Book Read Free

Broken Angels jbakb-3

Page 2

by Richard Montanari


  "Come on, man. You know the system. Witnesses have memory lapses. Shit gets thrown out of court. Happens all the time. The hot shot is never a sure thing."

  At that moment a shadow caught Byrne's peripheral vision. Left side. A SWAT officer was edging up the back hallway, his AR-15 rifle raised. He was out of Krotz's line of sight. The officer made eye contact with Byrne.

  If a SWAT officer was on scene, a perimeter was being established. If Krotz made it out of the restaurant, he wouldn't get far. Byrne had to get that woman out of Krotz's grasp, and that knife out of his hand.

  "Tell you what, Anton," Byrne said. "I'm going to put my weapon down, okay?"

  "That's what I'm talkin' about. Put it on the floor and kick it over to me."

  "I can't do that," Byrne said. "But I'm going to put it down, then I'm going to raise my hands over my head."

  Byrne saw the SWAT officer get into position. Cap reversed. Eye to the scope. Dialed in.

  Krotz slid another few inches toward the door. "I'm listening."

  "Once I do that, you let the woman go."

  "Then what?"

  "Then you and I will walk out of here." Byrne lowered his weapon. He placed it on the floor, put his foot on top of it "We'll talk. Okay?"

  For a moment, it appeared as if Krotz was considering it. Then it all went to hell just as quickly as it had begun.

  "Nah," Krotz said. "Where's the fun in that?"

  Krotz grabbed the woman by the hair, yanked back her head, and ran the blade across her throat. Her blood jetted halfway across the room.

  "No!" Byrne screamed.

  The woman folded to the floor, her neck a grotesque red smile. For a moment, Byrne felt weightless, immobilized, as if everything he had ever learned and done was pointless, as if his whole career on the street was a lie.

  Krotz winked. "Don't you love this fucking city?"

  Anton Krotz lunged at Byrne, but before he could take a single step the SWAT officer at the back of the diner fired. Two rounds slammed into Krotz's chest, propelling him back into the window, exploding his torso in a dense crimson burst. The blasts were deafening in the confined space of the small diner. Krotz tumbled backward through the shattered glass onto the sidewalk in front of the restaurant. Onlookers scattered. A pair of SWAT officers deployed in front of the diner rushed over to Krotz's supine form, putting heavy boots to his flesh, rifles aimed at his head.

  Krotz's chest heaved once, twice, then fell still, steaming in the frigid night air. A third SWAT officer arrived, took his pulse. He signaled. The suspect was dead.

  Detective Kevin Byrne's senses went into overdrive. He smelled the cordite in the air, mixed with smells of coffee and onions. He saw the bright blood spread on the tile. He heard the last shard of glass shattering on the floor, coupled with someone's soft crying. He felt the sweat on his back turn to sleet with the rush of freezing air from the street.

  Don't you love this fucking city?

  Moments later an EMS van screeched to a halt, bringing the world back into focus. Two paramedics sprinted into the diner and began to treat the woman on the floor. They tried to stem the bleeding, but it was too late. The woman and her killer were both dead.

  Nick Palladino and Eric Chavez-two detectives from the homicide unit-ran into the diner, weapons drawn. They saw Byrne and the carnage. They holstered. Chavez spoke into his two-way. Nick Palladino began to set up a crime scene.

  Byrne looked over at the man who had been sitting in the booth with the victim. The man stared at the woman on the floor as if she were sleeping, as if she could stand up, as if they might finish their meal, pay the check and walk out into the night, gazing at the Christmas decorations on the street. Byrne saw a half-opened individual creamer next to the woman's coffee. She was going to put cream in her coffee, then five minutes later she was dead.

  Byrne had witnessed the grief dealt by homicide many times, but rarely this soon after the act. This man had just seen his wife brutally murdered. He had been only a few feet away. The man glanced up at Byrne. In his eyes was an anguish far deeper, and darker, than Byrne had ever known.

  "I'm sorry," Byrne said. The moment the words left his lips, he wondered why he'd said them. He wondered what he meant.

  "You killed her," the man said.

