by Scott Sigler
John was still a bit jealous that Pookie’s career had not only continued, but had skyrocketed with another partner. John couldn’t bring himself to be mad at Bryan Clauser, however — the Terminator had saved his life.
“Bryan’s at his apartment,” Pookie said. “He isn’t feeling so hot.”
“Sick? Bryan?”
Pookie shrugged. “Yeah, I guess there’s a first time for everything.”
“Well, then stay away from me,” John said. “I know you guys were probably in the back of that Buick swapping spit and rubbing tummies.”
“Kissing dudes is my business and business is good. Now if you’re done fencing with your rapier wit, I need your help with this.”
“Is it from that body on Meacham this morning?”
Pookie nodded, looked for a place to set down his stack of folders. John cleared out a space. Pookie set them down, opened the top folder and handed John several printed crime-scene photos.
John took them, made a show of waving them so the paper made noise. “Pooks, you know you can email this shit, right?”
“Electrons are the work of the devil,” Pookie said. “We found that graffiti at the murder scene.”
“What makes you think it’s related to the murder?”
“It was drawn in the vic’s blood. So was this.”
Pookie handed over another photo showing the words long live the king scrawled in dripping letters on a brick wall.
John’s eyebrows rose.
“Yeah, that’ll do it.”
“You recognize that symbol?”
John stared at it, waiting for a flicker of recognition. A round eye inside a triangle, which itself was inside a circle. Didn’t ring any bells.
John’s main role with the Gang Task Force was to track gang memberships and relationships. That meant database work, analyzing online activity such as email and social media interactions, and that staple of gang communication — graffiti. Graffiti painted a picture of which gangs controlled various parts of the city. What looked like random vandalism was often a complex code of who ran the streets, who was marked for death and who would do the killing.
Computer work was about all John was good for, these days. Six years ago, he’d caught a bullet in his belly, then lay there, bleeding out, while the sniper — a dirty cop named Blake Johansson — kept him pinned down and stopped anyone from reaching him. The incident had left John with a blinding fear that made even the daily drive to work a challenge. Going out and being an actual cop? Forget it.
But if sitting behind a computer was the only way he could contribute, he would do it better than anyone else. Everyone in the department played a role. John knew his and accepted it.
When you’re a coward, you do what you can.
John shook his head. “I’ve never seen this symbol before. You got pictures of the victim?”
Pookie pulled out more printouts and handed them over. John had seen a lot of damage in his career, but this was among the worst. Such savagery. The colors of the victim’s jacket clicked home.
“He was in Boys Company,” John said.
“That a gang?”
John nodded. “Small potatoes. Just kids. Runs mostly out of Galileo High in the Marina.”
“They at war with anyone?”
“Not that I know of. Like I said, they’re small potatoes. A little B and E, some fighting, maybe a little dealing in the school. More like a club than a gang. If BoyCo went up against a serious outfit like MS13, they’d get slaughtered.”
Pookie pointed to the picture. “That sort of fits my definition of slaughter.”
“Good point. I’ll start digging, but I’m sure no one is at war with BoyCo.”
“How do you know he’s from BoyCo?”
“The jacket,” John said. “Boston College. Initials are B and C, same as Boys Company. That’s how they show their colors.”
“So why not the Boston Celtics? That’s BC.”
“Green and black are the colors of the Latin Cobras,” John said. “Anyone wearing Celtics gear is going to get fucked up by the Cobras, or any of the gangs that are fighting with the Cobras. Pretty much every gang has some sports team affiliation, either with colors or initials.”
“Go team,” Pookie said. “Dare I ask what happens if I wear the colors of my beloved Chicago Bears?”
“You get beat up by Raiders fans. That’s the worst of it, though. I don’t think any gangs use the Bears. Kids got to be real careful of what color clothes they wear to school these days — the wrong colors in the wrong spot can get you killed.”
