Authors: Elmore Leonard
Tags: #Police Procedural, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Detective and mystery stories, #Fiction
Chris said, “What’s rule number eight?”
Greta looked at the sheet again.
“It’s written out. ‘No party member will commit any crimes against other party members or black people at all, and cannot steal or take from the people, not even a needle or a piece of thread.’ ”
They looked at each other, heads turned on their pillows.
“I learn interesting facts in bed with you,” Greta said. “When I was little, Camille and Robert Taylor and I would get in bed with our dad and he’d read the Bobbsey Twins to us.”
Chris said, “Now you get the Ricks brothers and other crazies.” He pushed his glasses up on his nose and looked at Robin’s journal. “Here’s the part about Mark, her opinion of him. Robin says, ‘Mark digs the sound, the cant, the beat of revolution. He wants to be part of it, but political-science-wise knows next to nothing, zilch. He asks if I believe in the Movement, if I’m a member of the Communist Party. Why sure, Mark. He’s either
dumb or naive, but, man, is he loaded! I tell him to come by my tent tonight and I’ll lay it out for him. So to speak.’ ”
“Her tent?”
“This is when they were at Goose Lake. The Ricks boys slept in the limo they rented and Robin had her own tent. She says in case she met somebody interesting.”
“Mark wasn’t interesting enough?”
“She was using him. Listen.” Chris looked at the journal. “She finishes with Mark by saying, ‘This guy is so impressionable. He’s dying to be a star. If you want him, take him.’ Then she has written in capital letters, ‘
TAKE HIM FOR EVERYTHING HE’S GOT
!’ ”
Chris imagined Robin looking through old journals, this one, reliving those days, coming to this page and the words reaching out to grab her. It was worthless as evidence, but it let you look into her head. Chris closed the journal. It was quiet, Greta not saying a word. He was thinking she’d fallen asleep as he turned his head on the pillow, expecting to see her eyes closed.
She was staring at him. She said, “Is that what I’m doing? With Woody?”
Robin had become the ice woman, blowing her smoke out slow, stroking her braid, a thoughtful
act, stroking in time to “Little Girl Blue” in the background, Robin looking at Donnell with quiet eyes, saying, “Man, it’s been a long time coming.”
“What has?”
“Getting on track and feeling good about it. Yeah, now, finally I can see where we’re going.” Saying the words with a slight nod of the head, moving with the mellow beat.
Donnell liked how she did that. The woman was in time and looking good, for her age.
“I’m not saying we don’t have a problem,” Robin said. “If this Polack, Mankowski, is acting officially, and that was the impression I got, then it’s a major problem. Not because he’s especially bright—I don’t think he is. The way he tried to set me up, get me to talk, didn’t show a lot of finesse. But if he’s got the whole fucking police force behind him—”
“He was kicked
off
the police,” Donnell said. “I’ve told you that, and he don’t like it one bit.”
“You think he doesn’t like it or you know it?”
“I
know
it. I talked to the dude.”
“Well, if all he wants is money. . . .” She gave a little shrug with the beat.
“He’s working for himself, nobody else.”
“He told you that?”
This woman could be irritating.
“It was he
didn’t
tell me. He had, I might suspect him. Look, the dude bumped me up to twenty-five
thousand to get your bomb out of the swimming pool. He’s in it for bread, nothing else, and he’ll keep coming back. I know, I’ve seen the kind.” Donnell hunched over the table on his arms. “Listen to me. The dude will come back and he’ll come back. He’ll leave the police if he hasn’t done it already. The man smells a score. But that’s only the one problem. I see another one. I see too many people.”
“You mean Skip,” Robin said.
“Exactly. Your friend Skippy. What do we need him for? See, he’s the kind of problem you can tell goodbye and it’s gone. Like you say to him you not interested in the deal no more, you give up on it, he leaves.”
“I don’t think it would be quite that easy,” Robin said.
“Sit on it till he goes away. That’s easy. What I’m saying to you, I don’t see cutting it three ways when we don’t need to. I’m looking now at the economics of it. This kind of deal come along, you do it one time, understand? You pick a number, the most of what you can get, and that’s all.”
“If that’s what you’re worried about,” Robin said, “there’s no problem. You get half of a two-way split.”
