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Say No More

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by Hank Phillippi Ryan




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  Copyright Page

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  For Jonathan.

  And Flo and Eddy.

  Some of the greatest battles will be fought within the silent chambers of your own soul.

  —Ezra Taft Benson

  MONDAY

  1

  JANE RYLAND

  “Did you see that silver Cadillac? What he did?” Jane Ryland powered down the car window to get a better look. “He plowed right into that delivery van! Pull closer, can you?”

  “Anyone hurt?” Fiola kept her eyes on the cars stopped ahead of them in the Monday morning rush on O’Brien Highway.

  Squinting through the sun’s glare, Jane could just make out the Caddy’s red-and-white Massachusetts license plate up ahead in the lane to her right. “I can’t tell yet. We need to get closer.”

  “Should I call the cops?” Fiola asked.

  “Hang on. W-R-C, one-R-four.” Jane recited the license number while scrambling in the side pocket of her canvas tote bag for a pencil. No pencil. Some reporter. Using one forefinger, she wrote it in the dust of the news car’s grimy dashboard, for once the miserable housekeeping of Channel 2’s motor pool working in her favor. Then, before she remembered she wasn’t in jeans, she swiped the leftover grime down the side of her black skirt. Nine-forty A.M., if the dashboard digital was correct. The time wouldn’t matter, nor would the plate number, but it was all reporter reflex.

  “Jane? Can you see yet?”

  Fiola Morrello—not Fiona, as she’d reminded Jane a few hundred times already—had insisted on driving, even though she’d arrived in Boston only last week. Jane had protested once. Then, recognizing the sometimes-contentious reporter-producer dynamic, let her new producer take the wheel. That’s why Fiola got the big bucks, right?

  Jane was more comfortable being in the driver’s seat, but the two new colleagues would work it out. Jane hoped.

  “Almost.” She leaned out the window, far as she could, her bare forearm braced on the sunbaked door panel. Their white Crown Vic inched ahead toward the silver car, Jane’s passenger-side window scarcely moving closer to the driver’s side of the Caddy. “Sure sounded bad.”

  The chunky new Cadillac had hit a green Gormay on the Way delivery van, the popular take-out restaurant a culinary necessity for college kids, as well as the darling of Boston’s overscheduled millennials and overworked professionals. Including Jane. It was obviously the Caddy’s fault, so the drivers should have been exchanging insurance papers and calling the cops themselves. Damage or not, that big new car had banged into the older van’s rear. Jane had seen—and heard—the whole thing.

  “Is the Caddy driver on his cell?” Fiola asked. “Or should I call?”

  “He’s just sitting there.” Jane watched the man stare straight ahead, both hands clamped on the steering wheel, acting as if nothing happened. Good luck with that, buddy, she thought. You can’t pretend a car accident away. “Why doesn’t he get out? Check on the delivery guy?”

  As they crept closer, Jane catalogued the driver’s face, top to bottom, as she’d been taught back in journalism school. Middle-aged, Caucasian, widow’s peak, grayish hair, pointy cheekbones, thin lips, clean-shaven.

  “Is this a Boston thing? Ignoring an accident?” Fiola, keeping one hand on the wheel, had grabbed her phone. “What if he’s hurt? I’m gonna call.”

  “Yeah.” Jane wrapped her fingers around the door handle, ready to leap out if need be. The stoplight was still red, the ridiculously long wait at the intersection straddling Boston proper and neighboring Charlestown now working in their favor.

  The Gormay van’s driver-side door opened. Out came a man’s leg—running shoe, khaki pants. The left-turn arrow light turned green. The cars on Fiola’s left pulled away, headed toward Beacon Hill.

  “What do we do?” Fiola said. “When the light changes in a second, we’ll be blocking traffic.”

  “Don’t move. The people in front of us can go.” Jane twisted around, looked over the leather seat back. “No one’s behind us. Light’s still red. Go ahead, call the cops.”

