The Darkness (2009)

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The Darkness (2009) Page 30

by Jason - Henry Parker 05 Pinter


  suspect he is, then the sale of drugs in this city isn’t going

  abroad. It isn’t being diverted to an anti-terrorism foreign

  legion. What I’m saying is that money gained through the

  sale of drugs like the Darkness is going directly to the city

  itself. I’m saying that not only is our government turning

  a blind eye, but it’s taking a cut of the profits.”

  “The layoffs, the deficits,” I said. “You’re saying

  they’re trying to make up for budget shortfalls by taking

  a cut of drug payoffs?”

  “Words to live by, especially in politics. If something

  worked twenty years ago, it’ll probably work again now.”

  Just then I heard my cell phone ring. I went over to pick

  it up, but when I saw the caller ID I stopped. Looked at Jack.

  “Who is it?” he said.

  I shook my head, confused.

  “It’s Curt Sheffield,” I said.

  “Curt,” Jack said, taken aback. “Well, pick it up!”

  I answered the phone. Tried to play it cool.

  “Hey, man, what’s up?”

  Then I listened as Curt explained to me what was

  going to happen in just a few minutes.

  When I hung up, I looked at Jack and said, “You

  need to leave.”

  Needless to say this was not exactly what he was expecting to hear.

  “What the hell are you talking about, Henry?”

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  “In less than half an hour, somebody is going to come

  here to sell me drugs. And unless you want to try and pass

  off as my pot-addicted uncle or something, we can’t have

  any trace of you in this apartment.”

  43

  Curt Sheffield had only been working for the NYPD for

  five years, but the past two days made it feel like a lifetime.

  Two days. Twelve dead. All deaths related to this new

  drug, the Darkness.

  For years, New York was considered one of the safest

  big cities in the world. The crime that existed was relegated to back alleys and dingy apartments. Upstanding

  citizens had little to fear as long as they used common

  sense.

  The drug dealers were easy to smoke out. They were

  usually junkies themselves. They sold because that’s all

  they had, all they knew. They were uneducated, unloved,

  and an honest day’s work for an honest day’s pay was a

  foreign concept.

  And that’s why dealers were so easy to break.

  In real life, those dealers in their teens and twenties

  didn’t have any sort of real loyalty to the drug lords. It

  wasn’t like television. There was no “game” and no

  loyalty beyond a wad of cash. Your employer was simply

  whoever could pay that day.

  When a man making seventeen thousand dollars a year

  selling crack is forced to choose between turning in a man

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  he barely knows or spending five years behind bars, the

  decision was always easy.

  That’s why people on the top never lasted long. They

  could never offer the people below them a life worth risking on the streets. Every moment was fleeting, but when

  push came to shove a fistful of crumpled twenties wasn’t

  enough to keep someone from saving their own ass.

  This drug, though, was different. The narcotics division was sweeping all those back alleys, talking to all

  their sources, offering all their informants good, hard

  cash for one tip that could loosen the first thread.

  So far, they’d come up empty-handed.

  And it wasn’t because the informants had suddenly

  grown balls or a sense of loyalty. It’s that they didn’t know.

  However this product was being moved, it was being

  done away from the streets, away from the bottom feeders, away from the men and women who sold the very

  same drugs they ingested.

  This was different. And that’s what scared Curt the most.

  This city had the best police force in the world, but

  now that force was being slashed like an unfortunately

  located forest. A thousand cops, vanished from the streets,

  victims of a mayor legally beholden to a budget that had

  come in four billion dollars in the red.

  Curt stopped to pick up a pizza on the way home. Half

  mushroom, half pepperoni. He had no bigger plans than

  to throw on his Rutgers sweatshirt, lounge on the couch

  with a few slices and a few beers and flip between games

  and late-night Cinemax.

  As he approached his apartment building, he noticed

  a man hanging on the street corner. He was wearing a

  T-shirt and sweatpants, and had a pair of slippers covering

  his bare feet. Ordinarily such a thing wouldn’t catch his

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  eye, but this guy was swaying slightly, looking like every

  few seconds he had to remind himself not to topple over.

  It was a chilly night, and clearly the man had either gone

  out knowingly underdressed or was so zoned out that he

  hadn’t noticed.

  Suddenly he found himself walking over to the man,

  balancing the pizza in one hand while checking his gun

  to make sure it was at the ready. Curt had never been

  forced to use his gun off duty, but something about this

  man made him tense up. It was the jittery movements,

  how he looked like he might fall asleep one moment and

  then suddenly jerk awake the next. He looked like a

  classic user, and Curt had learned long ago that someone

  high could only be trusted as much as the drugs allowed

  them to be.

  Curt approached slowly. His hand was getting warm

  from the bottom of the pizza box. As he got closer, he

  called out, “Hey, man, you okay?”

