My optimism was obviously not catching. Brandt, looking older and more tired than I’d seen him in years, merely said, “I hope so.”
Early the next morning, tucked into my small corner office in the detective squad room, I began the day by pulling a slim address book from my pocket and dialing an in-state, long-distance number.
“State Police Criminal Division.”
“Dan Flynn, please.”
There was a brief pause. “VCIN—Flynn.”
VCIN stood for the Vermont Criminal Information Network, of which Lieutenant Daniel Flynn was director. The title sounded loftier than it was, since there were only two people in the office. Nevertheless, it was a grand experiment, and a credit to both Flynn, who’d thought it up in the first place, and to the Vermont State Police, who’d given him their blessing.
The principle of VCIN was childishly simple—establish a central clearinghouse for intelligence from every police agency in the state, using a process Flynn called the “pointer system.” If I fell over a crook named Bubba, for example, I sent his particulars to Dan, who entered them into his files on a “pointer card,” which he then tagged with my name. If any other cop, at any future date, came across Bubba and queried VCIN about him, Dan would know to put that other officer in touch with me. The beauty was that my file on Bubba never actually left my office—just his name and a few pertinent details. That one technicality guaranteed that no one could “steal” my case—a paranoid, and all-too-common concern of ambitious cops everywhere, and one around which Flynn had wisely constructed his system. As a result, from having no such operation three years ago, the Vermont State Police were now sharing information with—and acting as a conduit for—some thirty-five local law-enforcement agencies out of a possible statewide total of fifty-nine.
That, of course, was not the full extent of Flynn’s resources. His office was also connected to all the standard federal networks, both here and in Canada—as were many of the rest of us—and to Interpol. It also fielded information from the hundreds of Vermont state troopers out in the field, and communicated with state-police agencies throughout the United States.
All of which made Dan Flynn a good man to know. The fact that he was also pleasant and enthusiastic—if a little overly talkative—was a much-appreciated extra, something his greeting drove home now.
“Joe. I haven’t heard from you in months. What you been up to?”
“Nothing much. Things’ve been pretty peaceful.”
His rich laughter deafened my ear. “Don’t bullshit a bullshitter, boy. I read the newspapers. Soon as I heard about it, I ran Travers through my system here, just to see what popped up—professional curiosity.”
“What did you find?” I asked, curious myself. Travers’s wasn’t one of the names I would have thought to submit.
“He was a bad boy. You know he used to ply his talents in both Rutland and Bennington?”
“Yeah, I’d heard about some of that. Nothing to do with Asian gangs, was it?”
Dan Flynn laughed again, this time with a hint of conspiracy. “You know how it works, Joe. You want details, I give you the guy who handled the case. Period.” He hesitated a moment and then added, “But what about Asian gangs?”
“I think I may have something cooking down here. That’s actually why I called.”
“Got any names?” I could visualize him with his fingers poised over his computer keyboard.
“Yeah—four. Edward Diep, Truong Van Loc, Henry Lam, and Michael Vu.” I spelled each one out for him.
There was a prolonged pause while I heard him typing feverishly away. When he spoke again, I knew I’d definitely hooked his interest. “I found Michael Vu.”
I sat up, surprised that such a long shot had actually worked. “You’re kidding. Where?”
“Hartford—Detective Heather Dahlin. Vu’s been pegged for illegal aliens and possible extortion.”
I quickly wrote down Dahlin’s name, silently blessing VCIN and the foresight that had created it. “Anything else?”
“Not in-state. I take it you already tried the feds.”
“Yeah—nothing except that Truong’s brother was killed in a gang fight and that Vu has an old California rap sheet.”
Flynn grunted sympathetically. “These people all Vietnamese?”
“I guess so. Truong said he was.”
“Vietchin? Of Chinese ethnic origin?”
“I don’t know. Why?”
“’Cause if they are, they may still write their names using Chinese characters—being from the old country is a big source of pride to them, especially since they’re discriminated against in Vietnam. If you can get their names in character form, then you can translate the characters using the so-called Standard Telegraphic Codes, kind of like Morse code—and then we can send them via teletype to Interpol, or the Hong Kong police, or whoever else you think might be useful.”