  Another running shoe, another khaki leg. And then the face of the van driver, shadowed by the curved metal door open behind him. He stopped, both feet planted on the pavement, leaning sideways against the front seat. Hurt?

  “That guy doesn’t look right,” Fiola said.

  “Nine-one-one,” Jane said. “Do it.”

  Three lanes of lights above them turned green. Instantly, a cacophony of horns began, each driver apparently compelled to remind their fellow motorists what green meant.

  Their news car was kind of blocking traffic, but what if this was a story? The other drivers would have to go around while the accident scene got worked out.

  The Caddy driver still stared straight ahead. Then, with a wrench of his steering wheel and a squeal of tires, he jammed the car into reverse, veered to the right, swerved forward and across the right lane, other cars twisting out of his path, honking in protest. With a clamor of horns complaining, he peeled away, fishtailed once, spitting pebbles. The big car jounced over a jutting curb as it lost its battle with the acute angle of the turn onto the cross street, and barreled through the graffiti-slashed concrete beneath the Green Line underpass. Jane could almost hear the roar of acceleration as the Caddy sped into the distance, vanishing into the gritty construction-clogged labyrinth of Charlestown.

  “Are you kidding me?” Jane yelled at the universe, yanking open her car door, waving her arms, signaling Go around! to the driver now honking impatiently behind her. Though the van’s rear fender hung distressingly askew, this wasn’t newsworthy enough to make TV. Still, it was the principle of the thing. The Caddy hits a van, then tries to get away with it? Middle-aged, Caucasian, widow’s peak, gray hair, pointy cheekbones, thin lips, clean-shaven.

  “Hit-and-run?” Jane could hear the incredulity in her own voice. “Tell the cops—”

  “I got this.” Fiola, phone to her ear, pointed to the van. “Go check on the guy.”

  “I’ll check on the guy,” Jane said at the same time. So much for Jane and Fiola’s plans. Their interview at the college would have to wait. They’d been early—imagine that—so there was still an acceptable window of not-quite-lateness. Jane trotted up to the delivery truck, looking both ways, then all ways, remembering she was a defenseless pedestrian navigating four lanes of determined chrome and steel. At least the other drivers, now veering around the two stopped vehicles, seemed to acknowledge the potential danger. Day one of her new assignment—two steps forward, one step back.

  Maybe two steps back, she thought, as she saw the driver. A young man, arms sticking out of a pale blue uniform shirt, a thin trickle of blood down the side of his face, turned t
o her. He touched a finger to his cheek, then looked at the smear of red it left, frowning.

  “Are you okay?” Jane could see the young man’s body trembling. He opened his mouth, then said … something. Not in English.

  “I’m sorry, I’m Jane Ryland. From Channel 2? My producer’s calling nine-one-one. I saw what happened, okay? Are you hurt?”

  The man pointed toward the back of his van. He wants to see the damage, Jane thought. Makes sense. Maybe he’s in shock.

  “Yeah, I know,” she said, trying to look supportive and sympathetic. “Stinks. But come see. There’s not much damage.”

  The man approached, crouched on the pavement, and ran his finger over the dent, leaving a smudge of red on the pale green paint. He stood, then rattled the twin chrome handles of the van’s double back doors. They didn’t open.

  “Are you okay?” Jane persisted. “It looks like you’re bleeding a little.”

  “Cops on the way!” Fiola’s voice came from behind them.

  “The police are coming,” Jane repeated. Why hadn’t he said anything? “Sir?”

  Middle-aged, Caucasian, widow’s peak, her brain catalogued again, gray hair, pointy cheekbones, thin lips, clean-shaven. She replayed the moment of the collision, the sound of it, the sight of it, making it indelible. Middle-aged, Caucasian, widow’s peak, gray hair, pointy cheekbones, thin lips, clean-shaven. Yes, she’d remember the driver. She’d recognize him.

