Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled, #Noir
company or just riled up?” He moved past Kebar,
said,
“Deadwood, love it, since Brian Cox joined, it’s
moved up a notch, you think?” He tossed the box
on the table, asked, “So, you got any wineglasses?”
Kebar got a mug, none too clean, said, “Knock
yourself out.”
Morronni used his silk handkerchief to clean it,
poured a measure, looked at the Stoli bottle, said,
“Whatever gets you there, am I right?” Kebar
stayed standing, swaying actually, and asked, “The
fuck you want?”
Morronni pretended offense, then smiled, a
predator’s one, said, “It’s payday, my man.”
Tossed a fat envelope on the counter, said, “A
little extra this time as we have a favor to ask.”
Kebar didn’t touch the thing, asked, “And that’d
be?”
“We got a shipment coming in Friday, need to
know if the narcs know.” Kebar nodded and
Morronni asked, “You’re good to go on that?”
Kebar gave a bitter chuckle, said, “What you pay
me for, right?”
Morroni opened the pizza box, tore off a hefty
slice, stuffed his face, then midbite said,
“Slight problem has come up.”
Kebar was having double vision, would he have to
shoot the two Morronnis he was seeing, asked,
“Yeah, what’s that?”
“Your kid, the Mick cop, he did a real number on
my boy Gino.”
Kebar was delighted, Jesus, that kid, said,
“And?”
Morronni was looking in disgust at his white shirt,
a dab of sauce had landed there and he seemed
pissed, said,
“Fucking hate when that happens, oh yeah, your
boy, he’s going to have to make restitution.”
“What did you have in mind?” Morronni debated
another wedge and decided against it, said, “I’ll
think of something.” Kebar had to know, asked,
“And if he doesn’t?” Morronni stood up brushing
crumbs from his suit, said,
“Then it goes on you.”
Kebar thought of the firepower he had so very
close to hand and for one brief mad moment he
considered blowing the scumbag to hell and gone,
but then what of Lucia?
Morronni, as if he read his thoughts, laughed, said,
“You’d like to lash out, eh, show some muscle, but
you know, you ain’t got no fucking juice, pal,
you’re a cop on the take, I own your ass, and
because of that little stunt, I’ve had to take some …
what’s the word, punitive measures, get you back
in the game, it hurt me to do it but let it be a lesson
to you.” Kebar went cold, asked in a very quiet
tone, “What measures?” Morronni was at the door,
said, “And spoil the surprise?” Then he was gone.
Kebar, despite the amount of booze he’d
consumed, had become stone sober, hurting,
hungover, but sober.
Time to pull out of the spiral and get his frigging
act together, he tore off his reeking clothes, got in
the shower and stood under it, ice cold for five
minutes.
It was sheer agony but it sure drove the toxins out.
Shivering, from booze and cold, he got his uniform
on and was wondering if he could stomach some
caffeine when the phone rang, he picked up, a
tremor in his hand, went, “Yeah?” “Mr. B, it’s Mr.
Kemmel, at the nursing home.” Kebar’s stomach
plummeted and he went, “What’s the matter?”
Pause. Then: “There’s been an incident.” “Stop
fucking around, what happened?” “I think you
should get out here, right away.” Click. He hung
up?
Kebar was going to call the fuck right back but he
better move, he threw the phone back in its cradle.
The drive out there was murder, tailgating all the
way so he slammed the siren on, his own personal
one he had borrowed from Property, and still took
him forever to get out there, his mind a mess of
snakes and dread.
He finally made it, tore out of the car, ran in and
there was Kemmel, a serious expression on his
face.
He motioned Kebar to his office and, biting his
lower lip, said,
“It’s your sister …”
Kebar grabbed him by the neck of his Hugo Boss
shirt, snarled,
“What?”