  Byrne was incredulous. He felt gut-punched. He couldn't begin to process what he was hearing. "Sir, I-"

  "You… you could have shot him, but you hesitated. I saw. You could have shot him and you didn't."

  The man slid from the booth. He took a moment, steadied himself, and slowly approached Byrne. Nick Palladino made a move to get between them. Byrne waved Nick off. The man got closer. Just a few feet away now.

  "Isn't that your job?" the man asked.

  "I'm sorry?"

  "To protect us? Isn't that your job?"

  Byrne wanted to tell the man that there was a blue line, yes, but when evil stepped into the light, there was nothing any of them could do. He wanted to tell the man that he had stayed his trigger because of his wife. For the life of him, he couldn't think of a single word to begin to express any of this.

  "Laura," the man said.

  "Pardon me?"

  "Her name was Laura."

  Before Byrne could say another word, the man swung his fist. It was a wild shot, poorly thrown, inexpertly leveraged. Byrne saw it coming at the last instant, and managed to sidestep it with ease. But the look in the man's eyes was so full of rage and hurt and sorrow, Byrne almost wished he had taken the hit. It may have, for the moment, filled a need in both of them.

  Before the man could take another swing, Nick Palladino and Eric Chavez grabbed him, held him. The man did not struggle, but began to sob. He went limp in their grasp.

  "Let him go," Byrne said. "Just… let him go."

  The shooting team wrapped up around 3 AM. A half dozen detectives from the homicide unit had shown up for support. In a loose circle they stood around Byrne, protecting him from the media, even from the brass.

  Byrne gave his statement and was debriefed. He was free to go. For a while, he didn't know where to go, where he wanted to be. The idea of getting drunk wasn't even appealing, though it just might blot out the horrible events of the evening.

  Just twenty-four hours earlier he had been sitting on the cold, comfortable porch of a cabin in the Poconos, feet up, and a few inches of Old Forester in a plastic mug. Now two people were dead. It seemed as if he brought death with him.

  The man's name was Matthew Clarke. He was forty-one. He had three daughters-Felicity, Tammy, and Michele. He worked as an insurance broker for a large national firm. He and his wife had been in the city to see their oldest daughter, a freshman at Temple University. They had stopped at the diner for coffee and lemon pudding, his wife's favorite.

  Her name was Laura.

  She had hazel eyes.

  Kevin Byrne had a feeling he would see those eyes for a long time to come.

  3

  Two days lаtег.

  The book sat on the table. It was constructed out of harmless cardboard, benign paper, nontoxic ink. It had a dust jacket, an ISBN number, blurbs on the back, a title along the spine. It was similar in all ways to just about every other book in the world.

  Except it was different.

  Detective Jessica Balzano, a ten-year veteran of the Philadelphia Police Department, sipped her coffee and stared at the terrifying object. In her time she had squared off with killers, muggers, rapists, Peeping Toms, burglars, other model citizens; had once looked down the barrel of a 9mm weapon, aimed point-blank at her forehead. She had punched and been punched by a select group of thugs, creeps, whackos, punks, and gangsters; had chased psychopaths down dark alleys; had once been threatened by a man wielding a cordless drill.

  And yet the book on her dining room table scared her more than all of that combined.

  Jessica had nothing against books. Nothing at all. As a rule, she loved books. In fact, rare was the day she didn't have a paperback in her pur
se for those down times on the job. Books were great. Except this book-the bright, cheerful, yellow and red book on her dining room table, the book with a menagerie of grinning cartoon animals on the front-belonged to her daughter, Sophie.

  Which meant that her daughter was going to school.

  Not preschool, which to Jessica had seemed like a glorified day-care center. Regular school. Kindergarten. Granted, it was only a get- acquainted day for the real thing that began next fall, but all the trappings were there. On the table. In front of her. Book, lunch, coat, mittens, pencil case.

  School.

  Sophie came out of her bedroom dressed and primed for her first official day of academe. She wore a navy blue accordion-pleat skirt and crewneck sweater, a pair of lace-up shoes, and a wool beret-and-scarf set. She looked like a miniature Audrey Hepburn.

  Jessica felt sick.

  "You okay, Mom?" Sophie asked. She slid onto her chair.

  "Of course, sweetie," Jessica lied. "Why wouldn't I be okay?"

