The Survivor (18 page)

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Authors: Sean Slater

Tags: #Police, #Fiction, #Suspense Fiction, #School Shootings, #Thrillers, #Suspense

BOOK: The Survivor
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Striker sized him up. He wore the standard-issue uniform pants, which were about as effective in these wet winds as a pair of ass-less chaps in a snowstorm. His hands were tucked as deep into his pockets as he could get them, and blasts of warm breath steamed from his open mouth when he spoke.

‘Detective Striker,’ he said.

‘Tough break, kid.’ Striker pointed at his pants. ‘Use your e-points to get a pair of Gore-Tex.’ He nodded to the end of the dock where a dirty blue tarp lay spread out across the boards. There was a long lump underneath it. ‘Who found him?’

The Constable shrugged. ‘Some guy, a worker loading up for the cement plant. Dunno, really. Ask Rothschild, he was first on scene.’

‘We got a name for our John Doe?’

The kid shrugged again. ‘I just got stuck with guard duty.’

Striker left the young Constable standing there, fighting off hypothermia, and approached the rustling plastic tarp. Four large cinderblocks held it down – one at each corner, preventing it from blowing away. Striker picked up the nearest cinderblock, moved it to the side, then peeled back the tarp.

The first thing Striker noted was that the runner from the left foot was missing. In the darkness of the dock, the golden dragon design snaking down the sides of the man’s jeans was almost invisible. Striker took note of it. The white designer hoodie the man wore was stuck to his thin but muscular build like a second skin. Soil and slime smeared the stencilled designs.

The body hadn’t been in there for very long, but already the tissue was starting to bloat from water saturation, and tiny pockets of flesh had been pecked away from the face by sea creatures. Even so, with the tissue damage and in the poor illumination of the lower docks, the identity of the boy was irrefutable. Striker had seen this boy’s picture on his own ID cards.

It was Que Wong. The one they had thought to be White Mask.

The discovery made him sick, and yet it invigorated him. They now had an unidentified body back at the morgue. A faceless, handless corpse.

Striker stared at Que Wong with a hundred questions racing through his mind. Things that had made sense a few hours ago made no sense now, but he was so tired he could barely remember what they were. He reached out and gently took hold of the boy’s left hand. All the skin remained intact, connected properly to the muscles and fascia beneath. The hand hadn’t de-gloved, as is so often the case with floaters. And that was good. It meant Que Wong hadn’t been in the drink for overly long.

Striker took out his Maglite and shone a beam on Que’s hand. He looked for ridge detail on the fingers, but it was difficult to tell outside of the lab in the middle of the night.

‘Hey, Shipwreck!’ a voice called out. ‘Don’t fuck with my body!’

Striker didn’t have to turn around to recognise the heavy, out-of-breath yell. It was Jim Banner from Ident. Noodles. Striker spun about, half-irritated.

‘Christ, Noodles, even the undead sleep.’

‘Like you should talk.’ Noodles said this with a laugh, but his pudgy cheeks sagged and his eyes were heavily underscored. ‘And you should see my pay stubs. I get to pay more tax than any other cop in the city.’

‘Congratulations.’ Striker was about to say more when a movement caught his eye. He looked into the murky illumination of the dock entrance and spotted Mike Rothschild leading another man down the first set of stairs. One look at the thick, helmet-like hair, the five-foot-five stature, and Striker knew undoubtedly who it was.

Deputy Chief Laroche.

‘Here comes the circus,’ Noodles said.

‘They normally start with the clown?’ Striker had barely finished speaking when his cell rang. He snagged it, turned away from Noodles, and covered his other ear with his hand to drown out the sounds of the river. ‘Jacob Striker.’

‘Where the hell are you?’ The voice was tired and agitated.

‘Felicia?’

‘No, it’s Fergie, the Princess of Pop – who do you think it is? Where are you, Jacob?’

‘Down at the docks. On Marine. Look, they just found the body of Que Wong.’

‘Wong? But we already—’

‘Our headless corpse ain’t him, Feleesh. And if Que Wong was a set-up, then it’s pretty damn likely Raymond Leung is, too.’

‘Red Mask? Are you sure?’

‘Don’t kid yourself, he’s still out there somewhere. I know it. And we’ve got to find him.’

Felicia made an exasperated sound. ‘What are you talking about? Jesus, why didn’t you wake me?’

