Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled, #Noir
was okay, they’d some serious fucking to do with
him.
Rodriguez was contemplating another jelly
doughnut, those suckers were good but he was
piling on the pounds and had to watch it. He
looked at McCarthy, who, per usual, seemed on the
verge of a coronary, the guy was always so … het
up. He pushed the doughnut aside, got a match in
his mouth, asked,
“Ray, ask you something?”
McCarthy was surprised, Rodriguez was Mr.
Cool, hardly ever spoke, especially in
interrogations, just leaned against the wall,
chewing on a match, watching. McCarthy said,
“Sure.”
Rodriguez took his time, nothing was ever rushed
with this guy, he asked,
“Why are you so stuck on this case, Kebar, the kid?
I mean, we have a shitpile of backlog stuff yet you
seem to think these are the only ones that matter,
like it’s personal.”
McCarthy felt his temper flare but reined it in,
said,
“It is fucking personal, this Kebar, he thinks he’s
some kind of cowboy, and the kid, he’s got a mouth
on him, I aim to shut it the fuck up.”
A sergeant looked in, said, “Your boy is here.”
McCarthy said, “Let’s bring him to the morgue
first, you think?” Rodriguez said, “Youse de boss
man.” Always riled McCarthy when he went street.
Kebar was in full uniform, his expression neutral,
asked,
“The fuck you want now, don’t you parasites ever
do any real work?” McCarthy smiled, said, “We
need you to view a John Doe.” Kebar asked, “I
have a choice?” McCarthy said, “This way. We’ll
even give you a ride.”
THE MORGUE WAS COLD WITH THAT
ANTISEPTIC SMELL that made you want to gag,
a stretcher was in the center of the room, covered
with a sheet, McCarthy pulled it off in one sweep
and Kebar pulled back. A charred husk of what
might have once been human was curled up on the
stretcher. Kebar sneered,
“Crispy critter … how the fuck am I supposed to
know who the hell it is?”
Rodriguez spoke, startling them, said,
“We’ve saved you the problem, his dental records
identify him as an informant named Lonnie … your
informant, we believe.”
Kebar was stunned but kept his face in gear, the
world kept tilting out of focus, he said,
“You already know, why’d you bring me here?”
McCarthy got right in his face, said,
“See, here’s the thing, tough guy, ol’ Lonnie was
last seen getting into your car, and hey, next time he
shows, he’s French fries.”
Kebar snarled,
“Get outa my face and use your fucking head,
would I waste my own informant?”
Rodriguez said,
“You might if he didn’t give you what you wanted,
and we know you’re … upset, at… what happened
to your sister.”
Kebar whirled on him, his fists in balls, and
McCarthy said, “I hear she fought like a wild thing
when the perp was riding her.”
And he was flat on his back, a pile driver of a
punch from Kebar, Rodriguez had his gun against
Kebar’s neck, said,
“Back off… now.”
Kebar did, reluctantly, said,
“Pulling guns on your own, that where you guys
have got to?”
He looked down at McCarthy, who was trying to
sit up, spat in his face, said,
“You ever talk about my sister like that, I’ll
fucking kill you.”
McCarthy got shakily to his feet, said,
“Assaulting an officer and making death threats, I
could lock you up right now.” Kebar sneered, “So,
go ahead.” McCarthy shook his head, said, “Give
us Morronni, I’ll see you do only one to five.”
Kebar laughed. “Fuck you.” McCarthy said,
“Okay, mister, play hardball but you might
consider you’re taking the Irish kid with you, now
get the fuck out of here, start packing for the pen.”
Kebar turned without a word and left. Rodriguez
said, “Your jaw is swelling, better get an ice
pack.”
McCarthy rubbed his face, the pain was kicking in,
and he said,
“The bastard is out of control, just where we want
him.”
And he smiled, despite his swelling jaw, he
thought his answer was good.
He liked that.
It was … cool.
