Cold Blue
Page 14
He guided the Cutlass right on 36th Street North and passed a Tulsa Housing Authority complex on his left. Thorpe had worked shootings, murders, stabbings, rapes and engaged in numerous foot pursuits in and around this complex. Just east, on the north side of the street, a dirt road disappeared into a large wooded tract populated with working oil wells. Sometimes car thieves would drive their newly procured “hot boxes” to this secluded area, where they could strip the vehicles in privacy. Thorpe pulled left onto the dirt road that he knew from experience branched off into additional tracks.
“You guys are back here?” Leon asked, finally getting a whiff of something that didn’t smell right.
“You don’t want to be seen do you?” Thorpe reassured him.
“No…look, man, I don’t know….this is…can you show me some I.D.?”
Because it was dark inside the car, Thorpe obliged and pulled out his neck badge waving it in Leon’s direction.
“Look, man, this is fucked up. Why don’t you just take me to the FBI office?” Leon’s survival instinct had finally tossed the bullshit flag.
“The command post is right around this corner, Leon. Relax.”
Thorpe could tell his passenger was considering bailing out of the car. He sensed him eyeing the door release. Too late now, asshole.
They drove past a working pump jack. Also known as a nodding donkey because of its appearance, the machinery was an over-ground drive for a piston pump on an oil well. Tulsa was once considered the oil capital of the world and is still home to a number of wells, though most are out of view from the casual motorist.
Thorpe heard the click of the seatbelt release and the distinctive zip of the belt retracting into its housing unit. Leon, realizing he’d stepped into some deep shit, was attempting to escape. Unconcerned, Thorpe stopped the car, lowered the front windows, removed the key from the ignition, grabbed his gear bag from the rear seat, and stepped out of the Cutlass. He rounded the back of the car just in time to watch Leon slide through the open window, land on his head, and somersault onto his ass and up to his feet—an acrobatic move and probably a painful one considering he was still cuffed behind his back. The man was motivated.
Just as his prisoner gained his feet, Thorpe delivered a front heel kick to Leon’s kidney. The blow sent the small man crashing to the ground on his left shoulder. Not being able to use his arms to control his balance or break his fall, Leon landed awkwardly. When he stood again, his shoulder drooped at an unnatural angle, the fall apparently dislocating the joint. Enough adrenaline coursed through Leon’s system to block the pain. Only determination registered on his face. There were no cries of agony.
“Take these cuffs off, motherfucker, and let me go to work on you…fucking bitch,” Leon screamed.
Thorpe slung the gear bag over his shoulder, sidestepped a kick, and grabbed Leon by his coat collar. He dragged him over to a pair of 15-foot tall oil tanks. A metal staircase led to a small catwalk spanning the tops of the tanks. Thorpe propped Leon against the steel railing, unzipped Leon’s coat, and using the garment as a makeshift straightjacket, pulled the coat’s shoulders down to his captive’s elbows. He then looped another cuff around the plastic still attached to Leon’s wrists and wrapped it around the railing. Thorpe cinched the cuffs tight. He didn’t want to leave any space—desperate prisoners have been known to tear off their own skin in an attempt to free themselves.
Thorpe stepped back from his prisoner, knelt down, and pulled off his hood. The two men stared at each other until recognition flooded into Leon’s eyes.
“Aw, fuck, man! That shit wasn’t supposed to happen.”
It was bitterly cold, but Leon sat drowning in sweat, fear and pain. Thorpe attached Flexcuffs to Leon’s ankles, cinching them tight. Then he retrieved a rag and told Leon to open his mouth.
“Fuck you,” Leon spit.
Thorpe walked behind his captive, isolated Leon’s index finger from the rest and torqued it sideways until a joint gave way. Leon let out an agonizing moan but didn’t scream.
“I can do this nine more times. Open your mouth,” Thorpe repeated.
