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Blood of the Wicked

Page 4

by Leighton Gage


  “It’s about a watch you pawned,” Silva said. “A gold one with an inscription on the back.”

  “When was this?”

  “October of last year. You left it with Gilson Alveres, who owns a pawnshop on Rua Rio Branco. Your signature’s on the ticket.”

  “So what?”

  “I want to know where you got it.”

  “What’s it to you?”

  “It belonged to my mother. Someone stole it.”

  The sergeant’s face reddened, but whether in embarrassment or irritation, Silva couldn’t tell.

  “Well, I sure as hell didn’t,” he said. “I found it,”

  “Found it? Where?”

  “On the street.”

  “Where on the street?”

  “I don’t remember?”

  “Try.”

  “I told you, I don’t remember.”

  “And you expect me to believe that?”

  “I don’t give a shit what you believe. Fuck you.”

  Silva saw red. He reached out his left hand and grabbed the sergeant by the front of his shirt. “Where did you really get that watch?”

  The sergeant was at least twenty kilograms lighter than Silva, and maybe ten centimeters shorter, but he didn’t back down.

  “You got any idea who you’re dealing with? You take me on and you’re going to have the whole damned force on your back. Let go of my shirt.”

  The sergeant was right. The municipal cops stuck together. It was the only way for them to keep on doing what they did.

  Silva released the sergeant, took a deep breath and a step backward. “The way I figure it is you lifted my mother’s watch off of some lowlife punk. And you know what? I really don’t care. All I care about is his name and where to find him.”

  “Who the hell do you think you are, coming in here and making accusations like that? Get the fuck out of my house.”

  “I need to know, Sergeant. Those filhos da puta killed my father and raped my mother.”

  The sergeant’s red face turned even redder. “Tough. My heart bleeds. But I had nothing to do with it. Now, get out of here before I call some friends.”

  AT 4:30 the following morning, Sergeant de Alencar, sleepy from a long night at work, was walking along the deserted street, and less than five meters from his house, when he felt cold steel on the back of his neck.

  “It’s a revolver, and it’s cocked,” a voice said. “Keep your hand away from your holster. Pass your front door and keep walking.”

  “I don’t know who you are, senhor, but you’re making a big mistake.”

  “Shut up. Now, cross the street, stop next to the green car, and put your hands on the roof.”

  The sergeant did as he was told. The man behind him relieved him of his revolver, patted him down, and pocketed a small Beretta 7.65 semi-automatic that de Alencar was carrying in an ankle holster. Then he used the cop’s own cuffs to shackle his hands behind his back and opened the rear door of the car.

  “Get in.”

  “What is this?”

  “Just do it.”

  The sergeant felt the revolver again, pressing into the back of his neck. He did as he was told. When the man slipped in beside him, de Alencar glanced at his face.

  “You!” he said.

  “Me. Tell me about the punk you got the watch from.”

  “There wasn’t any punk. I already told you—”

  Silva cut him short by smashing him in the face with the butt of his .38 Taurus. The sergeant began to bleed profusely from his nose and lip. Silva reached behind him and threw him a towel. He’d come prepared.

  “I know what you told me. Now listen to me very carefully. If you tell me what I want to know, and then keep your mouth shut about it, it stops here. If you don’t, I’m going to kill you, and then I’m going to go into your house and kill your wife, that baby of yours, and anybody else who’s in there. Your choice.”

  It was a bluff. He would never have done it, but the sergeant looked into Silva’s eyes, black as death, and believed him.

  THEY WERE just a couple of punks, the sergeant said, just like the hundreds of others he’d shaken down in his lifetime.

  He’d been on patrol with two rookies, teaching them the ropes, teaching them how to get along on the salário de merda that was supposed to keep a roof over their heads and food in their bellies and didn’t.

  It had been broad daylight, maybe 2:00 or 3:00 in the afternoon. They were cruising along Avenida Faria Lima, not far from that big shopping center, Iguatemi, when Flores, one of the rookies, spotted a Rolex. Everybody, even a green kid like Flores, knew what a Rolex was, right?

