End of Watch (23 page)

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Authors: Baxter Clare

Tags: #Detective and Mystery Fiction, #Lesbian, #Noir, #Hard-Boiled

BOOK: End of Watch
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Cammayo broke away and turned his back to her.

Frank went around him. “Go ahead,” she whispered the demand. “Tell the truth. You’ve protected Pablo long enough. It was a good hard fight but it’s over. You did your best. Now finish it. Cleanly and with grace. Truly. For God’s sake.”

She could tell from the way Cammayo slowly wagged his head that he was breaking, that he was fighting the telling. And she knew that great secrets were hard to tell. The greater the secret, the fewer the words for it.

“It’s okay,” Frank urged. “It’s not a secret anymore. It’s time to let it go.”

When Cammayo spoke he was barely audible. “He was sick. He needed to score. I was afraid he was going to wake everybody up and scare the little ones. He was my oldest brother. Pablo. You’d have had to known him before the dope. He was kind and funny and he took care of us. He’d discipline us when we needed it and he’d protect us when we needed that. And I guess it was too much for a boy. He shouldered all the responsibilities of a man and at some point it became too much for him. I can understand that. After he left it was my turn to bear the load. But I was older then. And I had God to turn to. Pablo never had that. All he had was that false god in the needle. I tried to get him off it. Sometimes he’d be clean for months at a time but he’d always
go
back to it. He was scared that night. Scared like I’d never seen him. He made me scared. He thought he’d killed a cop. He said he needed the money. He had to fix and get out of town. I scrounged up what I could for him and he left. I never saw him again. Never heard from him. I heard the talk next morning, and later, in the paper, there was a paragraph about a man that had been robbed and killed in the East Village that night. There was no suspect. Anyone with information was asked to contact the police.”

When he finally looked at Frank, the priest’s eyes were wet. “I couldn’t do that. I fought with my conscience, but blood won. Pablo was my brother. I loved him. I couldn’t betray him. All these years … I’ve always wondered what happened to him. I think of him every time I visit your father’s grave. It keeps me connected to him.”

Frank had heard enough. The urge to hurt Cammayo was a throbbing red pulse throughout her body. She stepped to Annie’s ear. “I’ll be outside if you need me.”

“Yeah, sure.”

As Frank’s hand hit the knob, Cammayo pleaded, “Forgive me.”

Frank stopped. She took a deep breath and held it. Felt it turn scarlet inside her. She walked out the door.

CHAPTER 41

“You okay?”

Frank moved her head in the affirmative.

“I gotta bring him in for a statement.”

“You do that. I’ll catch a taxi.”

Annie rubbed Frank’s shoulder. “I’ll see you back at the apartment, okay?”

“Yeah.”

Frank walked away from Our Lady of the Angels. She walked blocks and blocks, ignoring taxis. She seethed. Passing bars, she noticed each one, fully aware that what was inside them could dampen her fury into a dull and manageable anger. She kept walking. One foot in front of the other. Over and over she thought, he knew. All this time, he knew. The lying, hypocritical bastard knew. He knew.

The accusation became a chant. She walked, each step being the next thing to do. She reiterated her mantra, concentrating so brutally on Cammayo that she forgot the liquor stores and bars. By the time she walked her rage into a simmering, bruised anger, it was dusk. She had no idea where she was. Except on a corner. Near a bar.

Daley’s Bar.

It sounded so welcome. The outside was brick, the door worn wood. Small signs in opaque windows blinked
Bud
and
Open.
A working-class bar. She bet it was dim inside and smelled like centuries of beer. She imagined the sour, malty smell, the way the bartender would draw the beer from the tap, the thick glass against her lips, how the beer would bubble over her tongue in a sharp gush.

She pulled on the door handle and stepped inside. She was right. It was dim and smelled of generations of smoke and sweat and ale. Three men at the bar turned to stare. She walked in their direction. Her eyes tracked the bartender.

“What’ll it be?” he asked.

She leaned into the smooth, slick wood. Rows of bottles beckoned. She considered each one. The bartender shifted his weight, sighed.

“Phone book,” she finally answered.

The bartender glared. He slapped the book on the bar and continued his conversation with the men.

Outside, Frank hailed a cab. The drive to Tribeca was short. Annie had the door open before Frank could turn her key in the lock.

“Where were you? I was gettin’ worried.”

“Walking.”

Behind her Annie bolted the door. “Walkin’? You walked here from Brooklyn?”

