Read Reckless Endangerment Online

Authors: Robert K. Tanenbaum

Tags: #Ciampi; Marlene (Fictitious character), #Terrorists, #Palestinian Arabs, #Mystery & Detective, #Karp; Butch (Fictitious character), #Legal, #Fiction, #Thrillers, #General, #Jews; American

Reckless Endangerment (34 page)

“The car is about as clean as a car can get,” said Detective Joe Alfasano to the two detectives who had come by to check out the dead Arab and his rolling sepulcher. Alfasano was an overweight, balding fellow who sported the last Adolphe Menjou mustache in New York. He had no problem talking about this case to two strange cops because this was not an ordinary case; the brass was interested in this one big-time, and these two, Raney and White, had hinted broadly that they were working for the fourteenth floor. He did not have much to share as yet, but he was sharing for all he was worth.

“It’s been wiped and vacuumed. It smelled of Windex when we cracked it. The stiff was in the trunk, by the way, naked, no bloodstains on the trunk carpet.”

“So killed someplace else, he bled out, and they stuck him in there,” observed White. “You got a previous owner on the car? I understand it had stolen plates.”

“No, that’s what I mean by clean,” said Alfasano. “The VINs were ground off, not just the ones on the engine block and the chassis, but the ones on the axles too, which they don’t usually bother with. Whoever sold the killer the car was a serious pro. Nice car too. A ’75 Firebird, black, with red interior, got the stencil on the front and everything.”

“A Firebird, huh? In good condition, is it?”

“Perfect. Runs smooth, the engine’s been steam-cleaned. The upholstery’s in good shape. Why, you in the market?”

White smiled briefly and said, “No, just that why use a nice car like that for a dump car. Why not steal a car from a dentist, or use the vic’s own car?”

“Maybe it
is
his car,” said Alfasano.

White exchanged a look with Raney and said, “If it was his car, why would it have phony plates on it? Why would the killer bother? No, this is a special kind of car. This is an armed-robbery getaway car, bought or rented from a chop shop. It’s like Avis uptown: you pay your money, you get a clean, fast, good-running car for the job. After, you take it back, the guy wipes it, paints it, dumps the stolen plates he supplied, and it disappears. It never was. If for some reason you got to dump the car, nobody can trace it back to you or to the guy you got it from.” He paused and explained, “Eight years on the heavy-crimes unit out of the Two-Eight. Now, the guys who do this kind of work tend to be a close-mouthed bunch, or they’re out of business, or dead. However …”

“What?” said Raney and Alfasano almost simultaneously, provoking a chuckle from White. “There’s one guy up in Inwood I recall,” said White, “used to specialize in muscle cars, Firebirds, GTOs, Mustangs. A Dominican guy, real precise, a perfectionist. He used to grind the VINs off the axles too. And he owes me a favor.”

As it turned out, Felipe Valdés, the chop artist, did not mind giving up the name of Connie Erbes to Detective Alonso White. Erbes was not a regular customer and was unlikely to take violent revenge if busted. Also, White had sworn to him that he would not have to testify, and White, Felipe knew, was not only a man of his word, but had, in the old days, placed his bulk between Valdés and any number of “accessory to” charges.

Ramon Valdés, when questioned at the Club Carib, said he hadn’t seen Connie for a while. The word was she was laying low, trying to shake a troublesome boyfriend. And yeah, he had an address for her.

The door to the apartment Connie Erbes reportedly occupied was unresponsive to knocks and, surprisingly, unlocked. The detectives entered, therefore, with drawn guns, crouching. They found a place unkempt, piled with take-out debris and smashed furnishings, but unoccupied. Raney went to check out the bedrooms, White to cover the rest of the apartment.

One bedroom had clearly not been occupied for a long time, and Raney ignored that one. The other showed signs of recent occupancy. The bed was rumpled, the sheets stained. There were some women’s clothes on the floor of the closet, and the smashed ruins of a dressing table. In a wastebasket he found wads of bloodstained cotton wadding. Raney looked under the bed. A brassy gleam attracted his eye, and he reached the little thing out with a rubber-covered hand. He was examining the cartridge closely, although he had known what it was the instant he had it in his fingers, when White came in, looking gray.