  And she’d get Jake to run the license number through his magic cop database. Not that he was supposed to do that unless he was working the collision, which he wouldn’t be, let alone telling her what he found. Not that she could use the information, or would even need it. But anyway. Be interesting to know.

  Still silent, the food truck driver finally seemed to acknowledge her, his eyes wide, inquiring. A siren, faint but recognizable, materialized from somewhere behind them. The cavalry. She and Fiola could still make their interview, Jane calculated. After this tiny and unremarkable good deed. Being a successful reporter was all about karma.

  Then the van driver pivoted, so quickly Jane stepped back, and with one thick-soled running shoe he kicked the white-walled left rear tire. He spat out a few words, almost yelling, in a language Jane didn’t understand.

  He kicked the tire again, then looked at her, palms outstretched. That, Jane understood. What the hell? This is crazy.

  “Yeah, I know.” Jane nodded, sympathetic.

  “You?” The man pointed to her. He could talk—that was good. Not in shock.

  “See?” He seemed to be searching for the word. “You see?” The siren grew louder. Any second now, the cops would be here, she’d be gone, and she’d never think of this again.

  “Yes, I see. Saw.” Jane held out both hands, nodding, smiling, the international language for “everything is going to be fine.” With one finger, she pointed to her chest, then to her eyes, then to the place where the silver Cadillac had been. And then to the direction it had vanished.

  “No question,” she said. “I saw everything.”

  2

  JAKE BROGAN

  “Can’t you lie low for a while?” Jake Brogan wasn’t used to this, telling someone to duck and cover.

  Grady Houlihan obviously wasn’t used to hearing it. The kid fidgeted in the battered wooden swivel chair Jake inherited from the last detective assigned to sit at the corner desk, left row, in the BPD homicide office. Jake hoped there wasn’t residual bad juju from that guy, now in disgrace somewhere, bitter that he’d been caught—by Jake—taking kickbacks. Jake had not only gotten the glory, but in a bit of copshop humor, he’d also gotten the guy’s chair.

  This corner of the now open-floor-plan squad room did have some privacy. Former superintendent Rivera had installed waist-high fabric dividers designed to “open up the place” and “prevent closed doors.” The gray panels were now layered with push-pinned newspaper clippings, Red Sox schedules, hand-drawn maps, union announcements, and the occasional what Jane would call inappropriate cartoon. Moments ago, the other cubicled cops had acknowledged Jake’s arrival with his young informant, but now ignored them, returning to paperwork and phone calling.

  Jake watched Grady consider the “lie low” suggestion, and knew from experience—and years of reading criminals’ body language—that the snitch had already decided the answer was no. How did someone so young get in so deep, so soon? But this was Boston, and traditions died hard. Sometimes young men did, too. Clearly Grady was worried he’d be next, and he might be right. Problem was, nothing Jake could do about it.

  “Don’t you guys have, like, a thing, a protection thing?” Grady’s voice held a taut undercurrent, not quite a whine, not quite a demand, that Jake figured came from some bone-weary feeling in the kid that he was always on the losing side. Never getting the break. But that assessment was demonstrably not true.

  Grady certainly’d gotten a break, big-time, when Jake arranged for his immunity in the Charlestown stabbing. And then the Hyde Park drug episode. That’s when young Grady McWhirter Houlihan—white male, age 19, charged with felony firearm possession—had realized he could have a career simply listening, then telling the cops what he heard. Not the safest of jobs, but it was why he sat here at police headquarters sipping root beer instead of in the Suffolk County Jail awaiting trial. In one of those who-can-understand-how-a-criminal-mind-works situations, Grady talked only to Jake. Little did Boston’s skulking lowlifes know how many of their colleagues were behind bars because of this kid they assumed was their friend. This time he was asking Jake to be his friend.

  Yes, Suffolk County had “a protection thing.” But for so many reasons it wasn’t going to work. And that left Jake in a pile-of-crap situation. Law enforcement needed Grady for his entrée into the world of illegal chutes and ladders, for his clues to its transactions and its participants. But if he was in danger? What was Jake’s responsibility to protect him?

