Mr. Monk and the Dirty Cop (2 page)

BOOK: Mr. Monk and the Dirty Cop
9.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
That’s why he won’t give up trying to get back on the San Francisco Police Department, even though they fired him after he suffered a complete mental and emotional breakdown in the wake of his wife Trudy’s murder.
And that’s why his friend Captain Leland Stottlemeyer hired him as a consultant to the Homicide Department, despite Monk’s many phobias and behavioral peculiarities.
Stottlemeyer knew that being a detective was an essential part of Monk’s character and that working was the only thing that would begin to make him whole again—at least until the day he finally finds whoever put a bomb in his wife’s car.
But doing that favor for Monk came at a huge price, and I don’t mean the countless things that Stottlemeyer, and his right-hand man, Lieutenant Randy Disher, have to do to keep Monk happy. (Like making sure there are no black-and-white police cars in sight at a crime scene because it will ruin his concentration. He believes that if cars are painted two colors, it must be done symmetrically, black on one side and white on the other. Anything else would violate the laws of nature.)
Monk is called in to consult whenever there is a crime that totally stumps Stottlemeyer and his detectives. He inevitably solves the mystery so easily that the captain feels stupid for not seeing the clues himself. I know this because the captain has said so on many occasions.
That’s one thing I really like about Stottlemeyer. He always expresses his gratitude and gives Monk all the credit he deserves. But I know it takes a toll on him. Relying on Monk implies that the captain and his men weren’t good enough to solve the crime on their own . . . or at least not as quickly.
What’s got to make it even worse is that even on the homicide cases that Stottlemeyer and his detectives
could
and undoubtedly
would
solve on their own, Monk often figures out the solution while they are still taking out their notebooks.
The fact is that every time Monk performs brilliantly at a crime scene, he’s unintentionally demonstrating that Stottlemeyer isn’t as good at the job as he is.
Monk is oblivious to that, of course. But I’m not.
It’s been going on like that day after day, year after year, and it’s got to be hard on the captain’s self-esteem.
I know it’s hard on mine, and I don’t even want to be a detective.
Witnessing Monk’s natural ability and affinity for his work over and over again only reminds me that I’ve yet to demonstrate anything like that in my own life.
It’s got to be much worse for Stottlemeyer, who is not only in the same profession, but in a leadership position.
All those conflicts were on my mind the morning we walked into the lecture hall in one of the newer buildings at the University of California, San Francisco’s law school.
We were supposed to meet Stottlemeyer at headquarters to pick up Monk’s paycheck and, by extension, my own, but the captain and Disher got called away to investigate a shooting at the university. Since we were desperate for the money, and Monk couldn’t resist visiting a crime scene, we went out there, too.
It was a big lecture hall with dry-erase boards and flat-screen monitors behind the lectern. Pretty soon, chalkboards and erasers will be as extinct as typewriters, vinyl records, and carbon paper.
All the seats in the room had power plugs and tables for laptop computers. I imagined that being a student here was like listening to lectures in the business-class section of a British Airways jet. The only thing missing was someone pushing a cart down the aisles serving beverages and snacks.
I did a rough head count of the students in the room. There were about a hundred of them and they were still in their seats, fidgeting nervously as a handful of detectives questioned them one by one.
The questions probably had to do with the dead guy.
The victim looked to me like one of the students, except that unlike the others he had a gunshot wound in his chest and he was dead.
His body was sprawled at the bottom of the aisle that ran down the left side of the room. There were streaks of blood on the floor that indicated he’d rolled halfway down the aisle before his foot snagged one of those fancy seats.
I could see a gun lying in the blood. A numbered yellow evidence cone marked the spot in case nobody had noticed the weapon, the blood, or the body.
Lieutenant Disher was in front of the lecture hall, pencil poised over his notebook, interviewing a jowly man who had gray hair and wore a suit and tie.
The jowly man had a short beard that I figured he grew to give his first chin more definition and distract attention from his second one.
He held his chins high, his back straight, and stared down his long nose at Disher as if regarding a misbehaving child. I wondered if he had that posture before he became a professor, if it came with the job, or if it was a vain attempt to stretch his flabby neck taut.
Lieutenant Disher was in his midthirties, eager to please, and surprisingly friendly for a homicide detective, which put most people at ease and got them to open up to him, revealing far more than they would to anybody else with a badge. But from what I could see I didn’t think the man Disher was talking to then was one of those people.
There were a couple of crime scene technicians taking pictures and gathering forensic evidence and trying very hard to look as cool as David Caruso and Marg Helgenberger while they worked. They weren’t succeeding. They were too self-conscious about striking poses, and they didn’t have the wardrobe, the stylists, or the buff bodies to pull it off.
Stottlemeyer wasn’t trying to impress anyone. In fact, he looked wearier and more haggard than usual. His jacket and slacks were wrinkled and his bushy mustache needed trimming. He was standing with his hands on his hips, staring down at the body as we approached.
He acknowledged us with a quick glance and a nod.
“You didn’t have to come all the way down here,” Stottlemeyer said.
“We came for Mr. Monk’s check,” I said.
“It’s back at the office,” he said. “Stop by later this afternoon and I’ll have it for you.”
Monk crouched down to examine the body, holding his hands out in front of him like a movie director framing a shot with his thumbs.
“Mr. Monk thought if he helped you out here, we wouldn’t have to wait until this afternoon.”
He eyed me suspiciously. “It was Monk’s idea.”
“I might have given him some advice on the matter,” I said. “The check is a week late as it is.”
“The department keeps slashing my budget and I have to prioritize my spending,” Stottlemeyer said. “I’m afraid consultants are at the bottom of the list.”
“Then you can forget about getting any help from Mr. Monk today,” I said. “He doesn’t work for free.”
