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Authors: Gerald Petievich

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Carr followed.
Heckel
and
Jeckel
sat on a sofa on either side of a tape recorder. Both men appeared to be in their middle thirties, wore dark suits with striped neckties, and were overweight. Strangely, they looked almost like brothers. Neither acknowledged his presence.

Waeves
scooted behind his oversized desk. He pointed Carr to a chair. "I guess you know who these gentlemen are?" he said.

Carr stared at the pair. The tape recorder wasn't running. "Jehovah's witnesses?" he asked.

The trio of inquisitors exchanged somber glances.
Heckel
turned on the recorder.
Jeckel
said, "Interview with Special Agent Charles Carr, tape number two, Shooting Incident Analysis." He cleared his throat. "Agent Carr, the operations manual section 302.2 requires that you answer each and every question put to you by an inspector fully and completely. Failure to do so would subject you to administrative
action which
could result in loss of pay or termination from government service. We take it you are familiar with that section?" He looked at his notes.

Carr nodded.

"Respond verbally, please,"
Jeckel
said.

"Yes," Carr said.

Heckel
looked at
Jeckel
. He nodded.
Jeckel
looked at his notes for a moment. "When you fired your service revolver," he said, "what was the thought that was foremost in your mind? I mean, right at that very moment."

Carr made a thoughtful expression. He leaned forward in his chair. His elbows rested on his thighs. He rubbed his chin for a while. "Things happened fast," he said finally, "but I remember clearly what was going through my mind."
A chin rub.

The inspectors made notes.

"I was sort of talking to myself," he continued. "I said, 'Carr, right now you have reason to fear for your life and the lives of others. You are now authorized to fire your Treasury revolver for the purpose of stopping the suspect from committing the act he is engaged in.'" He sat up straight.

Both men frowned. They looked at one another.

"Why did you fire at the suspect's head?"
Heckel
said.

"It was the only portion of his body that was exposed," Carr said. "The hostage was in front of him."

"Did you consider that you might have missed
LaMonica
and hit the hostage?"
Jeckel
threw the question out like a challenge.

"No," Carr said.

"In other words, that possibility didn't even enter your mind. Is that what you're saying?"
Heckel
said.

"Yes."

"Why not?"
Jeckel
said.

"Because I've qualified 'expert' at the pistol range every month for over twenty years," Carr said without inflection.

Waeves
emitted a burst of pipe smoke. The inspectors wrote things in the margins of their notes. There was a long silence before the next question.

 

Carr returned to the squad room after the interview. He plopped down at his desk.

Kelly was having an animated telephone conversation. "Thanks a lot for calling," he said. He hung up the receiver. "That was Rodriguez," he said. "He says Teddy Mora's ex-brother-in-law just put a fifty-grand down payment on a motel in Ensenada. He's the manager of the local bank."

"At least somebody came out all right on the deal," Carr said. He gave a little laugh.

 

Charles Carr strolled with Sally along the cement walkway running parallel to the snack shops and apartment houses that faced Santa Monica Beach. It was the first time they had been together since Carr's return from Mexico. They were lost in a parade of roller skaters and joggers of both sexes, all cocoa-tanned and costumed in skimpy swim clothes. A lithe couple on wheels a few feet in front of them did a ritual of figure eights around one another as they gabbed about the best way to mix margaritas.

Sally had been walking with her head down most of the way. Carr felt like telling her to get whatever it was off her chest, but didn't.

The roller skaters finished their discussion and zoomed away holding hands.

"Why didn't you mention to me that you were going to Mexico?" Sally said. "We were together just hours before you left and you didn't so much as mention it."

"I guess I just didn't think of it," Carr said.

"Did you have a good time?"

Carr didn't answer.

"You don't have to answer that," she said condescendingly. "Rose Kelly said you and Jack had a fabulous lobster dinner down there."

"It was real nice."

Sally stopped in her tracks. She locked her arms across her chest. "There is no reason in the world why you can't share little things like that with me," she said angrily. "We just don't
share
things like other...uh...friends do. And I think I know why. You're afraid of things becoming too serious. You think that I'm going to put restraints on you. Well, there needn't be chains and boundaries on our relationship. I've proved that. So please stop treating me like some dizzy schoolgirl."

Carr put his arm around her shoulder. He pulled her close to him. They walked on for a while without speaking.

"I would appreciate seeing you more than once or twice a month," Sally said.

"Sounds good," Carr said.

 

****

 

About the Author

 

GERALD PETIEVICH is a former U.S. Secret Service Agent. Mr.
Petievich
numbers among his novels
To Live and Die in L.A., Boiling Point
(published as
Money Men
) and
The Sentinel
, all of which were made into major motion pictures His other novels include
Earth Angels, Shakedown, To Die in Beverly Hills, One-Shot Deal, Paramour
and
The Quality of the Informant
.

 

****

BOOK: The Quality of the Informant
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