Glass Houses

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Authors: Terri Nolan

Tags: #birdie keane, #police, #mystery, #southland, #mystery fiction, #mystery novel

BOOK: Glass Houses
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Glass Houses
© 2013
Terri Nolan

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any matter whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Midnight Ink, except in the form of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

As the purchaser of this ebook, you are granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this ebook on screen. The text may not be otherwise reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, or recorded on any other storage device in any form or by any means.

Any unauthorized usage of the text without express written permission of the publisher is a violation of the author's copyright and is illegal and punishable by law.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

First e-book edition © 2013

E-book ISBN: 978-0-7387-3959-5

Book design by Donna Burch-Brown

Cover design by Kevin Brown

Cover images: Circle crack: iStockphoto.com/Siarhei Kazhadub
Downtown Los Angeles at sunset: iStockphoto.com/Chris Pritchard
Revolver: iStockphoto.com/Craig Grant
Shanghai skyline: iStockphoto.com/cuiphoto
Storm clouds: iStockphoto.com/Chad Purser

Midnight Ink is an imprint of Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.

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Manufactured in the United States of America

dedication

For Kathleen,
workout buddy, therapist

one

Sunday, May 13

The killer brought the
requisite murder tools: never-before-worn leather gloves that slid over a latex pair, surgical booties over new, smooth-soled shoes (two sizes too large), safety glasses, paper mask, hooded Tyvek coverall, WD-40, a foam craft brush, and a .22 revolver. The gun, a weapon of convenience, was especially pleasing, .22-caliber rounds pinball in the brain. Devastatingly perfect for executions.

The best and most important murder tool? The house key.

Once the killer unlocked the front door's deadbolt, there were no tentative steps. Someone had recently plugged night lights into the wall sockets. The soft yellow glow wasn't necessary. The killer knew how to zigzag the maze of chairs and couches; knew the squeaky portions of the floor to avoid; knew how many stairs led to the twin's room; knew how to push down slightly on the knob because the door sticks. Afterward, eleven steps to the master bedroom; the knob turned left because the door doesn't open when turned right.

The deed was quick and snappy.

There was one brief moment of compulsion to peel off the gloves and experience the slick of fresh blood on the fingertips. Or would it be sticky? The scent was metal and musk. Would it taste the way it smelled?

No time for temptation.

There was much to accomplish.

The killer checked the time.

Three minutes.

Four lives gone.

Five shots.

Three-four-five.

Good numbers.

two

Birdie Keane stepped into
the shower. She braced against the
cold water and pushed down an expletive. Her body shivered with the quick warming response fired up by nerve endings. She turned her back to the flow. Tiny pinpricks of icy pain sluiced her backside, waterfalled between buttocks, swirled around thighs before streaming down slender legs. How could tap water be so friggin' cold?

She had stoppered the drain. Her toes seemed to shrink away like a turtle's head pulling into the safety of its shell. She checked the water level. Three inches before the shower overflowed.

Her teeth chattered. A vice constricted her lungs. Her spine felt stiff. Birdie's heart labored to increase the blood flow to frigid extremities. Her brain argued for her to step away.

“What about heart failure?”

“Ever heard of hypothermia?”

She resisted the temptation. Bore down against the numbing
pain.

She spread her arms and turned, gasped for breath when it hit her face and accidentally swallowed. The cold seemed to flash freeze her throat. She could almost feel her metabolism shutting down to save vital blood necessary to operate the heart.

Birdie fisted two objects on the chain around her neck. One was a sterling silver medallion of Saint Francis de Sales, the patron saint of journalists and writers; the other, a brass handcuff key that once belonged to Matt Whelan. He'd worn it on his boot. For him, it was part talisman, part “just in case.” After his death she took it for her own. She had only taken the chain off once. On that day she was kidnapped. She hadn't removed it since.

She stood in the freezing shower long enough for her toes to turn blue. Only then did she kick away the stopper. As the water drained, she sank to the travertine and curled herself into a ball. She cried as she muttered, “Please give me strength,” for the uncertainty of what she'd done. “Please give me strength,” to get through another day of sobriety. “Please give me strength,” for another day of survival. “Please give me wisdom,” to deal with another day of questions.

three

Thom Keane woke up
hating himself. He was cocooned in unfamiliar sheets. His clothes stank of gardenias and cigarettes. Sugary smoke roiled his stomach as he tried to suppress the nausea. Stale scotch muck thickened his tongue and lined his cheeks. He smacked his mouth in search of moisture. Found none. Weepy eyelids fluttered, afraid to open fully, afraid of whom he might find. Maybe the blonde with the Russian accent.

Thom wiped his hand across his eyes and rolled his aching body toward the center of the bed. The cool sheets relieved him of guilt. He flopped onto his back and praised the Lord for small miracles. He didn't need more trouble.

