Hornet's Nest

Home > Mystery > Hornet's Nest > Page 4
Hornet's Nest Page 4

by Patricia Cornwell


  "I only wanna be with you... Yo! Andy, it's Axeldon't axe-me. Maybe dinner? How 'bout Jack Straw's ... ?"

  Brazil impatiently cut off the recording as the phone rang. This time the caller was live and creepy, and breathing into the phone as the pervert had sex with Brazil in mind, again without asking.

  "I'm holding youuu so haarrrddd, and you're touching me with your tongue, sliiiidiiing ..." she breathed in a low tone that reminded Brazil of psycho shows he sometimes had watched as a child.

  "You're sick." He slammed the receiver back into its cradle.

  He stood in the mirror over his dresser and began brushing hair out of his eyes. It was really bugging him, getting too long, streaks from the sun catching light. He had always worn his hair one of two ways, short or not as short. He was tucking an obstinate strand behind an ear when suddenly the reflection of his mother boiled up from behind, an obese, raging drunk, attacking.

  "Where have you been?" his mother screamed as she tried to backhand her son across the face.

  Brazil raised an arm, warding off the blow just in time. He wheeled around, grabbing his mother by both wrists, firmly but gently. This was a tired, old drama, an endless rerun of a painful play.

  "Easy, easy, easy," he said as he led his besotted mother to the bed and sat her down.

  Muriel Brazil began to cry, rocking, slurring her words.

  "Don't go.

  Don't leave me, Andy. Please, oh pleassseee. "

  Brazil glanced at his watch. He looked furtively at the window, afraid West might somehow see through shut blinds and know the wretched secret of his entire life.

  "Mom, I'm going to get your medicine, okay?" he said.

  "You watch TV and go to bed. I'll be home soon."

  It wasn't okay. Mrs. Brazil wailed, rocking, screaming hell on earth.

  "Sorry, sorry, sorry! Don't know what's wrong with me, Andyeeee!"

  "W West did not hear all of this, but she heard enough because she had opened car windows to smoke. She was suspicious that Brazil lived with a girlfriend and they were having a fight. West shook her head, flicking a butt out onto the weed-choked, eroded drive. Why would anyone move in with another human being right after college, after all those years of roommates? For what? She asked no questions of Brazil as they drove away. Whatever this reporter might have to say to explain his life, she didn't want to hear it. They headed back to the city, the lighted skyline an ambitious monument to banking and girls not allowed. This wasn't an original thought. She heard Hammer complain about it every day.

  "W West would drive her chief through the city, and Hammer would look out, poking her finger and talking about those businessmen behind tall walls of glass who decided what went into the paper and what crimes got solved and who became the next mayor. Hammer would rail on about Fortune 500 yahoos who didn't live anywhere near here and determined whether the police needed a bicycle squad or laptops or different pistols. Rich men had decided to change the uniforms years ago and to merge the city police with the Mecklenburg County's Sheriff's Department. Every decision was unimaginative and based on economics, according to Hammer.

  West believed every bit of it as she and Brazil cruised past the huge, new stadium where David Copperfield was making magic, and parking decks were jammed with thousands of cars. Brazil was oddly subdued, and not writing down a word. West looked curiously at him as the police scanner rudely announced this modern city's primitive crimes, and the radio softly played Eiton John.

  "Any unit in the area," a dispatcher said.

  "BE in progress, four hundred block East Trade Street."

  West floored it and flipped on lights. She whelped the siren, gunning past other cars.

  "That's us," she said, snapping up the mike.

  Brazil got interested.

  "Unit 700," West said over the air.

  The dispatcher wasn't expecting a deputy chief to respond, and sounded somewhat startled and confused.

  "What unit?" the dispatcher inquired.

  '700," replied West.

  "In the nine hundred block. I'll take the BE in progress."

  Ten-four, 700! "

  The radio broadcast the call. Other cars responded as West cut in and out of traffic. Brazil was staring at her with new interest. Maybe this wasn't going to be so bad after all.

  "Since when do deputy chiefs answer calls?" he said to her.

  "Since I got stuck with you."

  The projects on East Trade were cement barracks subsidized by the government and exploited by criminals who did deals in the dark and got their women to lie when the cops showed up. Breaking and entering around here, it had been West's experience, usually meant someone was pissed off. Most of the time, this was a girlfriend calling in a complaint on an apartment where her man was hiding and had enough outstanding warrants to be locked up twenty times.

  "You stay in the car," West ordered her ride-along as she parked behind two cruisers.

  "No way." Brazil grabbed the door handle.

  "I didn't go to all this trouble to sit in the car everywhere we go. Besides, it isn't safe to be out here alone."

  West didn't comment as she scanned buildings with windows lighted and dark. She studied parking lots filled with drug dealer cars, and didn't see a soul.

  "Then stay behind me, keep your mouth shut, and do what you're told," she told him as she got out.