  Sophie shrugged. "You've been sad all week."

  "Sad? What have I been sad about?"

  "You've been sad about me going to school."

  My God, Jessica thought. I have a five-year-old Dr. Phil living in my house. "I'm not sad, honey."

  "Kids go to school, Mom. We talked about it."

  Yes we did, my darling daughter. Except I didn't hear a word. I didn't hear a word because you are just a baby. My baby. A tiny, helpless, pink-fingered little soul who needs her mommy for everything.

  Sophie poured herself some cereal, added milk. She dug in.

  "Morning, my lovely ladies," Vincent said, walking into the kitchen, tying his tie. He planted a kiss on Jessica's cheek, and one on top of Sophie's beret.

  Jessica's husband was always cheerful in the morning. He brooded almost all the rest of the time, but in the morning he was a ray of sunshine. Exactly the opposite of his wife.

  Vincent Balzano was a detective working out of Narcotics Field Unit North. He was trim and muscular, still the most devastatingly sexy man Jessica had ever known-dark hair, caramel eyes, long lashes. This morning his hair was still damp, swept back from his broad forehead. He wore a dark blue suit.

  During six years of marriage, they'd hit a few rough patches-had been separated for nearly six months-but they were back together and making a go of it. Two-badge marriages were an extremely rare commodity. Successful ones, that is.

  Vincent poured himself a cup of coffee, sat at the table. "Let me look at you," he said to Sophie.

  Sophie jumped up from her chair, standing at rigid attention in front of her father.

  "Turn around," he said.

  Sophie spun in place, vamped, giggled, hand on hip.

  "Va-va-voom," Vincent said.

  "Va-va-voom," Sophie echoed.

  "So, tell me something, young lady."

  "What?"

  "How did you get so pretty?"

  "My mom's pretty." They both looked at Jessica. This was their routine when she was feeling a little down.

  Oh God, Jessica thought. Her chest felt like it was going to rumble right off her body. Her lower lip quivered.

  "Yes, she is," Vincent said. "One of the two prettiest girls in the world."

  "Who's the other girl?" Sophie asked.

  Vincent winked.

  "Dad," Sophie said.

  "Let's finish our breakfast."

  Sophie sat back down.

  Vincent sipped his coffee. "Are you looking forward to visiting the school?"

  "Oh, yes." Sophie spooned a blob of milk-sodden Cheerios into her mouth.

  "Where's your backpack?"

  Sophie stopped chewing. How could she get through the day without her backpack? It all but defined her as a person. Two weeks earlier she had tried on more than a dozen, finally settling on a Strawberry Shortcake model. For Jessica it had been like watching Paris Hilton at a Jean Paul Gaultier trunk show. A minute later Sophie finished eating, brought her bowl to the sink, and rocketed back to her room.

  Vincent then turned his attention to his suddenly fragile wife, the same woman who once punched out a thug in a Port Richmond bar for putting his arm around her waist, the woman who once went four full victorious rounds on ESPN2 with a monstrous gal from Cleveland, Ohio, a heavily muscled nineteen-year-old nicknamed "Cinder Block" Jackson.

  "Come here, you big baby," he said.

  Jessica crossed the room. Vincent patted his lap. Jessica sat. "What?" she asked.

  "You're not dealing with this too well, are you?"

  "No." Jessica felt the emotions well up again, a hot coal burning behind her breastbone. Big brute of a Philly homicide detective was she.

  "It's only an orientation thing, I thought," Vincent said.

  "It is. But it's going to orient her to school."

  "I thought that was the point."

  "She's not ready for school."

  "News flash, Jess."

  "What?"

  "She is ready for school."

  "Yeah but… but that means she'll be ready to wear makeup, and get her license, and start dating, and-"

  "What, in first grade?"

  "You know what I mean."

  It was obvious. God help her and save the republic she wanted another baby. Ever since she had rolled the odometer to thirty, she'd thought about it. Most of her friends were on bundle number three. Every time she saw a swaddled baby in a stroller, or in a papoose, or in a car seat, or even in a stupid television commercial for Pampers, she felt the pang.

  "Hold me tight," she said.