  “Jake? You hearing me? I’ll go, like, anywhere. No big deal. You buy, I’ll fly. I’m telling you, Jake, they’re onto me.”

  “They?” Jake took a sip of rancid squad room coffee. D was bringing the afternoon Dunkin’s and was late, as usual. Jake actually knew who Grady’s “they” was—the Sholto operation, a Charlestown tradition in the most unpleasant of ways, a merger of the two most powerful families in the neighborhood. In a much-discussed union ten years ago, everyone knew, big gun Clooney Sholto, more reclusive than Howard Hughes and nastier than Whitey Bulger, had married the flamboyant Violet O’Baron, terminating an entire generation of intra-neighborhood warfare and competition.

  With those wedding vows, the O’Barons’ drug-and-money territory had ceded to the Sholtos. Now, with Grady’s help, the impenetrable Sholtos—patriarch, wife, allies, and underlings—were in Jake’s sights. No matter what the kid wanted, Jake would have to send Grady back on the street. No other choice. Though this choice sucked.

  “The Sholtos? How do you know they’re onto you?”

  “Dude,” Grady said.

  “Indulge me,” Jake said.

  “It’s like…” Grady blew out a breath, remembering. “I come into the room, they stop talking, they go out of the room.” Used his hands to illustrate. In. Out.

  Bitten cuticles, Jake saw, but no tattoos, no remnants of incarceration or indelible indications of gang affiliation. He could have been a regular college kid, except for a few disastrously wrong choices and the uncaring randomness of the universe. And an ironclad agreement with the cops.

  “I leave the room, they go back in, start talking again. Dude. Somebody swiped my freakin’ phone. When I found it—like suddenly it was on the table, you know? Like it was never gone.” He held it up, the black plastic-cased evidence. “But I mean—why? Who? They’re onto me, Jake. I gotta split, or I’m like—Jake. I scratched you guys’ back, right? So now—we done. Call it a day.”

  Phones rang, doors slammed, cops complained. With the fragrance of bad coffee surrounding them and the August heat defeatin
g the muttering air conditioners, Jake let Grady talk. The longer Grady talked, the less Jake had to, and Jake had no good news and zero options. With only casual attendance at high school, and two parents and two brothers already doing time, Grady didn’t have many career choices. He possessed no skills, and no talent to speak of, except for a Boston-friendly demeanor—including ginger hair, green eyes, a stubby body comfortable on a soccer field or harbor trawler—and a good ear. Grady knew when to keep quiet, and, lucky for Jake and for the kid’s so-far-pristine criminal record, when to talk.

  Even so, Jake worried he’d become the kid’s father figure. That was Jane’s prediction. He should never have told her about the Houlihan situation, but too late to take that back. At least Grady didn’t know about Jane.

  The kid was Jake’s eyes and ears in two big cases. After a back-and-forth with the DA’s office, the department even let a couple of low-level drug deals Grady’d reported go through, to convince the bad guys there was no leak.

  If Grady split, Jake was screwed.

  One phone, insistent, jangled from across the room. “Somebody get that,” a voice complained. “Somebody who?” someone else yelled back. “Somebody’s not here,” another called out. “Budget cuts.” The phone rang again.

  “Here’s the thing, Grady,” Jake began. “The budget for the Suffolk County witness protection program, such as it is, is part of the—”

  “Hey. Grab one of these puppies.” DeLuca’s voice came from behind a flimsy cardboard carrier barely managing to contain three teetering Styrofoam cups. “If one goes over, it’ll burn ya to death. Shoulda gotten iced.”

  Jake’s partner shoved over a stack of paperwork on an unoccupied desk and deposited the coffees on the pitted surface. “Jake, you about done? Grady? Got one of these for you, cream, three sugars, like Jake said. But hey, you two about done with whatever you’re doing? We have to—”

 

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