Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled, #Noir
Led him a block away to where his battered Chevy
was parked and said, “Don’t suppose you can fix
my parking tickets?” Got the look and laughed,
said, “Can’t blame a guy for trying.”
They got in the front and from under the seat, Cam
produced a McDonald’s bag, opened it, the smell
of fries and burgers emanating, took out a Glock,
and a clip of ammo, said, “Just like you guys carry
on the job.” Joe took it, asked, “Is it clean?” Cam
laughed, said, “We at McDonald’s pride ourselves
on our hygiene.” Joe reached for his wallet and
Cam said, “Give me a hundred bucks and we’re
even.” As Joe got out of the car, Cam said,
“No offense but don’t come down here no more,
cops aren’t real popular.”
Joe said, “Ex-cop.” He was closing the door when
Cam added, “Once a cop …”
It was late when Joe got back to his room, he got
inside, turned on the light and nearly had a heart
attack.
Sitting on his bed was a black guy, chewing a
match, looking relaxed, a lazy smile on his face,
Joe had the Glock in his jacket but he hadn’t
loaded the sucker.
Fuck.
The guy said,
“Sorry for startling you but we need to talk, I’m
Rodriguez.”
Joe was sure this was it, Shea had sent him to do
the job, and as if reading his thoughts, the guy said,
“I’m here to help you … help you get Shea.”
THE GUY REACHED DOWN, PICKED UP A
BROWN PAPER bag, asked,
“You drink Wild Turkey?”
Joe got his mug and a water glass, handed them
over and then realized, said,
“You were Internal Affairs?”
Rodriguez poured freely, handed the mug to Joe,
said, “Wrong tense.” “Excuse me?’
“Am Internal Affairs, never left, it was a snow job
to get Shea, hell, he even believed I had Peters
sideswiped, pure accident, a situation we took
advantage of to get me tight with Shea, we’ve been
planning this operation for nearly two years, we
know Shea is the strangler, but no proof, and we’re
going to bring down a shitload of cops with him,
he’s got them in his pocket.” “Does McCarthy
know?” Rodriguez sighed, said, “No, he’s a drunk,
how it goes.”
Joe took a deep swallow and the stuff burned, he
was trying to bite down on his anger, asked,
“You knew this guy was killing women and what,
you’ve had your finger up yer ass, waiting for
what, him to do it again?” Rodriguez stuck another
match in his mouth, said, “I understand your
anger.” Joe nearly went for him, said, “The fuck
you do.” Rodriguez took it with that slow smile,
said, “I’ve been on the guy, 24/7 … hell, I even
went to Ireland with him.”
Joe put the mug down, lest he fling the contents in
Rodriguez’s face, asked,
“And when he took out the girl in Sligo, were you
on him … 24 fucking 7?”
Rodriguez let out a low whistle, not easy with a
match in your mouth, said,
“You’re good, did your background, but he got
away from me, this guy is the iceman, the ultimate
predator, but we have a shot at him now.”
Joe reached for the bottle, poured, asked about the
shot they had at Shea now.
“Yeah, how’s that?”
Rodriguez leaned against the wall, almost a lazy
pose, said,
“Lucia, his partner’s sister, he tried to off her but
got interrupted, now if she were to come around
and identify him?” Joe stared at him, said, “I don’t
think that’s too likely to happen.” Rodriguez gave
the lazy smile, no warmth, said, “But if he thought
she had?” Joe suddenly got the gig, said, I “And
I’m the guy to tell him?” Rodriguez said, “He
killed your sister, don’t you want to bring him
down?”
Joe said,
“You’re IA … like I’m supposed to trust you?”
Rodriguez filled his water glass but the booze
seemed to have little visible effect on him, said,
“And what do you call your partner, Jay, right…
who sold you out to Shea … you think he’s better
than me?” Joe lost it, near screamed, “He’s a
treacherous son of a bitch.” Rodriguez looked at
him, said, “There’s that I guess.”
you police an armed society, you learn to shoot
first or you’re dead.
