Where It Hurts (20 page)

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Authors: Reed Farrel Coleman

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #United States, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Hard-Boiled, #Private Investigators

BOOK: Where It Hurts
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41

(FRIDAY AFTERNOON)

I
didn’t know what to make of the things Zee hinted at before he sent me packing. You couldn’t just dismiss what he had to say because snitches were more than sponges. They did more than just hear things. They traded information to get information. So if he said what he said about Jimmy Regan, there had to be at least something there, though maybe something less than what he’d been told. But I knew beyond Zee, I knew that no one had forced Jimmy Regan’s name from between my lips. In spite of Bill Kilkenny’s assurances and Chief Regan’s stand on the heroin flooding into Suffolk County, I had doubts of my own. As much as I didn’t like hearing what Zee had implied and as much as I couldn’t bring myself to believe that a person or persons inside the SCPD might be implicated in two murders, there was no getting around the fact that someone inside the department was determined not to have TJ Delcamino’s murder looked at too carefully. It was one thing to warn me off. It was something else for Lou Carey and Milt Paxson not to do their jobs. Milt Paxson, okay, he was an incompetent schmuck. Not Lou Carey. Problem was that all I had for evidence was a lot of smoke and supposition. Which is to say I had nothing.

At least now I knew where to go and who to talk to. I wondered
if I would get any answers from him. I doubted it, but I had to try. So before I sat down in my car, I fished my cell out of my pocket and made to punch in Father Bill’s number. Before I could tap in even one digit, the phone buzzed in my hand. I recognized the number: the Paragon Hotel.

“Gus Murphy.”

“Gus, it is Felix.”

“Hey, Felix. You miss me already? I saw you an hour ago.”

“You are not so funny, Gus,” he said. “Remember you promised we would go for a Filipino meal together soon.”

“I remember. Is that why you called?”

“No. A man called for you.”

“Did he leave a name?”

“He did not, but he said that you would know him. That you met in the Macy’s parking lot.”

Pauly Martino.

“Did he leave a message?”

“A kind of a message.”

“What does that even mean, Felix?”

“It is very brief, two words, I think, but I am not certain I heard him clearly. He sounded quite agitated when we spoke.”

“Yeah, that guy’s always agitated. What’s the message?”

“It makes no sense. The message is PacSun.”

“PacSun? Like the store in the mall?”

“Yes, exactly, Gus. PacSun. It makes no sense.”

“Could he have said Paxson?”

“Yes, that is what he said, PacSun.”

“Okay,” I said, “thanks.”

“Gus, this makes sense to you?”

“All the sense in the world, Felix. All the sense in the world.”

I didn’t have time to deal with it at the moment, not that I was sure how I would deal with Milt Paxson when I found the time. And Pauly Martino’s admission that it was Paxson who put him onto me raised
more questions than it answered.
One thing at a time,
I thought.
One thing at a time.
First I had to go talk with Bill.

As he was the first time I’d come to his basement apartment in Massapequa, Bill was at the side of the house, smoking a cigarette and looking off into the distance. He didn’t notice my car, not at first, and I sat there watching him, wondering if what he’d done in Vietnam ever really left him. I didn’t doubt him for a second when he said he had gotten his faith back, finally. I wondered just how powerful his faith was as a hedge against the blackness. Or was it a topical salve, something to apply to the wound to bring relief, to bring a little bit of light into the void? Was there ever an escape from your past? I knew I was wondering about these things in terms of Bill, though my pain and grief were as much in question as Bill’s nightmare experiences in Vietnam. All those silly analogies about unscrambling eggs and unringing bells crossed my mind. And I thought, did I really want to forget? If all the grief and pain could vanish, but it meant truly forgetting, would I make that bargain?

Of course, there are no such bargains to be made. No one to make them with. Not for me. Bill, I supposed, believed such things could happen. The Holy Trinity as dealmaker. I also supposed he felt he deserved his pain. That somehow, through some sin of his own or through the one he was born with, he had earned it. He finished his cigarette, and as he snuffed it out, his eyes refocused on the present. That’s when he noticed my car and waved me in.

