Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled, #Noir
come out a door.”
McCarthy put up his hand to stop me, asked,
“And did you caution him, tell him to drop his
weapon, identify yourself as a police officer?”
I glanced at the black guy and was he smiling? I
asked, “You ever hear a shotgun being primed?”
He stared at me, irritation on his face, asked,
“What’s your point?” I made a click with my
tongue, said,
“That’s the sound and it tells you, you have maybe
two seconds to identify yourself or … save your
partner, what would you do or don’t you get out
from behind a desk?”
The black guy chuckled and McCarthy was riled,
snapped,
“Hey pal, you’re a goddamn rookie, don’t get
mouthy with me, you got that?” I let that hover for a
bit, then said, “A rookie who saved his partner’s
life.” He changed tactics, became Mr. Cordiality,
asked,
“How do you find your partner, busting your balls
is he?”
Now I got to smile, said, “I thought that was your
job.” He let it go, continued, How do you feel
about cops on the take?”
I didn’t hesitate, said, “Much the same way I feel
about informers, sorry … Internal Affairs.”
He jumped up, leaned right in my face, and if he
expected me to flinch, he was wrong.
In Templemore, the first month of Guards
enlistment, you have training officers from the
Midlands, big country fuckers who play hurling
because they love the brutality, they are thick
bastards and as tough as granite, and they spend
that first month shouting, spittle included, into your
face.
You get through that, and learn early … never …
ever, wipe the spit off, you can face any fucker
roaring into your mouth. He shouted,
“Listen up, Paddy, you’re going to be seeing a lot
more of me, and you don’t know it yet but IA might
be a bigger part of your life than you ever
imagined, that is, if you intend staying on the
force.”
He pulled back, well pleased with his threat. I
asked,
“Can I ask a question?” “Knock yourself out, I’m a
Mick too, remember?” “What happened to you
calling me Matt?” He spat on the floor, said, “Get
out of my fucking office.” I was at the door and I
said,
“McCarthy, despite your name, I think you got the
wrong country in your heritage.” He was curious,
thinking maybe I was making amends, he asked,
“Yeah, where should I be from?” I let a beat go,
then said, “Nazi Germany.” I swear, the black guy
winked.
That black guy, whose name was Rodriguez, there
was something about him, a familiarity, as if I’d
known him before, and it took me a while to figure
it out, I was staring in the mirror, a habit I’d
become more and more addicted to.
Not out of vanity but there was a little of that, I’m a
good-looking guy, so some of that but primarily, to
try and see if the two sides of my nature showed,
they hadn’t… yet.
After Internal Affairs, when I stared in the mirror, I
saw Rodriguez, that was it, he had that same dark
shadow on his soul.
An echo in the darkness.
I was pretty pleased with meself but as usual, my
frigging mouth had made me a bad enemy.
If the blue menaces are ever going to catch me,
they had better get off their fat butts and do
something.
—The Zodiac, letter to the los angeles times, 1971
SIX
RIDING WITH KEBAR AFTER, THE WHOLE
DYNAMIC HAD changed, he no longer gave me
grief and Jesus, asked my opinion on stuff, like if
we were going into a crack house, he’d go,
“How d’you want to play this … partner?”
Even he seemed stunned by his behavior, as if he’d
lost his way and was floundering.
Fuck, I let him flounder.
The bollix had gone out of his way to make me life
hell, and now he didn’t know his arse from his
elbow, he even forgot one time to slide the bar up
his sleeve till I reminded him.
Our luck stayed golden and we brought down a
major dope dealer by pure chance, it was a collar
that made the front pages of the Daily News.
Kebar said,
“This rate, kid, you’ll make detective in no time.”
And thing is, I felt blessed, bulletproof, no matter
what I touched, it panned out. I’m Irish, I should
have known better, things go that well, God is
seriously screwing with you, seeing just how much
you think it is your sheer talent before He fucks you
good.
I was learning the lingo, my American coming in
daily, still had me brogue of course and it amused
the other cops to hear me cuss American with an
Irish accent but at least I was getting there.
I noticed they had picked up a few of mine too,
even Kebar had started calling creeps “bollix” and
I once heard him say …
“Things were fierce.”
Best of all was when we pulled in a vicious
hooker who had been slashing Johns and he said,
as she tried to bite him,
“Fuck on a bike.”
Had him.
A month flew by in a haze, and knocking off work,
Kebar asked,
“There’s a bar in Brooklyn, got some great beer,
I’d, um … you know, appreciate it if you let me …
buy you a few brews.”
I figured he’d done enough penance, said,
“Sounds good.”
His whole face lit up and to see him smile, it was a
whole other guy, like he was ten years old.
We arranged to meet at eight o’clock and as I
headed for the locker room, he went,
“Shea?”
First time he used me name, and I turned. He said,
” ‘Predate it.” I said, “Whatever.”
I was going to cut him some slack but not get stupid
either.
Little did I know.
I got back to my place, I showered, broke out a
cold one and rolled a little weed, nothing major,
just chill on out, fingered the green rosary, the need
was mounting.
This was always the roughest time, as the darkness
mounted and demanded its due, the other side of
me, the good cop, wanted to be a regular guy and,
here’s the joke, to meet a woman who would so
consume me that I wouldn’t need the long slender
necks of others. The zoning was becoming more
powerful and the durations longer, how much of
any decency was left was eroding rapidly.
I had the TV on, listened to the news, a hundred
Americans killed in Iraq in one month.
Jesus.
I turned it off, sank back in a chair, lit up the spliff, took a long draw of the Miller, hit the radio, a
station playing old hits.
“Tainted Love” by Soft Cell, I sang along with the
chorus, the weed chilling me way out.
My uniform was hanging on the back of the door,
and I gazed at it, still in amazement it was actually
mine.
