Shadows (2 page)

Read Shadows Online

Authors: Edna Buchanan

BOOK: Shadows
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CHAPTER 1

MIAMI—TODAY

People applauded when Craig Burch walked into the office. His face reddened. He wanted no attention, no fuss. He wanted his first day back to be like any other day on the job. But that didn't happen.

Two of his detectives sprang to their feet. Pete Nazario, usually quiet and introspective, moved in for a bear hug, then hesitated.

“It's okay,” Burch said, and hugged back.

He exchanged a high five with Stone, who grinned like he'd won the lottery. Other homicide detectives pumped his hand.

“Looking good!”

“Attaboy!”

A sea of smiles and good humor, except for Emma, Lieutenant K. C. Riley's tiny, middle-aged secretary, who blubbered uncontrollably into a flowered handkerchief. She removed her spectacles, wiped her eyes, and blew her nose loudly. “Thank God you're back.” She hiccuped.

Where is Riley? Burch wondered. Joe Corso, his temporary replacement, was missing in action as well. He scanned the sprawling homicide office and spotted their heads together in the lieutenant's glass-enclosed office, the door closed. What's that all about? he wondered. Corso, who had seniority, had been appointed acting sergeant in Burch's absence.

The two emerged to join the welcome.

“So ya finally got off your lazy ass and came back to work!” Corso trailed behind the lieutenant's welcoming smile.

“Yeah, had to make sure somebody was doing some detecting around here.”

Burch had made certain, despite his impatience, that before he returned he looked suntanned, robust, and fit, as though back from a vacation, not life-threatening gunshot wounds. He wore a new jacket, shirt, and shoes, and had had his hair cut a week earlier.

No dead-man-walking look for him. Cops rush to donate blood, money, and vacation time to a fellow officer in need. You can take that to the bank. But reappear limping and scarred, with a hospital pallor, and the camaraderie pales as well. Survivors can read it in their eyes. Nobody on the job needs a daily reminder that there but for the grace of God…

Hailed from all directions, Burch made the obligatory rounds, to briefly shoot the breeze.

“You won't believe the one I caught today, Craig,” homicide detective Ron Diaz said. “Guy shot a dozen times—by his own kids.”

“Not those little rugrats out there?” Burch had seen them in the hall on the way in. A curly-haired thumb-sucker with wide, frightened eyes. She and a sturdy boy about seven clung to a plump middle-aged woman with a half-closed, swollen, and purpling left eye. They huddled on a hard wooden bench.

“That's them. The two little ankle biters.”

“Holy crap! He at the morgue yet?”

“Hell, no. He's at Jackson, in the ER. Doing okay.”

“Where'd he get hit?”

“Both legs, groin, chest, face, arms. You name it, they shot it. Guy looked like Swiss cheese.”

“What'd they use? Old ammo with no punch?”

“Nah! Get this. He picks a fight with 'is old lady, lands a right cross to 'er eye. They're in a shoving match when she starts screaming, ‘Shoot 'im! Shoot 'im! Shoot 'im!' to the kids.

“Unlike mine,
her
kids listen. They open up on Dad with the trusty Red Ryder BB guns he got 'em for Christmas. Keep shooting even after he falls down the front steps and cuts his head trying to get away. Damn good shots; guy should be proud.

“Moral a this one is: Be careful what you give 'em for Christmas. Don't buy 'em nothing they can use against you.

“Pisses me off, 'cause now I gotta figure out who to charge and with what. An ASA said I could charge the kids with agg battery, a felony. They're five and eight. I could bust Dad for spousal abuse instead. Or lock Mom up for neglect, child abuse, and contributing to their deliquency. I'm leaning toward the last one at the moment.”

“A little harsh with that shiner she's sporting.”

“Yeah. Ain't it a beaut.” Diaz shrugged. “But the ASA says it's a crime to encourage kids to break the law. Or I could just bust both parents for spousal abuse on each other and let a judge sort it out….”

