Book Read Free

Street Dreams

Page 22

by Street Dreams


  Germando El Paso was now eighteen and a half, with a warrant out for his arrest for unpaid traffic citations, specifically a speeding ticket and three parking violations. In the past, he’d been picked up for two DUIs, and his license was currently suspended, but hey, when did that ever stop bad guys from driving? He had also been arrested for a misdemeanor possession of marijuana, and had a sealed juvenile record. Since he wasn’t on probation, he had no probation officer. But there had been a juvenile officer who had worked with him. I took down his name and gave him a call.

  I got voice mail, so I left a message.

  I went down into the locker room and changed into my uniform. Homicide Detective Justice Brill snagged me right before I entered the roll-call room. Brill was in his mid-thirties, around five-ten, and good-looking in that seamed Steve McQueen/Paul Newman kind of way. They didn’t make movie stars like that anymore. Instead, it was all these slender pretty boys that I could probably beat in an arm wrestle. Brill was married but had a penchant for frequenting gentlemen’s clubs. I stayed clear of him.

  “We think we found the SUV. It was a stolen vehicle with stolen plates, but you did get the last four digits right. Good for you.”

  “You impound it?”

  “No, I put it up on eBay.” Brill smiled, his eyes oozing sincerity. “You did a good job, Decker.”

  I took the compliment with grace and aplomb, and a gallon of salt.

  He said, “Here’s the thing. The front bumper of the car was an inkblot of smashed body parts, but the rear bumper was clean.”

  “She wasn’t hit on the rear bumper.”

  “Very good, Decker, I see gold in your future.” He rolled his eyes. “Now since the plates were stolen, the lab dusted it for prints. Guess what?”

  “There were none.”

  “Bingo. But the lab did find a smear of fresh blood on the top right screw, where you screw the license plate onto the bumper.”

  “Was the smear enough for a partial?”

  “There was a partial, but nothing popped up in the system.”

  So much for that. “Did the blood match the victim’s?”

  “We don’t know for sure because the tests are preliminary. But the lab did run a simple ABO—victim’s blood was O, the smear was B. There was nothing else on the plate.” He looked at me. “Any ideas?”

  He was giving me a hurdle to jump. I thought about it for a moment. “And the lab didn’t find the B blood type anywhere else on the SUV?”

  “No.”

  I tapped my foot. “It’s on the screw but not on the license plate.”

  “Right.”

  Suddenly sparks popped in my brain. “If there were no prints on the license plates, maybe instead of just wiping it down, he wore gloves. Thing is, license plate edges are sharp. Could be the plate cut the latex while he was fiddling with it. Maybe the edge was sharp enough to cut through the latex and exposed part of his fingertip—hence the partial. Maybe it also cut skin. But he didn’t notice it because it was only a few droplets. The blood could have leaked out onto the screw as he attached the plate to the bumper.”

  Brill stared at me.

  I shrugged. “You asked what I thought. It’s a theory.”

  The nod came slowly. “Yeah, it’s a theory.”

  That was as much of a concession as I’d get from him.

  He gave me a wise-guy smile. “You know what? When I find out more, we’ll discuss it over a cup of coffee.”

  Why was it that every time a guy wanted play, he offered me a lousy cup of coffee? What ever happened to dinner and a movie?

  “Thanks for filling me in, Detective.”

  “We’ll keep in touch, Decker,” he said. “You’re good.”

  I smiled. I had so wanted things to work out with Koby. I had genuinely liked the man. But even if I hadn’t, he would have been worth dating just to keep the others off my back.

  27

  Germando El Paso’sjuvenile officer hadn’t returned my call, so I figured I might as well spend another fruitless night following up theories that evaporated like steam. I headed for Boss’s twenty-four-hour coffeehouse, a place that catered to freaks, chumps, hypes, and other ne’er-do-wells who couldn’t hack it in daylight hours. I was hoping to espy “Mr. Tiger Tattoo” himself. Alice Anne had produced a solid hit, so I made a mental note to slip her another ten-spot the next time I saw her.