“The names I’ve got won’t work?”
“Not overseas. I’ve tried names that had ‘Bob,’ or ‘Mike,’ or whatever in them, and I’ve hit a dead end nearly every time. They pick those when they get here. ’Course, they might work with other U.S. agencies, like Vu did with me.”
“Okay. Thanks. Why did your ears perk up when I mentioned Asian gangs?”
“They’re suddenly getting popular. Border Patrol’s nabbing them in growing numbers, crossing over from Canada. INS says fully staffed Chinese restaurants are starting to open where there’s little or no market for them, and then showing the IRS a booming business. Our troopers are reporting more sightings. Burlington PD thinks they might have a small gang in the making.”
My mind went back to Thomas Lee, owner of the Blue Willow. “The restaurants are laundering money?”
“Some of ᾿em are. And covering a drug-distribution network and an illegal-alien pipeline and credit-card fraud, and who knows what else. Of course, I have to tell my own people that of the three thousand Asians we have in this state, probably ninety percent are clean as a whistle. But it’s always the bad apples, you know? And Asian bad apples are worse than most—well-organized and super-insular. We’ve found that some of the more suspicious restaurants get supplies like napkins and straws and the rest exclusively from Chinese suppliers in New York, or Boston, or even Montreal, instead of buying them from local distributors. Everything they do keeps them isolated from the rest of society. Part of that’s cultural, I know—but part of it’s real clever, too. I mean, what do we care about a truck making weekly deliveries of tofu and shit like that up and down the state? We don’t, and we’re never going to know how much on board is tofu, and how much is dope or dirty money. These boys are sharp.”
“You getting reports of home invasions and extortion?” I asked, thinking again of the Lees.
“Nope. Usually those kinds of crimes happen in a Chinatown, or at least a residential area where you have a whole lot of Asians lumped together. Vermont’s still mostly just a road between two spots. And I hope it stays that way—none of us has the manpower to tackle it if it really got hot.”
As if he’d been eavesdropping on his own torrent of words, Dan Flynn suddenly stopped and reflected back on what had started this whole lopsided conversation. “You said you thought you had something cooking. What did you mean?”
“I wish I knew. It may just be a small local disturbance, but it’s gotten very violent very fast.”
“Well,” Flynn concluded after a small hesitation, “call again if you need any help. In the meantime, if you like, I’ll run a query through the system about Asian crime in general—see if any towns besides Hartford and Burlington have been having any trouble. Maybe we can come up with a common thread.”
That was an unexpected offer from a very busy man, and it gave me a sense of comfort that we weren’t necessarily alone on this—whatever it turned out to be.
· · ·
Sol Stennis hit his own pay dirt an hour later, calling me from an office at the back of the Hooker-Dunham Block annex on Main Street. “I think I found Vince Sharkey.”
Sharkey was the elusive second-in-command of Ben Travers’s small inner circle. As unpleasant as his late leader, but without the latter’s native authority, Sharkey’s compensating manipulativeness had made him a natural suspect as Ben’s killer in Brandt’s eyes. To me, that very same trait was why I thought him incapable of such boldness.
In any case, he’d become scarce following a brief preliminary interview with Ron, conducted right after Benny’s body had been identified.
Downtown Main Street, with only a few exceptions, consists of a double row of nineteenth-century, red-brick buildings—squat, grimy, determinately permanent, and for all that, distinctly statuesque. Having survived well over a century, these stolid, functional monuments to a long-past industrial era had finally acquired the kind of patina bestowed on certain elder statesmen.
But like a celebrity’s fame, the impression disguised reality. The Hooker-Dunham Block, almost directly across from an incongruously dinky Dunkin’ Donuts shop, was a typical result of the renovator’s art—it was an undistinguished, albeit practical, maze of apartments, offices, shops, hallways, and even a small theater. Its innards had been chopped up and changed so often since its glory days that it was anyone’s guess how many rooms, complete with inhabitants, might have been accidentally sealed off forever.
