The Guilty (27 page)

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Authors: Sean Slater

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BOOK: The Guilty
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‘Installed and activated,’ she said.

Still, he said nothing.

He hung up the phone. He brushed his hand through the hair of the man on the bed. Kissed his forehead. Smelled his pungent body odour. Said, ‘I love you . . . I love you
so
much
.’

And then the tears finally came – big salty drops, rolling down his cheeks and onto his lips, forcing him to flee the room altogether from what may well have been the final goodbye.

Shu-shush.

Sixty-Three

As Felicia drove their undercover cruiser eastward in pursuit of Harry and Koda, Striker sat in the passenger seat and continued going over all the various connections in his
mind. The link between Koda and Sharise Owens was clear. But the link between Koda and Keisha Williams still felt vague.

Striker took out his notebook and searched for the phone number of Keisha Williams’ brother, Gerome. When he found it several pages back, he dialled the number. It rang but once, and the
man answered. A sadness resonated in his tone, and Striker felt for him. He asked how the children were coping and if the Victim Services Unit had been helpful. The grief in Gerome’s voice
made it clear that nothing was helpful right now. So Striker got down to business.

‘Keisha was the owner of the Toy Hut, was she not?’

‘Well, Keisha owned the
business
,’ Gerome said. ‘Not the actual building.’

‘Had making toys always been something she loved to do?’

‘Oh yes. Always. We didn’t have much money as kids. Our parents were broke. So Keisha used to make us things. She was always good at that, and I think the happiness it brought me
made her feel better too.’

‘So she made toys all her life?’

‘Yes, sir. Mostly from wood. She was good with wood.’

‘And she did this as a career? All her life?’

‘Well, no, not exactly. She only opened the Toy Hut about ten years ago.’

‘What did she do before that?’ Striker asked.

‘She was a chartered accountant.’

Striker was surprised by this. ‘A chartered accountant? . . . Forgive me, Gerome, but I don’t get it.’

‘Get it, sir?’

‘Keisha and the children lived in social housing. She owned second-hand clothes. She looked in all ways like she was – well, for lack of a better word – poor.’

‘She
was
poor. The family just got by. Especially after her husband died – Chester had no life insurance, you know.’

Striker shook his head. ‘Forgive me, but this doesn’t make a whole lot of sense. Why stay poor? If Keisha was registered as a chartered accountant, why didn’t she work as
one?’

Gerome sighed. ‘You tell me, Detective. That was one of the things we used to fight about, Keisha and me. I always told her, “You and the kids got no money. Why don’t you go
back to your old job? You can buy a place for you and the children.” But every time I brought it up, it just created more and more distance between us. Like whenever I told her to get rid of
that Solomon guy.’

‘Did she work for a company?’

‘No. Was all private stuff, much as I know.’

‘And where does she keep her records?’

‘I dunno,’ Gerome said. ‘I been going through her stuff myself to see if she had any insurance for the children, but I ain’t found nothing so far. If she’s got
records, they ain’t here, I can tell you that.’

Striker thought it over. ‘Did something bad happen in the distant past? Something that made her quit her career as a chartered accountant?’

Gerome let out a long breath, one filled with tension. ‘I honestly don’t know, Detective. She just upped and quit, and that was pretty much that. The topic was off limits around
here. She made that pretty clear to me, clear to everyone. Lord, I’ll never know.’

Striker said nothing else on the matter. He just thanked Gerome for his time and told him to call if the children were in need of anything. Then he hung up and relayed what he had learned to
Felicia.

‘Something must have happened,’ she said. ‘Why else quit a good job like that and live in poverty? It doesn’t make sense, even if she loved the other job. I mean, she had
children to think about, right?’

Striker thought the same. Something must have happened.

Something bad.

Sixty-Four

Striker and Felicia continued tailing Harry and Koda out into the suburbs.

‘Not too close, not too close,’ Striker said.

Felicia gave him a cool look. ‘They’re two blocks east and one block north of us, Jacob. Unless they can see backwards and through the walls of the houses, we’re
fine.’

Striker frowned. He couldn’t help the concern.

‘We have to be perfect here, Feleesh. Harry and Koda might chalk up our first meeting in the yards to a fluke, but one more
lucky
meet like that and they’ll know we’re
tracking them. We need to maintain some distance until we figure out some of the other areas they’ve been searching. Then we can run the addresses and look for some connections.’