  I was seated by a toothpick of a guy with bad acne who appeared to be coming off a bad jones. Lucky for me, he was the maître d’ and not my server. That position was given to a captivating lady with blue spiked hair who dressed in black vinyl. She had a pierced upper lip and a pierced nose and small silver chain connecting the two metal studs together. I wondered if it hurt when she sneezed.

  She poured me some coffee and left me the pot. I had brought the morning paper and was skimming the usual bad news, having made myself comfortable in a torn Naugahyde booth in the far end of the restaurant after sweeping bread crumbs off the tabletop with my hands. I kept a sharp eye out for my prey, and though I saw a good sideshow, Germando wasn’t part of it. I sipped coffee and munched on dry lettuce leaves of what was professed to be a dinner salad. When my cell phone rang, I jumped. I had forgotten to turn it off.

  “Decker.”

  “I just got off shift. Are you still in the neighborhood?”

  The voice from the netherworld. I didn’t want to lie, but I definitely didnot want to see him. “It’s late.”

  “You could come to my place,” Koby purred. “I’ll fix you something to eat . . . give you a massage. . . .”

  As anger played inside my gut, I tried to keep my voice even. “Sounds like a booty call.”

  Silence over the line.

  “No, Cindy, not at all.”

  “Then explain it to me.”

  The seconds ticked.

  “Let’s try it again.” His voice was more somber. “I’m off all day Sunday. I’d love to see you. How about brunch and we go from there?”

  That meant spending money on me. A step up, but I stillwasn’t interested. So now I did lie. “I’m working Sunday.”

  “Actually, I’m off Saturday night through Monday morning. Actually, Friday night through Monday, but Saturday isShabbat. But if Saturday is your only time, I can see you then. Please. Just give me a time.”

  What in the world was going through that man’s head? Nothing for four days, then “Mr. Solicitous.” More than likely, he was horny. “Saturday I meet my mother for lunch. It’s sacrosanct.”

  Another pause. “What does that mean . . . the word?”

  “ ‘Sacrosanct’? It means if I miss a weekend with her, she goes ballistic.”

  “Maybe after lunch, then . . .”

  Not missing a beat. Tenacity had probably been a very useful asset for him. I relented, probably because he had asked me what “sacrosanct” meant. For some reason, I found it endearing. Still, I was cautious. “Actually, I’m still in the neighborhood. I’ve got a couple of odds and ends to pick up. How about I call you in a half hour? If I’m up to it, we’ll meet for coffee. All right?”

  “Fine . . . anything. Great. Terrific—”

  I hung up before he could think of more adjectives.

  After forty-five minutes, the phone rang again.

  “Are you still working?”

  “Yeah, just like you’ve been doing for the last four days.”

  Silence.

  I felt bad, not because he didn’t deserve it, but because it was unbecoming to be rude. I tossed him a bone. “If you come to Boss’s within the next half hour, I’ll still be here. Do you know where it is?”

  “Yes.”

  “Then I’ll see you later.” I disconnected the call.

  He showed up twenty minutes later. The first things I noticed were his eyes. How could I not notice? Usually luminous, his pupils were polluted brown muck, the formerly white irises were a combination of jaundice yellow and bright red bloodshot. He liked colors. He certainly had them.
>
  I immediately thought of a drug binge. It wouldn’t be the first time that a health professional had dipped into the locked cabinet of a hospital. He smiled sheepishly as he sat across from me. I slid my coffee cup over to him and watched him closely. When he picked up the mug, I saw that his hands were as steady as rocks.

  “I was supposed to meet someone,” I told him. “I think I got stood up.” I smiled. “Wouldn’t be the first time.”

  His tired eyes took in mine. “I’m sorry I haven’t called you.”

  “S’right. You’ve been busy.”

  “Who were you supposed to meet?”

  “A felon.”

  “I hope I’m better company, even if the margin is small.”

  Despite myself, I smiled. “You look exhausted.”

  “I am. I finally told them that if I didn’t get some time off, I would collapse.”