  The plan was pretty simple. Two officers would take the front of the apartment, on the first floor, and West and Brazil would go around back to make sure no one tried to flee through that door. Brazil's heart was pounding and he was sweating beneath his leather jacket as they walked in the thick darkness beneath sagging clotheslines in one of the city's war zones. West scanned windows and unsnapped her holster as she quietly got on the radio.

  "No lights on," she said over the air.

  "Closing in."

  She drew her pistol. Brazil was inches behind her and wished he were in front, as furtive officers they could not see closed in on a unit scarred by graffiti. Trash was everywhere, caught on rusting fences and in the trees, and the cops drew their guns as they reached the door.

  One of them spoke into his radio, giving West, their leader, an update, "We got the front."

  "Police!" his partner threatened.

  Brazil was concerned about the uneven terrain, and clotheslines hanging low enough to choke someone, and broken glass everywhere in the tar-black night. He was afraid West might hurt herself and turned on his Mag- Lite, illuminating her in a huge circle of light. Her sneaking silhouette with drawn pistol was bigger than God.

  "Turn that fucking thing off!" she whipped around and hissed at him.

  Charlotte police caught no one on that call. West and Brazil were in a bad mood as they rode and the radio chattered. She could have gotten shot. Thank God her officers hadn't seen what this idiot reporter had done. She couldn't wait to give Hammer a piece of her mind, and was halfway tempted to call her boss at home. West needed something to give her a boost and pulled into the Starvin Marvin on South Tryon Street. Before she had shifted the car into park, Brazil was pulling up his door handle.

  "You ever heard of looking before you leap?" she asked, like a severe schoolteacher.

  Brazil gave her an indignant, disgusted look as he undid his seatbelt.

  "I can't wait to write about you," he threatened.

  "Look." West nodded at the store, at the plate glass in front, at customers prowling inside and making purchases.

  "Pretend you're a cop. That should be easy for you. So you get out of your cop car?

  Don't check? Walk in on a robbery in progress? And guess what? " She climbed out and stared inside at him.

  "You're dead." She slammed the door shut.

  Brazil watched Deputy Chief West walk into the convenience store. He started to make notes, gave up, and leaned back in the seat. He did not understand what was happening. It bothered him a lot that she did not want him around, even though he was convinced he didn't give a rat's
ass. No wonder she wasn't married. Who would want to live with somebody like that? Brazil already knew that if he were ever successful, he wouldn't be mean to people new at life. It was heartless and said everything about West's true character.

  She made him pay for his own coffee. It cost a dollar and fifteen cents, and she hadn't bothered to ask him how he drank it, which wasn't with Irish cream and twenty packs of sugar. Brazil could barely swallow it, but did the best he could as they resumed patrolling. She was smoking again. They began to cruise a downtown street, where prostitutes clutching washcloths strolled languidly along the sidewalk, following them with luminous, empty eyes.

  "What are the washcloths for?" Brazil asked.

  "What do you expect? Finger bowls? It's a messy profession West remarked.

  He shot her another look.

  "No matter what kind of car I drive, they know I'm here," she went on, flicking an ash out the window.

  "Really?" he asked.

  "I guess the same ones have been out here, what, fifteen years, then? And they remember you. Imagine that."

  "You know, this isn't how you make points," West warned.

  He was looking out and thoughtful when he said, "Don't you miss it?"

  West watched the ladies of the night and didn't want to answer him.

  "Can you tell which are men?"

  "That one, maybe."

  Brazil stared at a big, ugly hooker in a vinyl miniskirt, her tight black top stretched over opera breasts. Her come-hither walk was slow and bulging as she stared hate into the cop car.

  "Nope. She's real," West let Brazil know, and not adding that the hooker was also an undercover cop, wired, armed, and married with a kid.

  "The men have good legs," she went on.

  "Anatomically correct perfect fake breasts. No hips. You get close, which I don't recommend, they shave."

  Brazil was quiet.

  "Guess you didn't learn all this working for the TV magazine," she added.

  He could feel her glancing at him, as if she had something else on her mind.

  "So, you drive that Cadillac with shark fins?" she finally got around to it.

  He continued looking out at the trade show along the street, trying to tell women from men.

  "In your driveway," West went on.

  "Doesn't look like something you'd drive."

  "It isn't," Brazil said.

  "Gotcha." West sucked on the cigarette, and flicked another ash into the wind.

  "You don't live alone."

  He continued staring out his window.

  "I have an old BMW 2002. It was my dad's. He got it used and fixed it up, could fix anything."

  They passed a silver rental Lincoln. West noticed it because the man inside had the interior light on and looked lost. He was talking on his portable phone, and casting about in this bad part of town. He turned off on Mint Street. Brazil was still looking out at dangerous people looking back at them when West got interested in the Toyota directly ahead, it's side window knocked out, the license plate hanging by a coat hanger. There were two young males inside. The driver was watching her in the rearview mirror.