His life had become a cliché. The not-yet middle-aged, slightly overweight, gray-haired, old beyond his years, hard-drinking ass-chaser was a bad character in a bad pulp novel. He hated it. But not enough. Exercise more, lose ten pounds, eat right, improve his attitude? Too much work.

In the twilight of the still morning he retraced yesterday and remembered he was in the guestroom of his cousin's house—a safe harbor from the storm of home.

His pants vibrated. He wrestled with pockets to recover the cell.

“What?”

“Hey, partner, we got called out to play,” said George Silva, much too peppy for this time of morning. “I'll pick you up at home.”

“I'm at the Bird House.”

“Better still. Birdie's house isn't as far west. Don't want the division dicks to wait longer than they have to.”

“Aren't you considerate. What day is it?”

“Sunday.”

“Our names aren't on the callout board. What's up?”

“Multiple DBs.”

“Oh, goodie, a long-ass day and a long-ass investigation.”

“Shit happens. Get your butt out of bed and in the shower. I'll give you a wail from the street.”

The cold jolt of the bathroom tile floor on Thom's bare feet was the equivalent of a splash of water. An empty bladder, a shower, and a shave turned him into a sub-human. He leaned on the counter and pinched his temples. Looked at his eyes. His best feature—so he'd been told. Pale blue like a baby blanket, they were disarming, sexy in a way that suggested he was always ready for a roll. This morning they were bloodshot. He rummaged through the medicine cabinet for drops. Found none.

Thom entered the massive built-in closet; empty except for a yard's length of hanging garments. He picked a suit at random and yanked off the dry cleaning plastic. Shirt, tie, belt, holster, firearm, personal cell, business cell, BUG, badge. Good to go.

He followed the mahogany hallway toward the stained glass window at the end of the hall. Backlit with a recently installed security light, he studied the scene as if seeing it for the first time. An iconic figure stood in a garden under a canopy of olive trees and flowering plants. He saw small details never before realized: bees buzzing the flowers, an orange butterfly in flight, a perched bird with a branch in its beak. Thom reflected briefly on the beauty of stained glass, of which this house had plenty.

Wood became marble and Thom descended the service stairs. The moment he reached the landing and made a sharp turn, he smelled the coffee from the kitchen. It was just as refreshing as the shower. And it'd knock back the pounding headache.

His cousin, Birdie, sat at the bar, palms flat on the paper, enveloped in a man-sized, silk kimono robe, hair shower damp. Her legs dangled off the barstool, feet encased in ratty fuzzy slippers. Only she could make them look cool.

An antiquated transistor radio tuned to a classic rock station sat on the windowsill over the sink. Birdie had to be the only Hancock Park millionaire who listened to great music betrayed by mono. She hummed along to the rhythm of Led Zeppelin's
Kashmir.

“Oh, God,” he said, “you're a morning person like George.”

Cocoa bean colored hair fluttered as she turned and flashed him a smile. At once unsentimental and easily imperiled by reality and yet exquisite as it stretched from her chin to the corners of her sky blue eyes.

“This is my favorite time of day,” she said. “It offers the promise of forgetfulness.”

Forgetfulness. A concept worth embracing. She'd had more than a fair share of grief lately. The scars on her face daily proof. She started an investigation and became part of the story when she was kidnapped and remade into a crime victim. Her illusions of safety lost forever. The violence done to her … well, Thom didn't like to dwell on it. He still felt guilty for the way he mistreated her afterward, but hell, he did what he had to and she forgave him. Besides, everybody has scars.

He gave her a good morning peck on the lips.

“Christ,” she said, wiping her mouth with the back of her hand. “You're still waxed. Johnnie Walker was it?”

“Damn, you're good. Know a hangover cure?”

“Aspirin and lots of water.”

“Boring. I'll take coffee instead.”

“Put some milk in your eyes.”

“No shit?”

“Good word. Describes how you look.”

“Thanks.” Thom opened his arms and twirled. “I work hard at this image.” He opened the mostly empty fridge and removed a bottle of milk. “Where'd you get bottled?”

“An organic dairy. They deliver.”

“Of course.” Thom wouldn't ask how much it cost.

“Working today?”

“Yeah.” He poured milk into a cup, dipped a finger, flicked the liquid at his eyes and blinked it in. “I hate missing Mass,” he deadpanned.

“I'm sure you do,” she echoed. “How was the first night in your temporary digs?”

“I didn't have a night. I had a few early morning hours.”

“Do I want to know?”

“Not if you believe your eldest cousin has any dignity.”

She crossed her arms schoolmarm fashion, but said nothing.

He downed the leftover milk. “That's good stuff.” He poured another cupful, shot it back then filled the cup with coffee.

“Who's the dude on the window in the hall?”

Birdie rolled her eyes. “It's Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane.”

“Considering this manse was once owned by the Church, I should've known.”

“You should've known regardless. Eat something.”

“No thanks. I'll take the sports section though.”

