Past Crimes

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Past Crimes Page 9

by Glen Erik Hamilton


  “What’s it about?” Granddad said. Not angry, not in a hurry. Cool.

  “This is your truck?” said Officer Youngs. Dumb question—they must have seen the registration. Maybe he was required to ask, like a cop thing.

  “I don’t think I have any unpaid tickets,” said Granddad. “And the tabs are up to date.”

  The cop who’d tried to put his hand on my shoulder came around in front of us. He was older than the other cops, and his head was shaved bald. The two of them stood a few feet apart, one on either side of Granddad.

  “Where were you earlier tonight, Mr. Shaw?” said Baldy.

  “With me,” I said. Granddad shot me a look. I closed my mouth.

  “And where was that?” said Baldy.

  “We were at the movies,” Granddad said, “and then we came here.”

  “Which theater?” said Youngs.

  “The Varsity,” Granddad said.

  Baldy smiled at me. “What’d you see?”

  I didn’t answer.

  “Forgot already?” he said.

  “Go ahead,” Granddad said to me.

  “Independence Day,” I told Baldy.

  “‘Welcome to Earth,’” he quoted. “Is this a special occasion?”

  Granddad turned away from him and pointed to where the woman cop was looking under the seats of the GMC. “What’s your cause? Because if you’re just pulling a random, I’ll leave the truck with you and call a cab.”

  The smile disappeared from Baldy’s face.

  “The Washington Mutual branch on Fortieth was robbed tonight, just before closing,” he said. “The robbers left the scene in a black pickup with a canopy.” He nodded at our truck. “One of the men matches your description.”

  “Was the other robber a ten-year-old kid?” Granddad said.

  “Did you see anybody you know at the theater?” Youngs said. “Anybody who can verify you were there?”

  “I’ve still some popcorn kernels in my teeth, if you’d like to look.”

  I wanted to scream. Don’t be idiots! He was with me. He’s not dumb enough to rob a stupid bank. And be seen, too, for Pete’s sake.

  “I think the boy should go back inside,” said Baldy.

  “No,” I said.

  “Yes,” Granddad said to me. “Go inside.”

  I didn’t move. I couldn’t leave him, out of my sight. Anything could happen.

  Granddad’s face darkened, and I could tell he was about to give me an order when the woman back at the truck said, “Hey,” very clearly. She had finished with the glove box and was looking up at the top of the cab. I could see a flap of tan fabric hanging where she’d torn the ceiling cover open.

  She stepped down from the cab. “Gun,” she said, and held up a pistol, fingers pinched around the trigger guard. Strips of duct tape dangled off the barrel and grip. It was a silver short-barreled automatic. I hadn’t seen it before. It wasn’t one of the guns Granddad let me shoot at tin cans out in the woods.

  Around us the cops tensed. The skinny cop standing next to Baldy slid his hand up to rest on his pistol.

  “Yours?” Officer Youngs said to Granddad.

  “Nope,” Granddad said.

  “It’s in your truck,” said another cop.

  Granddad shrugged. “Don’t know what to tell you.”

  “I bet,” said the woman cop, who had come up to join the group. She had brown hair in a bun and a square body and jaw. Strong-looking. “What the hell are you thinking, driving around with a gun hanging a foot above your kid’s head? It’s loaded.”

  Youngs leaned over for a closer look. “Serial numbers are ground off, too.” He drew his stun gun from his belt. Baldy had already taken a step back and was holding his riot baton by its side handle.

  Baldy pointed at the concrete in front of Granddad. “Sir, I’m going to need you to get down on the ground. Now.”

  It was crazy. They were crazy. Granddad and I were at the movies, and we could prove it if the cops would just calm down for a minute. We could call the theater right now. Surely someone would remember us buying popcorn or tickets or …

  The ticket stubs. Granddad had let me hang on to them. “Wait!” I said, and reached into my coat pocket.

  “Don’t move!” Youngs shouted. The skinny cop reached out and clutched me hard around the upper arm. Pain zapped all the way down to my fingertips. I hollered.

