Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled, #Noir
Joe handed over the bottle and Peters went to get
some glasses.
When he returned, he said,
“You were on the job?” “Yeah, how’d you know?”
Peters indicated Joe should sit, as he poured
healthy slugs of Maker’s, said,
“You have cop eyes and you cased the place, like
only a cop does.” Joe was impressed, said, “Did
eight months out of the Nine Seven.” And Peters
asked,
“Why’d you quit?”
Joe thought about shining him on but the guy was
sharp so he told the truth.
“I couldn’t stomach it.”
Peters nodded, then:
“Me, I loved it, still be doing it but I got
sideswiped by a damn cab, they pensioned me out,
worst day of my life, the fuck am I supposed to do
now, tend to my roses?”
Joe had clocked a bare garden, not a single flower
in it.
Peters drank from his glass, gave a slurp of
contentment, asked,
“So, what do you want?”
Joe ran down the strangler case, Gino, Morronni,
but didn’t mention Shea, then said, “I’d like to hear
your thoughts on it.”
Peters poured another wallop, swirled it around in
the glass, as if there might be some truth in there.
If truth is to be found in the bottom of a whiskey
glass, then God help us all.
-Irish bishop in sermon on drinking
THERE wasn’t, LEAST NOT ANY THAT
WOULD LAST.
Peters put it down, said,
“The whole case stunk to high heaven but we could
go with hero cop or …” Joe decided to go for
broke, asked, “Gut feeling, did Gino strangle the
Irish girl?” Peters gave him an odd look, said,
“No, not his MO … but if my instincts are right,
you’re going after Shea, be real careful, this guy is
three steps ahead of everybody else and worse, he
likes to play.” Joe stood up, thanked him for his
time, and they shook hands, Peters didn’t let go,
stared at Joe, said,
“This isn’t about a book, this is personal, you
mentioned the Irish girl, you looked like you were
gonna lose it.” Joe thought what the hell, he liked
the guy, said, “She was my sister.” Peters nodded,
then:
“You better work on your act, buddy, Shea sees
what I just saw, you’re fucked, nine ways to an
Irish Sunday and believe me, this guy has antennas
like I never encountered.”
Joe was at the door and Peters said,
“Give me your phone contacts, I know a Guard in
Ireland and discreetly I may be able to find out
about the girl in Sligo, you’re betting she was
strangled with something green.” Joe gave him his
card and said, “Why the green?” Peters snorted,
“Maybe he’s patriotic.” Neither of them smiled.
Joe said, “You’ve been a great help.” Peters laid
out both hands, palms up, said, “Once … were …
cops. Right?”
Joe took a leave of absence from his job and
packed a few belongings, got a flight to Newark.
He was letting his cop experience and his
journalist instincts lead him and they urged:
“Go see the sister, Lucia.”
It seemed like a wild goose chase but it was just
these out-of-left-field notions that had given him
his biggest scoops.
He’d booked a small room in the Village on the
Internet for a month. If he hadn’t gotten anywhere
then, well … fuck.
JOE HAD FORGOTTEN HOW COLD NEW
YORK WINTERS WERE
and after Miami, it was fierce.
He bought a heavy seaman’s jacket from Goodwill,
thermal underwear, and a pair of Gore-Tex boots.
He then sat down with the phone directory and
began to ring the hospitals, and to his amazement,
Lucia was still in the very same place.
He’d figured she’d have been shipped off to some
state one long ago. He took a cab out there, he’d
rent something after this, he needed to be mobile.
He was directed to Lucia’s room by a nurse who
said, “Thank God she finally has a visitor.”
Joe, sensing warmth, asked,
“Would any of the nurses from eighteen months ago
still be around?”
The nurse smiled, said,
“This is a very good place to work, we tend to dig
our heels in here, and Maria, she still looks after
Lucia, you go ahead, I’ll page her.”
Lucia looked like a corpse, a beautiful one but no
life evident, except for the monitor that counted out
her vacant moments like a death knell.
