into the room, his glass full again, and shook his head.

“No one knows anything. I called four different cops. Jersey City police are all going crazy trying to find this guy. He got to Manhattan via the ferry, and he might disappear there, for all I know. I let them know to call me back. Hopefully we’ll hear something soon. Why don’t you stay here until then?”

“No. I’m fine. I’m going to go home.”

“I’d really feel better if you stayed. Just tonight. You have your cell phone. If anything happens, they’ll call you. If we need to get a lawyer, we’ll get one. It’ll be easier.”

Michelle took a deep breath.

“I’m not a kid anymore,” she said.

“I know, but I’m still your father.”

Witness To Death

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