Red on Red (25 page)

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Authors: Edward Conlon

BOOK: Red on Red
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“Don’t look. Don’t move.”

The man turned back to the wall. Nick walked over to the body and touched his neck for a pulse. The flesh had a little give, a softness without response, like a pork chop in the supermarket. Nothing there; done. It reminded him to attend to the victim, who had fallen silent at the speed and violence of his deliverance. Nick walked over to him, and he looked at Nick, blinking. His head was bloodied all over, red in bright rivulets, brown in crusty smears.

“It’s okay. You’re safe. We’re the police.”

The man began to laugh, so weakly at first that Nick thought he was weeping, but when it grew more vigorous, there was an unmistakable bitter glee. He shook his shoulders, to tell Nick to unwrap him. Nick took hold of a piece of the cellophane by his neck and tried to tear it; the layers at the edge frayed, but the thicker midsection held. He would remain mummified until he was cut out. Nick wished he had a camera, wished he had a knife. He stepped back to look for something sharp, and the captive leaned over to spit on the man at his feet, who flinched but didn’t move.

Perez called out from the bathroom. “Got it! I got the piece!”

Napolitano hustled through the door, flushed and sweat-soaked, and the lieutenant pushed breathlessly past him; he leaned down, hands on his knees, and coughed up phlegm. He looked at Nick, unable to ask what he needed to know. Nick made the report:

“We’re good here. One perp down, one under, one on the run. Two guns. None of us hurt. The victim—this one—he’s beat up, burnt, but he’s still got some fight in him. This one here, he’s past helping. He don’t need an ambulance, but we need Crime Scene. The runner’s Kiko. We got him for this even if he walks on the homicide.”

The lieutenant nodded, and his breath seemed to grow more regular as he took in the information. The worst news was far better than what he’d imagined on the labored run upstairs, and you could almost picture his blood vessels relaxing, easing back into the ordinary flow.

“I already called the ambulance. There should be about a hundred cops here in a minute,” the lieutenant said. “You guys are both okay? This is … all good?”

Perez stepped out from the bathroom, a new man, nearly swaggering. “The gun’s right there, next to the body.”

“All right, good. What do we got here?”

Nick spoke up before Perez got a chance; he didn’t like how Perez improvised.

“Espo took the door, three guys sitting in chairs, the victim between two perps. Kiko ups and jets. The guy on the floor doesn’t get to. Junior is in the bathroom, he’s got headphones on. The music must be blasting, ’cause he walks out like he’s stepping onto the dance floor. Clueless, not a clue. He goes for his waist—that’s that.”

Lieutenant Ortiz nodded, then fumbled in his pockets for a cigarette. When he lit the match, his hand shook, and he had to steady it with the other before taking a drag. When he exhaled, all of the detectives did, and Nick could feel his pulse drop. He had seen what had happened, but he hadn’t begun to take it in until he’d said it aloud. It had been a good shoot, as they said, meaning that it was justified, that it would pass the test. Nick looked around the room, at the sweat, the fear, the dishevelment. They looked like an accounting firm who had been dropped into boot camp, their attaché cases lost somewhere on the obstacle course. Napolitano could have come from jogging through a car wash. Perez glistened with perspiration, but he was otherwise kempt. He began to pace back and forth.

“Muthafucka! That was close!”

While the lieutenant and Napolitano watched Perez move, walking in an odd circle—it looked something like a victory lap, something like a failed sobriety test—Esposito fixed his eyes on Nick. He was grateful for the simplicity of the recap, and was mindful that he hadn’t been asked himself. He turned to Lieutenant Ortiz, and the wryness faded from his expression. When Esposito placed a hand on the lieutenant’s shoulder, Nick wasn’t sure if it was to ask for support or to offer it.

“Let’s get going for this. Let’s get everybody out for Crime Scene,” Esposito said, taking it in. “What about this guy, the victim? We gotta get him out, I know, but I’d hate to lose the picture. With a picture of this guy, like this, we don’t have a trial—we have a plea. Their lawyers will beg for one. Anybody?”

