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Third Rail

Page 1

by Rory Flynn




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  On the Pike

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25

  26

  27

  28

  29

  30

  31

  By the Harbor

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Copyright © 2014 by Rory Flynn

  All Rights Reserved

  For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.

  www.hmhco.com

  The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:

  Flynn, Rory, date.

  Third rail : an Eddy Harkness novel / by Rory Flynn.

  pages cm

  ISBN 978-0-544-22627-2

  1. Police—Fiction. 2. Designer drugs—Fiction. 3. Drug traffic—Fiction. 4. Boston (Mass.)—Fiction. I. Title.

  PS3556.I816T45 2014

  813'.54—dc23

  2013021744

  eISBN 978-0-544-23289-1

  v1.0614

  For Ann, Amelia, and Claire

  The forbidden holds a secret attraction.

  —Tacitus

  On the Pike

  WHEN THE FIRST HEADLIGHTS burn in the distance, Harkness shoves the wire cutters in his back pocket, climbs through the fresh hole in the chain-link fence, and scrambles down the gravel embankment. He pulls on a Red Sox jacket to hide his uniform and finds his place in the center of the road like a pitcher taking the mound—focused and ready for tonight’s game. His departmental counselor would see this late-night return to the scene of the incident as proof of risk-seeking tendencies. His brother George would just shake his head and tell him to get over it and move on. Thalia would tell him to have another drink. But they aren’t here. Only Officer Edward Harkness, formerly of the Boston Police Department, stands on the Turnpike, ready to see if a stranger in a car will kill him.

  The first contender appears, a white BMW that takes the curve at Kenmore Square and races toward Harkness. The roar grows louder and echoes from the cement walls of the Pike. At twenty yards, the headlights set his Red Sox disguise aglow.

  Harkness runs west toward the car. No dodging. Stay on the line. These are the rules of engagement tonight.

  The BMW hurtles closer and the driver hits the horn. Breath steaming in the cool night air, Harkness runs down the yellow line. The horn screams and the car swerves so close that Harkness could reach out and touch the doors as it flies past, its slipstream spinning Harkness to the ground. The driver lays on the horn, the note bending lower as the car speeds away.

  “One down,” Harkness whispers. He struggles to his feet, palms scraping in the grit, and turns to watch the red taillights smearing toward South Station.

  When Pauley Fitzgerald stood here exactly a year ago, the highway was crowded with Sox fans driving home. In the blurry security video, he leaps across the lanes, pivots sideways, ricochets from one lane to the next, and somersaults over moving cars. More than three million people had watched Turnpike Toreador the last time Harkness checked YouTube, staring in sick fascination as Pauley Fitz dropped, danced, and died. After it was all over, the Staties couldn’t even find his teeth.

  Harkness runs down the empty highway, the white eyes of new demons racing toward him.

  1

  AN HOUR AND THREE DRINKS into his latest visit to Mr. Mach’s Zero Room, Harkness still can’t escape the roaring Turnpike. It’s asking a lot of a four-dollar whiskey special. He stares across the bar and wonders how he ended up here with the drunken secretaries, hipsters slumming it, and Joseph “Joey Ink” Incagnoli, an ancient North End felon drinking Cynar and soda and reading the Herald in a corner booth. It’s not a hard question. Almost everyone in Boston knows the answer.

  Thalia nudges his shoulder as she walks past. “Too much thinking, champ.”

  He looks up. “Can’t help it.”

  “Turnpike Toreador?”

  He nods.

  Thalia shuts her eyes. “Forget. Him.”

  “First anniversary.”

  “Of what?”

  “You know.”

  “Accidents happen every day. Let it go, Eddy. Really.”

  The restaurant flickers, orange as a broiler. The drinkers at the bar, the couples eating bowls of phô at the half-empty tables beyond the murky fish tank that divides the bar from the restaurant—they’re all staring.

  Harkness blinks. “What’re they looking at?”

  “Our customers don’t tend to like cops, Eddy.”

  “I’m off duty.”