  "What you wanna bet we got a stolen car ahead," West announced.

  She typed the plate number into the MDT. It began to beep as if she'd just won at slot machines. She read the display and flipped on flashing blue and red lights. The Toyota blasted ahead of them.

  "Shit!" West exclaimed.

  Now she was in a high-speed pursuit, trying to be a race driver and balance a cigarette and coffee and snatch up the mike, all at the same time. Brazil didn't know what to do to help. He was having the adventure of his life.

  '700! " West's voice went up as she yelled into the mike.

  "I'm in pursuit!"

  "Go ahead, 700," the radio came back.

  "You have the air."

  "I'm north on Pine, turning left on Seventh, give you a description in a second."

  Brazil could scarcely contain himself. Why didn't she pass, cut the car off. The Toyota was just a Ve. How fast could it go?

  "Hit the siren!" West shouted at him as the engine strained.

  Brazil didn't have this course in the volunteer academy. Unfastening his seatbelt, he groped around under the dash, the steering column, West's knees, and was practically in her lap when he found a button that felt promising. He pressed it as they roared down the street. The trunk loudly popped up. West's car rocked into a dip as they sped after the Toyota, and crime-scene equipment, a raincoat, a bubble light, flares spilled out, scattering over pavement. West couldn't believe it as she stared into the rearview mirror at her career bouncing away in the afterburn. Brazil was very quiet as police lights were turned off. They slowed, crawled off the road, and stopped. West looked at her ride-along.

  "Sorry," Brazil said.

  Chapter Three.

  }A'i<^'y West answered nothing more for an hour and twenty-five minutes, as she and Brazil inched "} their way along the street, collecting police gear that had jumped out of the trunk. The bubble light was shattered blue plastic.

  Flares were crushed paper cases leaking a dangerous composition. A Polaroid crime-scene camera would capture nothing any more. The raincoat was miles away, snagged on the undercarriage of a station wagon, touching the exhaust pipe and soon to catch on fire.

  "West and Brazil drove and stopped, picked up, and drove again. This went on without conversation. West was so angry she did not dare speak. So far, two patrol units had cruised past. There was no doubt in the deputy chief's mind that the entire four-to-midnight shift knew exactly what had happened and probably thought it was West who had hit the switch because she hadn't been in a pursuit in this life. Before tonight she had been respected. She had been admired by the troops.

  She stole a hateful glance at Brazil, who had recovered a jumper cable and was neatly coiling and tucking it beside the spare tire,

  which was the only thing that hadn't flown out, because it was bolted down.

  "Look," Brazil suddenly spoke, staring at her beneath a street light.

  "I didn't do it on purpose. What more do you want me to say?"

  West got back in the car. Brazil halfway wondered if she might drive off without him, and just leave him out here to be murdered by drug dealers or hookers who were really men. Maybe the consequences were occurring to West, too. She waited for him to climb in. He shut the door and pulled the seatbelt across his chest. The scanner hadn't stopped, and he was hoping they'd go on something else quick so he could redeem himself.

  "I have no reason to have a detailed knowledge of your car," Brazil said in a quiet, reasonable tone.

  "The Crown Vie I got to drive during the academy was older than this. The trunk opened from the outside.

  And we don't get to use sirens . "

  She shoved the car in gear and drove.

  "I know all that. I'm not blaming you. You didn't do it on purpose. Enough already," she said.

  She decided to try another part of town, off Remus Road near the Dog Pound. Nothing would be going on there. Her assumption would have been accurate, were it not for an old drunk woman who decided to start screaming on the lawn of the Mount Moriah Primitive Baptist Church, near the Greyhound bus station and the Presto Grill. West heard the call over the scanner and had no choice but to back up the responding unit. She and Brazil were maybe four blocks away.

  "This shouldn't be anything and we're going to make sure we keep it that way," West pointedly told Brazil as she sped up and took a right on Lancaster.

  The one-story church was yellow brick with gaudy colored glass windows all lit up and nobody home, the patchy lawn littered with beer bottles near the JESUS CALLS sign in front. An old woman was screaming and crying hysterically, and trying to pull away from two uniformed cops. Brazil and West got out of their car, heading to the problem. When the patrolmen saw the deputy chief in all her brass, they didn't know what to make of it and got exceedingly nervous.

  "What we got?" West asked when sh
e got to them.

  The woman screamed and had no teeth. Brazil could not understand a note she was wailing.

  "Drunk and disorderly," said a cop whose nameplate read Smith.

  "We've picked her up before."

  The woman was in her sixties, at least, and Brazil could not take his eyes off her. She was drunk and writhing in the harsh glare of a street light near the sign of a church she probably did not attend.

  She was dressed in a faded green Hornets sweatshirt and dirty jeans, her belly swollen, her breasts wind socks on a flat day, arms and legs sticks with spider webs of long dark hair.

 

‹ Prev