Burch sighed. “Some people shouldn't have kids.”

“Tell me about it.”

An attractive long-haired woman sat at a detective's desk, waiting to give a statement, her expression forlorn.

“What's her story?” Burch asked.

With her silky, low-cut blouse, dangly earrings, billowy skirt, and high heels, she looked dressed to go dancing, except for her tear-streaked makeup—and handcuffs.

“Yeah, all dressed up with no place to go. Domestic. Long history. Husband lies to 'er, cheats on 'er, beats on 'er. Separated for a while, but he claims he changed, turned over a whole new leaf. Talks 'er into letting him move back in. Promises to take 'er out on the town to celebrate last night. At seven, she's ready and waiting. She's still waitin', sittin' out front, when he finally gets home this morning, drunk as a skunk, lipstick on 'is shirt. Poor bastard hops outta 'is car with a big grin.
‘Qué pasa,
baby.'”

“‘Qué pasa,
my ass!' she says, and shoots him between the eyes. DRT, dead right there.”

“My wife would call that justifiable,” Burch said.

Another weepy suspect inside a small interview room wore open-toed stiletto heels, a miniskirt, and a bad case of five o'clock shadow.

“You don't wanna know about that one,” Diaz said. “Rivers's case. Fatal shooting up on the Boulevard. The victim was dumped out of a pickup on Seventy-ninth Street. He was wearing a red dress. Some kind of transsexual turf war up there in hooker heaven.

“So how ya doing, Burch?” The detective eyed the taller sergeant speculatively. “Heard it was touch and go for a while.”

“They exaggerated. I'm good.”

We all have a case number waiting for us, Burch thought. His hadn't come up yet. Life was good. He sighed as he returned to the Cold Case Squad's corner. Home at last.

Two hundred and thirty rumpled pounds occupied his space. Corso was slumped in Burch's chair, one big foot up on his desk.

“You mind?” Burch gripped the chair back.

“Sure. Sure.” Corso took his time vacating the seat. “Force a habit. Made sense ta use your desk when you were laid up. More convenient.”

Sure, Burch thought. He and Corso, a transplanted New Yorker, had worked patrol at the same time years ago. Time had mellowed Corso some, but edgy and unpredictable, he could still be a loose cannon. If Burch had had his way, Corso wouldn't be on his team, but the man knew how to win favors from friends in high places. After a stint as a city commissioner's driver/bodyguard, he returned recommended for a coveted homicide slot. After a brief, but lucky, run of cases, he'd applied for the Cold Case Squad. The regular hours appealed to him, too.

“Time for the Monday-morning case meeting,” Burch announced.

Stone and Nazario exchanged glances.

“Oh, yeah,” Corso said nonchalantly. “I changed that to Wednesdays.”

“So today,” Burch said mildly, “it's changed back.”

Hell, he was only gone a few weeks. What was Corso's big rush to change things?

“Stone, what's the status on your case?”

The husky black detective, the youngest on the squad at twenty-six, shook his head.
“Nada.
We decided to wait for you to come back.” Stone avoided Corso's eyes.

“Okay,” Burch said, sensing an unpleasant undercurrent in the air between them. “We take a hard run at it. Now. Give it top priority.”

“So, what was it like?” Corso said. “When that SOB shot you, when you hit the deck and thought you'd bought the farm, what were you thinking?”

“What we all think,” Burch said quietly. “That the worst thing is that you might not die. You don't want your family to have to spoon-feed you the rest of your life. I was lucky.” He glanced at Nazario. “I had good backup.”

“Damn straight,” Stone said.

“It makes you appreciate what matters most.”

“Exactly right.” Corso nodded wisely. “Me, too. Been there, ya know.” He stared at the other detectives. “Didn't know I got shot, did ya? On the job, like Craig.” He exposed his left forearm. “See that scar? Right there. That's where the bullet hit me.”

The detectives squinted at his hairy arm and saw nothing.

“Right there.” Annoyed, he pointed, and looked to Burch for confirmation.