  Then the skinny cop was falling backward, Granddad’s fist rebounding off his face. Baldy stepped forward, and I cried out as his riot baton hit Granddad on the back of the knee. Granddad staggered sideways. Youngs’s big arm wrapped around me.

  Baldy swung again, the baton bouncing off the top of Granddad’s shoulder. Granddad fell. I screamed. Granddad curled into a ball as Baldy and the fourth cop kicked at him. The woman was yelling something. The kicks sounded like falling sandbags as they hit Granddad’s body.

  I thrashed and tried to bite the arm that was crushing my chest. Youngs squeezed harder. My vision went white.

  When the world came swimming back into focus, Granddad was facedown on the concrete. Not moving. Baldy was on top of him, one knee pressing between Granddad’s shoulders. Yellow plastic strips bound his wrists behind his back.

  We didn’t do anything, I tried to say. The air just wheezed through my throat. I pushed again at Youngs. The skinny cop was still out cold on the ground, his partner bending over him.

  “Don’t help or nothing,” Baldy said to the woman cop.

  Her face was red. “Go to hell,” she said. She stepped around Granddad and Baldy over to where Youngs was holding me up.

  She leaned down to look in my face. I tried to twist away, to keep my eyes on Granddad. He was moving a little, turning his head.

  “I’m over here,” I said. My voice louder now.

  “He’ll be okay,” the woman said to me. “Hey. Look at me.”

  I didn’t, but I stopped wrestling against Youngs.

  “He’ll be okay,” she repeated. “But he needs you to calm down. Can you do that?”

  Fuck you, lady. Even if you’re right, Fuck you.

  I nodded.

  “Good,” she said. Youngs relaxed his arm a little. When I stayed upright and didn’t bolt, he let me go, staying inches away.

  “We have to take your dad in,” the woman said. I didn’t correct her. “And we have to call someone for you. Is your mom somewhere we can reach her?”

  I shook my head. My face was wet, and I reached up quickly to wipe the tears off.

  “How about aunts or uncles?”

  “Just us,” I said.

  “Fuck it,” said Youngs. He was angry, I suddenly realized. His arm was scratched and dripping blood. Had I done that? “I’m calling CPS.”

  The woman nodded slowly. She reached out and brushed a drop of Youngs’s blood off my coat. “You hang with me,” she said. “While we go to the station.”

  Baldy and the fourth cop lifted Granddad to his feet. His forehead and chin were cut, and one of his eyes was puffed closed. There were dark red splotches all down his shirt.

  He tilted his head to the side, peering around until he found me.

  “S’okay,” Granddad said. Blood dribbled out of the side of his mouth. “S’nothin’.” Baldy and his partner half dragged him toward one of the police cruisers.

  As they loaded him into the back and started the car, the woman cop put her hand on my shoulder. I wanted to shrug it off. But instead I just watched as the cruiser pulled out of the lot. Granddad was a dark pillar in the backseat. The car went around the corner and out of sight, but I could still see the light of the red and blue flashers bouncing off the windows of the buildings on the block. I counted one, two, three, four, until the last glow faded.

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  THE THUNDER HURT, SO I figured it must be close. Each time it rumbled, there was a golden flash of lightning that lit up the sky and slowly faded until the next time. Part of me knew that was wrong, that the booming sound should follow the electri
city, and it bothered me. I could feel my eyes shut tight in frustration. Except that was wrong, too. If my eyes were closed, how could I see the lightning? I’d have to open them. But I didn’t want to.

  And then I was abruptly back, eyes open after all, staring up at the ceiling of the foyer. The front door was still ajar. I could feel a breeze across my face. The room was still dark, too, although the streetlamps outside gave the windows of the front room a yellowish glow.

  I was lying about ten feet from where Dono had fallen, I realized. Some of his dried blood might be under me right now.

  That thought was enough to get me moving. I sat up, very slowly.

  The pain had an epicenter somewhere over my left ear. I didn’t have to touch it to feel the knot already forming there. My hand bumped against something on the floor.