  “I still don’t think it was such a good idea to wear your uniform,” Thalia says.

  “Didn’t have time to change after work.” His dark green Nagog Police uniform makes Harkness look more like a forest ranger than a cop.

  “What time’d your shift end?”

  “Nine,” he says.

  “Where’ve you been?”

  “Playing in traffic.”

  She shakes her head. “Not supposed to do that. Didn’t your mother tell you?”

  “Can’t help it.” The room spins a little and Harkness shuts his eyes for a moment to slow it. “It’s just too much fun.”

  “Count your blessings, Eddy. Be glad it wasn’t you who ended up dead.”

  “Maybe it was.”

  “Shut the fuck up.” Thalia leans closer. “That’s bullshit and you know it. You know, you really should drink more. Works for me when there’s something I need to chase out of my head.”

  “Like what?”

  “Like my week in lockup before Mach’s lawyer bailed me out.”

  “Told you before . . . ,” Harkness says, “I was just doing my job.”

  “And now I’m doing mine.” Thalia fills his glass with whiskey and moves on.

  ***

  After the beat cops cuffed Thalia and the other bartenders, they dragged them out of the Zero Room and into a van bound for Central Processing. Half were illegals; most of the rest had priors and outstanding warrants or drugs in their underwear or stuck in the toes of their Chuck Taylors. Only Thalia was clean. They locked eyes for a moment when Harkness walked in, wondering what a red-haired art girl in black jeans and a vintage Sonic Youth T-shirt was doing tending bar in a dump like the Zero Room. But he wasn’t at Mr. Mach’s to make new friends.

  The Boston cops from District A-1 had raided the place and called in Narco-Intel when they couldn’t find what they were after. Harkness walked through the bar, getting a read on it. He started at the cash register. Mach seemed organized, the kind of guy who kept his valuables together—keys and cell phone, wallet and Ray-Bans, drugs and money. Harkness trailed his fingers along the red leather barstools and set them spinning.

  The stool closest to the register was scuffed with tiny white scratches, almost invisible in the dark bar. Harkness jumped up on it, boots scraping the leather, and pushed up a stained ceiling tile.

  A BPD lifer named O’Rourke pointed his flashlight up into the ceiling to reveal wires and a metal duct.

  “Thanks for finding the ventilation system,” Sergeant O’Rourke said. “Was getting kind
of toasty in here.”

  Harkness held up his right hand to quiet the smart-ass, then let it move toward the duct like a dowsing rod, his fingers running along the cool aluminum until they found the smudged edge. He peeled back a piece of silver tape, then ripped the metal duct open—a little at first, then more, until the flashlight revealed dozens of foil-wrapped bricks.

  O’Rourke’s eyes popped open. “Holy crap.”

  At a sidewalk shooting in Dorchester or a drug dealer’s triple-decker in Mission Hill, Harkness could find the drugs, guns, money, shell casings, and tossed cell phones. It wasn’t supernatural. Harkness didn’t need any help from the spirit world.

  From where he sits, a few barstools to the right, Harkness can still see the stained tile that once hid ten kilos of cocaine. But there’s nothing to find up there now. After two years in Walpole, his sentence reduced by ratting out his supplier, Mr. Mach’s done with drugs, Thalia says.

  He’s moved on to something worse.

  ***

  “Hey!” Thalia’s waving her hand in front of his face. “You okay?”

  “Peachy.” Harkness stands but the room starts to twist, and he sinks back down on his barstool.

  “Everything okay?” Mr. Mach appears behind the bar beaming like a good citizen of Chinatown, the kind who funds scholarships and builds parks.

  “Sure.” Thalia gives a frozen smile.

  “Like her?” Mr. Mach asks Harkness, as if Thalia’s invisible. “Think she might make a good girlfriend?”

  “I do,” he says.

  “My best waitress ever. So sorry to see her go.” Mach smiles, teeth yellow as old dominos. With his shiny black hair combed back and his crisp blue suit, he looks handsome and presidential. Harkness can picture his face on a cheap coin.

