Authors: Rayven T. Hill
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Retail, #Thriller
“When Werner was there?”
“No. No. When he wasn’t there.”
“What did you see?” Jake asked. He took a chug of orange juice.
“Don’t know as I should say,” the old woman said.
“Go ahead, Sara,” Abe said. “You ain’t never kept nothing quiet for long anyway. Might as well spill the beans on this one.”
Sara whispered, “They get amorous.”
Annie tilted her head slightly to one side. “An affair?”
“Sure as tarnation.”
Jake and Annie exchanged a look. She knew he was thinking the same as her. Could Rocky or Maria have killed Werner? Or perhaps they were in it together?
Annie eyed Sara closely. “You’re sure about this?”
Sara sat back and looked at Abe. “Tell them, Abe. You’ve seen them carrying on.”
Abe nodded. “I have to confirm what the old woman says. There’s something up between them two and it ain’t innocent.”
Annie pulled a business card from her handbag and slid it in front of Sara. “You’ve been a big help. Call me if you can think of anything else.”
“I sure will,” Sara said. “You can bet I’m gonna be keepin’ a sharp eye out from now on.”
Abe chuckled. “I can vouch for that. It’s what she does best.”
Annie and Jake stood, thanked them again, and Sara saw them to the door. “Drop in again some time,” the old woman said, as they left.
Annie laughed and glanced at Jake when the door closed behind them. “Maybe we should offer Sara a part-time job. She’s got the knack.”
Jake chuckled. “She’d probably be good at stakeouts.”
They got in the car and Annie started the engine then turned to Jake. “The affair between Rocky and Maria could explain a lot. The problem is, it doesn’t tell us anything about why Michael Norton was killed.”
“Did Rocky kill his brother and frame Norton for it?”
“It’s possible,” Annie said. “But then we’re back to the same question. Who killed Norton, and why?”
Thursday, 9:22 a.m.
AS TIRED AS HANK had been the night before, he was robbed of sleep by the perplexing facts of the case running through his mind. He’d risen early to get a fresh start, and though he’d been up for a couple of hours, he felt he was making little headway.
A call to King to see if the detective found any information on the drug heist went unanswered. A quick study of his notes revealed nothing new, and to make matters worse, a plugged sink in the bathroom wasted a half hour of valuable time.
He downed a quick breakfast, made a short phone call to Amelia over coffee, and was raring to go.
He gathered up the stacks of notes, reports, and folders, and stuffed them into his briefcase. After fastening his service weapon in place, he headed out the door, determined to make the day count.
His old Chevy clanked and banged when he turned the key. It had served him faithfully for several years, but by the sounds of the engine, he would need a new vehicle before long. Not an easy thing to do with only a cop’s salary and the small car allowance RHPD allowed him.
When he arrived at the precinct, he parked behind, made a mental note King’s car wasn’t there, and hoped the detective was doing something productive for a change.
The precinct was in high gear when Hank stepped inside. Cops leaned over their desks, or consulted with one another. Captain Diego’s face was buried in paperwork, and across the room, Callaway squinted at his monitor.
The heat of the day was already infiltrating the room, the useless air conditioner doing little except rumble, and Hank made a mental note to talk to Diego about replacing the worn out piece of junk.
He headed for the break room. This was starting to be a bad day. Someone drained the coffee pot and left it turned on. Hank started a fresh pot. At least he knew it would be palatable, not like most of the rotgut sludge he had to endure when someone else made it.
Things took a turn for the better when he got to his desk, sat his coffee down, and spied the medical examiner’s report regarding the murder of Michael Norton, sitting dead center on his desk. Beside it lay the preliminary ballistics report. He sat and pulled up his chair, booted up his computer, and flipped open the folder containing the ME’s findings.
The listed cause of death was not surprising—a gunshot wound causing exsanguination. Norton bled to death after catastrophic injury to the heart.
The manner of death was homicide—that was obvious, and Nancy concluded Norton was killed elsewhere, perhaps a half hour prior to being dumped near the railroad tracks.
