by P J Parrish
Be careful, Kincaid. You don’t know what’s going on here.
“Officer?”
Louis met Steele’s eyes. “I am not sure but I think the original file might contain something that could be misconstrued or —- ”
“Are you suggesting Chief Gibralter has a reason, other than his personal dislike of me, to withhold information?”
“Look, I don’t know —- ”
“What do you know?”
Louis shook his head. Man, this guy was a prick.
“You show your chief little respect, Officer Kincaid,” Steele said.
Louis stared at him. This wasn’t going right at all.
Steele started back and then turned to Louis. “You telling me about the Dollar Bay file and Cole Lacey is appreciated,” he said. “But if you have a problem with your chief, deal with it. Don’t use it to bullshit yourself into my good graces.
Louis flushed with embarrassment and anger.
Steele went inside.
Louis stood there, staring at the streetlights. They flickered on in the quickly darkening dusk. Now he had lost Steele, too. He went back in.
He glanced at the command desk. Two aides were there but Steele was gone, apparently leaving by the locker room back door. Louis looked over at Florence. She was staring at him oddly.
This was nuts. He was going nuts. He had to get out of here. He hurried into the locker room to change. He emerged and was halfway out the door when he heard Florence calling his name.
“Louis! Telephone!”
He paused, hand on the door. “Who is it?”
“A man. Wouldn’t tell me his name.”
Louis came back and picked up the phone.
“Yeah?”
“Hey, it’s Delp.”
Louis sank into his chair. “Look, man, I told you —- ”
“I know. I didn’t tell the old biddy who I was. Jesus, what’s with you?”
“What do you want?”
“I got what you asked for.”
Louis sat up straighter. “That was quick,” he said.
“Hey, I’m good. What can I say.”
“What did you find?”
“You tell me first what you’re looking for.”
“Just tell me.”
Louis waited, hearing papers being shuffled at Delp’s end. He glanced at Florence but she was busy with the dispatch mike.
“Okay, back in ’68, there was a drug scandal,” Delp said. “Seventeen Englewood cops were indicated for possession and conspiracy to sell drugs, extortion and bribery.”
Louis let out a soft breath. “He was dirty?”
“No. My buddy knew the guy working the cop shop then. He said Gibralter was squeaky clean. But the DA figured Gibralter knew something and pressured to him to testify with a grant of immunity. Gibralter refused.”
“What happened?”
“Gibralter went to jail for contempt. He got off the hook though. The DA got what he needed somewhere else.”
Louis pulled out a notebook but then decided not to write it down. Besides, it wasn’t damning; it was totally in character for Gibralter.
“That it?” Louis asked.
“No, one more thing. In 1973, Gibralter was involved in an incident on the force,” Delp said.
“Incident? What does that mean?”
“He was a sergeant, thirty at the time. Something happened when he was on patrol. Couldn’t find out what. Whatever it was, Gibralter was riding the desk for months afterward.”
Louis tapped the pencil on the desk. “Shot in the line of duty, maybe?”
“Could be. Engelwood’s a tough place. But here’s something interesting. Three weeks after Gibralter was taken off the street, three gang members went down on drug charges. Came out of nowhere and rumors had it the kids were railroaded by the cops.”
“Did it have something to do with Gibralter?”
“Don’t know.”
“Shit, man, what do you know?”
“I know that it’s been bricked over.”
“What?”
“They ain’t talking about it, Kincaid. Not even ten years later.”
“Is that why he left Chicago?” Louis asked quietly.
“Doubt it. He made captain soon after the gang thing but never rode patrol again. He came here about a year later.”
Louis rubbed the bridge of his nose.
“You still there, Kincaid?”
“Yeah. Is that it?”
“Yup.”
“Okay. Listen, thanks.”
“If you want to thank me, get me an interview with Steele.”
“Can’t help you there. He runs his own show.”
“Well, if anything breaks don’t forget me, okay?”
“I won’t.”
Louis hung up and sat back in his chair, his eyes going to Gibralter’s locked office door. The contempt charge was understandable given Gibralter’s code of conduct. But the gang thing was less clear. It would have taken something pretty damn drastic to keep a cop like Gibralter off the street. And something told him that Delp was wrong, that whatever it was it had driven Gibralter out of Chicago.
“Louis?”
He looked up at Florence.
“I forgot to tell you. The chief called for you.”
“When?”
“When you were outside.”
He stared at her but could read nothing in her bland face.
“Did he say what he wanted?” Louis asked.
“No. Just wanted to know where you were.”
“What did you tell him?”
“That you stepped out.” She blinked. “Was that okay?”
He nodded. He realized he was sitting there in his University of Michigan Jacket. And that he was sweating.
Rising quickly, he unlocked his desk drawer and pulled out the envelope of photographs Delp had given him. For a second, he couldn’t find his copy of the raid file and in his paranoia wondered if Gibralter had found it. With relief, he found it stuffed under some papers. Without a word or a look back at Florence, he left.
CHAPTER 32
The contents of the raid file were spread out on the bed. Louis rubbed his face, trying not to give in to his fatigue and disappointment.