“I don’t need his help right now,” Stottlemeyer said. “There’s no mystery about what happened here.”
“The guy on the floor burst into the room in the middle of class and pointed a gun at the professor,” Monk said, standing up. “The gunman was about to shoot but the professor shot him first.”
“That’s exactly what happened,” Stottlemeyer said. “It was a clear case of self-defense and we’ve got a lecture hall full of eyewitnesses to back it up.”
“What was the professor doing with a gun?” Monk asked.
“He’s a former federal prosecutor who put a lot of scary people away in his day,” Stottlemeyer said. “He’s licensed to carry a concealed weapon.”
Monk looked to the front of the room. “Is that Professor Jeremiah Cowan?”
“Yeah, you know him?” Stottlemeyer said.
“I took his Introduction to Criminal Law class when I was at Berkeley.”
“That’s the class he was teaching today,” Stottlemeyer said. “But I don’t think the lesson the students got was on the syllabus.”
Monk rolled his head as if trying to work out a kink in his neck. But I knew it wasn’t his neck that was bothering him. The kink was in his mind. There was some detail that wasn’t fitting where it should and that worried me.
“You’re not working today, Mr. Monk,” I said. “You haven’t been paid.”
“I’m not working,” he said.
“Then what was this?” I rolled my head the way he did.
“It was nothing,” he said.
“Of course it was nothing,” Stottlemeyer said. “This case was closed before you got here. There’s nothing left to do now but the paperwork.”
“Good, then there’s no reason you can’t hurry back to the office to sign Mr. Monk’s check.”
Monk headed straight for Professor Cowan, who seemed to recoil at the sight of him approaching.
Stottlemeyer and I followed Monk, neither one of us too happy that he was getting himself involved in this.
“Oh my God,” Cowan said. “It’s Adrian Monk.”
“You still remember me after all these years?” Monk said.
“Before each class, you drew lines on the chalkboard for me to write on,” Cowan said. “You insisted that I use a fresh box of chalk. And you’d never let me erase the board; you had to do it yourself. It took you hours.”
Monk looked at Stottlemeyer and me and shrugged with false modesty. “I was kind of a teacher’s pet. The entire faculty loved me.”
“You’re fortunate I wasn’t carrying a gun in those days,” Cowan said.
“Why were you carrying a gun today?” Monk asked.
“I always carry it,” Cowan said. “But I had it within easy reach today because I’ve been getting these crazy, threatening e-mails lately from a student who believes I destroyed his life by giving him bad grades. He said that I would die for it.”
Disher tipped his head towards the victim. “Was it him?”
“I presume so,” Cowan said.
Disher narrowed his eyes. “Why?”
“Because he screamed, ‘You ruined my life,’ and then aimed his gun at me.”
“Maybe there is more than one student who hates you,” Disher said.
“There could be,” Cowan said tightly.
“We don’t make assumptions,” Disher said. “We deal in facts.”
“Of course,” Cowan said. “How reckless of me.”
“The guy who sent you the e-mails could be hiding behind a bush outside right now, waiting to leap out and gar rote you as you leave the building.”
“You should go check, Randy,” Stottlemeyer said.
Disher stood there for a moment. “Really?”
Stottlemeyer glared at him.
“I’m going to go check the bushes.” Disher pocketed his notebook and hurried away.
Stottlemeyer sighed and turned to Cowan. “Did you report the threats?”
“I informed the campus police and showed them the threatening e-mails,” Cowan said. “But there wasn’t much they could do. They traced the e-mails to the public computers at the campus coffeehouse. Anybody could have sent them.”
Stottlemeyer gestured to the victim. “Do you recognize him? His name is Ford Oldman.”
“He looks vaguely familiar but I have nearly a hundred students in this class alone, not counting the others that I teach,” Cowan said. “I can’t be expected to remember them all, semester after semester, year after year. There must be thousands.”
“You remembered me,” Monk said.
“You stood out,” Cowan said. “Besides, this is only the second week of the class. I’m just getting to know the faces.”
Monk rolled his shoulders. Another kink. Not a good sign. Stottlemeyer caught it, too.
“Yes, that makes perfect sense,” Monk said in a robotic, completely unnatural way. “I couldn’t be more convinced that what you are saying is true. There are no doubts in my mind. Captain, could I please speak to you for a moment about something that has nothing whatsoever to do with the murder of this student?”
“It wasn’t murder,” Cowan said. “It was self-defense. That’s an important legal and moral distinction.”
“You’re right,” Monk said in that same stilted voice. “I should have said self-defense murder.”
“It wasn’t murder at all,” Cowan said, raising his voice an octave in exasperation.
Stottlemeyer took Monk by the arm and dragged him out of earshot of the professor. I tagged along because that’s what I do. It’s in my job description.
“What has gotten into you, Monk?” the captain asked.
“He’s the guy,” Monk said. “He’s the killer.”
“Yes, Monk, we know that,” Stottlemeyer said. “That’s not in dispute.”
“It was murder, Captain.”
“It was self-defense,” Stottlemeyer said. “We’ve got a hundred eyewitnesses and they all tell the same story.”
“That proves it,” Monk said.
“That I’m right,” Stottlemeyer said.
“That this was
premeditated
murder,” Monk said.
I had no idea why Monk believed this shooting wasn’t what it appeared to be but I’d long since learned he was always right when it came to murder.
BOOK: Mr. Monk and the Dirty Cop
9.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Silver Spurs by Miralee Ferrell
The Joy of Killing by Harry MacLean
The Rogue and I by Eva Devon
All Souls' Rising by Madison Smartt Bell
FIRE AND ICE by Julie Garwood
The Trinity Six by Charles Cumming