I BORROWED NORA’S CAR, A BATTERED
PONTIAC AND
what a hoor to maneuver. I’d learned to drive on a
stick shift and this automatic gig, though obviously
easier, took some getting used to.
And …
New Yorkers, not the most patient bunch, you learn
as you go. I’d taken to following Kebar, if he was
taking down the guy who attacked Lucia, I wanted
to be there, Jesus, I had to know what he knew …
had to. But screwing with McCarthy was part of it.
And Lucia … she was the true reason.
Word was she wasn’t coming back from the
catatonia she’d retreated into and that made me so
hot, being interrupted … how do they say …
midmaneuver … just when I was in the zone, lost
in the ice palace.
Four nights I followed him, trying to be real
careful. He’d, as he’d taught me … ream me a new
one if he caught me.
He’d drive to a dive on Eighth and then just sit,
watching, I knew he was memorizing the players,
the times they came and went, and getting a feel for
the terrain.
Who polices the police? - Village Volce journalist
He was going and soon, I could sense it.
And me … I knew Lucia had saved me from you
know … doing something to Nora.
By the FOURTH NIGHT, I WAS DOZING,
DESPITE THE FLASK OF coffee I’d been sipping
from, and too, Nora and I had an active night
previously. I was resting my head on the wheel
when a gun barrel pushed into the back of my neck.
My first thought was … Gino … and I was gone.
Then Kebar’s voice: “Not too hot on this
surveillance gig, are you, kid?” He withdrew the
gun, asked,
“The fuck you think you’re doing, IA put you up to
this, that it?”
I said, “Us Micks don’t rat out anyone except our
own people.” I heard him sigh, then he said,
“Come on, I’ll buy you a brew.”
We got out of the car and I clocked he was wearing
all black, combat pants, leather jacket, and
sneakers. He’d shaved his head, added to the air of
menace. We headed two blocks back, went into a
bar that was marginally a cut above the dive on
Eighth. The bar guy looked like a hardarse, asked,
“Get you officers?” Kebar ignored the officers
jibe, said, “Maker’s Mark, two, and two Bud.” He
put a twenty on the counter, the guy said, “On me,
guys.” Kebar waited till we got our drinks, said, “I
want something from you, I’ll ask, got it?” He did.
Kebar left the change on the counter and we took a
table, he raised his shot, said,
“Here’s to you, you dumb Mick.”
Then we got to work on the Bud and he reached in
his jacket, took out a bundle, handed it over, said,
“Don’t unwrap it here.”
I took it, felt heavy, and stashed it in my pocket. He
said,
“It’s a Ruger, takes a full clip and is real fine for
up close and personal.”
Then he looked at me, surprise on his face, said,
“You weren’t carrying, were you?”
I shook my head, Nora had asked me not to carry
my police issue with me. He said,
“Christ, you are a dumb schmuck, what if
something went down this evening, were you going
to follow me in and use, what… offensive
language?”
I had no idea and told him so. He stared at me and
then gave a full laugh, not the bitter one he usually
paraded but one of genuine amusement, said,
“You freaking kill me, kid, I dunno, are you just
flat out stoopid or one of the hombres with the
biggest cojones I’ve ever met?” Before I could
answer, he said, “Listen up, buddy …”
Buddy!
“I’m going down, between IA, Morronni, the filth
who hurt Lucia, there ain’t no way I’m walking,
and you have a real future, I ‘predate your support
but it’s best if you just take off.” I said, “Same
again.” Went to the bar and the bar guy said, “Your
partner is one mean dude, yeah?” I put a twenty on
the counter and he pushed it away, said,
“Get with the game.”
I thought, fuckit, put the twenty back in my wallet,
brought the drinks back.
Kebar was staring at me and I went,
“What?” His eyes were granite and he accused:
“You didn’t pay, did you?” Jesus. I said,
“Big deal, the guy wants to stand us a drink, what’s
the harm?”
He lashed out, gripped my wrist like a vise,
snarled,
“Today he had you for chump change, but he has
you, and next thing, the bloodsuckers own your ass,
now get back up there, give him the goddamn
money.”