  It was Dono’s blackthorn shillelagh, which he kept in an umbrella stand by the door. I picked it up and looked at it. It was typical of Dono’s humor that he would keep an Irish stereotype like the club-shaped walking stick in the house. It was also typical of him that the knobbed end was filled with an extra half pound of lead shot, to create the kind of impact that had put out my lights so efficiently. A harder knock and it might have split my skull like a cantaloupe.

  Even as spacey as I was, it wasn’t difficult to piece together what had happened. Someone—a small man with a healthy amount of white curls, if I could trust what I’d only partially seen—had broken into the house. He had heard my drunken progress toward the door and availed himself of the shillelagh before hiding around the corner. When I walked in, the motherfucker had used my head for a piñata.

  I tried to listen over the slight ringing in my ears. Was he still inside the house? I didn’t think so. I was fairly certain he was hightailing it even as I was taking my first bounce off the floor. If he’d meant to hang around, he could’ve tied me up like a rodeo calf—or taken another swing with the stick to finish me off—and enjoyed all the time he wanted.

  I got to my feet with a lot of help from the wall. Carefully, I tottered to the pantry and opened up Dono’s hiding place at the back. I took out the nine-millimeter Browning. It was doubtful I could hit anything outside spitting distance right now, but the weight of it in my hand made me feel better.

  Back in the foyer, I saw that someone had been poking at Dono’s security system. The rectangular metal facing plate was lying on the floor, and the internal wires were pulled out and stripped in places.

  I stared at the alarm. It hadn’t been bypassed by being rewired. The intruder hadn’t needed to bypass it, because the alarm had remained off since Dono’s shooting. So why would he take it apart and strip the wires, just to leave it alone?

  I walked through it. The intruder had picked the dead-bolt lock on the front door—no easy task—and immediately opened up the alarm box inside, expecting to have to bypass it. And then he’d realized that the alarm was turned off, saving him the trouble.

  The wires were already stripped, because he’d stripped them before.

  Tonight wasn’t the first time the fucker had broken into the house.

  I moved slowly through each room. No other door or window had been breached. And nothing obvious had been taken. Maybe I’d stumbled in before he could do whatever he’d been here to do.

  In Dono’s bathroom I foraged through a drawer full of under-the-counter meds, a rainbow collection of safety-cap bottles and foil packets. The alcohol still in my system was probably dulling the worst of the headache, but it wouldn’t last. Codeine, Darvon, an unlabeled bottle of what looked like OxyContin. I chewed two tablets of codeine. Bitter taste, to match my mood. I grabbed a handful of packets and put them in my pocket for later.

  I went back downstairs to look at the security panel again.

  The guy had skills. Better than mine, maybe. Not just picking the front door lock. Whenever he’d first broken in and beaten Dono’s alarm system, he’d opened the box and played a few notes of Chopin on the wires before the allotted thirty seconds elapsed. That was Ph.D.-level breaking and entering.

  If the intruder had decided to pay a visit at two in the morning, then it was a good bet he also knew that Dono was out of commission. Sure as hell he had thought no one would be at home. I’d surprised him.

  Okay. Put myself in his shoes. I’m a professional burglar. I’m prepped with the tools I need, and I’m not expecting trouble. The target is the home of an old thief. What the hell could be in the place to make it worth the effort?

  Thieves attract thieves. Maybe the burglar knew about a score Dono had made, and he was looking for the take. Maybe he was even a partner of Dono’s on the job. Fair enough.

  But presumably he was also smart enough to guess that Dono wouldn’t leave a pile of money just lying around his house. I’m not breaking in on spec. I’m not tearing the place apart. I know what I’m after and where to find it.

  I turned all the lights on and took a harder look at each room. Nothing appeared out of place. The semi-organized clutter of an old bachelor’s home.

  I felt a little ridiculous. A half-drunk, half-concussed man looking for something unusual in a house he hadn’t occupied in years. The burglar might have been after something scribbled on a Post-it note, for Christ’s sake.

  Easing my way back down the hall to the taped-off front room, I paused to rest the side of my head against the cool doorframe.