  “You should be home sleeping, not drinking bad coffee that’ll probably give you heartburn.”

  “Yes.” He tried eye contact but couldn’t pull it off. “I’d like to make up my bad behavior to you. Can we see each other this weekend?”

  “What bad behavior? All you did was work.” I paused, thinking of Nurse Marnie’s possessive voice over the line. Once there had been something. “Unless you have something else to tell me.”

  He looked up. “I don’t know what you mean.”

  “Busy with someone else?” I was trying to sound casual. “What happened, Koby? Did she flake out on you or something? Call me for backup sex?”

  His eyes swung back to mine. “No. It isnothing like that. I really have been working—three 12-hour shifts and one 16-hour shift.”

  I was silent.

  “Ask anyone at the hospital,” he insisted. “And you can ask many people because I’ve practically lived there this past week.” He rubbed his bloodshot eyes. They watered with irritation. “Cindy, I have cash burning holes in my pockets. Please let me spend it on you.”

  I studied his face.

  “Please?”

  I shrugged. “Sure. Let’s go out Sunday night.”

  He blew out air and leaned back in the booth. “Thank you. I will try to redeem myself.”

  “I’m tired. I’m going home.” I stood up, pitched a ten on the table, then walked away.

  “I’ll walk you to your car.”

  “I’m fine, Koby. I carry a gun.”

  “I suppose I should keep that in mind.” He caught up with me, held my arm. “I really missed you.”

  “You have a funny way of showing it.”

  He held the door open for me. “I know.”

  “So what was that all about?”

  “Some other time, please? I’m so tired.”

  I took pity on him. “Sure.”

  As we walked out the door and onto the sidewalk, I saw the tiger tattoo before I saw the face. I broke away from Koby and took a couple of giant steps forward. “Hey!” I shouted. “Police!”

  Germando took off.

  I tore after him, grateful for my rubber-soled shoes, but I was out of my league. Koby however was a lightning bolt. A dozen long strides and he landed within striking distance. He whacked Germando between the shoulder blades and my traffic felon stumbled forward, falling flat onto his face. When I caught up, I was panting like a dog. Koby hadn’t broken a sweat. I leaned my knee between Germando’s shoulder blades and whipped his arms around his back.

  “I said, ‘Police!’ That means youstop! ”

  “I no hear—”

  “Well, now you hear! I am a police officer, Germando. Hold thefuck still or I’ll break yourfucking arms!”

  “That’s brutality!” He craned his neck to look at Koby. With my knee in position, he was pretty well pinned. “You hear her—”

  “You’re talking toair, my friend,” I yelled at him. “There’s no one here!” I retrieved the gun from my purse and held it at the base of his head. “Hold still, Germando. I’ve got bullets about an inch from your brain stem and I don’t want any accidents. I am going to cuff you.”

  Out came the cuffs from my purse. As soon as he was in manacles, I felt my heart rate drop. I looked up . . . Koby staring at me, shocked and wide-eyed. I took out my cell and called for police backup and a transport.

  His mouth was still agape. I said, “You can go now. In fact, it would be real good if you went now.”

  He closed his mouth and turned to walk away.

  “Hey,” I shouted.

  He pivoted around.

  “Thanks,” I told him. “But don’tever do my job for me again, okay?”

  He didn’t answer. He stared, blinked, then jogged off. I saw his Toyota hook a U, just as I caught the flash of a cruiser’s crossbar.

  Good thing the occupants of the black-and-white were on a case. Otherwise a cop could have given him a ticket for crossing a double, double yellow line.

  28

  Let’s go overit again, Decker.”

  I threw my head back, squirming in the hard seat, and studied the ceiling’s fluorescent lighting in the interview room. This wasn’t so bad, I rationalized. It gave me empathy with the scumbags that I’d be grilling one day. “What specifically, Detective?”

  “You went to Boss’s because . . .”

  “I went to Boss’s because I was looking for Germando El Paso, who often eats the banana pancakes there. I was looking for him because he had outstanding warrants.”

