Authors: Michael Slade
Tags: #Psychological, #Mystery & Detective, #Espionage, #Canadian Fiction, #Fiction, #General
"James Bond used a Beretta," Rick Scarlett added.
Spann almost laughed. Her mind weighed the man up and found him a couple of ounces short. "My turn," she said.
"Come on, Spann. Better minds than you or me have put that team together. Go down gracefully," the Mad Dog said.
"Better minds than you or I are also rethinking it, Ed. For the sake of argument I'll keep the long-barrels the same. Now let's chuck the Beretta and replace it with four Ruger Model Security 6.38 Special revolvers with either.38 Special + P ammunition or maybe .357 Magnum. I'd take the four-inch barrel over the two and three-quarters. So we've stepped up the Smith and Wesson, and it's also double action. And it's easily field-stripped."
"Lady, you're a fool. Your Ruger's only got six shots compared to sixteen in the Beretta. The buzz words in this exercise are 'greater firepower.' That means semi-automatic."
"Look," Spann said, "we're also talking accuracy and reliability. If you don't hit with the first few shots what does it really matter: all four women on the team will be dead and . . ."
"Women! That'll be the day. We're talkin
action
here. Not pushin' paper."
"... and besides, your firepower is in the long-barrels: you're not going to meet a short-barrel firepower situation. You're going to use the pistol only if you're right against it, eh? If your semi-auto misfires and jams, well then you're fucked. If your Ruger misfires you just pull the trigger again. Your Beretta you'd have to clear and that takes precious time. So your Ruger's reliable."
"Oh, smart broad," Rabidowski said, raising his eyebrows and looking at Scarlett. "Let's look at transportation. Your semi-auto's thinner and more easily concealed and holstered than your bulky cylinder. And to reload you got speed: just eject one magazine and jam in another. What about that, eh?"
"Irrelevant," Spann said immediately. "Have you never heard of a speed-loader for a revolver? Besides, your Beretta 92 S is fussy in what it feeds. It won't reliably take your Glaser Safety Slug. It won't take a hollow-point or flat nose. It won't take either your wadcutters or your armor piercing cartridges. With your Ruger, if it goes in the chamber, it fires. So your Beretta's got no selection of ammo. Your options are nil."
Rabidowski went to counter this, then realized as he opened his mouth that he had run out of arguments. He blinked instead.
"And while we're at it," Spann said, "you're creating jeopardy. Your semi-auto will be spewing out hot casings with every shot fired. What if one of those hits the guy
running beside you? A second can mean survival, and there the next guy is with a red hot cartridge down his shirt. And what about the floor? You want your whole team rollerskating on spent Beretta casings? Your Ruger hasn't got that problem. And anyway, for the sake of argument, why does your squad need sidearms at all? You're in a tactical response situation: it's the long-barrels that you'd use. But if you really want a pistol . . . yep, your Ruger is the one."
"Amen," Macdonald said. And then she turned to Lewis. "Well, what's your judgment?"
Rusty Lewis was twenty-nine years old and slightly overweight. He had drooping eyelids that made him look half-asleep. Sort of like Robert Mitchum. Above all, Rusty Lewis was fair. "Kathy wins," he said.
"Jesus, Mad Dog," Scarlett exclaimed. "The woman set you up!"
As Monica took the money she let out a thankful sigh.
"You just saved me, Kathy, from having a rabies shot."
Everybody laughed.
Except Rabidowski.
11:56 a.m.
"I'm impressed," Rick Scarlett said, "with the way you handled Mad Dog."
"Yeah sure. Nice friends you got."
"No really, I mean it. And he's not my friend. We just spent some time together in the same detachment. Where'd you get that knowledge? I certainly didn't expect it."
Katherine Spann gave him a long, hard look. "And just what did you expect? That I'd be reduced to tears when the subject turned to hardware? Don't be such a jerk."
"All right. I admit it. I started out an asshole. I'm sorry. Okay? So let's change the program. We got to work together, that's orders."
They were both sitting in the White Spot coffee shop at Cambie and King Edward waiting to order lunch. The waitress came and they ordered burgers Triple "O" with a side of french fries. Scarlett had coffee. Spann had tea.