  Silva nodded. There were gangs in São Paulo that specialized in lifting that one brand alone and sending the watches off to Paraguay for resale. But he wasn’t there to talk about Rolexes.

  “Get on with it,” he snapped.

  “I am getting on with it. See, the thing about this particular Rolex was that the guy who was wearing it was a lowlife punk with dirty sneakers and a fucking Palmeiras shirt.”

  He remembered the shirt, the sergeant told Silva, because, just the previous night, Palmeiras had stolen a game from Corinthians, four goals to three, because of a blind referee who, in de Alencar’s opinion, had no place on a soccer pitch and should never have been given a whistle.

  Silva told him to shut up about soccer teams and finish the story.

  De Alencar swallowed, and continued. “The punk with the shirt . . . no, that was wrong, it wasn’t a shirt. It was more like a jersey—”

  Silva waved the pistol.

  “—well, he wasn’t alone. There were two of them. And both of them were punks. The other guy was dressed in one of those fucking, stupid”

  Silva narrowed his eyes and took in an audible breath.

  De Alencar cut short his sartorial criticism and hastened to tell how he and the two rookies had taken both punks into a convenient alley for a quick search. The watch was a Rolex all right, stainless steel with a black face. They’d gotten six hundred cruzeiros for that one. The other watch, the one Silva was talking about, was in the pocket of the other punk. Because it was gold, it brought three times that. They’d split the money, half going to him, half going to the two rookies. He was a sergeant, after all, and that’s the way it worked. The senior guy always got half the take.

  All the while they were being shaken down, the punks didn’t say a word. What could they say? That the watches were family heirlooms? Yeah, right! So they just emptied their pockets and asked de Alencar and the two rookies to leave them enough change for the bus. No hard feelings on either side. That was just the way it worked.

  Names? No. It had been over a year ago. How could Silva expect him to remember names? He hadn’t seen them before, he hadn’t seen them since, and after all this time, he sure as hell wouldn’t recognize them from a mug shot.

  They were Bahianos, he remembered that much. Well, maybe not from Bahia, maybe from Pernambuco, or Alagoas. It could be anywhere up that way, because all of those fuck-ing northeastern accents sounded the same to him, and in the sergeant’s opinion, all of those lazy bastards should be crammed into a fleet of buses and shipped right back to where they belonged because, more than anybody else, it was them that were fucking up the city.

  “And that’s it? That’s all you can remember?” Silva said, cutting the social commentary short.

  “Yeah. That’s it.”

  Before he’d smashed de Alencar in the face, Silva had lowered the hammer of his Taurus. Now, he cocked it again. “What are you doing?” the sergeant said, nervously. “Watch out for that thing.”

  “Think hard. Give me something else.”

  The sergeant swallowed, crimped his eyes shut, opened them again. “There was one more thing,” he said.

  “What?”

  “One of them had this tattoo. It was a snake that started under that fucking jersey, maybe down on his chest. Then it curved all the way around his neck and the head and tongue were ju
st under his ear.”

  The tattoo clinched it for Silva.

  The man in front of him had been face-to-face with the men who’d killed his father and raped his mother. De Alencar had been close enough to smell them, close enough to reach out and touch them. But now they’d vanished again, and Silva’s lead had run out, all because of the venality of three municipal cops.

  Only the thought of the woman and baby sleeping across the street caused him to stay his hand. The sergeant never realized how close his wife had been to becoming a widow.

  Chapter Five

  EMERSON FERRAZ, THE COLONEL in charge of Cascatas do Pontal’s State Police Battalion, had clumps of hair protruding from his nostrils, pockmarked skin, a forehead about two fingers high and a personality as ugly as the rest of him.

  When Hector Costa, after a thirty-minute wait, was admitted to his presence, Ferraz didn’t even look up. For a good minute-and-a-half Hector stood in front of the colonel’s desk like a schoolboy called up for disciplinary action. All the while, Ferraz scratched away on a yellow legal pad with a Mont Blanc fountain pen. The pen, dwarfed by his pudgy fingers, looked out of place in the hands of a man earning the salary of a cop.

