into a fortress. Schilling has refused to talk to the cops, except to ask for me. The media are already referring to me as his attorney, a logical, though totally incorrect, assumption.
This shows signs of being a really long day.
Upper Saddle River is about as pretty a New York suburb as you are going to find in New Jersey. Located off Route 17, it’s an affluent, beautifully wooded community dotted with expensive but not pretentious homes. A number of wealthy athletes, especially on those teams that play in New Jersey like the Giants and Jets, have gravitated to it. As we enter its peaceful serenity, it’s easy to understand why.
Unfortunately, that serenity disappears as we near Kenny Schilling’s house. The street looks like it is hosting a SWAT team convention, and it’s hard to believe that there could be a police car anywhere else in New Jersey. Every car seems to have gun-toting officers crouched behind it; it took less firepower to bring down Saddam Hussein. Kenny Schilling is a threat that they are taking very seriously.
Willie and I are brought into a trailer, where State Police Captain Roger Dessens waits for us. He dispenses with the greetings and pleasantries and immediately brings me up-to-date, though his briefing includes little more than I heard in radio reports. Schilling is a suspect in Preston’s disappearance and possible murder, and his actions are certainly consistent with guilt. Innocent people don’t ordinarily barricade themselves in their homes and fire at police.
“You ready?” Dessens asks, but doesn’t wait for a reply. He picks up the phone and dials a number. After a few moments he talks into the phone. “Okay, Kenny, Carpenter is right here with me.”
He hands me the phone, and I cleverly say, “Hello?”
A clearly agitated voice comes through the phone. “Carpenter?”
“Yes.”
“How do I know it’s you?”
It’s a reasonable question. “Hold on,” I say, and signal to Willie to come over. I hand him the phone. “He isn’t sure it’s me.”
Willie talks into the phone. “Hey, Schill… what’s happenin’?” He says this as if they just met at a bar and the biggest decision confronting them is whether to have Coors or a Bud.
I can’t hear “Schill’s” view of what might be “happenin’,” but after a few moments Willie is talking again. “Yeah, it’s Andy. I’m right here with him. He’s cool. He’ll get you out of this bullshit in no time.”
Looking out over the army of cops assembled to deal with “this bullshit,” I’ve got a feeling Willie’s assessment might be a tad on the wildly optimistic side. Willie hands the phone back to me, and Schilling tells me that he wants me to come into his house. “I need to talk to you.”
I have absolutely no inclination to physically enter this confrontation by going into his house. “We’re talking now,” I say.
He is insistent. “I need to talk to you in here.”
“I understand you have some guns,” I say.
“I got one gun” is how he corrects me. “But don’t worry, man, I ain’t gonna shoot you.”
“I’ll get back to you,” I say, then hang up and tell Captain Dessens about Schilling’s request.
“Good,” he says, standing up. “Let’s get this thing moving.”
“What thing?” I ask. “You think I’m going in there? Why would I possibly go in there?”
Dessens seems unperturbed. “You want a live client or a dead one?”
“He’s not my client. Just now was the first time I’ve ever spoken to him. He didn’t even know it was me.”
“On the other hand, he’s got a lot of money to pay your bills, Counselor.” He says “Counselor” with the same respect he might have said “Fuehrer.”
Dessens is really pissing me off; I don’t need this aggravation. “On the other hand, you’re an asshole,” I say.
“So you’re not going?” Dessens asks. The smirk on his face seems to say that he knows I’m a coward and I’m just looking for an excuse to stay out of danger. He’s both arrogant and correct.
Willie comes over to me and talks softly. “Schill’s good people, Andy. They got the wrong guy.”
I’m instantly sorry I didn’t leave Willie at the airport. Now if I don’t go in, I’m not just letting down a stranger accused of murder, I’m letting down a friend. “Okay,” I say to Dessens, “but while I’m out there, everybody has their guns on safety.”
Dessens shakes his head. “Can’t do it, but I’ll have them pointed down.”
I nod. “And I get a bulletproof vest.”
Dessens agrees to the vest, and they have one on