The interesting part was the trajectory of the bullet. Gunshot residue indicated it had been fired from a distance of eighteen to twenty-four inches and entered the body at a thirty degree downward angle.
Hank did some quick calculations, and as far as he could tell, the victim had been either standing or kneeling when shot. Norton might’ve been tied to a chair, or on his knees, begging for his life when the fatal bullet entered his body.
An examination of the back of the victim’s shirt revealed small nicks and tears with ground-in dirt, consistent with the body being dragged a distance. To Hank, that meant Norton had been transported there in a vehicle, then dragged across the ground and deposited by the bushes. There was no other explanation he could see.
There were also lesions on the arms, face, and hands—nicks, bruises, and abrasions, probably defensive wounds, or at the least, an indication of a struggle.
Norton had fought and begged for his life and lost.
Blood alcohol levels, as well as blood and urine drug screens, were negative.
He closed the folder. Nothing else in the report revealed anything unusual, but he would go over it again later.
The ballistics report revealed exactly what Hank expected. The weapon Norton carried was the same one that fired the fatal bullet into Werner Shaft.
The bullet lodged in Norton’s heart was also .38-caliber, fired from a different weapon than the one found on the body. The ballistics ID system returned a negative. It was another unregistered weapon, never before used in a shooting as far as the system could tell.
That was all Jameson had for him at the moment. Hank hoped to see the rest of the findings later in the day. He was especially interested in the possibility of tire tracks and any trace evidence recovered from the scene. With the lack of surveillance cameras anywhere in the area, and no witnesses to be found, he hoped for something solid from forensics.
Hank looked up as Callaway approached his desk and handed him a sheet of paper. “I got the bank records on Rocky Shaft you requested. There’s an interesting withdrawal.”
“Thanks, Callaway.”
Hank took the paper and glanced at it. Callaway had highlighted a withdrawal for six thousand dollars cash from Shaft’s bank account on Tuesday morning. Could that be to pay off the hitman? Punky Brown had never been paid, but Brown indicated the fee for his services was five thousand. More circumstantial evidence? Perhaps. But what was the extra thousand for?
“Anything else you need, Hank?”
Hank looked up at the young cop. “Not right now. I’m sure there’ll be something later.”
Callaway returned to his desk as the precinct doors swung open and Detective King swaggered in. The grin on his face revealed he had something to share. He waved a finger at Hank, strode to the break room, took his sweet time about making a coffee, and then approached Hank’s desk.
Hank sat back and watched patiently as King settled into a chair and stretched out, one sneakered foot resting on the corner of the desk. King hadn’t shaved again this morning. He always managed to have three day’s growth on his face, even after he shaved. It was a mystery even Hank couldn’t solve.
King sipped at his coffee. Hank waited some more.
“Harland Eastwood,” King said at last.
King had a way of dropping names as if making a big reveal, and then waiting for a response before explaining.
Hank took the bait. “Who’s Harland Eastwood?”
King took another sip and sat his cup on the desk. “One of the druggies robbed by Shaft and his friends.”
Hank sat forward and rested his arms on the desk. “Does Eastwood know who robbed them?”
“I haven’t talked to him yet,” King said. “I got the name from a CI. Had to get him out of bed.”
Hank sighed lightly, shuffled the papers on his desk, and remained patient.
King continued, “Seems like all these criminal types sleep until noon. Guess that’s what happens when you’re up half the night.”
“Does your informant know where to find Eastwood?”
King pulled a scrap of paper from his shirt pocket and waved it. “Got the address.” He handed it to Hank.
“Rough part of town,” Hank said, after looking at the paper. “You’d think if they were big-time drug dealers they could afford to live in a better place.”
“Apparently, Eastwood is a flunky. Not one of the big shots. Does deliveries, pickups, that sort of thing.”
Hank frowned. “That’s the best you could get? A flunky?”
“He might not be top brass, but if he knows anything, it’s gonna be easier to get something from him.”
Hank swept the reports into a pile, dropped them into his briefcase, and stood. “Let’s go see if we can find this Eastwood character.”
