by Frank Zafiro
“My sensibilities? Coming from Captain Sensitivo over here, that really hurts.”
“I know this town,” Battaglia insisted.
“Not only do you not know this town, you don’t even know anything about this town. You’re ignorant of your own city’s history.”
“Oh really? And what are you? The River City History Channel?”
“No,” Sully said, “but I know a few things.”
“So do I.”
“Like what?”
“Like it’s called River City because it was founded by a river.”
“Oh, that’s good. Don’t stretch your brain.”
Battaglia shrugged. “It’s true. Deal with it.”
“So why’s Mount Joseph called by that name?” Sully asked.
“It’s named after some guy named Joseph.”
Sully slapped the steering wheel. “Another brilliant insight. Okay, Mensa boy, who was Joseph?”
Battaglia paused. “Some Indian, right?”
“Good guess. Yeah, some Indian. A chief, actually.”
Battaglia snapped his fingers and pointed. “That’s it. Mount Joseph was named after Chief Joseph.”
Sully sighed. “No kidding. So what tribe did he belong to?”
“Sioux?”
“No.”
“Pawnee?”
Sully shook his head. “Uh-uh.”
“Apache?”
“Oh, come on. The Apache live down in the desert.”
“We’ve got deserts around here. You ever been to Yakima?”
“Real deserts,” Sully said. “As in New Mexico and Arizona?”
Battaglia shrugged. “A desert’s a desert.”
“It’s Nez Perce,” Sully told him. “Chief Joseph was a Nez Perce Chief. From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever. You didn’t learn this stuff in school?”
“Hey, I went to Rogers. We learned From where the sun now stands, I will kick your ass forever. And so what? At least I got that he was an Indian Chief.”
Sully stopped for a red light and looked over at Battaglia. “Fine. How about the river, smart guy? Why is it called The Looking Glass River?”
“Easy. It’s named after that Alice in Wonderland movie.”
Sully gaped at him. “You’re kidding me, right? I mean, you’re totally screwing with me here?”
Battaglia shook his head. “No.” He pointed at the stoplight. “Light’s green.”
Sully glanced up at the light and goosed the accelerator. “Unbelievable,” he muttered.
“What? You gonna tell me it’s not named after that Disney cartoon, then?”
“News flash. That cartoon was made back in the forties. The river was named about a hundred years ago. Do the math.”
Battaglia scrunched his eyebrows. “You sure?”
“Yes.”
Battaglia considered a moment. Then he said, “Well, wasn’t there a book or something that they based the cartoon on? It coulda been named after that.”
“Yes, there was a book. But—”
“See?”
“No, no, no, no,” Sully said with an emphatic head shake. “The river was named after one of Joseph’s sub-chiefs, Chief Looking Glass. It was named after a man, not a cartoon.”
Battaglia shrugged. “I didn’t know that.”
“I know!” Sully said, nodding repeatedly. “You could fill a large museum with what you don’t know, Batts.”
“Bullshit.”
“No, you could.” Sully raised his hand from the steering wheel and mimed a headline in the air. “The Official ‘Stuff That Anthony Battaglia Doesn’t Know’ Museum. It’d be a huge building, too. Bigger than the Louvre.”
“The what?”
“The Lou—never mind. It’d be a big building and it would be full of shit. Just like you. That’s my point.”
“Whatever, dude. The only point I’m seeing is the one on top of your head.”
“Oh, har-dee-freaking-har.” Sully picked up the radio mike and held it out toward Battaglia. “Hey, 1972 called. They want their joke book back.”
Battaglia clapped his hands together slowly. “Ha. Ha. Ha.”
Sully re-hung the microphone, turned onto Dalke and killed the headlights.
Battaglia shook his head. “It still woulda been quicker to take Wall.”
Sully pulled to the curb two houses from the complainant’s address. “Guess we’ll never know, will we?”
The two clambered out of the car, shutting the doors quietly.