“I’m thinking more than half, and your number depends on my number.”
“Okay, what’s your number?”
“One million. I like the sound of it, I like the idea of it. One million, a one and six oughts.”
“Take off and spend it, huh?”
“Stay right where I am. It’s none of your business what I do with it.”
Donnell watched Robin get out another cigarette saying, “Okay, if you’re satisfied with a mil let’s go for two and Skip and I split the other one.”
Donnell shook his head. “I get more than you.”
“Why?”
“It’s my idea.”
“Gee, I thought it was mine,” Robin said.
Giving him that shitty tone again.
“I mean since I’m the one who called in the first place.”
“Yeah, and how’d you expect the man to pay you? Cash? He suppose to leave it some place you tell him?”
He watched her shrug, being cool.
“That’s one way.”
“You dumb as shit,” Donnell said. “Can you see the man go in the bank for the money? Drunk as usual, everybody looking at him? Everybody knowing his business? What did I say to you on the phone? I said, ‘That gonna be cash or you take a check?’ And you got mad, commence to threaten me, saying, ‘Oh, you want to play, huh?’ Giving me all this shit on the phone. You remember? Was only this morning.”
Still being cool. Look at her blow the smoke, sip the wine, getting her head straight, what she wanted to say. Smiling at him now, just a speck of smile showing.
“What I get from that,” Robin said, “you were serious. We could actually get paid by check?”
“There’s a way.”
“He could stop payment.”
“I said there’s a way to do it.”
“This is wild,” Robin said. “Far out.”
She turned her head to gaze off at the piano, listening but not moving, Donnell watching her, remembering the woman in the bathroom a long, long time ago. Pants on the floor, her sweater pushed up, seeing the back of her head in the mirror, all that long hair, seeing a nice dreamy smile in her eyes when he looked at her. . . . Her eyes came back to him from the piano.
“Skip killed a guy one time.”
“You mean little Markie?”
“Before. He did it for money. What I’m saying is, you can count on him.”
“I admire that kind,” Donnell said, “but it don’t mean we need him.”
“I was thinking he could get rid of our problem, the guy with his hand out.”
Donnell hesitated. The idea stopped him, hit him cold. He didn’t want to think about it, but said, “He’d do that?”
“If I asked him to.”
“That’s all?”
“If you say he’s in.”
Donnell shrugged, not saying yes or no, maybe not minding the guy being in if you could count on him and take his word. There were things to work out in this deal. It wasn’t entirely set in his mind. Though it seemed to be in Robin’s, the way she was smiling for real now, letting it come. . . .
Robin saying, “The extortion corporation, we accept checks. Hey, but we write Woody’s driver’s license I.D. on the back, right? In case he tries to stiff us.”
Chris played scenes,
lying in bed in that early morning half-light.
He heard himself tell Jerry Baker, “I go in the guy’s swimming pool, remove an explosive device and he gives me twenty-five grand.” Jerry says, “You take the device with you?” He tells Jerry, “I left it there but told him not to touch it, and I know he won’t.” Jerry says, “You should’ve taken it with you.” Jerry’s right; he should’ve. Jerry says, “But you did take the check.” “Of course I took the check, for Christ sake.” Jerry, thinking of all that money, thinking fast, says, “Well, there’s a gray area there.” He hears himself say to Jerry, “What’s gray about it? It’s withholding evidence, isn’t it?” Jerry, with his many years of experience on the police, says, “That’s a matter of interpretation. There’s withholding evidence and there’s holding evidence. It may be needed in the investigation, it may not be.” He hears himself say to Jerry,
“You don’t see it as a rip?”
Jerry says, “Where’s the rip? The guy agreed to the price and you did the job, performed a service.” Chris says, “But in receiving the check for removing evidence, isn’t
it
evidence too?” Jerry says, “Not necessarily. The explosive device, yeah, is evidence. But now the check, that’s definitely a gray area.”
Chris pictured doing the scene with Wendell. “Hey, Wendell? I’d like to ask you something?” The dude lieutenant looks up from his desk. “Yeah? What?” And that was as far as the scene got. Chris asked himself why he hadn’t thought of these questions yesterday, last night. He wondered if it was to avoid even thinking about it. Finally he asked himself what he believed was a key question:
When does holding evidence become withholding evidence?