Birdie slid the front page instead. His eye went straight to the headline:

FORMER LAPD COMMANDER SUSPECTED
OF RUNNING A RING OF ROBBERS

By Elizabeth Keane

Special to The Times

Part 1 of 2

So there it was. He knew it was coming. He'd even read a confidential draft like the rest of the family. But actually seeing it in print made his heart jump, his breath catch. From here forward nothing would ever be the same.

Thom scanned the front page then flipped to the continuation inside. His eye lingered on the department portrait of his uncle—Birdie's father—Gerard Keane. He folded it closed; not having the heart to continue. He pushed the paper away just as a truncated siren blew. “My ride's here. Gotta go.”

“Today's my first birthday,” said Birdie. “Ron's coming to town. He's making dinner. Join us. George, too.”

“And eat the healthy shit your boyfriend makes? No thanks. I prefer trans fat.”

He was already around the corner when she said, “Yeah, you look like it, too.”

“I heard that.”

“Dinner's at seven. I expect you here!”

———

Thom noted that George had already been to Motor Transport Division to pick up his designated city car. On the first day of any new investigation they always arrived together. Partners. Teammates. A practical construct considering they both lived in the city for which they served.

George was dressed in his usual triumph of fine tailoring. Today it was a black suit with a lilac shirt woven with shiny vertical threads. A paisley tie in a palate of pinks, dark browns, and a smattering of black anchored the ensemble. George was a flash dresser,
GQ
style, but he wore his wardrobe in a non-fussy way, never seeming to make a show of his appearance. On his feet he wore sturdy, rubber-soled wingtips that he owned in four colors. Despite their high-end appearance, he could climb a mountain and give them a brand-new shine afterward. Good police shoes.

Compared to George, Thom felt like a rumpled slacker in an off-the-rack suit he bought on sale at a department store. His ties were devoid of patterns and matched the hue of his shirts. An adult version of Garanimals.

George tossed him a foil-wrapped burrito. “Eggs, potato, bacon, rice, salsa, pinto beans, extra peppers.”

“Hosannas for Betty in her rolling coach of cuisine.” Thom ripped the foil and waxed paper from one end and dug his teeth into a thick layer of folded tortilla.

“Why did I pick you up at Birdie's?” said George.

“Anne kicked me out.”

“It's about time your wife threw your cheating ass out of the house.”

Thom swallowed a mouthful of food, picked up the Styrofoam cup and took a burning sip of French roast to wash it down.

“Women aren't the problem,” said Thom. “Anne wants to save face with her woman's group. She'll moan about my sullied reputation and pretend we're in therapy. Before you know it, I'll be a man reformed and move back in.”

“Don't get cocky. She might make it permanent this time.”

“Not my wife.” Thom took another bite. “Where're we going?”

“Hollywood Hills, baby.”

“Fancy. I hope we won't miss Bird's birthday dinner.”

“What?”

“Yeah, you're invited. Ron's gonna make one of those meals he's famous for. Dinner bell rings at seven.”

“I'll pass.”

“Why, Georgie boy? Still pining for your ex-girlfriend? Is that why you wailed from the street? Can't bear to look at her?”

“Screw off.”

Thom chortled and spit eggs onto the dash.

“You're a pig,” said George, throwing napkins.

“Come on, it's an important day. She's one year sober. Did you ever think she'd get this far?”

“Still not going.”

Thom's cell rang. He unclipped it from his belt and palmed it so George could hear as well. “L.A.'s finest detectives,” he said.

“I just love the tinny sound of the speaker,” said Lance Craig, their Lieutenant at Robbery/Homicide Division. “Suppose you can't multitask, Keane?”

“G-man is driving, but you know it's illegal, don't you, LT?”

“Whatever. Where are you monkeys? SID is already here. If you want a look before they mess up the scene with powder and chemicals you better get your asses here pronto.”

George flipped an auxiliary switch and stomped the accelerator. The blue and red LEDs on the windshield pulsed.

“What we looking at?” said Thom.

“Four bodies. Looks professional. One of the dead is a city attorney. Dominic Lawrence. High profile, boys. You're point.”

“Roger that,” said Thom. “We're bat speed.” He disconnected the call and continued scarfing his breakfast not knowing when he'd get another meal.

“We're maxed on overtime,” said George.

“He's a city guy. We'll get paid.”

“That means media.”

“Damn straight. It's gonna be double bad. Birdie's article launched this morning. The second part comes out Tuesday.”

George's face blanched.

“Gerard is the only family member guilty of anything,” said Thom.

“Still on message.”

Thom ignored the dig. “Gerard confessed to Bird in person. He mailed her letters and affidavits. He gave her more than he gave Eubanks”—Deputy District Attorney Daniel Eubanks—“that last bit is between you and me.”

“She still shouldn't have done it.”

“She's a journalist, George. That's what she does. It's her obligation to get in front of the shit storm.”

Thom glared out the window. Side streets passed in a blur as George ran one red light after another.

“No doubt it's going to hurt. But it could be worse.” It was the most artful lie Thom could present under the circumstances.

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