The home was a small yellow rancher with a well kept yard. A pair of lawn gnomes stood as stoic guards on either side of the concrete steps up to the front door. The officers climbed the stairs. Without discussion, each took up a position on opposite sides of the doorway. Battaglia rapped on the door.
After a few moments, a short pudgy man in his forties answered. He wore khakis and an unbuttoned Hawaiian shirt over a white tee. Sully glanced at the man’s thinning hair, which was plastered tight to his skull with gel and drawn together into a nub of a ponytail.
Ooh, he thought. A hipster.
“Good evening,” Battaglia said. “You called about a stolen car?”
“Yeah, yeah,” the man said, opening the screen door and waving them in. The officers filed past him and into a living room furnished with post-modern furniture. Several stark, nude line drawings of Marilyn Monroe encased in neon frames dotted the walls.
Battaglia removed his notebook and flipped it open. “Tell me about this stolen car.”
The man sank into an armless futon. “It’s my Beemer,” he sighed grandly.
Battaglia’s eyes flicked to Sully’s, then back to the complainant. Sully knew what the glance meant.
I’m supposed to be impressed?
“And?” Battaglia’s tone held the barest hint of his unspoken sarcasm.
The man seemed to sense Battaglia’s subtext. “Well, it’s stolen.”
Battaglia nodded his head. The man pointed to his notebook.
“Are you going to write that down?”
Battaglia’s head stopped moving up and down and shifted seamlessly to a left to right head shake.
The man looked to Sully for help.
Sully suppressed a sigh. “What’s your name, sir?”
“Tad.”
“Last name?”
“Elway. Like the quarterback. You know, John Elway?”
Sully nodded. “I’ve heard of him.”
“I’d hope so. He’s only been to the Super Bowl three times and –”
Never won yet, Sully finished silently. “What happened to your car, Mr. Elway?” he said aloud.
Tad stopped. “I told you. It was stolen.”
“Right. How exactly?”
Tad bit his lip in contemplation. “Well, I loaned it to a friend and it hasn’t been returned.”
“You loaned it?”
Tad nodded. “Yes.”
“To a friend?”
“Yes.”
Sully glanced at Battaglia, knowing his partner probably shared his thoughts.
This isn’t going to be a stolen car. It’ll be civil. An ex-girlfriend, probably. A drug buddy, maybe. Or a hooker.
“What’s with all the looks?” Tad asked, irritation plain in his voice.
“I’m not sure what you mean,” Sully said.
“You two keep looking at each other like I’m lying or something.”
Sully shook his head. “No, sir. We don’t think that at all.”
“Then what’s the deal?”
“Why don’t you just go ahead and tell us about your car so that we can take your stolen vehicle report?” Sully suggested.
“No,” Tad said, his tone indignant. “Not if you’re both going to stand there and treat me like some kind of criminal. I’m the victim here.”
“That’s why I need to get this information from you,” Sully said.
Tad would not be so easily assuaged. “It’s totally unprofessional,” he continued. “The way
you two are acting. Interrupting people and having all these sarcastic little looks back and forth.”
Sully took a deep breath and let it out.
“Don’t sigh at me,” Tad snapped.
“I didn’t sigh.”
“You did. You did just a second ago.”
Sully sighed.
“There! You did it again,” Tad said. “What is with you two assholes?”
Sully felt the heat of frustration creep up the back of his neck.
“So sorry to take time out of your busy day,” Tad sneered. “I mean, it’s only your job.”
The heat flowered into outright anger and flooded his limbs. He knew that if he was feeling it, Battaglia was probably about to explode.
“Is this how you treat every victim?” Tad shook his head. “No wonder people hate cops. You guys are so–”
“Who took your goddamn car?” Battaglia snapped.
Tad’s eyes flew open at the profanity. “What?”
“Your precious BMW. Who took it?”
Tad stood up. “You can’t talk to me like this.”
“Was it an ex-girlfriend? Is this a domestic issue?”