It was here. It had to be. He just couldn’t see it. Something had gone wrong that night and there was something in this file about it that Gibralter did not want Steele to see.
What had happened? And who was involved? His gut was telling him it was Jesse. The guy had lost it just busting a harmless hippie. Had he done something at the cabin that Gibralter felt compelled to cover up?
Louis slid off the bed and went into the darkened kitchen, got another Dr Pepper and returned to the bedroom. He popped the top and took a long drink, his eyes scanning the papers and photos.
Jesse’s report was on top, the last thing he had been reading. He stared at it, taking another drink then froze, the can at his lips.
It was typed.
Louis picked it up. He hadn’t noticed it before. Dale had said Jesse couldn’t type, that he was always allowed to write out his reports. Louis himself had seen it, Jesse’s distinctively heavy, right-slanted scrawl. He had seen it on the hippie report, on Mrs. Jaspers’s reindeer report and Stephanie Pryce’s statement.
Setting the soda can down, Louis read Jesse’s report again. Something about it didn’t ring true. The wording, the grammar, the phrasing were wrong. Jesse was an emotional man, someone who couldn’t stifle his feelings even when writing a routine report. And what had Dale said about Jesse being upset after the raid? This report wasn’t written by someone emotional, with a kid’s blood fresh on his uniform. This was too perfect, too...cool.
Louis flipped to the end of the report. It was signed but with just “Jesse Harrison,” not with Jesse’s trademark triple-underlined signature and usual postscript: NO MORE THIS REPORT.
Louis pulled out Ollie’s report. The wording was virtually identical to that in Gibralter’s and Jesse’s reports. L
ovejoy’s version was the same. Louis shook his head. Every cop had his own way of writing reports. What were the chances that four cops would have the same style?
He rummaged for Pryce’s report. It was typed like the others. But as Louis read, he became aware that its phrasing and grammar were different with small idiosyncrasies not obvious in the others. He set it aside and dug out the diagram showing the positions of the officers surrounding the cabin. Jesse, Ollie and Lovejoy all ended up in the backyard with Gibralter. But Pryce had been ordered to maintain his position in front. There was no way he could have seen what happened in the backyard.
All right, so Gibralter might have been the author of all the reports except Pryce’s. But would Steele even notice that? There had to be something else.
Louis turned to the crime-scene photos, stopping finally with Johnny Lacey’s shotgun-shattered face. It was a Xerox but it clearly showed the hole from the shotgun blast. It was centered on Johnny’s left cheekbone, maybe about the diameter of a half-dollar, spreading outward, taking out his left eye and brow. It was also obvious that the shotgun had been fired at very close range, at a slightly upward angle.
There was another mark, this one barely noticeable, on the right cheek. But was it just a shadow created by the copy machine?
He pulled out a separate manila envelope, the one Delp had given him. Sifting through the postmortem photographs, he found a close-up of Johnny Lacey’s face. It showed the second mark clearly and it wasn’t a shadow. It was a rectangular bruise, about an inch-and-a-half long with two short, parallel lines.
Louis fished through the papers on the bed and found the autopsy report, looking for an explanation for the bruise. There was nothing.
He picked up the autopsy photo again, staring at the strange bruise. Its shape was too perfect, too regular, too familiar. Suddenly, he knew what had caused it. It was from the cylinder of a handgun.
His mouth went dry as he slowly realized what had happened. Jesse had beaten Johnny Lacey to death. Jesse could not have been holding a shotgun in his right hand, as the reports said, because he had been holding his handgun, the gun he used to beat Johnny to death. The shotgun blast had come later, after Johnny Lacey was dead. Someone had blasted off Johnny Lacey’s face in an attempt to hide evidence of the beating.
Louis picked up the autopsy report again. The cause of death was listed only as “accidental shotgun wound to the left orbital area.” There was no mention of any other injuries. Louis stared at the name on the form. Merlin Boggs, M.D.
Suddenly, the pieces were falling into place. This had to be what Gibralter did not want Steele to see. Jesse had beat Johnny Lacey to death and they had covered it up. They got a gullible local doctor to do the postmortem and a small-town reporter to take the crime-scene photos. They kept it in the family, led by Gibralter who believed that loyalty was more important than anything, even the life of a teenage kid.
“Goddammit,” Louis said softly.
He stared at the papers spread over his bed. What was he going to do now? Turn it over to Steele? If this could be proven, Jesse and Gibralter could end up facing conspiracy or even manslaughter charges. But did he really have enough evidence?
He slowly shook his head. After what happened today he had no credibility with Steele. If he went to him with only a photograph and his suspicions Steele would kiss him off for good. He needed hardcore proof.
He started to gather up the papers and photographs off the bed but then stopped. Someone was knocking on the door.
Jesse? God, he couldn’t look him in the eye, not now.
The knock came again. Louis went to the front door.
“Louis?”
It was Zoe.
“Louis? Are you there?”
He waited, hoping she would leave. He hadn’t seen her since the night Ollie was murdered. He had awakened sometime before dawn, alone on the sofa, and they hadn’t spoken since. Several times he had dialed Gibralter’s home only to hang up when he heard her answer.