  “No way.” Thalia throws a bar rag on the floor with a wet slap loud enough to stir even the deepest drinkers.

  “Had enough. No more cop friends here.” Mach points at Harkness. “Especially this one. Very bad luck.”

  “He was just leaving,” Thalia says.

  “You leave, too.” Mach points at the door. “Get out. Now.”

  Thalia stares at her boss for a moment. She’s a tough girl from Worcester, her sharp edges even sharper after years working in one of Chinatown’s last dive bars. But there’s no negotiating with Mr. Mach.

  Thalia grabs her leather jacket and cigarettes. She raises the hinged wooden section of the bar, walks through, and lets it slam down behind her with a loud crack. Everyone in the Zero Room turns to watch another late-night drama unfold under the neon.

  “Come on, Eddy,” she says. “Let’s get out of this shithole.”

  As they walk across a galaxy of cigarette burns and carpet stains, Harkness waves at the roomful of night creatures like a celebutard taking a star turn. Because that’s what he’s become.

  Harkness turns at the door. “Hey, Mach. Can I see your special menu?” He points to the end of the bar, where creeps in suits leaf through thick black binders.

  Mach shows his bad teeth and stabs the air with his finger. “Special menu is for people who don’t have girlfriends.” Then he points at Thalia. “You get sick of her, bring her back. Then you see special menu.”

  “Thanks for getting me fired,” Thalia says when they’re on the street.

  “Sorry.” Harkness pulls his Sox jacket over his uniform and looks up at the spinning stars. “He’ll rehire you. Likes you.”

  Thalia shakes her head. “The guy’s a psycho. I’m sick of his shit.”

  They walk down Beach Street past closed restaurants, windows jammed with faded lunch menus and deflated Peking ducks hanging from greasy hooks.

  “What the hell was his problem tonight?”

  “No idea,” Thalia says.

  “Why’d he fire you?”

  “Because he thinks I’m your girlfriend now, remember?”

  “Maybe you are.”

  “For five hundred bucks, you could spend the night with your very own underage Thai girl,” Thalia says. “Don’t forget—virgins cost extra.”

  “I don’t have that kind of money anymore.”

  Thalia kicks Harkness.

  “I mean, no thanks.” Harkness imagines the warren of rooms facing the street—stained futons, sweet stink of rancid sesame oil, padlocks on the doors, the giant red 0 of the Zero Room’s sputtering neon sign glowing through a grid of chicken wire. “Soon as I’m back in Boston,” he says, “I’ll make sure Mach gets brought down again. For good, this time.”

  “You sure about that?”

  “Absolutely. Second time’s the charm.”

  “That’s great.” Thalia puts out her hand. “But tonight I’m driving, champ. You’re kind of drunk.”

  Harkness drops the keys in her palm. “Don’t smash it up, girlfriend.”

  2

  THEY DITCH THE PATROL car and walk toward Thalia’s neighborhood, clinging to each other like survivors after a shipwreck—half kissing, half walking, finally giving in to the slow desire that’s been building during months of late-night phone calls and texts and the occasional night of drinking at Mr. Mach’s.

  They stop at a Franklin’s, a brass-rail-and-plastic-fern bar on Mass Ave, and drink whiskey until they turn the lights up bug-kill bright to chase everyone home. Then Thalia remembers there’s a loft party down the street and they’re walking again. The nice part of the neighborhood thins out and they pass into the Lower South End, walking by places Harkness remembers from when this used to be his beat—a meth lab in an SRO hotel in Albrecht Square, a coffee shop that dealt Mexican shitweed.

  Whatever the street-corner thugs think of a cop and a girl in a white leather jacket wandering through their turf long past midnight, they keep it to themselves. Harkness and Thalia are protected by the impermeable aura of new love—and the heavy Glock hanging from his belt.