Leon complied, and Thorpe stuffed the opening with a rag, careful not to get his fingers bitten off in the process. He secured the rag with duct tape, walked to the Cutlass and backed the car up to where Leon sat. He retrieved a section of rope from the bag and tied one end around the Flexcuffs on Leon’s legs. Nearly drowned out by the rhythmic noise pollution of the nodding donkey, Thorpe could hear Leon’s muffled cries as he walked toward the rear of the car with the other end of the rope. The man realized what was in store for him. Thorpe tied off the rope to the underside of the Cutlass and returned to his thrashing prisoner.
“Leon, shut up and listen.” His captive continued to thrash and squeal like a bound hog. Thorpe grabbed him by both ears and peered directly into his eyes. “You want to get out of this shit?”
Leon looked pleadingly at Thorpe and nodded his head.
“Good. It’s important you listen carefully. Do you understand?” Openly crying now, Leon again nodded. “I’m going to ask you a series of questions. I already know the answers to most, but you don’t know which ones. All I want is honest answers—no matter how bad it makes you look. If you answer all the questions truthfully, you won’t have to endure this.” Thorpe motioned to the rope. “But if you tell one lie…just one…I’m going to stretch you out. And, Leon, I won’t drive away fast; I’ll rip you in half slow—like a sheet of paper. The first that’ll go are your shoulders because of the way they’re positioned. It’s going to hurt like a bitch. When you pass out—and I promise you Leon, you will pass out—I have some smelling salts to bring you back. And then we’ll start all over again. Understand?”
Leon nodded vigorously.
“I’m going to remove the gag. If you scream, I’ll smash your teeth in and force this rag back into your mouth, and then I’ll start stretching you out…got it?” Leon again nodded his head. Thorpe pulled off the duct tape and removed the rag from Leon’s mouth. “Leon, tell me what’s going to happen if you lie to me.”
“You’re going to fuck me up…but you’re going to kill me no matter what I say.”
“That’s a fact. But how I do it is your choice, Leon. Tell the truth, and you can die quick with a clear conscience. Lie and you can be slowly ripped apart and go straight to your maker with a lie on your lips. They killed my family, Leon, and those child killers aren’t worth protecting. They’re not worth the pain I’m willing to dish out.”
“Shit…man, I didn’t…”
“Shut up with the whining, Leon, or so help me…”
“Fuck,” Leon said, crying. “What do you want to know?”
“I want to know everything.”
“Fuck, man, this thing started out so small and just blew up. My pops was so fucking pissed at me and Lyndale when you caught us with that dope. He was mad at Lyndale, but he was crazy fucking pissed at me. Lyndale already had trouble with the law, but I done a good job staying away from that shit. I even had some college. Fuck! It all started when Pops bailed me out of jail. He was talking about kicking me out of the house, disowning me, just flushing me down the fucking toilet. Man, I panicked…and I felt bad about letting down my old man. He’s a good guy, a Christian, always tried to do right…”
“Get to the fucking point, Leon,” Thorpe interrupted.
“Anyway, I start trying to convince him that you planted the dope on us. I wasn’t lookin’ to get anyone in trouble, man; I was just tryin’ to get out of it. So I keep on him about this shit, tell him this sergeant pulled some dope out and planted it on Lyndale. Told him you said they weren’t going to let a bunch of niggas run around like we own the place. Man, I see this shit start to take a hold on him, so I just keep workin’ it. Pops starts making some phone calls, tells me to stay put, and leaves. A couple hours later he shows back up, tells me that some others had been set up by you, too. He wants me to come with him—tell my story to some other officers.
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“So Pops puts me in his car and drives me over to Shaw’s house. I walk in and about shit myself. Those two white dudes weren’t there, but all them other niggas was. Plus another that wasn’t there tonight…Cole Daniels. This thing was snowballin’ now, but by this time…you know, it’s too late. Pops makes me tell them what happened, so I tell them the same shit I told my pops. I could see these guys just getting more and more pissed. Especially Price and Phipps, they was workin’ those other motherfuckers up. They start tellin’ ‘em ‘bout other brothers they heard you set up. Man, it starts getting real bad then. They was wantin’ your head. Everybody started arguin’ about what to do. Some people wanted to report you, but most said that wouldn’t do any good. Said all you white boys stick together, that nuttin’ would be done. Finally, Price just told everybody to settle down. He’d handle it. Told everybody to stay quiet about this, that they couldn’t trust the white man to do shit. After, Price pulled me to the side and got my cell phone number. Told me he would call later. Then Pops drove me away and told me not to talk about this anymore, that it’d be handled…”
Thorpe could picture the scene. Leon had fed their paranoia perfectly. They didn’t bother to question the validity of Leon’s or Price’s outrageous statements. They only heard what they wanted to believe—that they were being targeted by a racist white cop. Thorpe chose not to interrupt Leon’s recollection. He would pose questions when the man finished talking.