  The office stank of sweat and cigar smoke, both of them stale. Topping the clutter on Ferraz’s desk was the business card Hector had handed to the uniformed policewoman— no beauty herself—who functioned as Ferraz’s secretary.

  Tiring of being ignored, Hector sank, uninvited, into one of the two chairs in front of the colonel’s desk.

  “Sure. That’s right. Just make yourself comfortable,” the colonel said, putting down his pen and raising his head. He stared at Hector out of a pair of porcine brown eyes and then screwed up his face as if his visitor had just passed gas. “I’ve heard about you,” he said. Ferraz emphasized his words by jabbing at Hector’s card with a pudgy forefinger.

  Hector groaned inwardly. He knew what was coming.

  “Your boss is Mario Silva, who just happens to be your uncle, am I right?”

  Hector hated it when people brought that up.

  “Yeah, I thought so.” Ferraz said, responding to Hector’s nod, as if he’d just wrung a confession from some criminal he particularly disliked. “Well, let me tell you something. I don’t need your help.” He picked up Hector’s card, ripped it in half, and dropped the pieces into a wastebasket. “And I don’t need your uncle, either.” He made the word “uncle” sound as if it was some kind of epithet.

  Hector was tempted to tell him that neither he, nor his uncle, needed, or wanted, Ferraz or his damned case either, but the colonel wasn’t finished.

  “Something else. I don’t talk to messenger boys. If that uncle of yours wants anything from me, tell him to come himself.”

  Ferraz picked up his pen and went back to doing whatever he’d been doing when Hector arrived. For some time the only sound in the office was the constant whir and clank of heavy construction machinery drifting in through the closed windows and the scratching of the colonel’s pen on paper. Hector waited him out, saying nothing.

  After a while, Ferraz looked up and blinked theatrically. “Still here?” he said.

  “He is coming himself,” Hector said, picking up where Ferraz had left off, “but he had to clear his schedule. He’ll be here tomorrow morning.”

  “Here?”

  “Here. In Cascatas.”

  “The almighty inspector-general himself?”

  “His title, Colonel, is Chief Inspector for Criminal Matters.”

  “No shit? Chief Inspector, eh? Well, don’t expect me to be waiting at the airport with a brass band. And tell him that if he wants to come here”—Ferraz stabbed the desktop with the same forefinger he’d used to jab the card—“he’d better call for an appointment.”

  As if emphasizing what the colonel said, someone on the floor above flushed a toilet.

  Hector crossed his arms and leaned back in his chair.”Do both of us a favor, Colonel,” he said, choosing his words carefully, but letting his irritation show. “Answer my questions. It’ll save you time in the long run.”

  Ferraz didn’t appear to be ruffled by the absence of cordiality. In fact, he seemed to welcome it. “Okay,” he said. “How about I give you five minutes of my time. Starting . . .” he glanced at his watch “ . . . now.”

  He took a box of thin cigars from the drawer of his desk, chose one, and replaced the box without offering it to Hector.

  Hector had already noticed that Ferraz had a slight wheeze when he talked. Probably, he thought, because he inhales the damned things. He wasn’t looking forward to the colonel lighting up that cheroot.

  The colonel seemed to sense it. He licked the cigar to moisten it and rolled it back and forth between his palms, staring at Hector all the while.

  Hector had made inquiries about Colonel Emerson Ferraz before leaving São Paulo: Politically connected and close to retirement, a friend at the State Police had told him. Wasn’t born rich, didn’t marry into money, but drives some kind of fancy imported car, owns a really big fazenda, and takes vacations in Miami.

  What Hector’s friend hadn’t told him was that Colonel Ferraz, in addition to almost certainly being a crook, was also a nasty son of a bitch.

  Ferraz bit a piece from the end of his cigar and spit it across his desk, narrowly missing the chair to Hector’s right.

  “What do you want to know?” he asked.

  “Do you have any leads?”

  “Not a one,” the colonel said contentedly. He removed a box of long wooden matches from his breast pocket, lit up, and blew some smoke in Hector’s direction. The cigar was Bahian and the smell was everything Hector had feared it would be. He started breathing through his mouth, a trick he’d taught himself after being exposed to too many rotting corpses.