  Vincent did. As tough as Jessica thought she was-in addition to her life as a police officer, she was also a professional boxer, not to mention a South Philly girl, born and raised at Sixth and Catharine-she never felt safer than at moments like this.

  She pulled back, looked into her husband's eyes. She kissed him. Deep and serious and let's-make-a-baby big-time.

  "Wow," Vincent said, his lips smeared with lipstick. "We should send her to school more often."

  "There's a lot more where that came from, Detective," she said, probably a little too seductively for seven in the morning. Vincent was, after all, Italian. She slid off his lap. He pulled her right back. He kissed her again, and then they both looked at the wall clock.

  The bus was coming for Sophie in five minutes. After that Jessica didn't have to meet her partner for almost an hour.

  Plenty of time.

  Kevin Byrne had been off for a week, and although Jessica had had enough on her plate to keep her busy, the week without him had dragged. Byrne had been scheduled to return three days ago, but there had been that horrible incident at the diner. She'd read the accounts in the Inquirer and Daily News, read the official reports. A nightmare scenario for a police officer.

  Byrne had been put on a brief administrative leave. There would be a review in the next day or two. They hadn't talked about the episode in depth yet.

  They would.

  When she turned the corner, she saw him standing in front of the coffee shop, two cups in hand. Their first stop of the day would be to visit a ten-year-old crime scene in Juniata Park, the location of a 1997 double drug-homicide, followed by an interview with an elderly gentleman who had been a potential witness. It was day one of a cold case to which they had been assigned.

  There were three sections in the homicide unit-the Line Squad, which handled new cases; the Fugitive Squad, which tracked down wanted suspects; and SIU, the Special Investigation Unit, which, among other things, handled cold cases. The roster of detectives was generally set in stone, but sometimes when all hell broke loose, which happened all too often in Philly, detectives on any given shift could work the line.

  "Excuse me, I was supposed to meet my partner here," Jessica said. "Tall, clean-shaven guy. Looks like a cop. Have you seen him?"

  "What, you don't like the beard?" Byrne handed her a cup. "I spent an hour shaping it."

  "Shaping?"

  "Well, you know, trimming around the
edges so it doesn't look ragged."

  "Ah."

  "What do you think?"

  Jessica leaned back, scrutinized his face. "Well, to be honest, I think it makes you look…"

  "Distinguished?"

  She was going to say homeless. "Yeah. That."

  Byrne stroked his beard. It hadn't grown fully in, but Jessica could see that when it did it would be mostly gray. As long as he didn't go Just For Men on her, she could probably handle it.

  As they headed to the Taurus, Byrne's cell phone rang. He flipped it open, listened, pulled out his notebook, made a few notes. He glanced at his watch. "Twenty minutes." He folded his phone, pocketed it.

  "Job?" Jessica asked.

  "Job."

  The cold case would stay cold a while longer. They continued up the street. After a full block, Jessica broke the silence.

  "You okay?" she asked.

  "Me? Oh, yeah," Byrne said. "Never better. Sciatica's acting up a little, but other than that."

  "Kevin."

  "I'm telling you, I'm a hundred percent," Byrne said. "Hand to God."

  He was lying, but that's what friends did for each other when they wanted you to know the truth.

  "We'll talk later?" Jessica asked.

  "We'll talk," Byrne said. "By the way, why are you so happy?"

  "I look happy?"

  "Let me put it this way. Your face could open a smile outlet in Jersey."

  "Just glad to see my partner."

  "Right," Byrne said, slipping into the car.

  Jessica had to laugh, recalling the unbridled marital passion of her morning. Her partner knew her well.

  4

  The crime scene was a boarded-up commercial property in Manayunk, an area in the northwest section of Philly, just on the eastern bank of the Schuylkill River. For some time now the neighborhood seemed in a constant state of redevelopment and gentrification, evolving from what was once a quarter for those working in the mills and factories, to an upper middle-class section of the city. The name Manayunk was a Lenape Indian term meaning "our place for drinking," and in the past decade or so, the neighborhood's lively Main Street strip of pubs, restaurants, and night clubs-essentially Philadelphia's answer to Bourbon Street-had tried mightily to live up to that long-ago bestowed name.

 

‹ Prev