“Yeah, right.” Burch's eyes rolled. “Won't ever forget that. Started over the price of a lime. Haitian guy in a Cuban market claims he's overcharged seven cents.

“The owner tells 'im get the hell out, we don't need your business. The Haitian guy refuses to go without his groceries. The argument escalates into a scuffle and the store security guard shoots the customer. Before air rescue can even evacuate the victim, angry Haitians are milling around outside. There was already bad blood between them and the owner.

“We're shorthanded. It's hot, Saturday afternoon, and all of a sudden, we've got a riot situation on our hands.

“We tell the owner to close up for the day. He gives us an argument. Rocks and bottles start to fly. We have just three, four cops out there. No riot gear. It's locked up back at the station. Nobody knows who has the key. This whole situation came outta nowhere. People start smashing the store windows, knocking down displays, snatching merchandise.

“Corso here draws his gun.”

“Right, we were overrun.” Corso shrugged.

“Somebody punches his arm,” Burch said, “his gun flies outta his hand, up into the air, crashes to the curb, discharges—and shoots him in the goddamn forearm. I'm thinking, Oh, shit. He manages to retrieve his gun, thank God.”

“Should a seen my arm,” Corso said proudly. “Blood like a waterfall, flying everywhere.”

Burch nodded. “It worked, believe it or not. Broke up the whole damn riot. Everybody ran. Know why? They figured this crazy cop means business. He's so mad, he already shot himself, he'll shoot us next. Scared the hell outta all the would-be looters.

“I don't recommend it if you guys ever find yourselves in the same situation,” Burch said. “But it worked.”

“Yeah,” Corso said. “They ran like hell.”

“Came out smelling like a rose,” Burch said. “Don't ask me how, but he always does. Even got his name on the plaque in the lobby, ‘Heroes Wounded in the Line of Duty.'”

Nazario and Stone struggled to keep straight faces.

“So what's the joke?” their lieutenant interrupted.

“Just war stories.” Burch shrugged.

“In my office, Burch,” Riley said.

She still looked too thin, he thought. The gun on her hip, a standard Glock, looked bigger and badder because she was so slim. She settled in her creaky leather chair, her blond shoulder-length hair backlit by Miami's radiant morning light. It cascaded through the window behind her, glinting off the hand-grenade-shaped paperweight on her desk.

He took a seat, eyes roving across the books—
Why They Kill, Sexual Homicide: Patterns and Motives, Inside the Criminal Mind, The Handbook of Forensic Sexology, When Bad Things Happen to Good People
—lining the shelves. He felt like a stranger seeing them for the first time yet comforted by the familiar titles. The framed photo of her and the late Major Kendall McDonald, carefree and laughing aboard a fishing boat, had been relocated to a less conspicuous spot, he noted, moved down a shelf or two. Maybe that was a good sign. Maybe she was healing, recovering at last from the loss.

“Glad you're back, Sarge. Sure you're ready?”

She always got right to the point; he liked that about her.

“Absolutamundo. In better shape than I was in the academy. Pumping iron, working out, swimming. Couldn't be better.”

“You talk to the shrink?”

“Had a session, only because it's SOP. Said I don't need to come back unless I have a problem, which I won't.” He shrugged. “Said I had a great support system.”

Being back home with my family is the best medicine, he thought.

“Connie and the kids have been great. Couldn't ask for more. Did a lotta work around the house. Fixed up the patio. Drove the family upstate, did some canoeing on the Peace River. Spent a lotta time together.”

“Connie okay about you coming back to work?”

He shifted in his chair. “A few boo-hoos from her and the girls this morning. Only natural. You know how girls are. Connie knew me before I put on a badge, she knew what she was getting into. She's taking some kind of course now, some kind a interior design, I think. It'll keep her busy. Craig Jr. kept a stiff upper lip. He's thirteen now. A cool kid.”

“Takes after his old man,” Riley said. “Okay, if you're sure you're up for it.”

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