He poured us glasses of red wine without bothering to ask.

“I knew you’d be back to talk,” he said, lifting his glass.
“Sláinte.”

“Sláinte.”

We clinked and drank.

“So far today my calories have all been of the liquid variety. Coffee and wine.”

“Is that complaint I hear in your voice? Would you like something to eat? I don’t have much in the way of food. I can scramble you up some eggs?”

I laughed.

“That’s me, Gus, a short-order comedian. You ever hear the one about the strip of bacon, the sausage, and the omelet that walked into the bar?”

“Sorry, Bill. When I was out in the car I was thinking about undoing the past.”

“I see, unscrambling the eggs, you mean?” he said with a sad smile.

“When you were out there smoking, were you remembering ’Nam?”

“Christ help me, I was. Forty plus years and eight thousand miles away, yet it’s never far from me.”

“If you could unsee what you saw, unhear what you heard—”

“Would I? What man wouldn’t? Surely, Gus, each of us has moments in our lives we would undo?”

“How about Jimmy Regan?”

He laughed, but not because he thought it was funny. “I believe I just gave you an answer to that. What man wouldn’t?”

“It’s an answer, but it’s pretty vague.”

“How did I know you wouldn’t be satisfied with our last talk?”

I shrugged. “Bill, I don’t want to believe Regan has any connection to all this violence, but I keep coming back around to him.”

“You’re wrong about this, Gus. I feel sure of it.”

“The other day when we spoke,” I said, taking a gulp of the wine, “you said Regan was no saint.”

“Nor are the two men in this room.”

I ignored that since his statement was true on its face. “When you said that about him, I thought you were talking about his drinking. Everyone in the department knows he used to have a problem with that and that he’s gotten it under control. But that’s not what you were talking about, was it, Bill?”

He finished the whole of his wine in a single swallow. He walked over to the sink of the tiny kitchen, poured himself some more, and gestured at me with the bottle.

“Sure, why not?” I walked over by him, letting him fill a third of
the glass before I waved him to stop. I looked down, once again taking note of Bill’s ugly black shoes, the shoes he wore when he still wore the collar.

“Jesus, Bill, why don’t you buy yourself a pair of running shoes or cross-trainers?”

He patted my jacket pocket where I had my gun stashed. “And why don’t you stop carrying that damned thing around with you?” He didn’t wait for an answer. “Because we are who we are. We all find comfort in odd things.”

“Comfort can be a kind of prison of its own.”

“There are any number of prisons, Gus. Some of our making and to our taste. Some not.”

“Fair enough,” I said, raising my glass to him, “but you haven’t answered my question about Regan.”

“You’re wrong about Jimmy, because I know the man.”

“Bill, you know a lot of things. I’ll give you that. You’re maybe the most intuitive person about human feelings I’ve ever met. Believe me, that’s saying something. You saved me, probably from killing myself. You helped save what was left of my family—”

“I sense a ‘but’ coming down the road here shortly.”

I obliged him. “But there’s something life and being on the job has taught me.”

“Care to share it with a broken-down ex-priest?”

“It’s impossible to really know somebody else.”

“And why is that, Gus?”

“Because we don’t even know ourselves. Sure, from day to day, inside the confines of our lives, we’re pretty good at predicting how we’ll react. But that’s not knowing yourself.”

He had no snappy comeback, no handy scripture quotation. Instead he sat down and sipped his wine. I knew he was thinking about it, that he had thought about this very subject many times before.

“There’s truth in what you say. To deny it would make me a liar or a fool. I know with some certainty that I’m not much for lying, but I
don’t suppose I will find out if I’m a fool until I’ve drawn my last breath.” Bill let a smile light up his gaunt face. “My, we’ve gone a bit far afield, haven’t we, though?”

I nodded.

“I’m sorry, Gus, but the things you want to know about Jimmy Regan . . . I cannot help you there.”

“Can’t or won’t?”

“Both, I suppose.”

I thought I understood. “Did you hear his confession?”