Frank sighed. “I walked. I stopped. I took a cab.”

“Oh. You hungry? You must be starvin’. I bought pizza. It’s in the oven. I’ll get you a slice.”

Frank waved her off. “I’m not hungry.”

“You sure? You had dinner?”

“No.”

“You should eat. I’ll get you a slice.”

“I’m not hungry, Annie.”

“Forget hunger. You should eat anyway.”

Giving in seemed easier than fighting. Frank dropped into a kitchen chair. “Get your statement?”

“Yeah. You worked him nice,” Annie said, sliding a plate onto the table.

Frank picked at an olive, wishing she had a beer chaser.

“The thing I don’t get is why Pablo thought he’d killed a cop. What made him think that?”

Frank shrugged. “Ask his brother.”

“I did. He couldn’t say.”

“Must’ve seen us coming outta Cal’s.”

“But how dumb is that to jack a cop?”

“Cop with a little girl’s a different story. Cop’s gonna protect the kid, so they’ll probably just hand the money over and not make a fuss. Besides, it was winter. It was cold. Not like there were a lot of good marks out. And for Christ’s sake,” Frank snapped, “we’re talkin’ about a junkie, right? It wasn’t fuckin’ Einstein that jacked my pop. How fuckin’ smart is a junkie? Especially one lookin’ to fix?”

Frank pushed away the pizza. Annie watched from against the sink.

Frank apologized. “It’s just… a lot to take in. That this bastard—this pious man of God, right? That he knew the whole time and never told anyone. All the time I was looking and wondering, he knew. All the time my Uncle Al spent looking and wondering, Cammayo knew. All the hours my uncle spent trying to find this bastard. He retired still looking. Died two months later. Liver failure. Drank himself to death. Never got over he couldn’t find his own brother’s killer. Pablo didn’t kill just one person. He took a lot of other lives with him. So forgive me if I’m a little bitter, huh?”

“There ain’t nothin’ to forgive. You got a right to be angry.”

“A priest, of all people. A guy you’re supposed to be able to trust. That’s the part that burns me. Pure and holy and all that crap.” Frank ran her fingers through her hair. “Man of God, my ass. How can you believe what these people tell you, Annie? You’re a bright woman. How can you believe that crap the church feeds you about truth and virtue and honesty? It’s a ration of shit. How can you believe what they tell you out one side of their mouth when they’re lying out the other side?”

“It’s not a man I believe. It’s an idea.”

“Yeah, well, what fuckin’ idea is that?”

“I understand you’re upset but I don’t think attackin’ my belief is gonna make you feel better.”

“No. I’m serious. I want to know. You don’t believe in a man but an idea. So, enlighten me. What’s the big idea? Let me in on the secret.”

Annie pursed her lips and folded her arms. Frank was pleased with the conversation’s distraction despite feeling guilty about needling Annie into a defensive posture.

“You really wanna know or am I just handin’ you more ammo?”

“I really wanna know.”

Annie pulled out the chair opposite Frank. “The big idea,” she started slowly. “It’s hard to put into words. It’s more a feeling than an idea. It’s a conviction, a certainty that someone is watchin’ out for me. Like that story I told you about the lake. When that old woman fished me out, I was shook, but I felt absolutely safe. I felt rescued. Somethin’, someone was takin’ care of me. All that stuff about Mary and Jesus and God”—she crossed herself—“habit. It’s all nice but in my humble opinion it’s not the truth. For instance, Mary over there. I love her dearly. I cherish her, but she’s not the big idea. Neither’s Jesus or even God. They’re just avenues to something much bigger, to a mystery, to a spirit so huge we can’t even begin to imagine it. But for all its immensity that mystery permeates every cell of our bodies. It’s there all the time, but I
forget.
I get caught up in paperwork, traffic, meetin’s, a run in my stockin’, everything, and I forget I’m part of somethin’ much bigger ‘an all that. I forget I’m a part of the mystery, of the immensity of it all, and Mary’s my way of reconnectin’ to that feelin’. She’s the path I take to the mystery, to that absolute conviction that everything’s right with the world no matter how messed up it looks from my miniscule perception. And there’s lots of paths, but again, in my opinion, they all lead to the same the place.”

“To the mystery.”

“Yes. To an infinite … indefinable conviction that rests in the marrow of my bones.”

“That’s a paradox. Infinite and indefinable yet sitting in the marrow of your bones.”