“Find something?” asked Raney.

“Oh, nothing much,” said White. “Ray Netski’s stuffed into the refrigerator with a bunch of holes in his chest. Besides that …”

“Oh, Christ!”

“Yeah, the beat goes on. Looks like he’s been dead a couple of days. We need to find this woman.”

“Uh-huh. Look at this.” He stood up and handed White the cartridge.

White peered at it. “What is that, Russian writing on the base?”

“Uh-huh. They were thick on the ground in ’Nam. That’s a Soviet-made 7.62mm round for the AK-47 assault rifle.”

“Roland,” said Karp, “you’re acting like a baby,” knowing it was the least calming thing he could say, and not caring anymore, not caring if the red-faced man who had just barged into his office cursing and screaming had a stroke, launched himself across the desk at which Karp sat, fists flying, or vanished through the earth like Rumpelstiltskin.

Roland didn’t seem to hear, however, but, standing by the open door, continued his diatribe. “… and didn’t think to even fucking inform me, a meeting at police headquarters, on
my
case. Who the fuck died and left you king shit? Huh? You trying to
ruin
me? You son of a bitch!”

Karp had on his desk a paperweight, a heavy piece of Lucite enclosing a rifle bullet once removed from his shoulder. Right next to it was a regulation baseball bearing the signature of Mickey Mantle. Instantly Hrcany’s last words were out, Karp sprang to his feet, grabbed the paperweight, and flung it at Roland’s head. It grazed his ear and slammed into the wall next to the door, making a sizable dent. Roland’s jaw dropped, and he went pale. He touched his ear and looked at the claret on his fingertips. Then he looked at Karp, who had the baseball in his hand and was in the final stages of a serious wind-up.

Roland ducked the bean ball, which flew through the doorway. A sound of shattering glass and a woman’s short, shrill yelp. Roaring, Roland took two long steps and a leap, and threw himself across the desk at Karp’s throat, bearing the larger man down behind the desk.

Karp had not had a serious physical fight (except once with his wife) since age thirteen, and it quickly crossed his mind that he could be in serious trouble in this one. Roland’s hands were on his throat, cutting off air and blood supply. He had once seen Roland, on a bet, actually bend a horseshoe with his hands. Things were starting to go gray when a deluge of cold water fell on both their heads, followed by a sound like the clang of a cracked bell.

Karp coughed water from his nose and slid out from under the spluttering Hrcany, the side of whose face was now covered with blood. Marcie O’Malley, the D.A.’s secretary, stood over the two of them, holding the galvanized one-gallon watering can with which she maintained the small rain forest of houseplants in the D.A.’s suite. This was the source of the flood, and also of the sound, for she had whaled Roland a couple across the skull.

“Jesus, Marcie!” said Roland, exploring his head with a cautious finger.

“Don’t you Jesus me, young man,” said the fierce O’Malley. “I’ve never seen anything like it, carrying on like a couple of mutt dogs on the street. How could you, right in the district attorney’s office! Broken glass! You should be ashamed of yourselves. And the both of you
attorneys
…” The enormity of this last fact overwhelmed the woman’s reserves of outrage, and she left, closing the door behind her.

Karp got to his feet, righted his chair, and fished a couple of clean paper napkins out of a bottom drawer. He handed these to Roland, who held them in a wad against his bleeding ear. He got to his feet too and collapsed into Karp’s visitor armchair.

“Christ, Butch,” he said, probing gently, “you almost tore my ear off.”

“I was aiming to split your skull,” said Karp huskily. There seemed to be something wrong with his vocal cords.

“Why, ‘cause I was yelling at you?”

