Contents Under Pressure (14 page)

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Authors: Edna Buchanan

Tags: #Mystery, #Thriller, #Suspense, #FICTION/Suspense

BOOK: Contents Under Pressure
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Nine

Parking at the police station was a pleasure at eleven o’clock at night. What a difference twelve hours made. I dropped my car keys, a comb, and other essentials into the deep pockets of my navy blue cotton jumpsuit.

McDonald had not forgotten. When I mentioned his name at the front desk, the officer said I was expected, and handed me a clip-on visitor’s pass. He escorted me across the empty lobby, past the stainless steel memorial to the thirty city officers killed in the line of duty since 1915, inserted his key card into the elevator slot, punched five, and returned to his post.

The fifth-floor halls were deserted; few people were on duty, and I liked the freedom of not having to look over my shoulder for Major Alvarez or some other officious supervisor eager to challenge my presence.

Robbery and homicide shared a big open office with picture windows looking out on Overtown, a high-crime ghetto neighborhood. McDonald, Flood, and two other detectives were huddled at desks at the homicide end of the room. They were handling their mail and paperwork, returning phone messages, and monitoring their radios all the while. McDonald broke into a big, slow smile when he saw me wending my way toward them, and I couldn’t help smiling back. He spoke to his partner, and Flood’s head spun around. “What!”

“Britt’s with us tonight,” McDonald repeated.

Uh oh, I thought. No wonder everything was okay with Flood, until now. He didn’t know I was riding with them.

Ignoring Flood’s scowls, I browsed the homicide board, which spanned an entire wall. The board listed each of the current year’s murder victims in numerical order, revealing at a glance the number of killings inside city limits so far this year, 121. Although most of those whose names were listed there did not lead orderly lives, their deaths were neatly catalogued. Each entry, precisely printed in black grease pencil, included the date, time, the name of the victim, the location and manner of death, the lead detective on the case, and the killer. Many of the killers, as well as occasional victims, were described simply as UNK. The worst possible case scenario for an investigator was a homicide in which weeks or months have elapsed with both victim and killer still listed as UNK. Where did you start when one unknown human being was murdered by another?

Other suspects’ descriptions were brief and basic enough to fit thousands of South Florida residents, such as W/L/M (white Latin male), age 20s to 30s. Those known by names were identified, along with their DOB (date of birth) and the charges filed against them.

Most of the names seemed like old acquaintances. That was because I had covered their cases.

Another detective, whom I knew only slightly, was on the telephone at a nearby desk. His end of the conversation sounded like he was pacifying a citizen unhappy about an unsolved case. He looked bored and slightly sullen, gazing blankly out the window as he mostly listened. Suddenly he leaped to his feet with a shout.

“Holy shit! Gotta go now!” He slammed down the receiver and sprinted across the office toward the hall.

“What the hell?” Flood muttered, rising from his desk.

“A 330, just down the street, corner of six and two,” the detective shouted breathlessly. “Some son of a bitch just shot a guy right off his bicycle. Right in front of me. Out there!” He was pointing and talking rapidly into his radio.

We ran to the window. A block-and-a-half away, a man lay sprawled in the street under a bright anti-crime sodium vapor light. His bicycle was already gone. The killer had pedaled away on it.

One reason for building the new station in this neighborhood was so its presence would cut crime and upgrade the area. Some people didn’t get the message.

“He won’t even need a car,” Flood said. “He can beat feet to the scene.”

We heard the detective on the radio, reporting the shooting to dispatch. He had seen two men, one on a bike, apparently arguing under the streetlight. The other had pulled a gun and shot him.

McDonald picked up his radio and spoke laconically to the detective, who by now had reached the lobby. “I guess we can assume you’re handling this one,” he drawled.

We all stared out the window. Several youths had appeared and approached the body. One crouched beside him.

McDonald radioed what was happening to the detective who was on the way. “We’ve got some bystanders, looks like one of them is taking your victim’s pulse—or his wristwatch. Hell, dammit! He’s got his watch! Tall black kid, wearing jeans and a dark-colored muscle shirt. Headed west on Six. He’s running.”