“…so I thought my part in all this shit was done. They wasn’t going to report it. Nothing official was going to happen. I went about my merry fuckin’ way. A few days later, Price calls and asks me if I remembered how to get to Shaw’s house. He gave me a time to come over that night and told me not to tell anyone what I was doin’, not even my pops. I’m nervous, I don’t know what the fuck he wants. So I show at his house, and there’s Baker, Price, Phipps, Corn Johnson, Thadius Shaw, Daniels, and that same white man that’s there tonight.”
“Is that Shaw’s house you were at tonight?” Thorpe asked.
“Yeah.”
“You said you don’t know who the white guy is?”
“No, man. I just seen him that night and tonight. That’s it.”
“What does he look like?”
“Man, I don’t know. He fo’ real don’t want to be seen. Both times he sits off in a corner with one of those fucking black ski masks on. Barely says a word, and when he does, he whispers like that actor in that fucking Batman movie. Don’t want to be known.”
“You think he’s a cop?”
“Fuck I know. Even though he don’t say nuttin’ the others kinda look at him like he’s running the shit. Know what I mean? Fuckin’ wait for him to nod and shit.”
Thorpe was frustrated. “You gotta know his height, weight, something?”
“I don’t fuckin’ know, man. He’s always sitting and wearing a big coat and shit. Might be about your size, might be fatter.”
Thorpe wasn’t getting anywhere in regards to the mysterious white man. “Go ahead with your story, Leon.”
“So Price asks me how I’d like to get back the guy who sent my brother to prison. And I ask how I was gonna do that. Price pulls out a fat bag, points at me, and says, ‘You gonna plant this in his house.’ I said no fuckin’ way, but they kept pressing me, and I kept sayin’ no. Finally Price says he’ll take care of it, but they won’t let me off the hook. They say I gotta be a part of it ‘cause of what I know. They told me where you stay and when you worked and the days you was off. They told me you was married and had kids. Wanted me to watch the house and call when it was empty. The next night I find your house—there’s a car parked in the driveway, and the lights are on. I didn’t want to sit in your hood…you know a brother sitting in your hood is gonna attract attention, so I just drove down the street every once in a while. That car was parked there the whole night. The next night I drive by your house, and there’s no car, no lights, nuttin’. It looked empty, so I call Price and tell him. He tells me to keep watchin’ the house and let him know if anyone comes home. I thought to myself fuck that!
“Later, Price calls and asks me if the house is still empty. I told him yeah, but really I wasn’t even watchin’ the damn place anymore. Price didn’t know that. He told me to keep watchin’ until I was told I could leave, told me to call him if anyone went to the house. Shit, I was already halfway across town, but I wasn’t going to tell Price that. Later that night, Price calls me, and he’s mad as a motherfucker…tells me the house wasn’t empty. He wants to see me, but I made up some excuse…I wasn’t about to go meet him. He tells me to keep my mouth shut until we could talk.
“The next day the shit about what went down at your place was all over the fuckin’ news. Then I heard the Double D Brothers were lit up the same night. I put two and two together, man…fuckin’ Price killed those niggas…I know it. Figured I was next. I was the only non-cop left in the know—my dad being one was probably only thing kept me alive. I put all this shit I’m tellin’ you to paper and gave it to someone to keep safe. I told Price he’d better make sure I stayed healthy, or that letter would be sent to the feds with a copy to my dad. They would’ve killed my black ass if I didn’t take out that little insurance policy on myself. That’s it, man! That’s the whole story. I didn’t want anyone to get hurt. I didn’t even want to watch your house, but they made me. Please don’t kill me, man…I feel real bad about what happened to your wife and kid. That shit ain’t right. Please, man! I promise I won’t tell nobody. Just kill those motherfuckers…I’ll fucking help you do it.”