  The man didn’t respond, just kept swaying. His right

  arm shot out and caught a lamppost to steady himself.

  “I said, you okay, man?”

  Then the guy whipped around, and the look in his eyes

  made Curt glad his gun was so close. His eyes were bloodshot, but they were wide open, crazylike, and he stared at

  Curt with a mixture of confusion and apprehension, like an

  animal cornered who might bare its fangs out of pure panic.

  Curt slowly knelt down and laid the pizza on the sidewalk. He hoped this guy was just drunk, and that he could

  throw him in a cab, be done with it and retreat to his pepperoni. But getting closer, he knew it wouldn’t be that

  simple.

  “Hey, man,” Curt called out. “You’re not looking so

  hot. Why don’t you head home. Sleep it off.”

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  The man shook his head. Slowly at first, but then more

  rapidly until Curt was worried he might hurt himself.

  “Whoa, slow down there. I’m a cop. See?” Curt took

  out his badge, showed it to the guy. “My name’s Officer

  Sheffield. I’m here to help.”

  “No,” the man moaned. “No. No. No. Nooooooo. ”

  “It’s okay. We’ve all had bad days. Why don’t I call a

  cab…”

  “It’s all gone,” he said, his body swaying faster than

  the breeze.

  “What’s gone?”

  “All of it,” he said. “All of it. It�
��s gone.”

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about, but I’m sure

  you have some in your fridge.”

  “No. I can’t get anymore.”

  Curt kept playing along. “Why not?”

  “Money,” he said, his voice like tar pulled through a

  pasta strainer. “I need it to buy more.”

  “More what?”

  “Darkness,” the man said, his eyes fixated on Curt.

  Sheffield felt his body tense up. The drug was too

  early in its life for cops to fully know how users reacted

  to it, how their bodies responded. Each drug did different things to people who took it, and as a cop you learned

  how to deal with each of them. You had to be supple with

  your voice, malleable with your body language. The

  wrong tone or stilted reaction could set someone off,

  putting you or others at risk.

  Curt didn’t know how to deal with people who used

  this new drug. They were unpredictable, but if anything

  the last few days had proven without a doubt was that they

  were uncompromisingly violent. He’d been trained on

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  how to deal with addicts of various substances, but this

  seemed to go well beyond the training manual.

  “Why do you want more, man? What say we get you

  somewhere safe. St. Luke’s hospital isn’t too far from

  here. We’ll get you a nice bed, get you cleaned up…”

  “I don’t want to be cleaned up!” the man yelled. Curt

  stepped back, the look in the man’s eyes giving him

  pause. He thought about calling for an ambulance, figuring whether he liked it or not this guy could use a night

  in detox. The only worry was whether in the time it took

  for an ambulance to come, this man was intent on hurting

  Curt or someone else.

  “Hey, I hear you. That stuff is good. But being able to

  think clearly, ain’t nothing you buy can replicate that

  feeling.”

  “You’re wrong,” the man slurred, his eyes closed as he

  smiled. “I feel…alive. I feel…fine.” Then his mood

  turned sour, the smile disappearing. “There’s no more

  money. No more money. It’s gone. I can’t have any more.”

  “It’s okay, we can just…”

  “I can’t have any more!” he shouted.

  “Come on, buddy, that stuff isn’t going to do anything

  for you. Let’s talk.”

  Then the man reached into his pocket and pulled out

  a cell phone. “They won’t take my calls anymore,” he

  said. “The last guy who came, Vinnie, he told me unless

  I had cold hard cash he wouldn’t sell me anything.” The

  man held up the phone like it was a soiled diaper, and

  dropped it into the trash can. “Where am I going to get

  more money? I can’t find anybody to trade with me.”

  “Trade with you? What the hell are you talking

  about? Listen to yourself, man. You don’t need more,

  you need help.”

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  Curt took out his phone and dialed 911. When the

  operator picked up, he said, “This is Officer Curt Sheffield, currently off duty, I have a ten sixty-nine in progress. Adult male, mid-thirties, high on I believe this new

  drug, Darkness. Guy looks pretty out of it and potentially

  dangerous. Send a unit and an ambulance to Eighty-eight

  and Amsterdam.”

  “Ten-four, Officer Sheffield. Ambulance will be en

  route. Might have to wait for a squad car. Busy night

  tonight. Can you watch him until the EMTs get there?”

  Curt sighed. Always shorthanded.

  “I’ll do my best.” He hung up.

  The man’s body was draped across the lamppost now,

  as he barely looked able to stand. Curt took a few steps

  closer, put his hand in his jacket pocket where he felt the

  comfort of his holster.

  “Listen, buddy. I got a few friends coming. They’re

  going to take care of you. They…”

  “My wife,” the man said.

  “What’s you say?”

  “My wife is dead,” the man said in a guttural rasp.

  “She died.”

  “I’m so sorry… How did she die?”