He shrugged as if she could see him. ‘You needed the sleep. And I didn’t know it was connected. Not till now. Look, I’ll explain when I get back. Just get up and get dressed. I won’t be long.’ He hung up his cell phone, turned around and stared at Noodles. ‘Keep me up to date,’ he said.

‘Not with your sense of style.’

‘I’m serious, Noodles. This changes everything.’

‘I’ll call. God, just get out of here, will you?’

Striker nodded. He started to leave, then spotted Laroche sauntering down the last set of stairs. He looked back at Noodles, saw the big black Ident marker sticking out of his jacket pocket, and smiled. He snatched it up, ignoring Noodles’ protest, and marched down the dock till he came face to face with the Deputy Chief.

‘What are
you
doing here?’ Laroche said, his voice resonating with unease.

Striker said nothing, he just handed him the black felt marker.

‘What’s this for?’

Striker jabbed his thumb over his shoulder, back towards the dock. ‘You might want to paint some stripes on that body back there – looks like I just found you your zebra.’

 

Twenty-Nine

Twenty minutes later, Striker picked up Felicia and headed to the police garage. He needed to check the forensics on the stolen Honda Civic. Something was bothering him about it, and he always followed his instincts. While en route, he pulled out his cell and dialled Noodles. On the fourth ring a gruff voice answered.

‘Christ almighty, Shipwreck, I got three hours’ sleep and work to do.’

‘I need your help.’

‘Why? What now?’

‘Raymond Leung’s DNA – I need it compared to the blood in the Honda Civic.’

‘You called me for
that
? I’ve already got the samples done. They just need to be submitted to the lab.’

‘I need it now.’

Noodles cursed. ‘You’re like a high-maintenance girlfriend.’

‘Noodles—’

‘The lab doesn’t even open for another two hours. And even if I get the samples in first thing, and even if I get a priority one rush put on it, it’s still gonna take three to four days to get any results – and that’s without a full report. It’s DNA. You know how it is.’

‘The DNA can come later,’ Striker explained. ‘All I need at this point is blood type. Find out if Raymond Leung’s blood type matches the blood in the stolen Civic. You can get those results for me fast if you stop dragging your ass.’

‘So I should just get up and leave our floater here.’

‘Noodles, I need this.’

‘I thought Red Mask was found.’

‘He’s
not
Raymond Leung. I know it, Noodles. I just need your help proving it.’

Noodles let out a frustrated sound, but finally relented. ‘I’ll get to it as soon as I got the bases covered here, then I’ll come back and finish the Wong body later. But you owe me huge for this, Shipwreck. Two bottles of Crown Royal. Ten-year.’

‘You got it. Just call me the second you know.’

The police garage is located in the worst part of town, the Skids. Also known as the Downtown East Side – that unpredictable area occupied by only criminals, addicts and the mentally ill.

In short, it was ten square blocks of bedlam.

Striker looked around. To the west was a series of community buildings offering housing for the down-and-outs. To the east were four straight blocks of slum apartments, housing dealers, enforcers, mules, and every other type of drug-related offender who haunted the area. Homeless people – the ones who had either refused help from the nearby community programmes or had been banned from them – roamed the block, setting up makeshift camps all along the sidewalk and rear alleyways. Their numbers had grown over the past few years, causing overpopulation of the street and sidewalks. And as a result, the City had set up sprinkler systems, timed for midnight activation, in order to keep the police bays clear.

It was a sad statement of the times.

Striker checked his watch. It was almost six a.m. He parked the Crown Vic out front and told Felicia to wait. She didn’t seem to mind; she looked half-dead in the passenger seat, and she made a soft
uh-huh
sound as he got out.

It was cold. The sky was still dark, and the fall winds bit into him, sent his short brown hair blowing back over his head. He looked east and west at the cardboard tents set up all along the drive and frowned. The street was one giant paper city. A few blocks down, a marked patrol car turned east, away from him, and continued driving along Alexander Street until it disappeared in the heavy murk.

Alpha shift. Had to be. God knows, no one else was out yet.

The rain had stopped, but it had failed to clean the streets of all the used rigs and dirty condoms. Striker looked away from the filth. He used his police key to enter the barred-off entrance to the garage, then let himself in and turned off the beeping alarm. Far above, the industrial fan rattled loudly. The Department had fixed the thing ten times over the past year, and here it was on the fritz again.