The answer came unexpectedly, flooding him with a sense of relief:
Monday
. He had the weekend to think about it, study that gray area.
Chris got up on an elbow to flip his pillow over to the cool side and paused in the half-light as he heard Greta say, “Oh, my Lord.” She was lying with her eyes open, staring at the ceiling.
“What’s wrong?”
“I don’t think my car was stolen.”
Greta said it must have been her concussion of the brain that made her forget where she parked it. The
thing was, twice before when she’d gone to the Playhouse Theater she’d parked in the same aisle on the ground floor of the building, almost in the same exact space both times. But then last Tuesday, or whenever it was, the place was jammed. She ended up parking on the third level, ran out of there with a lot on her mind having been raped and all and wanting to have Woody arrested, and then so much happened right after, ending up in the hospital. . . . She felt really dumb.
Chris said, Yeah, all that going on. He said he’d drive her to get her car. But then didn’t talk much while they were having breakfast. Greta said, “I think about my car and then I think about Woody. I don’t know what to do.” Drinking her coffee she said, “And you’re no help.” She said, “You think I’m a flake, don’t you?” He told her it was no big deal, people forgot where they parked their cars all the time. She said, “But what should I do about Woody?” Chris told her it was a gray area; it depended on how you looked at it. Giving her that much understanding. . . .
While thinking about the weekend, the two days giving him hope, seeing time enough in there to believe the investigation could all of a sudden be closed when he wasn’t looking and he wouldn’t be withholding anything. Would he?
In the Cadillac driving downtown Greta said, “Oh, God, I have to tell that guy at the precinct my
car wasn’t stolen. I know exactly what he’s gonna say.”
It gave Chris an idea. Stop by 1300 to see Wendell. Only you forgot it’s Saturday, he isn’t there. But whoever’s on duty verifies it later on. Yeah, Mankowski was here, he was looking for Wendell.
So he told Greta he’d stop at the precinct desk and tell them the car had been returned, that’s all; it just showed up. They didn’t have to know she forgot where she put it. Greta said, “Thanks,” without much life in it.
On the third level of the parking structure they pulled up next to her blue Ford Escort; Saturday morning not another car near it. Greta said, “Thanks for a nice time.”
Chris said, “I’ll see you later.”
Greta held the door open. “I’m going home.”
“You’re coming back, aren’t you?”
“I’ll have to think about it.”
“What’s wrong?”
Greta hesitated. “You’re different.”
Chris said, “Wait a minute,” as she got out of the Cadillac and was closing the door. “What do you mean, I’m different?” She was standing by her car now, her back to him. He pushed a button to lower the window on the passenger side. “I’m not different.” She didn’t turn around; she was unlocking her car. “I don’t feel different.” Maybe he was different, but not in the way she thought he was. She was
in the car now, starting it. Christ. He got out of the Cadillac and went around to her car; she didn’t lower her window. He tapped on the glass with the tip of his finger. “Ginjuh? I’m not different.” She looked up at him. “Really, I’m not.” She didn’t seem convinced; she looked sad. Shit. “What’s wrong? Tell me.”
“You’re different,” Greta said.
“How am I different?”
“I don’t know, but you are.”
She drove off.
Chris locked his dad’s car and walked the two blocks to 1300.
Squad Seven’s door, Room 500, was straight across the hall from the elevators. Chris walked in, stopped and wanted to turn around and walk out. Saturday morning, and it looked like a convention going on, a gang of people, cops and suspects, or else witnesses. The head homicide cop himself, Inspector Raymond Cruz, was stroking his mustache as he stood talking to Wendell, seated at his desk. A detective by the name of Hunter was taking a Polaroid shot of a good-looking young black woman, stylish enough to be a Supreme, sitting half turned in a desk chair, her arm hanging behind it, long slender fingers heavy with rings. The squad’s executive sergeant, Norb Bryl, stood by the Norelco coffeemaker with a young black dude in a cream-colored suit and sunglasses. Two uniformed evidence techs lounged
against a desk with grocery-store sacks bearing red tags. All this activity. . . .