  “I killed her.”

  Curt stopped moving. His fingers went from tickling

  the gun to gripping the pistol.

  His eyes darted back and forth as he spoke.

  “I wanted to sell her wedding ring. She told me I

  couldn’t. I could have bought so much with it, but she said

  no. I didn’t know what to do. I needed it so badly. So I

  took a knife and I cut it off of her.”

  “Oh, Jesus…”

  The man looked down, reached into his pocket.

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  “Okay, my friend, I’m going to come over there. I

  have a gun on me. Please, don’t move any more and take

  your hand out of your pocket.”

  Without warning the man yanked his hand from his

  pocket. It took Curt a second to realize what he was holding.

  In the man’s hand was a severed finger. A glittering

  diamond ring still attached to it.

  “I don’t know what to do!”

  Suddenly the man dropped the finger, turned around

  and ran out into the middle of the street.

  “Stop!” Curt shouted, sprinting forward.

  Half a dozen cars were speeding up Amsterdam, headlights blazing in the dark blue sky. Their horns started blaring

  as the man weaved in and out of the way of thousands of

  pounds of metal passing him by at forty miles an hour.

  Suddenly there was a flash of metal, sparks, and a terrible

  crunching sound as Curt stopped dead in his tracks. Curt saw

  the man’s body go flying, literally lifted into the air, where

  it spun end over end until landing in a heap by the curb.

  The car, a dark sedan, came screeching to a halt. The

  driver leaped out of the car, hands holding his head in disbelief. Cars ground to a stop all around the sedan, whose

  hood was dented, grill smashed inward. A slick of blood

  pooling around the hood ornament.

  And just below the front of the car was a sight that

  would never leave Curt Sheffield as long as he lived.

  Resting on the asphalt, in a perfect row as if placed

  there gently, was a pair of slippers.

  “Oh my God,” he said. The man looked at Curt, his

  mouth wide open. “You…you saw that. He ran out in front

  of me. He…oh, sweet Jesus…”

  Curt ran over to the body, knelt down next to it. The

  man’s face looked like it had been bludgeoned with a

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  sledgehammer, and his limbs were twisted in a way that

  God had most certainly not intended.

  He ripped his phone from his pocket, dialed 911. “Ten

  fifty-three,” Curt said, his mouth dry, the words tumbling

  out. “Officer needs assistance. We have a motor vehicle

  accident. One civilian is down and hurt, potentially fatal.

  He’s not breathing.”

  Curt put his fingers to the man’s neck, searched for a

  pulse.

  He felt nothing.

  Picking up the man’s wrist, he tried again. Still nothing.

  No use. He was long gone.

  “I think I
lost him,” Curt said into the phone.

  When he was assured an ambulance was en route,

  Curt stood up, took in the scene unfolding in front of him.

  Cars were lining up down the street, drivers getting out

  at first to see what was causing the traffic holdup. Then

  when they saw what was going on, phones came out as

  they called 911. Onlookers began to crowd the sidewalks.

  A few people started heading toward the body. Some

  looked concerned, fearful, but a few had a glint in their

  eyes that Curt didn’t like. He knew that not everybody

  was concerned for this guy’s well-being.

  Curt stood up, pulled out his badge. Let his arm hang

  loose so his jacket opened up a bit, revealing the gun and

  holster inside.

  “NYPD!” he shouted. The surge stopped. A few people slipped back into the crowds and disappeared, disappointed they didn’t have a chance to search the man

  for jewelry or money. “An ambulance is on the way. I’m

  going to need everyone to back away and clear room.”

  He walked toward the crowd, and they stepped back,

  obeying. Then Curt remembered something.

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  He turned and jogged back to the street corner where

  he’d seen the man. Reaching into the garbage can, he

  managed to find the man’s cell phone he’d dropped

  inside. He wiped off the crud and liquid, relieved to see

  the machine was still working.

  He clicked it on.

  The home page blinked on, and an LCD screen read

  Gil’s Phone.

  Gil. That was the dead man’s name.

  Then Curt scrolled through the numerous functions

  until he found a button marked Recent Calls.

  He clicked on it, and saw Gil’s call log from the last

  twelve hours. Incoming calls marked with an orange

  “down” arrow, outgoing with a red “up” arrow.

  Then Curt felt his breath catch in his throat.

  There was one phone number that stood out. Gil had

  called it no less than ten times in the last three hours.

  And the number had a 718 prefix.

  Without hesitating, Curt called the number from

  Gil’s phone.

  It rang twice, and then was picked up.

  “Mr. Meadows, we’ve already explained to you the

  situation. Until you have legal tender available, we cannot

  serve you. Goodbye.”

  The person on the other end hung up.

  And as soon as they hung up, Curt called one more

  number. A number he never thought he’d be calling to

  help him do his job.

  Curt had never gone undercover. He wasn’t sure he

 

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