‘Fine, fine.’

Felicia slowed down another ten K per hour, if only to appease him, and Striker watched the screen of the BirdDog tracker. They navigated deeper into the suburban area of Riley Park, and soon
found themselves on James Street. After three more blocks, the car icon on the tracking display stopped moving altogether and the speed read: 0 km/hr.

‘They’ve stopped,’ Striker said.

Felicia pulled over to the nearest kerb. ‘They on Quebec?’

‘Yeah. Right across from the softball centre.’

Her face took on the faraway gaze of deep thought. ‘What else is there?’

‘Just houses.’

‘Maybe they’re at a red light or a stop sign.’

Striker shook his head. ‘They’re mid-block. Just wait them out.’

They gave it another full minute. When the icon didn’t start moving again, Striker said, ‘I’m getting out and going on foot.’

He shouldered open the door and ran southward down the lane. Two blocks later, he slowed down and started peering in between the houses, one by one. Halfway down the lane, he caught sight of the
old undercover police cruiser.

The Crown Vic was parked in front of a small house. The place looked old, was square in shape and covered with water-stained stucco. It had probably been built back in the late 30s or early 40s.
Out front, the foliage was out of control. The lawn looked like it hadn’t been mowed in years, and the garden was nothing but weed and crabgrass. Standing in the small alcove were Harry and
Koda. They were talking to a thin brunette with a narrow face.

Striker looked her over. The woman’s hair looked unnaturally black, like a bad home-dye job. She was wearing a red-and-white checked apron which she kept absently smoothing out, and there
was a small boy clutching her side.

He was maybe four years old.

Harry and Koda asked the woman several questions, and all the while a nervous expression lingered on the woman’s face. Several times, her eyes flitted to the long fresh wound running down
the centre of Koda’s face and forehead, and at one point the boy pointed at it. She quickly yanked his hand away and gave him a reprimand, before looking back with an expression of
embarrassment.

After a long moment, the two men said goodbye and returned to their vehicle. Koda was raving about something while Harry just looked straight ahead, his face communicating nothing.

Striker watched them talk heatedly in the cab, then drive down the road until they were out of sight. When he was sure they were long gone, he turned his attention back to the house.

The woman was still standing in the doorway, looking down the road where they had gone. That nervous, embarrassed look still covered her face. Seconds later, she scooped up her little boy and
carried him inside the house.

Striker wrote the address down in his notebook, then added: ‘mother and son (4 years old)’. He put the pen away and his cell went off. He answered.

‘They’re moving again,’ Felicia said.

‘Run this address: 5311 Quebec Street. See what comes up.’

‘Hold on . . .’ Striker heard her typing. ‘Okay, got it. Let’s see here . . . nothing in PRIME, but the Motor Vehicle Branch has a listing there for a woman named Theresa
Jameson. Should be about one hundred and seventy centimetres and fifty-one kilos. Brown hair, blue eyes. No criminal record whatsoever.’

Striker listened to the description. It matched the woman from the doorway.

‘Hair’s a bit off,’ he said. ‘But it looks dyed. Just hold tight for now. I’m gonna check her out.’

‘Be fast – I don’t want to lose them.’

Striker crossed the street and marched up the sidewalk. The closer he got to the house, the more run-down the lot appeared. Weeds had pushed through the cracks in the concrete walkway, and thick
tree roots could be seen burrowing into the house’s foundation – a major structural problem. Add in the water damage to the exterior walls and the place was a rebuild at best.

Striker walked up the front steps and knocked. The moment the door opened, the fresh smell of baked muffins filled the air. Bran, for sure. Apple too. The woman who answered the door was the
same one he’d seen moments earlier talking to Harry and Koda, only now she was holding a bowl of white icing.

‘Theresa Jameson?’ Striker asked.

‘Yes.’

Striker pulled out his badge and offered her a smile. ‘Detective Striker, Vancouver Police Department.’

‘I just spoke to two cops, not a minute ago.’

Striker put the badge away. ‘Oh, I’m sorry, I didn’t realize we’d already been by to talk to you.’

‘Yes, you just missed them.’

Striker made something up. ‘Were they here on the mischief call?’