And now Wendell was looking this way and the stylish black woman was looking up past her shoulder at Raymond Cruz going by in his narrow navy suit, top cop and he looked it, his down-curved bandit mustache giving him a solemn expression. His eyes moved and he said, “Chris, how’s it going?” Chris hesitated. By the time he said, “Not too bad,” the inspector was out the door.
Now Wendell was coming. Chris didn’t move, getting ready for him. Wendell stopped by the door to the interrogation room and said, “I can’t talk to you now.” Chris wanted to go over and hug him, but gave him an easy shrug instead and said, “No problem.” He turned to leave and heard Wendell say, “Wait. Come here a minute.” So he had to go over to Wendell standing with his hand on the door, Wendell in shirtsleeves but his paisley tie knotted up there tight. He said, “These are Booker’s people,” keeping his voice low. “His houseman over there with Bryl, his lady, Moselle, and we got his bodyguard in here, Juicy Mouth. You know him?”
“He wasn’t around,” Chris said.
“That’s what he tells me. But if Juicy didn’t put the bomb in the chair he knows who did.”
Chris said, “This hasn’t got anything to do with . . .”
Wendell was shaking his head. “Doesn’t seem like the least connection.”
“What about Skip?”
“Skip Gibbs, worked for the film company. You were right. All we got so far, he turned in his rental car. We left off checking with airlines for the moment and got back on Booker.”
Chris felt he had to keep going. “Anybody watching Robin?”
“She’s not that good a suspect yet. I don’t have the people to sit around in cars.”
“I read her notebook. In capital letters she says she’s gonna take Mark Ricks for everything she can get.”
“And you see the date on the book, seventeen years ago.”
“I know, but it was on her desk and she didn’t want us to see it. She had it out, not stuck away somewhere.”
Wendell said, “I understand what you’re saying. I like it, even if it isn’t any kind of evidence would hold up. But I have to let Robin sit while I tend to this one.”
Chris said in a hurry, because he had to say it right now, get it out, “There’s something else I want to talk to you about.”
He kept staring at Wendell, the lieutenant’s hand on the doorknob, about to enter, but staring back
at him now, a change in his expression, his eyes. Wendell said, “You’re not working for me.”
“I know that.”
“You might, sometime, but you’re not now.”
Chris didn’t say anything.
“I don’t want to hear a question I don’t have an answer to. Or I don’t want to know anything I’d have trouble explaining where I found it out. You understand?”
Chris nodded.
“Think about it and we’ll talk Monday. All right?”
Chris said, “Whatever you say,” sounding a little disappointed but dying to get out of there. He turned to go and Wendell touched his arm.
“Wait, take a minute. See if you think this guy knows anything about bombs.”
Juicy Mouth sat hunched over, arms resting on thick knees, eyes raised to them coming in: a young black guy with a build, shoulders stretching his silky jacket. He seemed to fill half of this narrow pink room that was no bigger than a walk-in closet. Next to him was a small wooden table, a tin ashtray on it full of old cigarette butts. Wendell said, “Juicy, this is Sergeant Mankowski, the last person on this earth to see Booker alive.”
Chris had a feeling Juicy didn’t give a shit, the way he yawned and leaned back against the wall, the pink surface stained from heads resting against it. Chris didn’t notice anything unusual about the guy’s mouth.
“I’ve been telling Juicy,” Wendell said, “if he didn’t actually set the bomb maybe we could lighten up on him, take it down to accessory.”
Juicy said, “You gonna have to let me out any minute now. That’s light enough.”
“Sergeant Mankowski,” Wendell said, “was the bomb man there that time. Talked to Booker, heard his last words. . . .”
What were they? Chris seemed to recall Booker saying, “Where you motherfuckers going?” Something like that. And saw Juicy Mouth looking at him, his head still pressed to the wall, Juicy saying, “Is that right? If you the bomb man, how come you didn’t take the bomb out from under him?”
Chris didn’t see anything especially juicy about the guy’s mouth, even when he spoke.
“The question was how to get to it,” Chris said. “Ten sticks of—what was it, sixty percent? Rigged to some kind of electronic pressure sensor. Where would you learn to put something like that together?”
No reaction. He wasn’t sure Juicy was even listening. But then the guy said, “You right there
with him, with Booker? Looking to see what you had?”
“I cut into the seat cushion,” Chris said, “but couldn’t get to the works from the front.”