Nick wondered if Esposito wanted the picture to look at later, for when he thought about the dead boy and needed reassurance that he had done what was necessary, for when he needed proof. Then Nick
wondered if it would be a kind of trophy, a head to hang on the wall. He stopped wondering after that. No one had a camera.

When Nick had been on patrol, he’d carried one for a while—a number of cops did—for souvenir purposes as much as evidentiary ones, but the habit had fallen away. Nick should have had a camera and a knife, he thought. For that matter, a radio and a vest. A lot of detectives discarded the old tools of patrol for defense and attack because their new tools worked so well, so often, and all that mattered was your mind, your mouth. You talked them in, when you could, and you never fought them, when it was possible, because you had to talk to them later on. Someone else was always the tough guy, the bad guy. Nick could hear the sirens gathering in the distance. The cops were coming.

What would have happened if they’d run this drill by the book? Had met dangerous opponents with body armor, paramilitary tactics, superior force? Would they have done better—one down, one gone, one under arrest, successful rescue, no cops hurt? Before they had taken the door, they’d been chasing a rumor.

Esposito ran a hand through his hair, thinking, then thinking aloud.

“The two ladies upstairs, in 5A and 5E, they were ready to help. One of them’s probably got a camera.”

Napolitano was closest to the door. He tucked his shirt in, smoothed his hair back.

“I got it.”

The hostage moaned again—
“Ven aquí. Ayudame.”
—and Nick went over to him, telling him to wait, it would be all right. The man shook his head, pointing his chin over to Esposito—
Look!
—and then chinned down to his own neck. He called over, hoarsely, and Perez translated his request.

“He has a necklace. Take it out. He wants to show you.”

Nick pulled back sheets of bloody plastic, gingerly, and saw a string of beads, black and red, in alternating grouped bands. The man nodded again to Esposito, in his red and black clothing. Perez led them through the new significance.

“Los colores, negro y rojo.”

“The colors, black and red.”

“Son los colores de Elegua.”

“Elegua?”

“Elegua.”

“He says they’re the colors of Ellegua, whoever that is. You’re a priest?
Es usted cura, sacerdote, clero?

“Sí.”

“Qué tipo?”

“Santero.”

“Shit, he’s a voodoo guy…. Santeria. That shit creeps me out…. Basically he thinks Espo is his voodoo avenger, that he called Esposito here.”

“Shut up. Don’t even joke like that,” Esposito said.

Lieutenant Ortiz raised his hand to cut the conversation off. There would be enough paperwork to do without the metaphysics.

“You think they knew and they still kidnapped him? Isn’t that bad luck?”

“It looks like it was bad luck.”

“What do you think, they took him for his pot of gold?”

“That’s leprechauns, jackass.”

Napolitano had returned, with a little disposable camera. The sound of sirens neared outside, as Napolitano stepped into the room and began to choose where he’d snap the pictures. The santero grinned, delighted that his service to Ellegua had borne such fruit. Napolitano told him to stop.

“Tell him not to smile, okay? It’s just too weird. A good lawyer’s gonna look at him all happy and say it’s some kind of S&M thing.”

Perez instructed him, and his facial expression varied between grim stoicism and silent-movie horror, as if he were a damsel tied to the railroad tracks. Napolitano took the last picture in the roll, and they wondered if the santero was a little loony, playing up for the camera, but when Esposito tried to tear some of the plastic from his arm, he shrieked. The plastic had melted into the skin, where they had burned him with the iron. Had he been tortured for a day or two? More? He was entitled to make all the faces he wanted, to laugh whenever he found it in himself, and to thank God, the New York City Police Department, and whatever imaginary friends who took the trouble to visit. Esposito touched him on the shoulder, kindly, and stepped back.