In a high voice, Kemmel said,
“Someone got in her room, broke both her arms
and, it seems, tried to strangle her.” Kebar let him
go, a sob breaking from him, asked, “Where is
she?” “At the hospital, she’s at the hospital and in
deep shock.” Kebar was in hell, asked, “Did she
say who did it?” Kemmel was shaking his head,
said,
“She’s receded into a catatonic state, she has
retreated into someplace safe in her own mind.”
Kebar demanded,
“Aren’t you supposed to mind the patients, isn’t
that your fucking job?”
Kemmel reasserted some authority, said,
“It happened in the early hours of the morning, we
only have night staff, and believe you me, they’re
stretched to the breaking point.”
Kebar got the address of the hospital and started
out. Kemmel said,
“Mr. B, in light of this … incident, we may have to
review her continuing stay here.”
Kebar kept going, if he’d responded, he wasn’t
sure if he could keep himself from beating the
schmuck to a pulp.
His uniform got him to see a doctor at the hospital
without delay and he was told that she’d suffered a
massive beating, her arms broken and her nose,
and they were just now checking but they suspected
she’d been … raped.
And the marks on her neck, the bruising, huge
welts, whoever had done this, he’d gotten off on
the strangulation, the doctor telling him this was
shocked, nigh shaking.
Kebar felt like he might pass out, asked, “May I
see her?” The doctor was sympathetic and said,
“This evening would be best, she’s in intensive
care now, we want to ensure there is no internal
bleeding.” Back in his car, Kebar remembered
Morronni’s words: “Punishment.” Lacking
anywhere else to go, he went to work.
O’Brien, the CO, had him on the carpet, reamed
him a new one, and warned:
“IA is on your ass, and what do you do, you take
sick leave without telling anyone, you were …
once … a good cop … but I think you better start
looking at the security ads, that or Leavenworth,
now get out of my sight.”
He passed the kid, who was behind a desk, and
tried to greet him but the kid stonewalled.
Kebar got down to the car pool and the guy
assigned there smirked, went,
“Back to the Lone Ranger again?”
Kebar didn’t rise to it, got in the prowl, burned
rubber outa there.
His mind was hopping with every form of revenge
known to man, and his first order of business was
to find out who did the number on Lucia. Morronni
would have contracted that out, and Kebar knew
exactly who to ask.
He drove to Little Italy, went into a barbershop
there, and sure enough, a bookie by the name of
Lonnie was sitting in a chair, marking up the form
sheets, he wasn’t happy to see Kebar, who said,
“Get your ass in gear, we’re taking a little ride.”
Lonnie looked around for help but the other
customers were suddenly engrossed in other
activities, no one was going to run interference for
him with the demented cop. Lonnie made a show of
putting the paper aside, sighed, and followed
Kebar outside. As they got in the car, Kebar said,
“That sigh you gave, hold the thought, you’re gonna
fucking need it.”
Kebar had the radio on, not the police scanner but
the C and W channel, they always played Johnny
Cash and sure enough, here he was with “The Man
Comes Around.”
Listening to Kebar sing along with Cash, that
scared the be-Jaysus out of Lonnie more than
anything else, and the way he leaned on the line
about a guy taking names, something very ominous
about that.
Kebar took Lonnie to the same area of ground
where he’d sent the kid sprawling in the dirt,
pulled up, let his window down, said, “Good spot
to dump a body, you think?” Lonnie thought, “Oh
sweet fuck.”
Kebar took out his Glock, let it lie loosely in his
lap, said, “I’m going to ask you one time for some
information, and if you stall, shoot me a line, I’m
going to shoot you in the balls, you real clear on
that?”
He was.
Kebar turned the radio off, leaned back, then
asked,
“Morronni got some scumbag to do a number on
my sister, the full beating and …”
He had to grab a breath, then:
“And … violated her, she’s a little handicapped
but she’d have known she was being hurt, now take
your time, I want to know who’d be up for that type
of… job?”