Pookie nodded absently as he thought. “If it’s not another gang, what about someone just fighting back? Maybe BoyCo roughed up the wrong kid?”
“Possible, but not likely,” John said. “These lower-tier gangs are usually smart enough to only pick on the weak. They target kids who aren’t in a gang or related to gang members, who aren’t on the wrestling team or football team, anything like that.”
“And long live the king? Could that be some gangsta’s street name?”
John shrugged. “Maybe, but that doesn’t ring any bells, either. We could have a new player in the mix. Let’s take a look at the BoyCo file.”
John sat at his computer and called up his database. The file had hundreds of tabs, one for each of the gangs that ran through the Bay Area. Some, like MS13 or the Norteños, were seriously bad news, connected on a national and even international basis. Other outfits were local but just as dangerous, like Westmob and Big Block in Hunters Point; 14K Triad and Wah Ching in Chinatown; Jackson Street Boys all over the city; or Knock Out Posse and Eddy Rock in the Western Addition.
John clicked on the tab for BoyCo. A file appeared with four photos.
Pookie looked over his shoulder. “Just four kids?”
“That we know of. Oscar Woody, Jay Parlar, Issac Moses and the leader, Alex Panos.”
“Four kids is a gang?”
John shrugged. “Like I said, more of a club of bullies, really. Barely even on our radar.”
Pookie pulled out another photo. A particularly gruesome shot, it showed Oscar Woody’s full body: arm ripped off, stomach torn open, face beaten so badly it barely looked human.
“This isn’t just some mugging,” Pookie said. “The mutilation, the writing on the wall — someone is sending a message. Sure it couldn’t be MS13? Don’t they cut off limbs?”
“And hands and heads,” John said. “But MS13 uses machetes. Look at that kid’s body, Pooks. He wasn’t cut apart, he was torn apart.”
“Could it be a new gang? What about that blood-graffiti symbol?”
“That’s where we’ll start. Let’s get this scanned in and see what the computer says.”
John scanned in both the photos, then opened them up in his computer and accessed the Regional Information Sharing System. RISS coordinated nationwide gang data, including suspects, organizations and weapons as well as visual imagery of gang members, gang symbols and gang graffiti.
“Huh,” Pookie said. “And I thought the Internet was for porn.”
“Oh no,” John said. “We don’t look at porn down here, Pooks. There are filters and then if you’re caught—”
“Kidding,” Pookie said. “Jesus, man, you haven’t changed a bit.”
John sighed. Even when they’d been partners, he only caught about half of Pookie’s humor. “Anyway, the RISS software identifies key points much like a fingerprint, marking the degree of curves, the thickness and relative length of lines. It breaks down individual segments of the symbols into a hundred minisymbols. Then I feed it into the database and it searches for matches, partial or full.”
“Does this crap really work?”
John nodded. “Oh, hell yeah. It’s amazing. It can even build a graphic profile on individual artists so accurate we can tell the genuine artist from an imitator.”
The computer beeped.
John opened a window to read the results. “Huh. Nothing in San Francisco.”
“Anywhere else?”
John scanned the results. “Looks like one hit in New York City a couple of decades ago. A serial killer. Looks like he murdered four women, then killed himself. That’s all it says. I’m sure there’s more info, but we’d have to reach out to the NYPD to get it.”
As John read the lines of information, he saw something strange. “This is weird.”
“What is?”
“Well, I see incoming links on these symbols from that old case in New York, but what those links connect to was deleted from our system. Oh, look at this! Here’s a local request. It’s old, must have been the early days of the SFPD’s efforts to computerize. Let’s see … twenty-nine years ago. But there’s no images associated with it, so we can’t know if the request was answered.”
Pookie absently scratched at his jaw. “Why would someone delete info on this symbol?”
“Probably a mistake,” John said. “You have thousands of people accessing this stuff. Systems and software conflict, databases purge, things can get accidentally erased.”
“That local request,” Pookie said, “Can you tell me who made it?”