The row of buildings lined the entire east side of the street, and cut off a potentially beautiful view of the Connecticut River and the New Hampshire hills lying just beyond. As a result, that abandoned strip of shoreline had been left to the railroad track, the garbage barrels, a few haphazardly parked cars, and a veritable jungle of tall, scraggly weeds—a prime hangout for the drunk, the dispossessed, and those just wanting to be left alone.
It all spoke richly of Brattleboro as a whole, and went far to explain why many people found the town appealingly unique. Neither left to decay in economic depression nor totally gutted and replaced by urban renewalists hell-bent on the latest architectural kick, Brattleboro had thrashed and battled its way up the food chain like a born survivor, making do with what it had, creating citizens of whoever was willing to stake a claim, and establishing itself as an outspoken, politicized, often contradictory place to live. Old and new, rich and poor, native and fIatlander—and, most pointedly, right wing and left—all existed in a jostling, noisy harmony that baffled outsiders and imbued residents with a begrudging sort of pride.
Stennis had told me to find him in some offices at the back of the building, on the Main Street level, which put them about three flights above the train tracks. He met me in the reception area and guided me down a rear corridor. “We’re going to Mary Cappuce’s office. She’s got a front-row seat from her window,” he explained, as if he were making sense.
Mary Cappuce seemed nonplussed to see us, giving us a small wave of the hand before returning to her computer. Stennis parked himself to one side of a large, open window that did have a commanding view of the grubby, cluttered scene below. Like crows from a rooftop, we could consider our pickings at leisure. Unfortunately, I was still a little vague on what those pickings were supposed to be.
“See that big bush down there, between the tracks and the riverbank, just to the far side of the utility pole?” Stennis asked, pointing.
“Yes.”
“There’s a narrow path to the far side of it—leads down to the water’s edge. It’s a favorite hangout for dope smokers.”
Mary’s voice floated up behind us. “When the wind’s right, I feel like I’m having flashbacks.”
I smiled and shook my head—small-town police procedure at work. “And that’s where he’s hanging out?” I asked Sol.
“Tracked him there not fifteen minutes ago.”
“He alone?”
Stennis looked a little less confident. “That I don’t know. There’s no clear view of the actual river edge—part of its appeal. I thought you might want to go down and talk to him, while I guarded the rear.” He pointed a little farther down the tracks, where even I could see a faint worn path cutting through the grass. “Just in case he’s not in a chatty mood.”
Battle plans drawn, I nodded my agreement, thanked Mary for her hospitality, and led the way back outside.
We descended a variety of cement, wooden, and metal stairs until we reached the bottom of the building’s downhill side, and emerged from a service entrance among trash cans and debris. Across the double row of railroad tracks, the weeds and brush looked impenetrably dense, and much taller than they had from above.
We split up and approached the jungle from different angles; I headed for the far side of the huge bush Stennis had pointed out earlier. Just before I took the path behind it, I glanced up at the window we’d been using and saw five women clustered around Mary, eagerly watching the proceedings. I hoped they’d be in for a dull time.
While the day was not at all hot, it felt close and uncomfortably warm amid the dry, dusty, dense vegetation, a sensation no doubt enhanced by not knowing what lay even a few feet ahead of me. I moved slowly down the steep embankment, and as quietly as possible, so that by the time I emerged along a narrow strip of trampled grass lining the water and decorated with a few wooden boxes to sit on, I caught four young men sprawled out on the ground completely by surprise. The joint they’d been smoking flew into the water as they all made a mad scramble up the path Stennis was blocking.
They didn’t even make it to the bushes. As the first of them was about to vanish, Stennis magically appeared, planting his hand against the first one’s chest.
I pointed a finger at Sharkey, the last one in line. “You stay. The rest can go.”
The first three sheepishly hurried past the cheerful-looking Stennis, who’d stepped aside to let them by. Vince Sharkey was left staring sullenly at the ground.
“I’ll give you two a little privacy,” Stennis said affably, and followed the others back to the railroad tracks.
“You gonna bust me?” Sharkey demanded, folding his arms across his chest in an effort to inflate his size. He was more fat than muscular, but big nevertheless, with the prominent brow and single-line thick eyebrows that caricaturists routinely place on dim-witted bullies.