A patrol car skidded around the corner, lights flashing. The bystanders scattered.

“Nothing good ever comes out of Overtown,” Flood grumbled, turning back to his desk.

I continued staring out the window at the growing tableau below. “Something did once,” I said quietly. “D. Wayne Hudson.”

The radios stayed active with the manhunt and with street patrolmen frequently raising detectives for advice or to report incidents or injuries that might develop into something serious. Homicide detectives hated surprises, like people who died in hospitals weeks after minor crimes that were never properly investigated and were now murders.

Flood was discussing a mugging victim on the radio. “How bad was the hit on the head?”

“Apparently it was some object, maybe a pipe,” the tinny voice of a young patrolman answered. “Knocked the victim to the ground. He was hit from behind, then fell forward and struck his face on the pavement.”

“How many stitches?”

“About twenty-one in the back, six in the front. His nose is kind of bloodied, and it may have loosened a couple of teeth.”

“Was he ever unconscious?”

One could hear the officer conferring with someone, perhaps the victim, in the emergency room. “He’s not sure, maybe briefly. He crawled to the corner gas station where somebody helped him and called us.”

“How old is he?”

“Seventy-two.”

“Talk to the doctor and see what he says. Lemme know if they decide to admit him.”

“QSL.”

McDonald was responding to an officer handling a robbery on NW Twentieth Street at Twelfth Avenue, a rental car attacked by street people who smashed the windshield with rocks, then robbed the occupants. “Are the victims local?” McDonald said.

“Negative. Tourists, a family from Ohio.”

“Okay, get them down here to talk to robbery. Now.”

Had the victims been Miamians, a report would have been filled out and a detective may have contacted them eventually, if he found the time. But tourists took priority. Their cases carried a sense of urgency. Criminals loved to stalk them, like hunters stalking their prey, because of the scant chance that an out-of-towner would return to testify against them in the unlikely event of an arrest. In fact, there was a strong possibility that the victim would leave town before an investigation could even be launched. Most traumatized tourists fled at once. That, of course, left city officials and chamber of commerce types wringing their hands and ordering the cops to give their cases top priority, even if it meant ignoring the local tax payers who got mugged.

McDonald motioned me to help myself from the coffeepot set up near the interview rooms. The muddy brew looked like it had been made earlier in the day, perhaps even earlier in the week, but if the night stayed relatively quiet, I would need the caffeine. It was murky and lukewarm, but I poured some into a Styrofoam cup and stirred in sugar with a plastic spoon.

A hoot of jubilation came from McDonald, and I moseyed over to his desk. He’d received a positive ID from the lab on a print lifted from a detective’s car. The crime had been one of deception on both sides, a narcotics reverse sting gone awry ten days earlier. The “drug sellers” were really cops, the “drug buyers” were really robbers. The playacting ended when the robber ringleader pulled his impressive new gun, a European model fitted with extra safety features. He had never fired it before and forgot to release the safety before trying to kill the cops. As he wondered why his expensive new gun wouldn’t work, they shot him dead and his accomplices scattered.

Police shootings are more sensitive than they once were, and are now investigated like homicide cases. It is important to interrogate all participants. Police had had no luck until now—the Rockwell computer had matched a single thumbprint lifted from the roof of the undercover car to a man by the name of Rodney Williams.

He may have been one of the conspirators. All of the robbers had leaned on the detectives’ car at some time during the negotiations.

McDonald called records for Williams’ rap sheet and copies of all his prior arrests. We all pulled chairs up to the same desk, searching the paperwork for the dead man’s name as a prior codefendant or relative. We found no link between Williams and the man police shot. Williams did have a number of arrests on drug and robbery charges, which looked good, but none were in the Brownsville neighborhood where the shooting went down. That looked bad. Criminals are creatures of habit.

“Uh oh,” McDonald said, scanning A-forms. “Unless he’s doing something new, or his cousin or somebody lives in this building, he may have left his print on that car at some other time, some other place.” He looked disappointed.

“When’s the last time they washed the car?” I asked.

“Good question,” Flood said.

“Probably impossible to find out, but worth asking,” McDonald said.