“For a few years there, I was his confessor, but I won’t rely solely on the sanctity of confession to deflect your questions. Jimmy and I are friends, much as I’d like to think you and I are friends. My friendship with Jimmy was forged like ours, Gus, in the midst of very personal crisis. And it is neither my place as a priest nor as a friend to share the details or the nature of that crisis. Though I will say to you that it was many years ago and I can’t see how it would have any bearing on what’s going on here.”

“Okay, Bill. I understand and I owe you far too much to press you on this. But can you answer me one question and then I’ll leave it be between us?”

“If I can.”

“This crisis, whatever it was, did it happen in the mid-1990s?”

He didn’t have to answer in words. The look on his face was answer enough.

42

(FRIDAY, LATE AFTERNOON)

D
usk was taking a sharp turn toward night as I swung left off the Southern State onto the northbound Sagtikos/Sunken Meadow Parkway. With schools out and people getting an early jump on holiday travel, traffic was sparse on both sides of the road. I was more than a little preoccupied by any number of things when I saw the flashing lights in my rearview mirror. I immediately looked at my speedometer. I was doing seventy, fifteen over the Sag speed limit, though by Long Island standards I was crawling.

I wasn’t really worried about getting a ticket. Cops, even retired ones, can usually escape that fate. No, the problem was that the Sag, like the Southern State and Northern State Parkways and unlike the Long Island Expressway, was patrolled by state troopers, not the SCPD. It was that territorial thing. State troopers weren’t particularly fond of local cops and resented the hell out of our contracts, so they took a strange delight in any opportunity to bust our balls, and traffic stops were perfect opportunities for just that.

There was a brief moment when I thought that maybe the lights weren’t for me. A very brief moment. When the unmarked Crown Vic zoomed up behind me, I knew it was game on. I pulled onto the
shoulder, my tires kicking up a cloud of dust. I saw the Crown Vic emerge out of the dust as it pulled to a stop directly behind me. I flicked on my interior lights and rolled down my window. I retrieved my license, registration, and union card. I put the documentation in my left hand and stuck my hands on the steering wheel and watched out my sideview mirror, waiting for the trooper’s inevitable approach. But the second the trooper shut off his Crown Vic’s in-grille-mounted red-and-blue flashing lights, I got the sense that something was wrong. I just didn’t know how wrong.

With those flashing lights off, we would be less conspicuous to passing cars. That was if passing cars would even notice us in the dying light. But it was only when the door of the Crown Vic opened and the man behind the wheel stepped out that I knew I might be in more serious trouble than just a little ball busting. The guy who got out of the unmarked Ford wasn’t in uniform. He wasn’t dressed in state trooper grays, nor did he have on a beige felt trooper hat. That didn’t mean anything by itself. The troopers had plainclothes personnel, too, but I had never seen one doing a traffic stop. And then there was the fact that he already had his weapon fully drawn. That wasn’t exactly doing it by the book. Look, traffic stops can be dangerous and there are times you have to have the attitude
proper procedure be damned
. The thing was, I couldn’t see how this was one of those times. I’d been speeding, sure, but there was nothing about my car or the way I’d been driving to call particular attention to myself or to mark me as dangerous. I was being set up.

Then I realized I had my old service weapon in the pocket of my leather jacket. Not in a holster as it should have been.
Fuck!
Easy enough to shoot me and claim I’d been reaching for it, but it was too late for me to ditch it or to yank my jacket off and throw it in the backseat. Any sudden movement I might make would only give the guy an excuse to fire. Easy enough to call it all a tragic accident. So easy I could hear the guy’s testimony in my head.
He jerked his right hand while I was approaching his vehicle, and when next I saw his hand, he had a weapon in it. What
choice did I have?
I had to keep absolutely still and wait for Slava to pull up. That was, if he was still behind me.

“Get out of the car,” the cop said, voice on edge, his gun no more than a foot or two from my head.

I kept my eyes straight ahead, making sure not to turn too rapidly. “No.”

He hadn’t expected that. “No?” his voice cracked.

“No.” I nodded at my left hand, lifted it slowly, offering him my license, reg, and union card. “You’ll see, I used to be on the job in Suffolk.”

