James looked at them. “Look, I don’t want to get anybody in trouble.”
“Just tell us what you know,” prompted White. “It goes no further.”
James looked back out at the field, his elbows resting on the fence top. “His dad never got over his mom. Tyler said his dad would sneak over there just to watch her.”
“Is that right?” said White, shooting a glance at Decker.
“And he was seeing all these young girls, but Tyler said his dad really had no interest in them. Tyler thinks he was just trying to make his mom jealous. He’d get drunk at night and cry about the divorce. I think it took a lot out of Tyler. I mean, a lot. He’d have to sit with his dad and listen to that. He’s only seventeen; he’s not going to know how to handle stuff like that.”
Decker studied him. “It’s rough what he’s going through, for sure.”
“Kid shouldn’t have to be a parent, too,” chimed in White.
“You ever been over to Tyler’s condo?” Decker asked him.
“Sure, lots of times.” He grinned. “The girls his dad dates? I don’t mind hanging out with them.”
“His dad conducts his business from there.”
“Yeah, even before COVID, he did that. He has clients all over the place, and he can’t travel to see them all so he does it online. I listened to him practice what he would say to clients sometimes. Tyler said his dad would record it, play it back, and then, you know, improve on it. Get it just right before he did it for real. He told me that’s what separates the winners from the losers.” He looked out at the field. “Sort of what Tyler is doing right now. So maybe his dad was teaching him some good stuff, too. Practice makes perfect.”
“Right,” said Decker.
“Yeah. Well, see ya. I gotta go do my protein shakes.” James walked off.
Tyler glanced over and saw them watching, White impatiently and Decker with interest. But he kept running his routes for another half hour.
He finished up and jogged over to them, toweled off, and guzzled down a bottle of water.
Decker said, “You’ve already made improvements on the dominant leg issue. Your cuts are more balanced, sharper, and cleaner.”
Breathing hard, Tyler stared at them in anger. “You arrested my dad. That’s bullshit.”
“Evidence says otherwise.”
“Fuck evidence. My dad never left the condo.”
“It looks like at least his gun did,” observed White.
“I’m telling you, I heard him there pretty much all night.”
“Talk to me about the gun,” said Decker.
“He’s had it forever. I doubt he’s ever even fired it.”
“When was the last time you saw it?”
“It’s probably been years. He used to keep it locked in a box when I was a kid.”
“Your dad said no one had been over to the condo for a while.”
“Why does that matter?”
“It matters because if your dad didn’t use that gun to kill two people, then someone took it, used it, and then returned it. There were four rounds fired from it, Tyler. Those four bullets killed two people.”
“Do you think that’s what happened? Someone’s trying to frame him?”
“It’s possible. In fact, the way I see it, it’s the only way your dad gets out of this.”