— Chief Constable John Alderton
I WAS SITTING AT ME DESK, A STARBUCKS
VANILLA-flavored latte before me and the
frigging beads in me right hand. Where did he get
it? And, as if on cue, the phone rang, I picked up,
heard, “Lieutenant Shea, we may have a major
break in the case.” The fucking writer. I kept me
voice neutral, asked, “Yeah?”
“Oh yeah, Lucia, your partner’s sister, she’s
regained consciousness and I’m meeting her
tomorrow, she might be able to tell us who
attacked her and if it wasn’t that guy … Gino … ?”
I tried to stay calm, said,
“Wow, how about if I come along with you
tomorrow, make it official?”
“That would be great, around nine o’clock… that
suit you?”
“Perfect.”
Click.
Fuck … fuck … Jesus, if she was able to talk … I
swept the damn paper cup off me desk… I hate
fucking vanilla … then began to calm down, hey,
I’d the evening free, and man, I sure wanted
another shot at her, and who knew, maybe the
stuck-up nurse would be on duty, do her too …
I grabbed my jacket, ran into Rodriguez in the hall,
who asked, “What’s up?” I said, “There’s a mess
in my office, get it cleaned up.”
Come night, I go to the hospital, wearing doctor’s
scrubs, even a stethoscope, and fuck, I was so
zoned, pure energy flying me on.
Found her room in jig time and there she was.
Radiant. In that half light they use in hospitals. Her
white neck … gleaming. I pulled the blankets back.
Odd? She looked fairly fucking comatose.
Probably the drugs.
What the fuck ever.
Snapped my medal off her neck and then got out the
beads, wrapped it round her gorgeous throat and
then … heard the sound of a gun being racked.
Turned to face Rodriguez, the fucking writer
behind him, and in the corridor a whole bunch of
uniforms, he said,
“Back away real slow, asshole.”
I wasn’t going to let the prick take me beads and
moved to get them and was slammed against the
wall. He shot me? Me? The blood was gurgling in
my throat and I tried to say, “But I’m a cop …”
The writer was staring at me with pure
malevolence and I wanted to tell him, “I did the
others but not Nora … I swear.” Heard Rodriguez
say, “The fuck is begging for help.” I didn’t see
any of them rush to get it. The fuck is with that?
AFTER, AS JOE STOOD OUTSIDE, HIS EARS
STILL RINGING from the gunshots, he was joined
by Rodriguez. He stared at the cop, his anger
barely controlled, asked, “Why did you have to
take him out?” Rodriguez shook his head, said,
“You’ve forgotten what it’s like to be a cop?” Joe
didn’t get it, said, “I don’t get it, what’s that got to
do with you wasting him?” Rodriguez faced him,
his eyes a hard hue, said,
“The police department has enough bad press, you
think we wanted Shea in a courtroom, the hero cop,
on view to the whole world, best for all if he went
down.”
Joe wanted to wallop him, felt his fists curl, and
before he could reply, Rodriguez said,
“I thought you’d be happy to see your sister’s killer
buy the farm?”
Joe took a deep breath, said, “That was an
execution.” Rodriguez turned to move away, said,
“No, it was expediency.”
EPILOGUE
Joe was back in Miami a month now and couldn’t
settle, dammit all to hell, he had New York back in
his blood, despite the cold, the traffic and all the
usual stuff.
Plus, he couldn’t get Maria off his mind, he’d
given her his cell phone number and she promised
to stay in touch. He was glad that his scenario
about her might not be that far-fetched after all, just
maybe she felt something too.
He was trying to put together a piece on all that
had happened when his cell shrilled, he flipped the
cover open, said,
“Yeah?”
“Joe, it’s Maria.”
God, he couldn’t believe how happy he was to
hear her but before he could say anything, she near
screamed, barely containing her hysteria,
“Joe, Dios mio, one of the nurses has been
strangled, the police say it is a copycat but he used
a green rosary and last night when I got home, on
my pillow was a gold ring, it had two hands
holding a heart, I am so scared.” Joe, stunned for a
minute, realizing it had to be Nora’s ring, they’d
never found it. He said, “I’ll be on the next flight.”
She asked, “But your job?”
He nearly smiled, said,
“Screw the job.”
The End.