I was up the two flights of stairs in less than ten seconds.
“Kelly!” I shouted. “Kelly!”
Her door was still closed and I threw it open so fast I nearly pulled it off its hinges. I could hear Kelly screaming, but I didn’t see her. What I did see was shattered glass scattered across the floor and Kelly’s bed. The window that faced the street was a jagged nightmare.
“Kelly!”
I heard muffled crying and bolted for her closet door. I swung it wide and found her huddled in there atop a pile of shoes.
She leapt up and flung her arms around me.
“Are you okay? Honey? Are you okay? Talk to me!”
She pressed her head against my chest and sobbed, “Daddy! Daddy!” I was holding her so tightly I was afraid I’d break her.
“I’ve got you, I’ve got you, I’ve got you. Are you hurt? Did you get hit? By glass or anything?”
“I don’t know,” she whimpered. “It scared me!”
“I know, I know. Honey, I have to see if you’re okay.”
She sniffed and nodded and allowed me to hold her a foot away. I was looking for blood and didn’t see any.
“You weren’t hit by the glass?”
“I was sitting there,” she said, pointing to the computer. Her desk was up against the same wall as the window, which meant that all the glass came in beside and behind her.
“Tell me what happened.”
“I was just sitting there, and I heard a car going really fast and then there was a big bang and all the glass came in and so I ran into the closet.”
“That was smart,” I said. “Hiding like that. That was good.” I pulled her into my arms again.
“What did it?” she asked. “Did somebody shoot at the house? Is that what happened?”
There were other people who’d help us get the answers to those questions.
“Well,” said Rona Wedmore. “We meet again.”
She arrived soon after several Milford police cars showed up. The street was closed off and there was yellow police tape cordoning off our property.
“Small world,” I said.
Wedmore spent several minutes talking just to Kelly. Then she wanted to talk to me privately. When Kelly looked frightened at the thought of being separated from me, Wedmore called over one of the uniformed officers, a woman, and asked Kelly if she’d like to see what the inside of a police car was like. My daughter allowed the woman to lead her away only after I promised her it would be okay.
“She’ll be fine,” Wedmore assured me.
“Really?” I said. “Detective, someone just tried to kill my daughter.”
“Mr. Garber, I know you’re very upset right now, which, if you weren’t, I’d think there was something wrong with you. But let’s take this a step at a time, and sort out what we know and what we don’t know. What we know is pretty straightforward. Someone took a shot at your house, blew out your daughter’s bedroom window. But unless there’s something you know you’re not telling me, that’s about all we know for sure right now.
“In fact, judging by where your daughter was sitting when the shot was fired, it doesn’t seem likely anyone was aiming for her. She wouldn’t even have been visible from the street. On top of that, the curtains were pulled shut almost all the way. Add to that the fact that Kelly’s only eight, not very tall, and no one shooting up from the street through a window, at that angle, could expect to have hit anyone that small anyway.”
I nodded.
“All that said, someone still shot out the window of your daughter’s bedroom. You have any idea who might want to do that?”
“No,” I said.
“No one’s got a bone to pick with you? No one’s upset with you?”
“I got more people pissed off at me than I can count, but none that would take a shot at my house. At least, I don’t think so.”
“I guess Officer Slocum would be on the list of those pissed off at you.” I looked at her and said nothing. “I was at the visitation,” she reminded me. “And I know what you did. I know you took a swing at Officer Slocum.”
“Jesus, you think Slocum did this?”
“No,” she said sharply. “I do not. But who else have you taken a swing at lately that you’ve forgotten about? Do I need to start making a list?”
“I haven’t forgotten-look, I’m a bit rattled, okay?”
“Sure.” She shook her head. “You’re lucky, you know?”
“What? That someone took a shot at my house?”
“That you weren’t charged with assaulting a police officer.”
It had occurred to me.
“He isn’t pressing charges. I spoke to him about it personally. But you’re lucky. If some guy hit me, at my spouse’s visitation, that guy would be charged. Big-time.”
“Why isn’t he?”
“I don’t know. I don’t get the idea you guys are good friends. My guess is, he’ll find a way to settle it on his own. I don’t think he’d shoot up your house, but I’d keep an eye on your speed. If he doesn’t pull you over, one of his buddies will.”
“Maybe one of those buddies did it.”
Wedmore’s face was awash with concern. “I suppose that’s something we have to consider, isn’t it? When we dig that bullet out of your wall, we’ll be taking a look at it, seeing if it’s a likely match with a police officer’s weapon. But now that you’ve had a moment to think, is there anyone else whose toes you’ve stepped on lately?”
“It’s been a kind of… kind of a strange few days,” I admitted.
“Strange how?”
“I guess… I suppose it started with the sleepover.”
“Wait, the one at the Slocums’?”
“That’s right. There was kind of an incident there.”
“What kind of incident?”
“Kelly and Emily, the Slocums’ little girl, were playing hide-and-seek. Kelly was hiding in the Slocums’ bedroom closet when Ann came into the room to make a call. When she spotted Kelly there, she got very angry. She upset Kelly so much that Kelly called me to come take her home.”
“Okay,” Wedmore said. “Was that it?”
“Not… really. Darren figured out Kelly had heard some of this phone conversation, which his wife had not told him about, and he wanted to know everything Kelly’d heard. He came by here Saturday, looking for her. Throwing his weight around. I told him what Kelly heard, which was next to nothing, and he promised not to bother her. But then I found him questioning her, without my knowledge, or permission, at the funeral home.” I looked down. “That was when I hit him.”
Wedmore put her palm on the back of her neck and rubbed. “Well. Okay. Why was Officer Slocum so concerned about that phone call?”
“Whoever it was, he thinks it was why his wife left the house that night. And then she had that accident down by the pier.”
When Wedmore didn’t say anything for a moment, I said, “It was an accident, right?”
A male uniformed officer came into the room and said, “Excuse me, Detective. The woman who lives next door, Joan…”
“Mueller,” I offered.
“That’s right. She happened to be looking out her window at the time and she says she saw a car drive past quickly at the time of the shot.”
“Did she get a look at the car? Get a plate or anything?”
“No plate, but she said it was a small car, but squared off at the back, like a station wagon. Sounds to me like a Golf, or maybe a Mazda 3, something like that. And she said she thought it was silver.”
“She get a look at the driver?” She didn’t ask the question with any hope in her voice. It was night, after all.
“No,” the cop said, “but she thought there were two people in the car. In the front. Oh yeah, and something on the end of the antenna. Something yellow, like a little ball.”
“Okay, keep knocking on doors. Maybe somebody else saw something, too.”
The cop left and Wedmore turned her attention back to me. “Mr. Garber, if you think of anything else, I want you to call me.” She reached into her pocket and produced a card. “And if we find out anything, I’ll be sure to let you know.”
“You didn’t answer my question.”
“What was that?”
“Ann Slocum. Her death. That was an accident, right?”
Wedmore gave me an even look. “That investigation is ongoing, sir.” She put the card into my hand. “If you think of anything.”