Thursday, 10:24 a.m.
JAKE WAS STRETCHED out on the couch, a cushion under his head, his hands tucked behind it. The television was on and muted, but Jake wasn’t watching it. He stared at the ceiling, sorting through the facts, devising a workable plan of attack.
Though Rocky Shaft appeared to be the obvious suspect for Norton’s murder, Jake wasn’t so sure. However, the revelation by Shaft’s neighbors regarding a possible affair was foremost in his mind.
It seemed to Jake, other than the affair, Shaft was trying to hide something and money played a big part in it.
He swung his legs to the floor, stood, and went into the office. Annie was typing furiously at the keyboard, and when he entered, she stopped and looked over at him.
He approached the desk and perched on the corner. “I thought I might go see Rocky Shaft,” he said.
“That suits me fine. I got the cell phone number of one of Michael Norton’s neighbors from Hank, and I have an appointment to visit her at her work at noon, during her lunch break.”
“Great. Then I’ll see you back here this afternoon. I’ll call you if I come up with anything interesting.” Jake gave her a quick peck on the lips and left the office.
He unplugged his cell phone from the charger, slipped it into a holder on his belt, and grabbed his car keys from a hook by the door on the way out.
The Firebird purred like a tiger under control when he turned the key. He looked at his watch; Shaft should be at work, and if not, Jake wanted to know why.
Richmond Distributing sat on a couple of acres surrounded by a chain link fence. A pair of warehouses occupied much of that space, the rest taken up by parking areas, tractor-trailers, and shipping containers.
From the information he’d gleaned online, Jake knew the company did local and national distribution for a number of organizations, as well as drop-shipping services for a variety of mail-order and online firms.
Driving onto the property was not much different from going to the mall. There was no gate, no security, and the public was always welcome to visit the showroom displaying a range of items for retail purchase.
Jake parked in one of the guest spots, grabbed an official looking baseball cap from the back seat, and walked around behind the largest building to the shipping doors at the rear.
A row of vehicles was parked along the back fence and Jake spied a red Ford pickup. That would be Shaft’s vehicle. He wandered over and checked the license plate to be sure. It was Shaft’s. He would be in the building somewhere.
A trailer was backed up to the loading dock and the hum of a lift truck could be heard unloading skids of merchandise to be redistributed. A man door beside the dock was propped open by a concrete block, and from where Jake stood, workers could be seen engrossed in their tasks.
He stepped inside and looked around. No one paid him any attention; perhaps they assumed he was a truck or local delivery van driver.
Jake didn’t know where he would find Shaft. He only knew he worked in the shipping department. Half of the enormous room was filled with rows and rows of shelving, skids piled three layers high, and mounds of shipping material. Shaft could be anywhere.
The entire right wall of the building was one long counter, weigh scales and postage machines at intervals, where pickers filled orders for shipping to individuals and small companies. Shaft wasn’t among those preoccupied workers.
To his left, on the far side of the loading dock, Jake spied a small office. He waited for a lift truck to rumble by, then strolled across the floor and peered into the room.
Rocky Shaft sat at a small desk, filling out some forms. He seemed to have become shipping manager in place of his brother. Certainly the promotion would not be a motive for murder, just a logical step for the company to take in light of Werner’s demise.
Jake tapped on the open door. Shaft looked up and his face darkened. He tossed his pen on the desk, spun around, and glared at the visitor. “What do you want?”
Jake disregarded the surly tone and smiled politely. “I want to talk to you about your brother.”
Shaft’s voice took on a calmer tone. “What about him?”
“Norton didn’t kill him,” Jake said.
Shaft remained quiet a moment, then, “Norton killed my brother. I have no doubt about that, and all the evidence proves he did.”
“Evidence can be planted.”
Shaft shrugged. “And who planted the evidence?”
“Maybe you.”
Shaft slammed a fist on a table. “Are you accusing me of killing my own brother?”
“I’m not accusing anyone,” Jake said calmly. “I’ll let the evidence speak for itself.”