He stood inside the doorway of the police garage and took in a deep breath. The place smelled of dust and dampness, oil and kitty litter. A flick of the light switch bathed the huge space in a bleak fluorescent illumination, revealing a fully-stacked bay: rows and rows of vehicles awaiting processing. Fingerprints, DNA, Hidden Compartment Searches, Paint Comparisons – all needed something.

Two Escalades with shaded windows and big chrome mags – gangbanger rides – occupied stalls one and two. A bright cherry-red sports car occupied stall three. It was heavily customised, decorated with an oversized chrome muffler, spinning gold mags, and a tail fin larger than any humpback could hope for. Gang style. Probably belonged to the White Lotus – Canada’s version of the Lotus gang, made up solely of Canadian Chinese.

Striker’s eyes moved on until they found the vehicle he was looking for. The stolen Civic.

Red Mask’s ride.

Striker moved to the bay door and took hold of the handle. The rollers were rigid and in desperate need of oiling. The metal made a sharp, grating noise as Striker reefed down hard on the chain and rolled the steel door open. It was barely three-quarters up when Felicia drove the cruiser inside the bay. She climbed out, shivered from the cold, zipped up her suede jacket.

‘Coffee after this,’ she said. ‘Immediately.’

Striker agreed. He closed the garage door and turned towards the Civic. The yellow copy of the Ident Form was trapped beneath the driver’s side windshield-wiper. Before he could read it, Felicia snatched it up. She held it in her long, thin fingers, her clear nails digging into the paper. She finished reading, made a face, deflated.

‘Not a single goddam print in the car.’

‘You didn’t really expect any, did you?’ Striker looked inside the vehicle. One clear bag sat on the front passenger seat, tagged after processing for fingerprints and DNA analysis. It held the key-ring and keys, complete with fob and happy face. Someone had written
No Prints
in thick black felt on the bag. The member’s badge number and the incident number were included.

Striker looked at the badge number, saw it wasn’t Noodles, and it pissed him off. He liked Noodles. Noodles was the best. Then he looked over the paperwork and saw that the cigarettes had also been processed:

Prints positive. Subject: Quenton Wong.

Striker stared at this for a long time, then showed it to Felicia.

‘It puts him in the car,’ she said.

‘No. It
connects
him to the car, the shooter, or anyone connected to either one. But how, we don’t know.’

Striker removed his long coat and draped it over the work bench. He put on a fresh pair of latex gloves, then moved over to the metallic whiteboard on the west wall, where numerous yellow forms were hanging by clip-magnets. He shifted them all to the left side, exposing a large patch of white steel, then returned to the Civic.

Felicia joined him. ‘So Que’s prints are on the cigarettes, and now he’s dead. Great. So aside from knowing he’s somehow connected, all we got is another dead end on our hands.’

Striker corrected her. ‘This has been anything but a dead end.’

She furrowed her brow.

‘It’s not just about the prints,’ he explained. ‘It’s about why they stole the car a whole week before the shootings.’

‘And you got an answer for that?’

‘I think so.’ He pulled Courtney’s happy face magnet from his pocket and handed it to Felicia. ‘What do you see?’

She flipped it over. ‘A happy face. Where did you get this?’

‘Courtney had it on the fridge, next to her Britney magnets,’ Stiker said. ‘Put it on something metal. Like the whiteboard over there.’

She did, and the happy face stuck. She pulled it off the board and looked back at Striker. ‘It’s magnetic. So?’

Striker returned to the Civic. According to the notes on the Ident bag, there were no prints on the key-ring and the items had already been swabbed for DNA. So there was no fear of cross-contamination. However, taking no chances, he gloved up with fresh latex. He took the key-ring complete with key, fob, and happy face out of the bag and held it up for Felicia to see.

‘This happy face is magnetic, too.’ He gave the key-ring an underhand toss across the room. When it hit the metallic whiteboard, the key-ring and fob fell down towards the ground, but the happy face stuck hard, holding everything up.

He looked at Felicia and smiled. ‘That tells us everything.’

Felicia played with Courtney’s happy face and shook her head. ‘It tells
me
nothing.’

Striker tried to explain it from a different angle. ‘How many keys do you see on that key-ring?’

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