“Louis?”
He flipped on the porch light and opened the door. She stood, looking up at him. There were things he wanted to say, questions he needed answered. Instead, he turned away, going into the living room.
“It’s freezing in here,” she said softly, pulling off her jacket and red wool hat.
Louis knelt to toss two logs in the grate. It wasn’t until the fire was burning that he finally turned to face her.
“Louis, what’s the matter?” she asked. When he said nothing, she came to him, her hand raised to touch his face. He jerked back.
“Don’t,” he said. He moved away, going into the bar.
“Louis, what is the matter?” she asked again.
“You lied to me,” he said.
She didn’t move. When she didn’t say anything, he turned and faced her. “You lied to me,” he repeated.
She stared at him then slowly her face crumpled. She went to the sofa, sitting on its edge.
“You’re married,” he said. “When were you going to tell me that?”
“Tonight. I...Louis, please —- ”
“Right.”
She looked away, holding her arms.
“He’s my chief, for crissake!” Louis said.
She shut her eyes, as if trying not to cry, and he turned away in anger. “How could you lie to me?” he demanded.
“I didn’t lie.”
He came forward to stand in front of her. “You lied about him, Zoe. Shit, that isn’t even your name. You lied about who you are, for God’s sake.”
Her eyes glistened up at him. She didn’t say it but he saw it there in her eyes. So did you.
“Why?” he asked.
“I don’t know,” she said, her voice quavering.
“You know.”
She met his eyes. “I can give you all the clichés, Louis. I can say my marriage was over years ago. I can say he’s changed, I changed. Is that what you want to hear?”
“I don’t know what I want,” he said, shaking his head.
“This isn’t easy,” she said sharply.
Her anger was unexpected. It deflated his own somehow. He moved to the window, not wanting to look at her. “Do you love him?” he asked.
“I don’t know. I did. I don’t know anymore.”
He leaned his forehead against the cold glass.
“I’m not happy. I haven’t been for a long time. Part of it is this place but it’s more, it’s...” Her voice trailed off, breaking slightly.
He didn’t want to hear it. An affair, a neglected wife, it was a damn cliché and he didn’t want to be part of it.
“All right, so the marriage failed,” he said. “Lots of marriages fail. But I don’t get it. The fake name, the cabin. What the hell was that? Do you take other guys there too?
“No. You’re the only one.” She took a deep breath and let it out slowly. “He got me the cabin about two years ago. I wanted to have a place to go. He had work and I wanted something of my own. I started painting there, something I hadn’t done in ten years. I found two kittens living in the crawl space so I kept them there, because Brian hates cats.”
Louis thought of the sensual cabin, with its draperies, music, pillows, candles and incense. He couldn’t see Gibralter tolerating any of it.
“What about your name?”
“I read it in a novel once and I always wanted to go to France. I never used it before that night by the lake when I saw you. It just...came out.”
Her voice had trailed off to a whisper. “I always hated the name Jean. I never felt like a Jean.”
Louis came back to stand near the fireplace, looking down at her. “Why didn’t you tell me you were married?” he asked.
“Would it have made a difference?”
“Yes.”
She stared at him. “It must be comforting to have such a reliable moral compass.”
He couldn’t tell if she meant it to be sarcastic. “You could have left him,” he said.
“W
e’ve been together since I was nineteen. We had...” She paused. “He needed me.”
“I can’t see him needing anyone,” Louis said.
“He wasn’t always like this,” she said. “In the beginning, back in Chicago, it was different.”
Louis looked away. He didn’t want to hear about the joys of Brian Gibralter’s young married life. She saw Louis’s reaction but went on.
“When Brian was a rookie, he used to come home at night so excited about the job, so sure he was doing good,” she said, her eyes going to the fire. “But he got transferred to Englewood and things changed. He started talking about the bad things, the junkies, the thirteen-year-old hookers, the man who pulled a knife on him after he pulled him over for a broken tail light.” She paused. “One night, I found him sitting at the kitchen table in the dark, still in his jacket. I finally got him to tell me what it was. He had arrested a man who had bashed in the head of his girlfriend’s baby with a baseball bat because the baby wet his pants.”
Louis didn’t respond.
“He stopped talking to me about work after that. He said I couldn’t understand,” she said.
Louis thought of the night Ollie died. Even as she had held him while he cried, he had thought the same thing.
“I didn’t fit in with the other wives and I was very lonely,” she said. “I started taking the el downtown for classes at the Art Institute but Brian made me stop. He said I’d get raped or mugged.”
He heard her voice break. Her face was streaked with tears.
“It got worse,” she said. “He yelled at me for not locking the door when I went down to the laundry room. He yelled at me for not ironing the crease sharp enough in his uniform pants.”
“You should have left him,” he said.
She looked at Louis. “I wanted to but I had no way to support myself, no job. I didn’t even have a high school diploma.” She gave a small laugh. “I needed him.”
“I thought you had a sister,” Louis said.
She nodded. “She told me I could come stay with her. I even had a suitcase packed but then something happened and I couldn’t leave.”