  “Speed it up,” the colonel said. “You’ve got four minutes and forty seconds.”

  “Where did the shots come from?” Hector asked.

  “The north tower of the new church.”

  “How can you be sure?”

  “We found the murder weapon.”

  Ferraz opened the drawer of his desk.

  Hector sniffed. A telltale smell filled his nostrils. A photo. Recently processed. Hector was blessed, sometimes cursed, with an extraordinary sense of smell, a sense so acute that he could have made a living as a perfumer or a wine taster. He’d already found the stale sweat and the cheap cigar smoke hard to bear. Now, despite the trick of breathing through his mouth, there was the dominant top note of a photographic print hardly dry.

  Ferraz handed it over. The paper was still damp.

  The image was of a firearm, a rifle with a telescopic sight and a leather sling. It had been photographed against a white background, perhaps a Formica table.

  “Looks like a Sako Classic with a Leupold scope,” Hector said.

  Ferraz tipped some ash into an ashtray. “It is,” he said, a reluctant note of admiration creeping into his voice.

  “What was he firing?”

  “Nosler ballistic tips,” the colonel said, and then, glancing at his watch, “three minutes and twenty seconds.”

  Hector kept staring at the photograph. In Brazil, the rifle and ammunition were unusual—sniper stuff—but these days, you could buy just about any firearm you wanted in the fave-las of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. The drug gangs smuggled them in from Paraguay or bought them from corrupt quartermasters in Brazil’s armed services. The crooks were as well armed as the police and often better.

  “Latent prints?”

  The colonel put the cigar back into his mouth, held it firmly between his teeth, and tipped it up at a jaunty angle. “Not one. Wiped clean,” he said through clenched teeth.

  “My people are going to want to inspect the rifle.”

  “Be my guest. It’s in the evidence locker downstairs.”

  “And no one saw anyone going in or out of the tower?”

  “Nope.”

  Ferraz took the cigar out of his mouth
and bared his teeth, more of a grimace than a smile. The teeth were tobacco-stained and as crooked as the tombstones in an old cemetery. “Have you sealed off the tower?”

  “Of course I have. What do you take me for?”

  An ugly, unpleasant son of a bitch. But Hector didn’t say it. He took a shallow breath and let it out slowly. “Any theories about the motive?”

  “Seven, to be exact.”

  “Seven?”

  “Seven. The reception committee. They’re all landowners and each and every one of them thinks the bullets were meant for him.”

  “They think the bishop was shot by mistake?”

  “What did I just say?”

  “Why?”

  “Ever hear of the Landless Workers’ League?”

  “Sure.”

  “How about Aurelio Azevedo?”

  Hector shook his head. “Aurelio who?”

  “Azevedo. He was their leader around these parts, a real pain-in-the-ass. About a month ago, somebody killed him. His buddies figure it must have been a landowner and they’re out for blood.”

  “What do you think?”

  The colonel took another deep drag on his cigar. “They’re wrong. The bishop was the target.” He expelled the smoke and coughed. He brought up some phlegm and leaned over to spit it into the wastebasket next to his chair.

  Someday, Hector thought, those cigars are going to kill him. But not soon enough to suit me. “What makes you so sure?” he said.

  “When the first shot was fired the whole reception committee, all seven of them, stopped dead in their tracks. The closest one, the mayor, was still four meters away, maybe even a little more. The second shot hit the bishop just above the line between his eyes, took off the back of his head. That sound to you like the shooter didn’t know what he was doing? No way. He was aiming at Dom Felipe, all right. No doubt about it.”

  Ferraz pulled up his cuff and ostentatiously displayed his watch. It was a gold Rolex. “You’ve got two minutes left.”

  “Tell me more about this guy Azevedo.”

  Ferraz took another puff. The smoke was beginning to sting Hector’s eyes.

  “Azevedo was a field hand out on the Fazenda da Boa Vista,” he said. “No criminal record. Never made any trouble until those League people got to him. Then he started going to meetings and rallies and the next thing you know he’s running around in a red shirt, waving one of those banners and organizing a group to occupy Muniz’s land”.

 

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