Cops began to arrive in numbers, and the lieutenant kept them calm, outside the apartment; Nick picked the man up from the floor, struggling in his cuffs, and sent him away with two of the cops. EMS arrived soon after, among them the same pair, their old friends. When they walked
into the room, the white guy was visibly amazed, while the Spanish woman knew enough to conceal her amazement and get to work. She went to the santero, while the white guy went to the dead guy, touched his neck. He looked at his watch.

“Time is 11:32.”

And then he looked to Nick, wondering. There was no accusation in his face. If anything, he looked admiring, cocking his head toward Esposito.

“Jeez. This guy—you guys, again? Which one did it?”

Esposito scowled. Napolitano stepped forward, as if to backhand him, and the EMT stumbled back. Napolitano was the union delegate. He knew that every shooting led to either a medal or an indictment. This one looked good, but he was unwilling to bet. And he certainly was not going to allow a statement to a stranger.

“What I do?” the EMT asked.

His partner cringed and went to him, for consolation and cover. Esposito shook his head as Napolitano walked up to them, shaking an angry finger.

“We have to read people their rights before we ask if they killed anybody. I guess you’re a special kind of detective, get to do whatever you want.”

“Sorry. I just—”

“Yeah.”

“Easy now, everybody.” The woman EMT put a placating hand on Napolitano’s shoulder, then another on her partner’s, and led him over to the priest.

“Come on. Help me here. Baby, get a razor. Let’s get this guy out of this stuff. There’s second-, third-degree burns here. I don’t think the scalp and face lacerations are too bad….”

Lieutenant Ortiz joined them around the man in the chair, in part to separate the teams.

“Easy with the plastic, okay? We’re gonna have to save it, check it for prints, DNA, see if we’re missing any of the players.”

“You got it. I think there may be twenty, thirty yards of it, maybe more.”

“Yeah.”

As they cut through the plastic, a dark-skinned man emerged from beneath, nearly fifty years old, with a bare barrel chest and a substantial
belly. His arms were thin, and his legs didn’t quite reach the ground. There were a dozen burns on his arms and half as many on his legs where they had to cut around the plastic because it had been seared in; the doctors would have to remove it later on. His underwear was dingy and white, or once had been. It was now sallow yellow at the front, giving off a foul waft when his legs and lower body were finally cut free. Some covered their faces. Some made sounds, disgusted. Most stepped back. The Spanish EMT caressed his face.

“Todo está okay, papi. No te sientas avergonzado.”

The priest began to cry now, maybe for the first time, as if the pain had been somehow bearable but the shame was not. Bound and brutalized, he’d been able to stand whatever his enemies had inflicted on him; sitting in dirty underpants in front of a compassionate woman was beyond his endurance. He began to sob and cough in erratic rhythm, and the EMTs ushered him to his unsteady feet before helping him up onto the gurney. They guided him out of the apartment, into the crowd of cops in the hallway, where a dozen blue arms reached around the stretcher to help carry him down the stairs. Nick wondered what the color blue meant for him, what devil or divinity he had called upon to bear him away, after the red god had shot his way to freedom.

T
here was work to be done in the apartment, but it wasn’t theirs; Crime Scene would take photographs, measurements, specimens. All the documentation and cataloguing, the dull science of it, was theirs to slog through. There were interrogations to be conducted in the precinct, regarding the crimes to be proved and disproved. The detectives gave the lieutenant their guns, to establish which had been fired. Nick would have to give a statement, later on, but there was still business for him to do with his partner. They pushed through the crowd outside the apartment—cops and the curious—and forgot again, like the last time, where the car was; was it an hour ago when they’d met, hiding around the corner? Ages ago, that hour. Nick breathed more deeply and easily when they found the car, and again when they left the block, so that it felt like, with each stage of departure, he was finally getting real air. Esposito had wiped his forehead with his arm a few times, but his suit was a poor absorbent for the sweat that flowed from him.

“How you doin’?”

“Fine,” said Nick, almost believing it. “You?”

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