When they were finished eating, Rick Scarlett said: "Let's pose you another problem. You've got this flying patrol, see, that wants to get this Headhunter. Where does it start?"
"At the beginning," Spann said. "So let's hit the files."
12:37 p.m.
Monica Macdonald and Rusty Lewis came into the White Spot just as Spann and Scarlett were leaving. They took the same table. Both ordered the weight-watchers' platter.
"So where do we start?" Lewis asked, sipping a cup of
coffee.
"The way I see it, we haven't many options." Macdonald thought a moment. "The Central Corps will start with local info. I say you and I abandon our country. Let's go south." "And do what?" Lewis asked. "Tap the FBI?" "Remember that baby kidnapping case several years ago? The infant out of White Rock found in Oregon? Well I was on the Force team that worked with the FBI. I even went out a few times with this Bureau guy from Seattle. He'll remember me."
"You still keep in touch?"
"No, but he'll remember me. So I say we leave this afternoon and make for Washington State. Let's get a look at the skin list they'll have there. We'll get a jump on the other flying patrols and Central Corps and maybe we'll get lucky. Maybe we'll find an American skinner poaching in Her Majesty's far western forest."
"Sounds good," Lewis said. "Do you want to drive or shall I?"
"I'll drive," Macdonald said. "You look far too tired."
2:45 p.m.
Commercial Crime Section (Special "I") Target: Steve Rackstraw (aka "The Fox")
Tape installed: October 31st 0900 hours. (Tipple) Tape removed: October 31st 1130 hours. (Tipple) u/m "The Weasel" now known as John Lincoln Hardy, u/m only known as "The Wolf."
Outgoing local call.
Weasel: Hello. Fox: Hey. Weasel: Hoodoo. Fox: Hoodoo yourself.
Weasel: (Chuckling) Hey nigger. . . Hey nigger . . . what's happening?
Fox: Be ready . . . you know . . . It's on. Weasel: That's cold, man.
Fox: I was wondering about that house youse knows. Burnaby?
Weasel: It's cool. Everythin' all moved in. Fox: Ah . . . that's good. Weasel: There were so many ladies out last night. Fox: Uh huh.
Weasel: They shoot at you, no need to shoot at them . . .you know, drive them white boys wild.
Fox: Yeah I know. Play the sucker man . . . Hey nigger, are you ready? You be gettin' your hoodoo soon.
Weasel: That's good . . . cause I's hurtin'.
Fox: Okay. Bye. Weasel: Bye . . . Hey. Fox: (Laughing) Hey hey.
3:57 p.m.
Incoming call. Long distance.
Fox: Hey hey.
Operator: I have a collect call from Mr. Wolf. Will you accept the charge?
Fox: Yes I will.
Wolf: It's cooking on the 6th .. . The pot boils over at midnight.
Fox: I'm ready . . . The cous will be down there to see all you.
Wolf: Ah . . . right ... be seein' the man then.
Fox: Okay, bye for now.
Wolf:
Au revoir.
4:01 p.m.
Outgoing local call.
Weasel: Yeah?
Fox: Time for a nigger hoodoo man to catch his ride an' be gone. It's on for the 6th.
Weasel: All right . . . let's go.
Fox: Say hello to our Momma for me . . . you hear?
Weasel: I hear. Bye for now.
Fox: Bye. Hey hey.
Halloween
6:15 p.m.
Tonight the moon was almost full. And tonight was also Halloween.
There are those who say they don't need to look at the sky or consult an almanac to know when a full moon lurks behind the rain clouds. For they are policemen and firemen and hospital workers and bartenders and ambulance drivers. From years of experience they have learned that the nights just before full moon will bring out more violence, more uncontrolled emotion, more just plain weirdness than any other time.
It has long been known that in mental hospitals the most bizarre behavior occurs in the twenty-four to forty-eight hours preceding the full moon. Now there is scientific theory to back this up: it is accepted as fact that the moon's weak magnetism affects the earth's metal-induced magnetic field. This is primarily true of iron. Based on this fact, a Chicago study concentrated on a single element in biological tissue. It concluded that magnetic and gravitational interaction between the earth and the moon may very well be involved in certain human physiological and psychological changes.