His heart felt bruised just looking at her and then
he heard:
“Isn’t she lovely?”
He turned to face a Spanish-looking woman, late
thirties, with a face, if not pretty, certainly riveting
and he felt something he’d given up on …
attraction.
She held out her hand, said,
“I’m Maria.”
He felt electricity when their hands touched and he
muttered … “Joe.” She studied him for a moment,
then asked,
“Why are you here?”
Despite his years as a journalist and the lies that
sprang naturally to him for cover, he went with
some of the truth, said,
“I’m writing a story on her brother, the hero cop.”
Her face looked hurt, she said,
“His death robbed her of company and he sure
worshipped her. I thought for a while, his young
partner was going to be a regular, a gorgeous dark
Irish guy …”
He felt a pang of… jealousy?
She continued,
“I saw him put a gold medal of the Madonna round
her neck and then he looked like he was massaging
her throat, it seemed … odd and too intimate …
and his face, like El Diablo, I wasn’t sorry he
didn’t come by no more, the feeling I had, like I
interrupted him.”
Joe felt the rush, the old familiar kicking in of the
story taking shape. She asked, “You’re new to
Nuevo York?” He smiled, went, “That obvious,
huh?” She indicated his new boots, heavy coat, and
said, “The scare effect, tourists rush out and dress
like they were in the arctic.”
Back in the Village, he needed to get his ass in
gear, get focused.
He went to a bar near Partners in Crime bookstore
and for a fleeting moment wondered about going
in, seeing if his book was on the shelves. And …
what if it was on the remaindered shelf? He went
to the bar, ordered a Jameson and a Bud back.
Nora loved a shot of the Jay. Used to tease him.
“Joe, can you imagine if we ever actually went to
Ireland, sitting in some Galway pub, the band with
bodhrans, spoons, tin whistles, playing some song
to break your heart and drink, like, real Guinness?”
He downed the Jay in jig time, blot out the
memories, and the bartender asked, “Hit you again,
buddy?” Jesus, he wanted to but said, “No, I’m
good.” He had work to do.
Went to a diner and had meatloaf, gravy, mashed
potatoes, and though he had no appetite, he got it
down, called it… comfort/energy food. Back in his
room, he looked at the bare surroundings and
nearly laughed, muttered,
“I’ve become Thomas Merton.”
Yeah, Merton on Jameson.
Got his laptop fired up and did some more
research on Shea.
God bless Google.
McCarthy, the Internal Affairs guy, now he might
be worth a chat, he jotted down some numbers and
then hit another search engine and up came the
smiling face of Shea, a newspaper feature on the
young hero, Joe peered for a long time at the photo
and all it told him was the prick was photogenic.
Then a wave of tiredness hit and he decided to
grab a power nap, just five, okay, ten minutes and
he moved to the single bed, lay down and was in a
deep sleep in seconds.
On his laptop screen, the smiling face of Shea
seemed to watch him, the gaze unflinching and
without feeling.
YOU WANT TO KNOW ABOUT COPS, YOU
HANG OUT IN COP bars and if you’ve been on
the job, they know. Joe’s partner in the eight
months he’d been on the force was a quiet guy
named Jay, looked more like a rock star than a cop,
long black hair, gray shades that he never, ever
took off and despite department rules, he managed
to avoid the regulation haircut, kept his hair under
his cap on the job, then off duty, he let it hang.
Cops don’t much like long hair, it’s instinctive, but
with Jay, he had enough street cred to get away
with it, now if he’d tried an earring, well, whole
other gig.
He didn’t.
J and J they used to be called.
Joe met him in the watering hole near the Nine Six,
Jay’s new precinct.
Jay was dressed like an undercover vice cop.
Heavy battered leather, lots of scarves, mittens,
wool hat, and boots that Joe knew had steel caps.
He looked older, lots of lines around his eyes and
Joe knew they weren’t from laughter.