  “Traffic warrants.”

  “Warrants just the same.”

  Brill rubbed his forehead. “And this is what you do on your off-hours? Hunt for dudes with unpaid tickets?”

  “I consider it a civic duty.”

  His smile was wry. “You need a life.”

  “I agree,” I answered. “But that doesn’t change this situation. It was a righteous bust and I did not plant that bag of X on him, no matter what he says.”

  “You’ve got no witnesses to back you up.”

  “Neither does he.”

  “He claims you were with someone.”

  “He claims a lot of things.” I looked at the one-way mirror. “Who’s back there?”

  Brill followed the direction of my eyes. He wore a black suit and a white shirt. A badly knotted red tie ringed his neck. He had dressed hurriedly. “Someone from the DA . . . the Loo.”

  “Detective or uniform?”

  “My Loo.”

  “He can come in and ask his own questions, if he wants.”

  “Don’t be a smart-ass.”

  “Believe me, Detective, I’m not trying to be snide.” I looked at my watch. It was two in the morning. At least, Koby was home sleeping. Thinking about him depressed me. “I’ll start from the beginning—again. I’ll repeat it as many times as you want me to repeat it.”

  Brill gave me a hands-up.

  I started to talk, then stopped. “Let me start from thevery beginning. This whole thing has its roots in the abandoned baby I pulled out of the garbage a couple of weeks ago. All right?”

  “Go on.”

  I glanced at the tape recorder in the middle of the Formica table, which was scarred and scratched and held a dirty ashtray. “I found the mother on my own, I’d like to add—”

  “Not the time to brag.”

  “I’m only mentioning this to show the DA on the other side of the mirror that I am obsessive.”

  “Seems to be a family trait,” Brill answered.

  “You said it, sir, not I.”

  He smiled. “You found the baby; you found the mother.”

  “I pulled out the baby; I found the mother.” I readjusted my weight for the millionth time. “So now we’re up to date on that. After I found the mother, I wanted to know about the father—”

  “Why?”

  “I thought this poor little baby from a retarded mother deserved to know her entire genetic history.”

  “Why?”

  “Because I became attached to her. I visited her a couple of times in the hospital—on my own. This whole thing did
n’t come out of nowhere.”

  Brill waited.

  I said, “So I went to the mother’s home to interview her about the baby’s father. I did this with Detective Van Horn’s permissionand with Detective MacGregor’s permission. I visited her on Sunday. I took my father, Lieutenant Decker, along with me because I knew I needed somebody experienced, and Detective Van Horn had gone on vacation. Detective Russ MacGregor, who had been assigned to the case, was away for the weekend.”

  “And it was during this discussion that the girl”—Brill flipped through his notes—“Sarah Sanders . . . she mentioned being gang-raped and her boyfriend was beaten up and thrown into a trash can.”

  “Exactly. But because the case was six months old, Lieutenant Decker suggested that I don’t act on my information until I informed Detective MacGregor of this latest development. Which I did.”

  “And?”

  I smiled. “He thought it could be a fantasy. Still, the girl came in and made a statement. On the off chance that her story might be true, I asked MacGregor if I could look into it. He said that if I wanted to find the father on my own time, he wouldn’t have a problem with that.”

  “To find the father, not to solve a six-month-old fantasy crime.”

  “Look . . . sir. I went after Germando because I had heard that he hangs with punks who harass the homeless and jump people in public bathrooms. I looked Germando up. I knew he had an outstanding warrant. I knew I could pull him in on that. Why would I bother planting a bag of ecstasy on him?”

  “To make the bust look more righteous.”

  “The bag has been nothing but a pain in the neck.”

  “But you didn’t know that at the time.”

  “I know the Department’s attitude toward rogue cops. Give me a lie detector test if you have doubts.”

  “What about this guy Germando claims you were with?”

  I looked at my hands.

  Brill pointed to the mirror. “They don’t like it when you’re not forthcoming. If you lie about this, no one’s going to believe you about the bag.”

 

‹ Prev