Halloween, of course, takes no account of science.
Halloween concerns itself with only evil forces.
And so it would this year.
At 6:15 p.m. a nun came out through the front door of the convent, past the shaded alcoves in the wood designed for contemplation, along one side of the shallow pond with its celestial reflections, and up the path to the main road where the North Vancouver bus was waiting.
Before this Halloween was over there would be another victim.
7:05 p.m.
The library was a dingy room on the main floor of the command building. Over the years it must have been used for some sort of storage, for all four walls were lined with shelves from the ground up to the ceiling. Several very large tables were scattered about the room and covering these were photostats of every available document on all three of the killings. Copies of the various photographs were in the process of reproduction, while every half hour additional material came in that had not been there before.
Scarlett and Spann sat at one of the tables working on all three files.
"When you get right down to it," the woman whispered, "there's really not much here."
"I was just thinking the same."
"This haystack will have to get bigger before we'll find the needle."
"Yeah."
"Want to get some supper?"
The man looked at his watch. "Actually I was thinking that it's time for me to leave."
"Oh, so you still go out Trick-or-Treating."
"No, it's my mother. She hasn't been very well. She lives in the East End and the street punks scare her. My sister and I go over every Halloween."
"Sorry. I shouldn't have been so flippant."
Rick Scarlett shrugged as if to say,
It's what I expected.
Out loud he said: "Where shall we go from here? We're going to have to come up with a line of investigation. This got us nowhere."
"Let's wait for a look at the pictures. Maybe there's something in them."
"I got a minute," Scarlett said. "Let's look at them now."
"Well, we can't do that, my good man, until they arrive, now can we?"
"Let's go up and take a look at the Superintendent's wall. He said his door was open. He's not going to object."
Three minutes later the two of them knocked on DeClercq's office door. When no one answered, Scarlett tried the handle. The door was unlocked. They entered the room and Spann switched on the lights.
As a result of the Superintendent's work during the day, the overview had exploded. Two whole walls were now covered with pinned-up pictures and reports and pages of notes. It was only a minute before Katherine Spann locked on one of the photos. She let out a low whistle then began reading the notes and reports and telexes tacked around the picture. Finally she turned to her partner and said: "Tomorrow we go downtown early and quaff a couple of beers."
"Great. We kick off by drinking on duty. Tell me lady, where'd you have in mind for this professional suicide?"
"Let's start with the Moonlight Arms."
"The heart of junk city. You got class. I like your debonair style."
"That, my good man, is where I once saw this dude. And perhaps we'll find him again."
Rick Scarlett followed her pointing finger to one of the photographs—the picture of John Lincoln Hardy, suspected pimp of Helen Grabowski.
8:17 p.m.
The black man stormed into the apartment with his face contorted by rage. He slammed the door behind him, the wood crashing against the jamb. She heard him wrench the lock viciously and the tumblers fall into place.
"Johnnie?" she asked vaguely, getting up off the couch.
He grabbed her by the hair. He was a strong man and it took but a single jerk to throw her across the room. Colliding with a table, she knocked a lamp to the floor. The bulb shattered, spewing glass shards everywhere. Then before she could try to gain her feet, the man pounced across the space between them and with one hand seized her face. He yanked her up toward him, and suddenly she was frightened. Very frightened indeed.
"Where is it?" the man hissed, spittle hitting her skin.
"I ... I don't know what you mean."
"Don't you get smart with me, bitch!" It was almost a scream. "You know exactly what I mean!"
"Please Johnnie. Let go," she pleaded. "You're hurting . . ."
"Shut it, or I'll cut your throat! Do you hear me?"
Her eyes opened wide in terror, her mouth opened wide to scream. But she couldn't get the sound out because he tightened his grip on her cheeks.
"Now you listen to me!" His eyelids were practically
squinted shut. "That ain't just
any
object. That ain't a piece
of
junk. It's my religion, woman. Now where the fuck is it?"
"Johnnie, pleeease," she gasped through the vice-tight grip of his fingers. "I was so sick. I tried but I, I couldn't take it. You just disappeared. You were gone so long. I thought I was gonna go era . . ."