“No, it’s not. And I want to talk to your–”
“Was it a male or a female?” Battaglia’s question was cold and forceful.
Tad paused. “Female,” he admitted.
Battaglia nodded and gave Sully a purposeful glance.
Sully couldn’t resist. He sighed loudly.
“Was she a doper or just a hooker?” Battaglia asked Tad.
Tad’s jaw dropped.
“Our practice is not to take stolen reports if you what you did was let a prostitute ‘borrow’ your car,” Battaglia mimed a pair of air quotes and continued, “to go get dope or in exchange for sexual favors.”
Tad’s mouth snapped shut. “She was–she–” he stammered, his face turning red.
“Which is illegal, by the way,” Battaglia finished.
Tad stopped trying to speak. He glared at Battaglia, who stared back dispassionately, though Sully knew from experience that he was furious inside.
“So what was her name?”
“Jade,” Tad answered through gritted teeth.
“Is that her real name? Do you even know her last name?”
Tad gave his head one slow, short shake.
“Your relationship to her was what, exactly?”
Tad didn’t answer.
Battaglia waited, returning Tad’s hot glare with flat coolness.
Thirty seconds passed. Sully listened to the sound of Tad’s breathing and the slight hum of the neon picture frames.
Finally, Tad growled, “I’d like you to leave now.”
Battaglia raised his eyebrows. “You don’t want to make a report?”
“Get the hell out of my house,” Tad snapped.
Without a word, the officers filed out. As they reached the bottom of the front steps, Tad slammed the door behind them.
Battaglia didn’t even look back. Neither did Sully. They walked without a word until they reached the car. Sully unlocked his door and hit the door unlock button for Battaglia on the passenger side. The two men got inside the car. Small flecks of rain started pattering against the windshield.
“Little arrogant prick!” Battaglia roared, once the doors were safely shut.
Sully’s anger at Tad’s attitude had already subsided. Now he was more worried about a complaint.
“You believe this guy?” Battaglia shouted.
“I’m right here,” Sully said. “You don’t have to yell.”
“Don’t tell me that didn’t piss you off, Sully. That little prick didn’t get your Irish up at all?”
“Already up and down,” Sully said, slipping the key into the ignition and starting the engine. “Now I figure we’re getting a complaint.”
“For what? Not taking a report?” He snorted. “Whatever. Ten to one, that Jade he mentioned is a hooker.”
“I know.”
“And we don’t take those reports.”
“I know.”
“So we’re within policy.”
“I know.”
“So where’s the goddamn complaint?”
Sully pointed at him. “Right there.”
“Me?”
“Your mouth.”
“What did I say?”
“Does goddamn ring a bell?”
“What?” Battaglia asked, surprised. “Are you the fucking language police now, Sully?”
“I’m not. But Lieutenant Hart is.”
Battaglia opened his mouth to reply, then fell silent.
Sully rubbed his eyes. The sound of the rain falling against the outside of the car grew to a dull roar.
“Goddamn,” whispered Battaglia. “You’re right.”
“I know.”
Both men were silent again for several moments. Then Battaglia broke the silence with a shrug. “Fuck it. What’s done is done. That guy is an asshole who loaned his car to a hooker.”
“Maybe.”
“Maybe? You’re taking his side?”
“No. Definitely he’s an asshole. Maybe the woman who took his car is a hooker.”
“I like my odds,” Battaglia said.
“Either way, he’s the kind of guy who calls and complains.”
“Yeah,” Battaglia agreed. “He’s also the kind of guy who is probably living in the house his mother left him.”
“Probably.”
“Probably lived in her basement until she died and he inherited the place.”
Sully nodded. “Good chance of it. That’s why the inside is decorated like an uncool bachelor trying to impress women but the outside is still all Mom.”
“Yeah, he’s impressive all right.”
“He’s something.” Sully pulled away from the curb. He drove past Tad’s house. Both officers eyed the front again.
