Read Extracurricular Activities Online
Authors: Maggie Barbieri
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Divorced women, #Women Sleuths, #Mystery fiction, #Police, #Detective and mystery stories, #Police - New York (State) - New York, #Gangsters, #Women college teachers, #Crawford; Bobby (Fictitious character), #Bergeron; Alison (Fictitious character), #Bronx (New York; N.Y.), #English teachers
It wasn't exactly “I love you” but it was close enough. I felt hot tears burn in my eyes. “I worry about you, too.”
He took my hand. “I promise you that I will find who did this,” he said. And for about the fiftieth time in our relationship, he reached in his jacket pocket and took out a clean square handkerchief. Crawford always has on a clean, white undershirt, and he always carries a nice pressed square of linen, seemingly for my use only. He handed it to me. “Listen, this is my last handkerchief. I'm going to have to switch to tissues if this keeps up.”
I wiped my eyes and blew my nose before commencing with the story of my postwedding Sunday. I told him about running into Terri, too, and the note from Gianna. Although I wasn't sure what that conversation with Terri amounted to, I thought it was worth mentioning; I knew that Gianna's note was a warning to me to stay away from her fatso husband and told Crawford so.
He listened to my story while he finished his sandwich, and when I saw him eyeing mine, I pushed it across at him. He worked on the chicken salad and wiped his hands on a paper napkin when he was finished. He pulled out his notebook and a pen and started asking me questions. “Tell me everything you talked about with Peter. And Terri.” I answered as thoroughly as I could and tried to hold my tears at bay, none too successfully. I didn't want to be married to the asshole anymore but I had never wanted anything bad to happen to him, either. Okayâso that's kind of a lie. I had wanted bad things to happen to him, only I wanted to be the perpetrator of said bad things, not some crazed Mob capo.
He collected all of the debris from lunch. “Please do your best to stay away from Peter Miceli. Got it?”
“Got it.” I was relieved now that I had told him everything. “Thanks, Crawford.”
He got up and pushed all of the garbage into a long, cylindrical garbage can by the door. We left the restaurant and stood on the street, facing each other under the elevated subway. “If I close this case, you'll owe me,” he said suggestively, cupping his hand to my cheek. “And I'm bringing my handcuffs.”
I blushed deep red.
“Oh, Jesus, I was just kidding,” he said, exasperated. He held his arms out. “Come here.” I walked into his arms and stayed there for a few minutes, drinking in his clean laundry smell; I didn't know when we were going out again, but I figured it would be a while until I got this close to smell it again.
I looked up at him and leaned in to give him a kiss but his cell phone rang, interrupting us.
He answered the phone and listened to the person on the other end. “Four-fifteen?” he asked. “Make it four-thirty. If I'm not there, wait for me, Alex. Don't leave. I'm not kidding.” He waited a few seconds. “If you leave, Alex, I'll find you. And it won't be fucking pretty when I do. I'll kick your fucking ass.” He looked over at me, again a little chagrined at the cursing and loss of composure. I looked down at my shoes. “Fine. Four-thirty.” He hung up and looked at me.
“Good friend?” I asked.
“Informant,” was his one-word answer. A train rumbled overhead, passing by slowly. Crawford started to say something else, but I couldn't hear him because of the squealing train brakes. It sounded like “Christine,” but I couldn't imagine what he would need to tell me about his wife. I pulled away and looked up at the train to see how long it would take before we could resume normal conversation; the sound obliterated everything else.
But when I screamed as the bullet tore through my upper arm even the train couldn't drown out the sound.
When I awoke, I was on a stretcher and the big, giant face of Arthur Moran wavered in front of me. I waved at him, and tried to smile. Crawford stood next to him, peering down at me with a concerned look on his face, his hands on his hips and his gun back in the shoulder holster. There was blood smeared across the front of his starched white oxford shirt. When he saw that my eyes were open, he leaned in to talk to me. “They're taking you to Mercy. I'll meet you over there.”
I was wheeled out and put into the ambulance for a bumpy ride across the Bronx to Mercy Hospital. I was in pain, but not as much pain as shock at the fact that someone had tried to shoot me. I think. I may have just been an innocent bystander, but even to me, that explanation sounded pretty thin.
Embarrassingly enough, my wound, a graze, was only serious enough to warrant ten stitches. From the way I had been crying and carrying on, and the amount of pain I was in, I was sure it was an amputation situation.
I was sitting in the emergency room in a curtained-off area, looking at the pile of gauze that wound around my upper arm. I begged the doctor for a painkiller and he finally relented and gave me a prescription for something called Vicodin. He handed me two in a tiny Ziploc bag and instructed me to take one now and one later. He then told me to fill the prescription at home, warning me not to take any unless I was in severe pain. Otherwise, I was to take Tylenol. I didn't mention that I take four Advil at a time when I have cramps. A bullet wound? Bring on the hard stuff.