"Where is it?" he spat out through his clenched teeth, and then he slapped her suddenly. "Where?" he repeated, and he hit her again. "Where?" This time the blow with his closed fist. "Where?" "Where?" "
Where?"
"Oh God, I sold it! Please, not again!"
He let her go abruptly and she crumpled to the floor. For several long moments she lay there, sobbing to catch her breath. Then she heard a dull
click
that brought a knot to her stomach, and she jerked her head up sharply to find that he had switched a blade on her. She could see the light from the ceiling fixture dancing along its steel edge.
"Okay, baby." His eyes were tense, as though his head were hurting. "It's time for you and me to have a little talk. I really hate to do this."
8:21 p.m.
"Sparky."
"Shut up! Go away! Fuckin' leave me alone!"
"Sparky, now really, is that the way you talk to your mother?"
"You're dead and buried! Get lost! You can't be here!"
"Oh, but I am. I'm down here waiting. Come and stroke my hair.''
'"No!"
"Soft, soft, so soft—and how long and black it is. Black, black, black, child. Black as your heart."
"No! I'm not bad. It's you who torments me and makes
me
do awful things. Oh God, Mommy, why did you make
me
look?"
"Because I love you, Sparky. And because you needed the lesson. How can you have pleasure—unless you have pain?"
"But what you did to that man, and to Crystal. It was so mean. So very cruel."
"Oh, come now. And what about the hippie? What about what you did to that girl in Ecuador?"
"That wasn't me! That was you!"
"Sparky, please. I wasn't even there."
"Yes you were."
"No, not really. Only in your head."
"Well you can just fuck off! I won't do what you say!"
"Yes, you will. You'll do anything I ask."
"No!"
"Yes."
"No!"
"Yes."
"No! No! N . . . AUUGGHHHH!"
Silence.
"Yes."
"Oh, please, Mommy, don't do that again! Please! Please! Please!"
"Come, come, Sparky. Dry those tears. Now let's hear your footsteps on the stairs. Come to me, child. Come and stroke my hair."
"I'm coming. I'm coming, Mommy. Oh God! Why'd you make me look!"
10:19 p.m.
The rain had begun at last.
Since morning dark clouds had hovered all along the western horizon far out at sea, kept at bay by a high pressure ridge along the spine of the mountains. But now the battle had been lost. First a light drizzle, then a shower, then a full downpour had taken over. The nun was soaked to the skin before she was ten feet from the bus stop.
It didn't bother her, this rain—to her it was Heaven's touch.
She came slowly down the slope of the path that wound through the convent gardens, past the reflecting pool now pockmarked by the raindrops, past the alcoves in the Garden of Christ where she often sat in thought. She was deep in thought now. Above her the moon, one day from full, was hidden behind the storm clouds.
The nun had spent the evening with an old woman who was living out her final days in a decaying house in the East End of Vancouver. Her hands gnarled with arthritis and her eyes clouded by cataracts, she could barely take care of herself yet she steadfastly refused to be warehoused in a hospital or a rest home. That tenacity had reminded the nun of when she herself was a child, when this strong woman, her surrogate mother, had helped convince her to take the Holy
Vows. It had hurt her tonight to sit in that room in that house in East Vancouver, and listen to the one whom she loved so now shake her fist at God.
So tonight especially the nun was looking forward to Mass.
It was with utter surprise that she felt the arm circle around her throat. Suddenly her breath was cut off and so was any scream. A hand seized her roughly, throwing her to the ground. The motions were swift; the person was strong; the force applied was brutal. The attacker abruptly let her go, then fell down upon her. Now
a
gloved hand was instantly clamped over her mouth.
The eyes of the nun opened wide when she heard the material ripping. Above her she saw a flash of blood-red color at the neck of the nylon jacket worn by her violator. The face was hidden behind a black nylon mask, the eyes leered out of two small incisions, and a third hole revealed lips pulled back in a snarl over bared white teeth. Then in utter horror she felt the hardness stab between her legs. The pressure. The entry. And realized.
Oh My Lord, this is rape!
In that instant she thought of the Sister who had been attacked in New York City. The other Sisters raped and killed in El Salvador.
How in the name of Mercy,
she thought,
can God let this happen!
Then there was a glint of light on steel.
And the knife slammed through her throat.