Lonnie racked his mind for some out, couldn’t find
one, said,
“There’s a psycho, a real piece of work, that kind
of… stuff, he loves it and if it was a retard—”
He instantly regretted using the word but fuck, he
was nervous.
He chanced a look at Kebar, and no reaction save
a slight tightening of his mouth. Kebar asked,
“The name and where he hangs?”
“Fernandez, he likes to go to the strip joint on
Eighth and Twentieth, he’s a real dangerous
mother, does crystal and has a crew of some very
deranged bikers.”
Kebar nodded, said, “Good, you did good, just one
thing.”
Then he suddenly whacked Lonnie under his chin,
hard and brutal, said,
“Retard, that’s a real ugly word, try and drop it,
okay?”
Lonnie was seeing stars and he was fairly certain
he’d had some teeth loosened. Kebar put the car in
gear, asked,
“Drop you someplace?” Lonnie, barely able to
speak, muttered, “Any subway station, any one
that’s near.”
Five minutes later, he was getting out of the car,
blood and sweat running down his face. Kebar
said, “You won’t be tipping off anybody, will you,
Lonnie?” Lonnie swore on his mother’s grave.
Kebar smiled, said,
“Be seeing you.”
Lonnie watched him drive off and hoped Kebar
wouldn’t find out his mother was alive and well.
How well I have learned that there is no fence to
sit on between heaven and hell. There is a deep
wide gulf a chasm, and in that chasm is no place
for any man.
—Johnny Cash
I’M NOT GOING TO MAKE EXCUSES HERE,
AS THE YANKS say, it got away from me.
Lucia.
The darkness had been building in my head and I
liked Nora, Jesus wept, I never liked no one me
whole life and she was me shot at the other life but
I was afraid if I didn’t get release soon, I’d go
after her. Then I zoned, and I was outside the
hospital, I could see meself, walking along the
corridors, it was night and the dimmers were on
and all I could see was that beautiful white neck,
I’m not even sure if I knew who it was it belonged
to anymore and a tiny part of me was saying,
“This is a good thing, going to see the poor girl,
give her a bit of company.” And then …
It gets all fuzzy here and next thing I was back in
my car, the darkness lifting, and I was thinking of a
nice place I might bring Nora for dinner.
I BEGAN TO SEE NORA REGULARLY, IT
STARTED SLOW, BUT in jig time we were
seeing each other about three times a week. I liked
her a lot and thing is, she made me feel good about
me own self and I don’t want to go on about it, but
her neck … just waiting … after Lucia, I was …
what’s the word, sated, she was my swan … didn’t
know exactly what I was doing … that’s the best
bit.
How rare is that?
The last thing I’d planned on was getting involved
but it snuck up on me. The lovemaking was real
fine and one evening, exhausted, she asked me, her
head lying on my chest, “You like me, huh?” I
smiled, said, “Well, you’re not the worst.”
Then, of course, the woman’s question, the one that
guys hate: “So Shea, where are we going with
this?” I had her neck in me sights but no hurry …
right? I said, “Let’s see how it goes.” Wrong
answer. She was up, getting dressed, said,
“Fucking guys, all the same, you call me when you
know what you want.” And was gone. I muttered
the mantra of men all over the planet: “What’d I
do?”
Course I knew, I’d behaved like an arsehole …
sorry, asshole.
I figured I’d give her a few days to cool off and
then we’d be back on track.
Whatever track that was.
I was still riding the desk, desperate to get back on
the streets. I knew Kebar was out there, doing his
gig, and I missed it, and him. Whatever else, he
was never boring. I was getting a cup of the burnt
grains that pass for coffee with cops, adding lots of
cream to kill the taste, when one of the old guys
approached me, these were the beat cops, grizzled,
bitter, but the very best if you needed backup, I’d
been thinking of Kebar’s sister a lot, something
about her really twisted me heart and I was sorry,
well, a bit that I’d done such a number but like I’ve