John looked. He followed database links to a dead end. “No, those fields aren’t there. The information is too old. Probably migrated from sytem to sytem to system as the department continued to modernize. I can keep looking, though. Give me a couple of days, I’ll see what I can find.”
Pookie sighed. He gathered his papers and pictures, stuffing them once again into the abused manila folder. “While you’re at it, can you get the details on the New York City case?”
“Sure thing.”
“One more favor,” Pookie said. “Keep all your searching on the down-low. Polyester Rich has what might be a similar case, and I want them both. Don’t need him hearing about you looking into it.”
Pookie’s rivalry with Rich Verde was still alive and well, it seemed. “Not a problem, Pooks.”
Pookie opened the door to leave, then turned, a grin on his face.
“Come on,” he said. “Do it for me just once.”
John laughed, then affected an evil smile. He held his hands in front of him like claws, touching the tips of his left fingers to the tips of his right.
“Excellent, Smithers,” John said. “Exxxxcellent.”
Pookie nodded sagely, as if John had just said the most wise words in all the world. “Mister Burns should have been black.”
“He is. The networks just decolorize him because America fears a rich black man.”
Pookie nodded, then walked out the door, leaving John to look at the symbols scanned into his computer.
Pookie’s Flashback
It had been almost two decades since Pookie Chang’s high school graduation, and yet a principal’s office still gave him the creeps.
Pookie had given Bryan a few hours to himself. That hadn’t seemed to help much — when Pookie picked Bryan up, the man still looked scattered, a little freaked out and sick as a dog. At least Bryan hadn’t fled. Maybe it would have been easier if he had. That would have forced Pookie’s hand, saved him from deciding if he should either trust Bryan or arrest him.
You just couldn’t dream crime-scene details like that. Could someone be setting Bryan up? Maybe, but how would that work? Was someone hypnotizing him? Maybe drugging him, then sneaking into his apartment and whispering sweet nothings in his ear? Could this be some massively convoluted revenge plot from someone Bryan had put away?
Maybe, sure, or maybe Pookie could pull his head out of his ass and accept the obvious answer — that Bryan Clauser had gone out last night and butchered Oscar Woody.
No way. I’ve known that man for six years. NO WAY.
That thought echoed constantly through Pookie’s head, fighting for space against but he’s already killed FIVE people. The bottom line, however, was that Pookie owed Bryan Clauser his life. So did Black Mr. Burns. Therefore, Bryan got the benefit of the doubt. However unlikely, there could still be a valid reason why Bryan knew those crime-scene details. To find that answer, Pookie had to do his job — beginning with Kyle Souller, principal of Galileo High.
“Principal Souller, we need to know who Oscar Woody may have had a beef with.”
Souller had the tired look of a man who knew his entire career involved fighting a losing battle. His suit seemed to hang on him like a convict’s stripes.
Souller threaded his fingers together, rested the clasped hands on his desktop. “You think a student did this?” He didn’t say that with shock or disbelief, just a sense of resignation. “We have violence here, like any school, but this is on a different level.”
“Could be a student,” Pookie said. “A stronger possibility is a student hired someone to do it. We understand Oscar had incidents here?”
Souller let out a single, sad laugh. “Yeah, you could say that. We don’t have much of a gang problem at Galileo. That lets a pissant operation like BoyCo kind of rule the roost. They pick on a lot of kids.”
“Which kids?” Bryan said. “We need names.”
Souller sat back in his chair. “Inspector, I can’t just give you names of everyone BoyCo has crossed. I’m not going to subject those kids to police questioning when they’ve done nothing wrong.”
Bryan started to talk, but he winced before any words came out. He cleared his throat — painfully, judging by the expression on his face — then tried again. “Don’t give me that civil rights bullshit,” he said. “We need leads. We …”
His voice trailed off. He closed his eyes and leaned back. He rubbed his temples.
Pookie reached out and supportively squeezed Bryan’s shoulder. “You okay, man?”