He slapped the stuff out of my hand and onto the floor of the front seat.

“Get the fuck out of the car!”

“No,” I repeated, putting my left hand back on the steering wheel with my right. “You’re not a trooper, are you? I’m guessing you’re Suffolk County. Regan send you?”

Bang!
I didn’t see it coming, but I felt it. He hit me so hard in the temple with the butt of his Glock that I fell sideways onto the center console. My left ear was ringing like crazy and pain shot through my head and neck. I was stunned. There was a second there that I might have been completely out of it. While I was woozy, I thought I felt him reach into the car and reach into my jacket. I don’t know. I was so disoriented for a time that I thought I might’ve imagined it. When my lids flickered open, the vision in my left eye was blurred. Then I felt a hand around my jacket collar, yanking me upright.

“I’m not gonna ask you again, asshole. Get the fuck outta the car!”

I was rubber-legged, blood from where he’d hit me leaking into my eyes, stinging, but I did as I was told, making sure my hands stayed as far away from my jacket pockets as possible. If this prick was going to shoot me, he was going to have to summon up the nerve to do it on his own. I wasn’t going to help him.

“There’s a Glock in my right jacket pocket,” I said, standing on unsteady legs. “I’m still licensed to carry. You can check my—”

“Shut the fuck up and assume the position.”

Before I could react, he slammed my head against the roof of my car, almost daring me to make a move. Instead, I kept as calm as I could manage, placing my arms wide and my hands flat against the roof. I moved my legs back at an angle away from the car. As he used his foot to kick my legs further apart, another car pulled up onto the shoulder.

“Fuck!” I heard the cop whisper to himself.

I had mixed feelings about it. Sure, I was happy that this guy wouldn’t be able to execute me in cold blood, if that’s what he meant to do. But if it was Slava, and he had that Russian pistol on him, I realized things could get really ugly in a hurry. I didn’t turn my head fully around to look. Instead I took a peek under my right arm. It was Slava getting out of a ratty-looking old Honda Civic.

“Mr. Police, Mr. Police,” he was screaming, clutching at his chest. “I am having heart attack. I am not so good breathing. You are helping me, please. You are helping. I have calling already 9-1-1 and told them where am I, but you are helping.”

The cop was confused and he hesitated. If other cops were on the way, he couldn’t very well just shoot me in front of a potential witness. Or he would have to shoot us both. It was one thing if he’d been ordered to get rid of me, but shooting a civilian . . . that was something else entirely. Then Slava, as if to make the cop hesitate even longer, dropped to his knees and then collapsed completely to the ground.

“Help me! Help, Mr. Police. Help!” he screamed again.

“Aren’t you gonna help that man?” I said.

“No one asked you.”

Sirens wailed in the distance and were coming our way, but the cop was undeterred. He reached into my jacket pocket and removed my gun. He stuffed it in his pocket. Next he shut off my car and took the keys out of the ignition. He then handcuffed my hands through the steering wheel. That left me in a very awkward position, but it was better than being dead. With the sirens almost upon us, the cop finally went over to tend to Slava.

Half a minute later the area was lit up like the Rockefeller Center skating rink at Christmas, but I didn’t feel much like celebrating. Especially after the ambulance showed and one of the uniformed cops who responded to the scene finished frisking me.

“Look at this!” the uniform said, holding five small white paper packets in his palm. Each packet had a stamp of a crudely rendered dinosaur on it. Beneath the image of the dinosaur was the word “Raptor” in red ink.

The cop who pulled me over and who had since turned the care of Slava over to the EMTs clapped his hands together. “Yeah, Raptor, that’s the same heroin that’s been on the street, killing all these kids. We’ll have to add possession charges to reckless driving, assaulting an officer, and resisting arrest. Good work,” he told the uniform.

When the uniform went to his unit, the guy who pulled me over came very close to me and whispered in my ear, “You were warned, Murphy. You should’ve listened. Now it’s time to start praying.”

I didn’t bother saying anything to him, nor did I pray. Since John’s death, I had learned a lesson about wasting my time.

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