“Would the undercover officer recognize Williams’ mug shot?” I asked.

“Maybe, maybe not,” he said. “They were dealing mostly with the main man, the guy they shot.”

“Thing to do,” Flood said, “is to go roust Rodney and ask him what the hell happened that night. That could solve our problems. He might tell us.” He looked at me. “That’s the secret, never ask
if
he was there, ask him what happened
when
he was there.”

“I do that all the time,” I told him, chin on my palm, elbow on his desk.

“Don’t ever try it on me,” he growled, but he cut his eyes at me with a grudging look of approval. I did like him.

Since the city seemed quiet, with no major chaos in the streets at the moment, we studied Rodney’s most recent mug shots and set out to hunt him down at his usual haunts.

I was glad to be alone with McDonald and Flood in their big unmarked Chevrolet Caprice, in a more private setting, without others overhearing our conversations. McDonald drove, with Flood in the passenger seat, me in the back.

We drifted through neighborhoods unsafe for motorists in broad daylight. There was a great deal of movement on the street given the hour, which was almost 1
A.M
., and our plain, unmarked four-door car fooled no one. People lounged comfortably on corners and in doorways as though in their living rooms. The downtown foot traffic was constant, homeless people pushing shopping carts full of aluminum cans, piled high with their possessions, stacked with merchandise they had stolen. Others dragged their beds, huge pieces of folded cardboard as big as refrigerators, looking for their spot. Most wore layers of clothing, carrying their entire wardrobe as they moved about.

“They’re younger than the hobos and bums of yesterday,” Flood pointed out. “Drinking has stayed about the same, but a lot of these people are strung out on crack.”

“It’s the drug addiction of the poorest of the poor,” McDonald said. “If they’re young they’re usually addicted to crack. They drink wine too, but just to stay numb. When they do get their hands on a few dollars they buy crack first, then alcohol, then they try to
get,
not buy, food. That’s the order of their priorities.”

We rolled through the streets staring, watching for a face, as eyes watched us from the shadows. Nothing in this city where I was born and raised looked the same as it did during the day. Miami’s blue vistas seemed shrunken, as though a lid of darkness had been clamped down, cutting off the vast horizons and shrinking the city. I felt a strange intimacy between us, out there together, sharing a metal cocoon moving through a strange and surrealistic landscape. I could see how police partners who worked this shift could become closer to each other than to their families or spouses.

Alone in the backseat, I eased out my notebook. Flood was reminiscing about the bad old days, the year of the big gasoline shortage. The long lines at the tanks sent the city murder rate skyrocketing while the county’s dropped, when killers stopped dumping dead bodies out in the remote countryside. Short on gas, they left them lying where they fell, inside city limits, unfortunately.

Flood folded two slices of chewing gum into his mouth. “Trying to quit cigarettes,” he explained, as he chomped and offered the pack around.

During a lull in conversation I asked, “How does this shift affect your home lives? How do your wives cope?”

“She’s used to it,” Flood said, and shrugged.

“Not married,” McDonald said. “A few close calls, but I’m still a free man. It would be a lot to ask of anybody. Quite a few of the guys have marital problems. What does your significant other think of your job?’’

Yes! He is single, I thought, glad he couldn’t see my expression. “Oh, it keeps me too busy to really get involved with anyone,” I said, trying to sound casual. “Why do you guys like midnights?”

“We’re the warriors of the dark,” McDonald said playfully. “The white hats out here to save the innocent. Also, the station is empty and you don’t have to put up with any shit from management. No traffic, no staff meetings, no ass-kissing. Things are simpler. We also don’t have to deal with people who walk into the office wasting our time with complaints that their neighbor is threatening to kill them over some backyard dispute.”

He occasionally glanced at me in the rearview mirror as he spoke. “It’s easier on this shift to deal with witnesses, perps, people on the street. We can persuade people to cooperate without getting tough. At night people feel that it’s just between us. They also seem to think that if they don’t cooperate, and try giving us some lip, we’re gonna kick their asses. During the day they’ve got options: They can call their boss, their lawyer, or their neighbors who come out and start hassling the police. You don’t have much privacy dealing with people during the day.”

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