Leon put all this on paper? Thorpe thought.
“Where’s that letter you wrote, Leon?”
“My law…hey…that’s…uhh…if I die the cops are going to know all this shit. They’ll know the whole story. You can’t kill me! You’ll be suspect number one if you start doing these other motherfuckers. You gotta let me live. Killing me will get you in the joint.”
Leon made a good point—smart little bastard. “Where’s the letter you wrote?” Thorpe repeated.
“Fuck you, nigga, that letter gonna keep me alive. Got you now—cracker motherfucker.” Leon began to show his ass now that he thought it was saved.
Thorpe scooped up Leon’s legs before he could react, lifted them off the ground, and with all his strength yanked backward on the small man. Tendons and bones gave way as Leon’s arms, which had been restrained to the railing behind his lower back, now extended straight above his head. Thorpe dropped his contorted prisoner to the ground. The scream that followed barely sounded human and had to be stifled with the rag.
“Leon, you were doing so well, but then you had to go and get disrespectful. You are going to tell me where that letter is. It’s just a matter of how much pain you’re willing to endure first.”
Leon vomited, prompting Thorpe to remove the rag. The man’s arms no longer presented a threat so Thorpe cut the Flexcuffs and rolled Leon over on his side to prevent him from asphyxiating on his own puke.
“Leon, where’s the letter?” Thorpe persisted.
Leon sputtered, his breath smelling of bile. “At home, under my mattress.”
“Bullshit, asshole, that’s going to cost you.” Thorpe grabbed Leon’s wrist, locked his elbow, and slowly began to twist, rotating the already dislocated shoulder.
“Wait!...my lawyer has it…Jessie Leatherman.”
“Leon, are you lying to me again? If you are, I promise I’ll work on you all fucking night.”
“Man, he’s got it. If I die, he walks it to the feds. You can’t stop it.”
Thorpe considered Leon words—it made sense. Jessie Leatherman was a private criminal attorney who often served the North Side drug dealers. Officers loved him because he was a horrible lawyer. They joked Jessie put more bad guys in jail than any cop ever dreamed. The only time he got people out of prison was when they appealed their case and it was determined Jessie had provided ineffective counsel. Earlier, before Leon attempted to use the letter as
leverage against Thorpe, he started to say his lawyer was in possession of the document. If Jessie did have the letter, it presented a significant obstacle. Thorpe wasn’t prepared to start hurting innocent people, which made retrieving the document a tricky proposal.
“What about your brother? He know about any of this shit?” Lyndale was still incarcerated.
“No.”
“I find that hard to believe.”
“He’s in fuckin’ prison. They monitor his phone calls and his mail. I’m not going to talk about this shit with him.”
“What else you have to tell me, asshole?”
“I’ll be waiting for you in hell,” Leon growled between clenched teeth.
Thorpe stood. “You have two minutes to make peace with God. Then I’m sending you to one place or the other.”
Thorpe gathered his equipment as he heard Leon praying under his breath. There truly are no atheists in foxholes. Despite the damage Thorpe had inflicted on Leon, there was little blood to show for it. Thorpe wanted to keep it that way. After a couple of minutes, he returned to his captive and pulled on Leon’s collar until the man sat upright, his arms dangling unnaturally at his sides. Thorpe stood behind Leon and dug a knee into his ribs.
“It’s time.”
Leon began to protest in vain. Thorpe grabbed Leon’s chin with his right hand and palmed the top of his head with the other. In one violent motion, Thorpe pulled up and back with his right as he pushed down and away with his left, snapping Leon’s thin neck and fatally damaging the spinal cord.
Thorpe dropped the limp vessel of what was once Leon to the ground. He needed to find a place to conceal the body in an attempt to prolong its discovery and buy enough time to complete his mission. If a letter truly existed, and if Leon’s corpse were discovered, it wouldn’t take long for investigators to focus on Thorpe, especially after certain TPD officers’ life expectancies took a sudden plunge.