They’d been real close in the day and within five
minutes, it was back to that bond.
He did a thing you don’t much see cops do, he
hugged Joe, said he was so sorry about Nora, Jay
had always a little shine for her but his buddy’s
sister… ah-uh, no way.
They went in the bar and there was silence for one
split second but then Jay got lots of: “How yah
doing?” And drinking, talking continued. Jay didn’t
ask, just upped and ordered. “Two boilermakers.”
They took them to a table, got on the other side of
the bourbon, let out a collective “Ah …” of serious
appreciation.
They studied each other for a moment, not in any
threatening way but just sussing it out, then Jay
asked,
“What brings you back, bro?”
Joe felt the booze warm his stomach, let it swirl a
bit, do its alchemy, then:
“I’m doing a book.”
Jay signaled to the bartender for another, Joe
didn’t object though he had to keep his wits about
him, he used to be one of them but he’d walked and
that drew a line. Jay asked,
“What about?”
Joe gave him a brief outline of hero cop shit,
Kebar, Shea.
Like that.
The drinks came and Joe still hadn’t seen any
money appear but he went with the flow, the tab
would come, always did, one way or another, Jay
said,
“You’re full of crap, buddy.” Joe raised his glass,
clinked against his friend’s, said, “Slainte.” Jay
nodded, waited.
So Joe told him most of it, not all, but enough. Jay
said,
“Come outside.”
For a fleeting moment Joe panicked, had he blown
it already?
Outside, Jay huddled against the wind factor, got
out a pack of Marlboro Red, fired one up with a
heavy Zippo, said,
“I’m assuming you Florida types don’t smoke,
probably drink herbal tea?”
Jay’s tone had a new hardness, a bitterness, and
Joe tried, “You used to be a nonsmoker.” And got
the look, then:
“You used to be a cop.” Loaded.
Jay flicked the butt high into the air, a tiny flicker
of light against the cold Manhattan sky and then
nothing.
Jay grabbed Joe’s arm, not roughly but with a
certain firmness, asked,
“Cut the shit, what are you really after?”
Joe hesitated, then just spat it all out, trying to keep
his voice neutral as he spoke about Shea, the
stranglings, Nora.
Jay shook his head, said, “You dumb prick, come
on, we’ll have another brew and I’ll tell you the
skinny.”
The music had got louder and being a cop hangout,
it was country and western, the only concession
they make to sentimentality, Lucinda Williams with
“Drunken Angel.”
They got their drinks and Jay ushered them into an
alcove, away from prying ears and where they
could hear each other, said, “You’re going after
Shea?” Joe considered, said, “Well, his name is
all over this whole business.” Jay looked around,
then:
“You must be out of your cotton-picking mind, bro,
Shea is golden, he’s so far up that corporate
ladder, he’s bulletproof, he’s not liked but fuck,
ain’t nobody gonna go up against him, you do and
sayonara sucker.”
Joe felt a rush of rage, he’d come to his running
buddy and here he was getting … what… a shit
sandwich, he gritted,
“Sorry to have wasted your time, I didn’t realize
you’d be scared of the little bastard.”
Jay was stunned, actually took a step back, calling
a cop a coward, whether true or not, you better be
packing more than attitude, he took a deep breath,
asked,
“You hear I got shot last year?” He hadn’t.
And Jay nodded, said,
“Thought so but then, you’re down there sunning
yourself, why the fuck would you care what
happens to cops?” Joe was going to say, “I fucking
care what happens to my sister.” But asked,
“How’d it happen, the shooting?” Jay sighed, said,
“A gangbanger, fourteen years old, I took my eye
offa him and he shot me in the gut, and they’re
right, nothing hurts like that sucker so yeah, it made
me more careful and I’m certainly not gonna have
Top Cop thinking I’m sniffing around him.”
Joe was tired, maybe the damn cold or the series
of boilermakers, he shrugged on his gloves, said,