Bryan slowly shook his head. “Yeah, I … got a headache. Is it hot in here?”
Souller pointed to his office door. “There’s a water fountain in the hall. Quite cold.”
Bryan nodded. “Yeah, that’ll help. Pooks, you mind?”
“I got this,” Pookie said.
Bryan stood and walked to the door. He moved slowly, swaying just a little bit. Maybe he had a split personality taking over. Maybe he was going out to tear off someone’s arm, poke out their eye, rip out their guts and then stuff them—
Pookie shook his head once, quickly, as if to chase away the thoughts.
Bryan shut the door behind him.
Pookie turned back to Principal Souller, who looked less than pleased.
“Civil rights bullshit?” Souller said. “You guys are subtle.”
Pookie shrugged. “Cut him some slack, man. Oscar’s body really shook him up.”
Souller sighed and nodded. “Yeah, I guess that would shake up anyone. But I can’t just give you a list of names.”
“Principal Souller, we have concerns that the other BoyCo members could be in trouble. Alex Panos, Issac Moses and Jay Parlar deserve our protection.”
Souller’s eyebrows rose. “You already know their names? Nice. Are you telling me that you really care about a bunch of bullies?”
“It’s my job,” Pookie said. He looked around the room. “And let’s just say I spent a significant amount of my high school years in an office that looked a lot like this.”
“As victim, or victimizer?”
“The latter,” Pookie said. “I know these kids are bad news, but they’re still kids. They can straighten out. I did. Oscar Woody will never have that chance. You know the students and the staff here better than we do. Anything you can do to save us time could matter.”
Souller nodded. “Okay. I’ll go through the records, see if anything comes up. I’ll talk to the teachers individually.”
Pookie stood and handed over his card. “Please call me if you find anything at all.”
They shook hands. Pookie walked out to find Bryan bent over the drinking fountain, water splashing against his face.
“Bri-Bri, you okay?”
Bryan stood, wiped the water from his face. “Yeah, that did the trick. I feel better. Ready to go talk to Oscar Woody’s parents?”r />
You’ve killed five human beings was what flashed through Pookie’s head.
“Sure thing” was what came out of his mouth.
Hair of the Dog
Robin lifted her head from the microscope.
That couldn’t be right. She must have mistakenly used a human hair.
She reached for the tray that contained the inch-long brown hairs she’d collected from the body and the blanket. With a tweezers, she carefully selected one that had been embedded in Oscar’s wound. She picked it up, held it close — yes, that was one of the animal hairs.
But it looked the same as her current sample.
She held them side by side: exactly the same.
She put the new one under the microscope. Just as she had done with the first sample, she started at low magnification to see the entire shape. The hair had a tapered end, as would be expected from animal fur. Ends of human hair were almost always cut, something that could easily be seen under a microscope, while most animal fur tapered to a point because the strands of fur wore down on their own.
At higher magnification, things got weird.
Hair or fur has three parts: the cortex, the cuticle and the medulla. Comparing it to a pencil, the cortex is the wood, the medulla is the lead and the thin coat of yellow paint is the cuticle.
The cuticle is a layer of cells that covers the shaft, like scales on a snake. The pattern of scales differs from species to species. Crownlike scales, called coronal, are common among rodents. Triangular spinous scales indicate cat hairs.
The sample Robin examined had imbricate, or flattened, scales.
Dog fur had imbricate scales, but those scales were thick sheets that wrapped all the way around. The scales on the sample from the blanket, however, were thinner, finer and tighter than would be found in dog fur.
This type of imbricate scales were found on human hair.
She checked a third strand, a fourth, then a fifth. All had fine scales, all had tapered ends.
Maybe the attacker had hair that grew very slowly. Maybe he rarely, if ever, had to get it cut. Maybe the strands were from a man with a receding hairline, his follicular growth slowed to a near standstill. Guys who were balding didn’t like trimming what little hair they had left.