When he had left the room, I swallowed both of them with a gulp of water from a flimsy paper cup.
I saw Crawford's shadow on the other side of the curtain. “You decent?” he called in.
I was rather indecent, truth be told, but I didn't think that was the question. I told him to come in.
“Ten stitches, huh?” he asked, and came over to survey the wound. The doctor had cut off the sleeve of my sweater to stitch me up, so the gauze was clearly visible. Crawford gingerly took my arm in his hand and turned it so he could get a full view. “I was expecting you to have a prosthetic arm with the way you were carrying on.” He smoothed my sweat-soaked hair from my forehead. “Good news. We found the slug on the street. Ballistics has it now.”
“That's good news?” I asked and attempted to slide off the bed. “What would bad news be?” The Vicodin was already taking effect and my legs felt a little wobbly. He grabbed me before I slid all the way to the floor. With all of the drinking I had done in the last several days, you'd think a painkiller would be a day at the beach. But I had the feeling that my body was filled with helium and that I'd float away if I didn't hang on to his arm for dear life. “Can you take me home or do you have to go see Alex?”
“Who?” he asked.
“Alex. The guy you were cursing at on the phone and threatening with an ass-kicking.”
“Oh, him,” he said, the synapses firing again. “I'll call him and cancel. He wasn't going to show up anyway. And then I'd just have to find him and kick his ass. I'm too tired for all of that.” He looked at the wound again. “Are you in any pain?”
“Not since I took painkillers,” I admitted, my tongue thick and virtually unusable in my mouth. I held on to him and walked through the emergency room and out into the parking lot. I didn't have a jacket anymoreâit had been bagged as evidence, even though I wasn't sure what kind of forensics could be performed on a ripped-up jacketâso Crawford took off his blazer and put it around my shoulders. The temperature had dropped by a few degrees and I was now shivering, so I was grateful for his act of chivalry. He grabbed my good arm as I wandered off in another direction.
“This way,” he said, and pointed to my car. He pointed the key tag at the car and unlocked it. After I was safely inside, my seat belt across my chest, he started the car and drove out of the lot and onto the highway. “Do you remember anything about what happened before the shot was fired?”
“I remember thinking that I love⦔ I started and then stopped. “The way you smell,” I said, not meaning to say anything but hearing the words come from my lips. “And did you say the name Christine?” My head lolled to the side of the headrest.
He changed lanes and didn't respond. “Did you hear anything? See anything? Like a specific car? Someone suspicious looking?”
“I remember you telling me that I would owe you something if you helped me find Ray. And about your handcuffs. I stopped thinking after that. That's what I remember.” I closed my eyes and ran my tongue over my lips. “What do I owe you?”
“How many painkillers did you take?” he asked.
“Two,” I mumbled. “But they were good ones.”
He pulled his cell phone out of his pocket.
“Aren't talking and driving against the law?” I asked.
He dialed a number and waited a moment for someone to answer. “Yeah, it's Crawford. Clock me out for the day. I won't be back in.” He waited a few more seconds. “I don't knowâ¦sick leaveâ¦lost timeâ¦a vacation day? Whatever you want.” He flipped the phone closed and looked over at me. “Do you want something to eat?” he asked, almost relieved when I said that I wasn't hungry. I had thrown up on this man more than anyone in my lifeâeven my own mother.
We pulled into the driveway at my house about a half hour later. Crawford had been here several times and knew which key opened which lock on the front door, so he got out, opened the door, and then came back to get me, a virtual vegetable in the front seat. I took his hand and got out, a strung-out-on-Vicodin, high-heel-wearing college professor. I stumbled up the path to the front door.
“First thing we're going to do is take off those shoes,” Crawford said when we got into the house. He sat me on the bottom step of the staircase, knelt in front of me and took off my pumps. “How do you teach in these things?” he asked rhetorically, holding up and examining my beautiful, black suede pumps.
I shrugged. “I don't know. I'm used to wearing heels.”
“They're a little sexy for school, don't you think?” he asked, his eyes narrowing.
“You know me,” I said. “I'm all about the sex,” I said, trying to snap my fingers to convey a hipness that I did not possess.
“That's what I'm hoping,” he muttered, putting my shoes to the side of the stairs.
I started up the stairs, holding on to the railing. I got into my bedroom and flopped onto the bed facedown, careful not to fall onto my stitched arm. Crawford followed me up and came into the room.
“Do you want to get undressed?” he asked.