“That’s the thing!” Annie slapped the table. “It
is
a paradox. It’s cellular yet it’s immense. It’s indefinable yet it’s absolutely knowable. That’s the mystery of it all. It’s why one face, one name, can’t start to describe it. So I have my faith, I have my Mary, but I know they’re limited. I know that priests and nuns and popes are limited. They’re only human. All they can do is tell the stories that might get you to the mystery, but
they’re
not the mystery. They’re just spokesmen, the pitch men.”

“PR for the unknowable.”

“Exactly.” Annie leaned over the table. “You ever tell my mother we had this conversation and I’ll cut your tongue out, ya hear me?”

“She believes the story?”

“God bless her.” Annie nodded. “The story’s more important to her than the meaning of it. That’s how you get your fanatics, your zealots. It’s easier to believe in the stories than to seek the mystery behind them. Dogma’s for people too tired to think. But faith, that’s trickier business. It requires work and effort, especially when things aren’t goin’ your way.”

Frank probed, “When your son died, did you have faith?”

Annie sat back. She smoothed the creases in the tablecloth. “I was angry. I was mad. But under it all I think I always knew it was the way it had to be. I didn’t know why—I never will—but you and me, we see it every day. People die every day. Kids, good people, people that got no business dyin’. Like your father. It’s just all part of life, part of the mystery, much as we hate it and much as it hurts. That’s when I started turnin’ away from the church I was raised in and leaning more on Mary. She was comfortable. Her story reassured me I wasn’t the only one to suffer, that people suffer all the time, for reasons we don’t know why. And we endure and we go on and life goes on. And there’s joy again and pleasure. It’s all cycles and we take each day as it comes.”

“One day at a time.”

“Exactly,” Annie affirmed. “One day at a time.”

Frank pulled the pizza toward her.

“Want I should warm that up?”

“Naw. It’s good. I guess it’s all good, huh?”

Annie nodded. “All part of the mystery.”

Frank chewed. The pizza was good. She got up for a Coke. “You mind if I talk to Cammayo?”

“‘Bout what?”

“His brother. Just some things I want to know. I wanna put a face to the man who killed my dad. I been trying to see it for a long time.”

“You okay with talkin’ civil to him? I don’t want you harassin’ him.”

“I’m not gonna harass him. I just want to ask a few questions. Come with me if you want.”

“Nah. I got all the answers I want. Just be respectful, huh?”

” ‘Cause he’s a priest?”

“No. Because he lost somebody, too. You’re not the only one lost somebody that night. You even said so yourself.”

Frank agreed. “I’ll behave.”

“Better.” Annie pointed a sharp nail. She pushed out of her chair, rising with a yawn. “I’m bushed.”

“Yeah. Long day. Hey.”

Annie looked at her.

“Thanks for everything.”

“Forget about it. I’m happy. I closed a case, right?”

“Right. Sleep well.”

“Yeah, you too. Sweet dreams, huh?”

“Back at you.”

Frank was left with dinner as cold as her anger.

CHAPTER 42

“I know you’ve got a busy day but I need five minutes of your time.”

Cammayo protested, “I’ve already told you and Detective Silvester everything I know.”

Frank squashed her irritation. “Telling me everything I want to know would take months. All I want is five minutes.”

Cammayo bowed his head. He opened the door and Frank entered the familiar apartment. Seeing her, Cammayo’s roommate retreated from the living room. Cammayo switched off the TV.

Frank said, “Tell me about Pablo.”

“What about him?”

“Anything. Everything. What was he like? What was his favorite color? Did he have a nickname? Did he like baseball? Football? Everything.”

“He liked baseball. He was a Yankees fan. I don’t know his favorite color. I do know he was good boy and I wonder every day what kind of man he would have been. If he could have kicked the dope.”

“You say that like you know he’s dead.”

“I’m under no illusions, Detective. I know the kind of junkie my brother was. I know the odds of him being dead by now. But you asked what he was like. He was kind. That’s what I remember most. He could be stern and sometimes he hit us but never without a reason. He punished to teach a lesson. But mostly he was affectionate. I remember my sister hugging him all the time. My younger brother, too. He’d sit with them on either side of him, an arm around each child. He smiled a lot and laughed. Pablo laughed like birds singing. I always envied him. I never saw humor in the world the way Pablo did. He was kind. He had a gentle soul. That’s why it was easy to keep his secret all these years. He was easy to help. If you knew him, you’d want to help him. He was like that. A very kind
young
man. Very giving.”

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