  The loft party is on the top floor of a crumbling brick warehouse, entered via a lurching freight elevator perfect for more grappling in the dark. Upstairs, the unfinished drywall hallways are scrawled with drawings and messages lit by a string of bare bulbs. To Harkness, it looks more like a construction site than a place to live. Thalia introduces him to some of her friends—a guy who runs a gallery on Thayer Street, a couple of photographers, and her rabbity friend Marnie, who works at the Zero Room and moonlights as a webcam girl and a sex worker, as she calls it.

  Marnie’s hard to miss with her rainbow hair and pierced eyebrows. Tonight’s a halfhearted costume party, though everyone seems to be dressed like some subspecies of hipster.

  “Great costume,” Marnie says. “You really look like a cop, you know that?”

  Harkness is tall and thin and stands up straight. He keeps his black hair cut short on the sides. When he’s not drinking, his brown eyes spark with intelligence and enthusiasm. When he’s drinking, they go dark and dead. Strangers pay attention to him because his voice is strong and he looks right at them, a lost art. A natural, they’d thought at the Police Academy.

  “Yeah, Eddy’s going for Bad Lieutenant.” Thalia presses her hand on his chest just below his badge.

  Harkness summons up Harvey Keitel lurching through nasty New York City, snorting coke by the bucketful and obsessing about a nun. “I don’t think he wore a uniform,” he says. “And I’m not a lieutenant.”

  Thalia leans close. “It’s a party, Eddy. Don’t be so fucking literal.”

  She steps away and Marnie whispers something in her ear.

  “Be back in a few,” Thalia says. “Stay where I can find you.” She walks across the room with Marnie, and Harkness stands alone in the crowded, dim loft, which thrums with bass and feedback. He drifts toward the band, too arty and slow for him, but better than silence.

  The twitchy lead singer looks like a fledgling Nick Cave, pressing his eyes closed and muttering deep lyrics into the microphone. Up front, zombies, goddesses, and nurses dance, faces lit blue by their iPhones when they pause to take pictures of each other.

 
Harkness hits that magic point when drinking resets his mind. Disobedience is cleansing—one of the many truths they don’t teach at the Academy. Tomorrow he’ll be whiskey scoured and ready to try again.

  He finds the bar, a worktable lined with stalagmites of crusted oil paint and a couple of handles of Yakov. Harkness skips the fake Russian vodka. But there’s a trashcan full of ice and beer next to the table. He takes a couple of bottles and twists the tops off, drains one and starts the second.

  Little Dorothy dances by, weaving around the dancers’ legs, white plastic mask over her face. Harkness pushes through the crowd. She surfaces again for a moment, her blue dress fluttering behind her as she darts around the loft.

  Little Dorothy shows up after Harkness hears about any dead girl. Doesn’t matter how they die—washed up on a Hyannis beach, rotting in the locked trunk of a car on the Southeast Expressway, or mauled by a pit bull in Franklin Park. They’re all Little Dorothy to him.

  After a few minutes, when he still hasn’t found her, Harkness gives up and decides Little Dorothy was just someone’s kid in a costume.

  “Hey. Brought you a beer.” It’s the rabbit-girl with the circus hair.

  “Thanks, Marnie.” Harkness takes the beer. Why not? Thalia’s friends are his friends now.

  “Thalia just told me you’re that Harvard Cop!”

  He shakes his head and drinks.

  “Dude. That was like the fucking worst thing ever? That happens, then the Sox haven’t won ever since?”

  That happens—his notorious incident reduced to two words.

  “You go to jail?”

  “No,” Harkness says. “They don’t send cops to jail for doing their job.”

  “Good, ’cause that whole thing was fucked up? I mean way fucked up. What kind of douche would do that shit? Drop a friend off a bridge . . . down onto the Pike?”

  It’s a question Harkness asks himself every day. And its darker twin—Why couldn’t he stop them?

  “Beantown is a mean town,” Marnie recites. “That’s what I always say. Looks all nice and historical on the surface. But underneath it’s fucking rotten. Boston’s built on these piers from the 1700s, you know? When they rot, the whole city is going down. Gonna be total fucking chaos.”

 

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