The woman looked confused. ‘Mischief? Uh, I’m not sure. They were more concerned about who lived here now, and how long me and the kids have been living here.’

‘Oh,’ Striker said. ‘Did they take a written statement?’

‘No.’

He sighed onerously. ‘That figures. No problem though. I’ll just make some quick notes and put in a page for you – save you the hassle later on. What exactly did you tell
them?’

The woman transferred the bowl of icing to her other arm. ‘Uh, just that we’d been living here almost three years now, and that no one rented any rooms from us.’ She frowned as
she spoke. ‘Then they started asking me if I had any
gang
connections. Or if any of my kids did. It kind of scared me, to be honest with you.’

‘Did they mention anything specific?’

‘I don’t understand.’

‘Any gang names? Any surnames?’

She shook her head. ‘No, no. They didn’t.’

When the young boy appeared at her side again, he looked up at Striker and clutched at his mother’s apron. Theresa Jameson put the mixing bowl down on a small table just inside the doorway
and scooped up the boy, cradling him in her arms. As she did so, she met Striker’s stare, and suddenly she looked smaller and more diminutive than before.

Scared.

‘Should I . . . should I be worried here, Detective?’ she asked.

Striker offered a warm smile.

‘Only at your gardener costs.’

Sixty-Five

‘We need to learn the history of that house and the people that live there,’ Striker said when Felicia picked him up again on Quebec Street. ‘There’s a
reason Harry and Koda stopped there, and it looks gang-related.’

‘Just buckle up,’ she said. ‘They’re making ground on us.’

She hammered the gas.

They continued following Harry and Koda with the BirdDog tracker and several kilometres later caught up to them. Once again, the target vehicle stopped, though this time at the White Spot
restaurant on Main Street. Striker was not surprised. The White Spot was a cop favourite; it had a central location and none of the cooks there would spit in your food.

‘They’re gonna be a while,’ Striker said. ‘Let’s head for the Gang Crime Unit, see what they have on this Sergeant-at-Arms biker we keep reading about –
Sleeves.’

Felicia shifted irritably. ‘We should stay and watch these guys – what if they leave?’

Striker waved a hand dismissively. ‘We should head to GCU.’

A cross look took over Felicia’s face. ‘Don’t do that to me.’

‘Do what?’

‘Wave your hand like my opinion doesn’t matter.’ She shook her head. ‘Sometimes you can be so damn . . .
condescending
.’

Striker looked back, surprised. Once again he’d managed to piss off Felicia without even trying. It was a bad habit of his, he knew, taking the lead and giving orders rather than working
in tandem. And all too often he came across as bossy, even though he didn’t mean to. He tried to be fair, always. But ultimately, the niceties didn’t matter. He was the lead
investigator of their partnership and the most senior detective of the unit. And that meant one thing:

All the glory, all the blame.

He tried to smooth things out.

‘Look, all I’m saying is I know Harry. Personally. He’ll take an hour and a half to eat his lunch. He always does. Besides, the BirdDog will tell us if they leave. If it goes
off, we’ll turn around. We can always catch up to them if we need to.’

When the look of irritation fell from Felicia’s face, Striker softened his voice and spoke again.

‘The thing is, every minute counts right now, Feleesh. And I just don’t want us wasting ninety of them watching Harry and Koda stuff their faces. Besides, you just know Koda’s
gonna get food in his goatee – who wants to see that?’

Felicia let out a small laugh, then nodded, if only to appease him.

‘Fine, Jacob. GCU it is.’

Striker felt relieved. To do otherwise would have driven him nuts. As far as he was concerned, the Gang Crime Unit was not only their next best bet, it was a critical part of the investigation.
The GCU had their own offline-database, which was unavailable to other units. They would definitely have hidden files on the Satan’s Prowlers and – if they were lucky enough –
this Sergeant-at-Arms, Sleeves.

Striker and Felicia headed for the Bunker.

Like most of the Special Operations squads, the Gang Crime Unit was located in the Bunker, an old warehouse in District 3. And like the primary headquarters at 312 Main Street,
the building was a giant concrete block that was old, outdated, and slowly falling into ruin. The only part of the building that wasn’t outdated was the new model security system; cameras
stuck out against the crumbling walls of the facility like shiny quarters on a grey sidewalk.

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