Fuck.
I did.
The bar guy smirked, said,
“I had you pegged for having balls, guess I was
wrong.”
Humiliated in about three different ways, I went
back and drained my bourbon. Kebar said,
“You want to kill some mother now? … Right… .
Welcome to my world.”
I stood up, said,
“You know, I was just trying to help you, but you
know what, all the damn lectures, the little
homilies, I’m sick to death of them, you have a
good one.”
And I stormed out of there.
Could be my imagination but I swear I heard the
bar guy chuckle.
Lucky I wasn’t meeting Nora, the rage, it triggered
the urge and then … that frigging zoning … and …
stuff happened.
WAS SHOOTING THE SHIT WITH ONE OF
THE UNIFORMS, leaning against our cars, grande
Starbucks with an extra shot of espresso, my hand
leaning casually on the butt of my gun, my radio
squawking, I was finally able to figure out what the
hell the spew of data meant, it was like learning a
new language but one day it just begins to make
sense and you can filter out what is relevant and
what is fluff. I felt like a cop, NYPD BLUE … and
feck, I loved it.
Back home, being a Guard, sipping tepid tea,
twirling your lousy baton, mostly you felt…
useless.
Watching the party girls, skirts up to their arse, and
then, corner of my eye, I’d see a swan do that
graceful glide along the basin, such beautiful necks
those creatures have. But this, this was the deal.
The cop, looking at my hand resting on my gun,
asked, “How’s that working for you?” Cops will
talk hardware all day.
I said it had a nice light weight but the trigger was
sometimes liable to fold in on itself.
He nodded, said,
“See, yer Glock, the department insisted we had to
keep up with the crims and carry that, but I tell you,
you’re chasing a perp on foot, the freaking thing
sometimes goes off, blow your foot or worse your
balls off, me, I carry a little extra.”
Pulled up his pants and strapped to his foot, a
Browning.
He drained his coffee, said,
“Our last mayor, the guys loved him, he was a no-
shit guy, told the dopers, fuck you, fuck your rights,
and got the streets clean, he’d have made one great
pres but you know what, ain’t going to happen.”
Before I could hear more, I was summoned by
O’Brien, who accused: “Goofing off?” Then
added, “You’re wanted upstairs.” I figured, IA
again. Figured wrong. O’Brien stopped outside the
conference room, asked, “You familiar with a task
force?” “Sure.”
He knocked on the door and we went in. A long
wooden table, lots of brass sitting round, all with
stony expressions, O’Brien said, “This is Officer
O’Shea.” A tall gaunt man, in civvies, at the top of
the table, said, “O’Shea, I’m Special Agent Peters,
head of this task force.”
I was standing at attention, learned back in Ireland,
you face the top guys, act submissive. He said,
“Stand at ease, Officer.” I did. He indicated a thick
file, asked,
“You know anything about a strangler, traveling in
Brooklyn?”
“No, sir.”
He looked round at the assembled faces, then:
“Good, we’re trying to keep a lid on it, prevent
panic, three women to date have been strangled in
Brooklyn, all in their late twenties.” He let me
digest that and I asked, “How does this concern me
… sir?” He bit his lower lip, then:
“Well, you’re a Mick, and the killer, he’s using
rosary beads to strangle the women, green beads I
might add.” I said, “I didn’t do it, I don’t even have
a beads.” He glared at me, snapped, “Is that an
attempt at humor, O’Shea?” “No, sir.” He said,
“Reason we asked you here is, you’re fresh off the
boat, full of all the Mick Catholic mumbo jumbo,
and we wondered if you had any input, insights
into this?” The snide dismissal of my faith rankled
but I kept a lid on it, said, “I’d need to think about
it… sir.” He was already dismissing me, I’d been
useless, said, “You do that, don’t strain yourself.”
O’Brien indicated I was to leave and he followed
me out. I said,
“I think that went well.”