I said,
“Fuck, you son of a gun, you really did it.”
I had bigger plans, no way was I going home after
a year, I fully intended being a hero cop and then
no way could they send me home, that precinct, it
would be mine, I’d already started gleaning
information, like that O’Brien liked young girls, I’d
gather me ammunition and then when my plans
were full crystallized, I’d hit like that cobra.
Back home, the lads would be getting ready to go
out for a few pints.
For few, read fifteen. Jaysus, if they could see me
now.
Was this the American Dream?
Fecking would be if I made detective, and the way
I was cruising, what could stop me?
Dumb fuck I am, I’m Irish, superstition is our
birthright but did I bless meself, touch wood, do
any ritual stuff? Nope. Bad fuck to it now, would it
have changed anything? Wouldn’t have hurt. But
no, I opened another brew, and here were U2 with
still haven z found what I’m looking for. I had,
hadn’t I? Damn straight, my accent coming in.
I figured I should eat something and the weed had
given me the munchies so I called out for some
pizza.
The guy arrived in like jig time and I spotted him a
five, he looked at me, said, “Cop, right?” I was
delighted, asked, “How’d you know?” He gave
that New Yorker look, said, “Cop lives in the
building, everyone hides their stash.” Then he
wrinkled his nose, smelling the weed, said,
“Evidence, huh?” I put my fingers to my lips, made
the shssssh noise. He was cool, down with it, said,
“You ever need some decent blow, you gimme a
call, my name is Jimmy.”
I asked,
“Jimmy, how come you think I won’t bust your
arse?”
“Ass, you’re in America now, and you’re Irish, the
Irish don’t give a fuck, see yah.”
And he was gone, whistling what might well have
been “Galway Bay” but that was probably the
weed.
The pizza was good and I felt wired, good to go,
good to … boogie.
I didn’t have a whole lot of clothes so wore a
white T … whitish, and black 501s, a pair of
knock-off Nikes and me one sports jacket.
Whatever else it said, it sure as shite said, he’s not
on the take.
A line that would come back to haunt me.
In my mind, I saw the green rosary … gleaming.
KEBAR WAS IN THE LOCKER ROOM,
FEELING PLEASED THE kid had agreed to have
a brew. He asked himself why it was so important.
He’d never wanted buddy stuff before. But then,
nobody had ever saved his life either.
If the kid hadn’t stepped up to the plate, Kebar
would be pushing up dirt, and he shuddered:
What would Lucia do if he was gone?
Back to the state garbage bins.
Yeah, he owed and not just for himself, Lucia too,
so the least he could do was buy the kid some cold
ones, maybe let him in on stuff that would take
years to learn.
Clean the slate.
He’d never owed before and it was confusing him.
Plus, fuckit, he liked the kid, who’d have ever seen
that coming?
Kebar hadn’t liked anyone in … jeez … when …
ever?
The other cops, they gave Kebar a wide berth, you
bid him the time of day, he growled right back at
you.
But the older guys, they didn’t much like him, what
was there to like, he was a surly mean bastard, but
they sure as shit respected him, he was your real
beat cop, a stand-up guy, and he believed in the old
ways.
A sergeant, a Polack named Swierzcynski,
approached Kebar, asked,
“Got a moment, K?”
Kebar, who should have been a sergeant long ago
‘cept for his attitude, snapped,
“Make it quick.”
The sergeant sighed, hard to help this schmuck but
he tried, said, “You need to watch your back.”
Kebar stopped, turned, asked, “What’s that mean?”
The sergeant checked they couldn’t be heard, said,
“IA is sniffing around you.” Kebar shrugged it off,
said, “Fuck ‘em, they got nothing on me.”
The sergeant, knowing he was going way out there,
said,
“You got a sister?”
Kebar was stunned, he’d kept her real hidden,
asked, “How do you know?”
The sergeant gave a rueful smile, said,
“I hear stuff and the word is, she’s in a real fancy
home …”
Pause. “A very expensive one.” Kebar was
thinking, “Fuck fuck fuck.” But he said nothing and
the sergeant added, “Word is they’re using the kid
to bring you down.” Kebar couldn’t help it,
splurted, “That kid saved my ass.” The sergeant
shook his head, said, “That’s why he’s perfect to
take you down, you trust him.” Kebar gave a
grudging thanks and the sergeant said, “Not too
many good ones left.” Kebar got out of there quick,
thinking, “Damn kid, he wouldn’t turn, would he?”
He had to hustle to get to see Lucia before he met
with the kid. The drive out to Long Island was the
usual fucking nightmare, and he got there running
way late so he’d have to cut his time with his sister
short. Thus preoccupied, he never clocked the tail
on his ass. And if he had, he’d have been sure it
was Internal Affairs. He’d have been wrong.
As he went in, the Chevy pulled in a few spaces
behind his car. The driver sighed, “How long will
the prick be, liked, visiting?” Morronni, on his cell
phone in the backseat, said, “I’m told he’s meeting
the Irish guy …”
He checked his gold Rolex, he knew the time to the
second but he liked to flash the bling, said,
“At eight, so he’s gonna have to cut the time with
the spastic short.” The driver, not really giving a
fuck, asked, “That what she is, huh?” Morronni
said,
“The fuck do I know, some kind of retard is all,
what’s it matter?”
It didn’t.
Kebar hated to cut her time, but maybe she
wouldn’t notice, he’d brought her Hershey’s
Kisses. Her ritual was always the same, she’d
count them out.
“One for Daddy, one for Mamma, one for Konny,”
her childhood name for him, “and one for little old
me.”
Fuck, to see your beautiful thirty-five-year-old
sister do that, when she should be married with
two kids and a halfway decent husband, it