  Keep at it, dummy, I thought of Dono saying. Better to seek and come up empty than wonder what you might have found around the next corner.

  Sometimes fortune smiles. Sometimes fate gives you a painful kick in the right direction.

  Without the leftover fingerprint dust, I wouldn’t have noticed it—Dono’s chair had been moved. There were darker square patches on the oak floor, clean of any white residue, where the front legs had been. Two inches from where they were now.

  I stepped around the tape and into the room, walking over to look at that corner. There was a tiny screw on the floor, resting in a groove between the hardwood planks. The ventilation grille on the wall had an empty hole where the screw belonged. When I bent down, I could see fresh scratches on the screwheads of the grille.

  Dono had always kept a small toolbox for light house jobs in the kitchen. I went into the kitchen and found it, came back and used a screwdriver to remove the ventilation grille.

  I leaned down and craned my neck to peer inside. About a foot from the opening, there was something taped to the top of the ventilation duct. It was compact and rectangular, with a dark gray plastic cover over most of its parts. A green wire led from the plastic box through a hole that had been drilled in the side of the duct.

  I pulled the little object out of the vent, tearing the wire and the tape loose. I sat on Dono’s chair and removed the plastic cover to examine the gadget more closely. It had a SIM card and electronics and keypad taken from a basic cellular phone, all soldered to a plastic housing and connected to the tiny horn shape of an expensive-looking receiver.

  It was a bug.

  And a reasonably good one, from what I could tell. I had seen a few hidden listening devices in the military. Those were mass-manufactured gadgets. This one was handmade—and with care.

  I could guess how it worked. The receiver allowed it to be voice-activated, so that if someone spoke in the room, the microphone would register the sound and the cell-phone bits and pieces would call another phone somewhere, which would probably start recording.

  The attached battery wouldn’t last long. But there had been the green wire through the hole in the duct. The wire was probably tapping into the house power at the electrical outlet a few feet from the vent.

  Slick. By feeding off the house, the bug could operate 24/7. The voice activation might mean you’d lose a sentence or two at the other end, but that was the only real flaw. It might have been sitting in the vent for weeks, happily transmitting everything within its range.

  How long had it been there? And how many more of the things were in the house?


  Over the next half hour, I checked every outlet and vent in the house, from the basement to the bathrooms. I shoved furniture out of the way and nearly tore the vent grilles off the walls with my bare hands. I found two more of the bugs and evidence of others in the holes drilled in ventilation ducts in almost every room, including the basement.

  Dono had one landline phone in the house, on the wall in the kitchen. There were shiny scratches on the minuscule screwheads on the underside of it. Nothing unusual inside the phone. Not anymore.

  I sat down at the dining table and laid the three bugs out in a row. All the same parts. All handmade.

  The burglar hadn’t been here to take something of Dono’s. He had been here to get his toys back. I’d come along just as he was getting to the last of them.

  That fit with the lump on my skull. I’d spooked him, and after he’d dealt with me, he’d chosen a hasty retreat over finishing the job.

  And he’d left me alive.

  Dono had been left alive, too. Was that intentional?

  The burglar had planted the bugs. He had listened in on whatever Dono had said in the house, and to Dono’s phone calls, for some unknown number of days. When he’d heard enough, he had returned to retrieve his gadgets. And maybe he’d been surprised by Dono.

  My thoughts flew back over the last few days. What had I said in the house? There was the first morning, of course, with the whole circus of cops and paramedics and Guerin. I’d had my conversation with Addy Proctor. I’d talked to Ganz, and Hollis, although I was pretty sure I hadn’t said Hollis’s name. I’d talked to the hospital, checking on Dono.

  What the hell did Dono know that was worth the trouble of bugging his entire house?

  Dono. It finally hit me then, and I stood up, headache be damned. His shooting. His shooting would have been recorded by the bugs.

  And the guy who’d shot him.

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  DETECTIVE GUERIN KNOCKED BACK the last of his coffee. I sat across from him at the kitchen table, holding an ice pack behind my ear.

 

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