“You right there, but you didn’t get blown to shit like Booker did?”
“I stepped outside for a minute.”
“You did, huh? I stepped out to get some pizza,” Juicy said. “What’d you step out for?”
“We told him don’t move, we’ll be right back,” Chris said, and felt dumb, this big street kid turning it around on him. The kid wearing five hundred dollars worth of clothes, a Rolex watch. . . .
“Step outside and let the man get blown up by hisself,” Juicy said. “Yeah, well, if it don’t mean shit to you and it don’t mean shit to me, why we even talking about it?”
“I still have to sit on you,” Wendell said. “Anybody it says on their sheet kills people, been known to, that makes him a suspect.”
“Look on the sheet again, man. No convictions.”
“You did people for Booker, didn’t you? Shot ’em in the back of the head, left ’em out at Metro?”
“Man, this is a bomb,” Juicy said. “You know I didn’t fool with no bomb.”
“Yeah, but you next to whatever one of the Italians put it there. Once I find out which one, then I can let ’em know it was you told me. See, then I
won’t have to worry about you no more, you’ll be
gone
.”
Juicy said, “Shit. Can’t trust nobody, can you?”
Wendell said, “It’s nothing personal. It don’t mean I think you’re an asshole, anything like that, you understand? Hey, show Sergeant Mankowski why they call you Juicy Mouth. Go on.”
Juicy looked up. He said, “Check it out,” and Chris thought the sole of a shoe was coming out of the guy’s mouth, a big gray tongue that filled his lips from corner to corner, Chris looking at it wondering how the tongue could even fit in the guy’s mouth.
“Put it back,” Wendell said.
Chris stared, Juicy grinning at him now, until Wendell touched Chris’s arm and they left the room, Wendell closing the door after them.
“Can you see him on the playground when he was little,” Wendell said, “showing that ugly thing to the other kids?”
“He’s proud of it,” Chris said.
“It’s what I’m saying. He’s like a little kid and we playing with him, take him in there and shoot the shit. We know he helped do Booker, there’s no other way it could’ve been done.” They stood by the door to the pink interrogation room, the stylish girl at Hunter’s desk watching them over her shoulder, her hand with the rings swinging idly behind her chair. “All these ones here,” Wendell said,
“they got their game going, living on the edge. Booker’s houseman, his bodyguard, his lady, the one got him to sit in the chair. . . . We get a feel for that kind of action, huh? Know when to step outside, so to speak, let them do their own kind of freaky deaky. You remember that sexy dance? Was about ten years ago. Man, we had people shooting each other over it—two homicides I know of come to mind. You freaky deak with somebody else’s woman you could get seriously hurt.”
“Or you could get lucky,” Chris said.
Wendell smiled. He said, “All in how you look at it, huh?” and put his hand on Chris’s shoulder. “The inspector likes your style, babe. You ever move back to the city. . . . Anyway, I’ll see you Monday.”
Chris waited less than a minute for an elevator, took the stairs to seven and hurried down the hall to Sex Crimes. The squad room was dim, lights off, no one here. He found Greta’s Preliminary Complaint Report in the desk with the blue flowers, picked up the phone and dialed her number. He’d filled out her PCR only four days ago; it seemed more like four weeks. After five rings Greta’s voice came on: “Hi, you’ve reached Ginger Jones, but she isn’t here right now, doggone it.” Chris thinking, Jesus Christ. “If you want, you can
leave a message right after you hear the beep. ‘Bye now.” Chris waited for the beep and when he heard it he still waited. Finally he said, “Greta? I haven’t changed one bit,” and hung up. That was all he could say to a machine. He’d try her again later. But now he didn’t know what to do. He sat down to think about it, looking at the blue flowers, a case file, a stack of PCR forms, a worn three-ring binder
with
DOWNEY
written on it, and realized this was Maureen’s desk. Well, he’d only been here two days officially, in and out. He looked at notes written neatly on a yellow legal pad, saw the name
ROBIN ABBOTT
and her phone number, her address on Canfield, and another phone number and address with
MOTHER
written after it, then a dash and the name
MARILYN
. Below this Maureen had written
B.H. POLICE
and a number. B.H. for Bloomfield Hills, where Maureen had said the mother lived.