As they drove on, Battaglia shook his head and grunted. “Maybe not.”
“Maybe not what?”
“I don’t think he inherited the house from his mom. I don’t think he’s the son at all,” Battaglia said. “In fact, I’m a little concerned.”
“Huh?”
“You saw those yard gnomes out front, right?”
“Sure.”
“There were two of them.”
“So?”
Battaglia sighed. “Sully, everyone knows those things travel in packs of three.”
“What are you talking about?”
“Listen,” Battaglia said with mock patience. “My theory is this. The guy calling himself Tad inside that house is actually the third yard gnome.”
A smile spread across Sully’s face.
Battaglia continued, “I’m thinking he probably came to life one night, murdered the occupants of the house and assumed the identity of the son. Now he’s got his two buddy gnomes guarding the front door – you saw them there, standing like sentries, right?”
Sully nodded, chuckling.
“So he’s got his guard gnomes standing post while he is out living the high life. Driving the Beemer, doing some dope, fooling around with some hookers, you name it.”
Sully laughed. “Yeah, you’re probably right. So should we call it in to Major Crimes? Get Lieutenant Crawford and some detectives out here to investigate?”
“I think it definitely warrants some looking into,” Battaglia said. “But I think we’ve got even bigger problems than that, you and I.”
“What?”
“Well, the thing is, if dipshit does file a complaint, you know his gnome friends are going to buddy him up. I’m positive that they’ll be witnesses for him.”
Sully laughed out loud.
“And those gnomes, they’ll say anything,” Battaglia said, his voice changing pitch as he held back his laughter. “Those little fuckers.”
Sully laughed louder and slapped the steering wheel. Battaglia finally broke down and joined him.
Maybe a complaint is coming, Sully thought. But Battaglia sure kn
ew how to keep him from worrying.
“Lying, murdering, Beemer-driving yard gnomes,” muttered Battaglia through his laughter.
The two officers drove down Wall Street, howling.
“Well, at least this was one stolen vehicle report call that didn’t suck,” Battaglia said. “That’s something.”
2319 hours
Katie MacLeod sipped her coffee, looking out at the rain that ran down the window outside the café booth. Across from her, Matt Westboard blew wordlessly on his own coffee. The easy silence between them comforted Katie somehow. Westboard, sometimes a goof and other times sensitive, seemed to intuit her moods almost better than she did herself. The respite from Sully and Battaglia’s constant banter and James Kahn’s grouchiness was always welcome.
The coffee’s aroma filled her nostrils. She sipped again. All around them, Mary’s Café bustled with activity. Conversation buzzed, dishes clattered. Linda, the waitress, flitted from table to table, topping off coffee cups and smiling.
From across the table, Westboard slurped his coffee loudly.
Katie shot him a glance, momentarily irritated. He knew she hated that. Then she saw the coy smile playing on his lips.
“Matt—”
He slurped again.
“Knock it off.”
Westboard answered with a long slurp.
“Don’t be a jerk,” Katie said, but with the beginnings of a smile.
Westboard shrugged and put the coffee cup down. “So you going to talk to me or what?”
Katie sighed. “I was kind of enjoying the silence.”
Westboard nodded. “Yeah, silence is good.”
Katie returned his nod and sipped her coffee.
“The other nice thing about silence,” Westboard continued, “is that it solves so many problems.”
Katie swung her gaze back to the straw-haired officer. “Are you being sarcastic?”
“Nooooooo,” Westboard answered. “Not at all. I completely believe that if you have a problem, the best thing to do is to remain absolutely silent about it. If you ignore the problem, it will almost always go away.”
“Shut up.”
“It also works for ostriches, I hear.”
“Asshole,” Katie muttered without much conviction.
Westboard smiled tightly, picked up his coffee and slurped loudly.
Katie groaned. “You’re worse than those two juveniles at roll call.”
“Everyone copes in different ways,” Westboard said, motioning to Linda for more coffee.