I rolled over. “I don't know. Do you?” I tried to sit up, but the room turned upside down in front of me, and I lay back down on the bed. I put my good arm over my forehead.
“Do you want a glass of water?” he asked, leaning over me and studying my face.
I nodded. “You didn't answer my question!” I called after him as he went into the bathroom and ran the tap to fill a glass of water for me. He came back out and told me to sit up, handing me the cup of water. I took a long drink. “You should give Vicodin to your suspects. It's like truth serum.”
He turned my face to his and kissed me lightly on the lips. “You need to get some sleep.” He put his hand on the back of my neck. “If I promise not to look, can I help you get undressed?”
I sighed again. “You can look all you want. There's really nothing to see.”
He stood. “That's what you think.”
I lay back on the bed again, unable to stay sitting if he wasn't propping me up. “Crawford?”
He took off his jacket and threw it across the foot of the bed. “Yes?”
I decided to take a different tack. “What happens now? With us?” I asked.
He leaned against my dresser and crossed his arms. “What do you want to happen?”
“I don't know.”
“You already know how I feel about you. I guess you need to figure out how you feel about me.” He looked at me. “For all I know, you're still mad at me.”
I tried to sit up again. “How could you know how you feel about me? We had this whirlwind relationship for a few weeks in the spring that culminated inâ¦nothing,” I said. It had actually culminated in my broken heart, but he already knew that. It would do no good to revisit that. I was slurring my words, but felt pretty clear of head, so I kept going. “Do you even feel like you know me?”
He nodded. “I know you.” He walked over and unbuttoned my cardigan sweater. He pulled the remaining sleeveâthe one that hadn't been cut offâdown the length of my arm and gingerly took the other, sleeveless half off, careful of my bandage. I had a camisole underneath it and he pulled that over my head. “You're smart, you're funny, you're beautiful⦔ he said, pausing to kiss me. He pulled me to my feet, reached around my back and unzipped my skirt. “You know the difference between a cruiser and a regular car,” he said and kissed me again, “and you're tall. What more could I want?” he whispered as my skirt fell to my feet. “Oh, wait. And you're smart. A heck of a lot smarter than me, but hopefully you won't hold that against me.”
“And I know for sure that âkillier' is not a word.” Whoops. As soon as I said it, despite my drug-addled state, I realized that I was having the wrong conversation with the wrong man.
He looked at me quizzically. “What?”
I decided that mounting a good offense was my best maneuver. I put my good arm around his waist and tried to pull him closer. “Do you want to sleep over?” I asked.
He looked down at me and I could see his mind working. Finally, he shook his head. “No.” He smiled.
I sat back down on the bed and attempted to take my stockings off by myself. “A little help, please?” I asked.
He helped me roll them down and pulled them off my feet. “This isn't what I had in mind.”
“I didn't really expect that the next time you jumped me we'd be on a dirty city street under the el, but we all adjust. What exactly did you have in mind?” I asked.
He sighed and turned back around to my dresser, not answering. “What do you like to sleep in?” he asked.
I told him that my pajama pants and T-shirt were hanging on the back of the bathroom door. The T-shirt was police issue, navy blue, and he had given it to me shortly after we had first met. He came back with them and helped me get my pants on. “What did you have in mind?” I repeated.
“Well, for one thing, you wouldn't have a Vicodin monkey on your back.”
He had a point. I saw his eyes drop to my black bra and then come back up to my face. Thank God I had worn some decent underwear; when I had gotten dressed that morning, it never occurred to me that anyone would see me half-naked. He helped me put the T-shirt on and sat down next to me on the bed. He fished a small Ziploc bag from his pocket and handed me another pill. “The doctor gave me these. He said you could have another one to help you sleep.” He put it in my hand and got the glass of water, which I drank down in one gulp after swallowing the pill. “I'm going to call Dobbs Ferry PD and get a car out front. Then I'm going to go home, put some things in a bag, and come back. Will you be all right for a few hours?” he asked, pushing a piece of my hair behind my ear. He pulled a piece of paper out of his pocket. “I'll also get your prescription filled.”
I nodded. “What's the bag for? Are you staying awhile?”
He smiled. “I'll stay at least as long as the Vicodin doesn't wear off. When you're sober, you're going to change your mind about everything. I know you well enough to know that.” He pulled the comforter out from under the pillows and helped me get into bed. He folded the comforter down across my chest. “Go to sleep,” he said, kissing my forehead. He stood up, thought for a moment, and then leaned over me again, this time kissing me on the mouth for a lot longer than I would have expected, given our conversation. Although my lips were numb and my tongue was stuck to the roof of my mouth, I enjoyed it.
I drifted off to sleep, caught in that space where nagging doubt is replaced by unending hope.