“No,” Karp croaked, “because a man is dead, a cop is dead, a cop who was supposed to be a pal of yours is dead, and what’s on your mind is your status, your
goddamned
ego, whether Butch Karp is fucking with you or not. That’s why. I couldn’t stand it anymore, Roland. It’s fucking
unworthy
of you. And you’ve been poisonous like that ever since you took that damn job.”

Hrcany was studying his fingernails intently, as if a remarkably engrossing novel had miraculously been imprinted on them.

“I mean, fuck it, Roland,” Karp added, “it’s okay to be wrong. Everybody’s a schmuck sometimes. The difference between the occasional schmuck and the incurable schmuck to the bone is, do you fucking
cop
to it and drive on?”

Roland shook his head sharply from side to side, like a man discouraging a small flying insect. “Okay. On this Netski thing—I do feel bad about it, especially since he probably got it looking into this thing for me, these threats. I think we should pick up the Obregons again. That was his girlfriend, the Erbes woman, who rented the car the Arab who killed Morilla was found in.”

“You think she killed Netski?” asked Karp with a hidden sigh. That “okay” was all the acknowledgment he was going to get on the subject of Roland’s errors of judgment and his atrocious behavior over the last weeks. It was back to business, with Karp hoping faintly for a less abrasive relationship with the Homicide Bureau chief in the future.

“I doubt it,” said Roland. “There’s another guy involved. Who knows, maybe a third Obregon brother we don’t know about. I’ll have them picked up. The cops are already looking for the woman.”

“And the Arab connection, the Russian bullet in the apartment? The Czech bullets in the women’s shelter?”

Roland tossed his hand, fingers spread, a gesture of bafflement. “Fuck if I know, man. We’re back to zero on this whole thing. Let’s reserve theorizing until we get more information.”

“A wise policy, Roland.”

“And fuck you too,” said Roland, a hard smile cracking his face. He got up to leave.

Karp said, “Roland, I want to apologize for trying to kill you.”

“Ah, shit, that’s okay,” said Roland. “My dad tried a lot harder than that about a million times. I’m surprised I made it this far. What can I say? I’m a fucking pain in the ass.”

“You are not paying attention,” chided Tran. He was trying to teach Lucy how to spot a tail by dashing across busy streets just before the traffic started, and then observing the results in a plate-glass window set perpendicular to the direction of travel. It was a simple enough dodge, but the child seemed uninterested, dull, and recalcitrant.

Lucy was about to offer a reflex denial of this charge, as kids do, but then a little flower of maturity chanced to blossom in her soul, and she came out with what was on her mind, in Cantonese:

“That’s right, Elder Brother, I am not. I am worried about Fatyma. I still cannot understand how you allowed this to occur. It is confusing. I think it was cowardly to allow her to be taken without a fight, although I know you are not a coward.”

“You are mistaken, Little Sister,” said Tran. “I am a great coward. This is the proof: in my country there are one million dead heroes, but I am alive after twenty-five years of war. I am very good at running away.”

“And you are not ashamed of this?”

“No. Shame is for when we act inappropriately. Sometimes it is appropriate to fight like a demon, and other times it is appropriate to run like a rabbit.”

Lucy thought assiduously, trying to digest this odd lump of notions, so alien to the popular culture in which she had been raised. At length she remarked, “I think I understand, Elder Brother, although I cannot see how you can tell what is appropriate and what is not, when to run and when to fight.”

Tran smiled benignly. “Well, as to that, that is the study of a lifetime, which you have barely begun. For now you should accept the guidance of your elders.”

Oh, right! thought Lucy, who could only absorb so much Confucian wisdom at one time. Changing the subject somewhat, she said, “Still, I would very much like to get Fatyma back from whoever has stolen her.”

“Surely this is a matter for the police.”

“Oh, the police! If the police find her, they will return her to her horrible father, and he will make her marry that old man or else kill her. No, she must be found by her friends.”

“And how will her friends do that? She is hidden in so large a city, or maybe she is already taken to another country.”

Lucy’s jaw firmed up in a way that reminded Tran powerfully of the same expression on Marlene’s face. She said, “I don’t know how yet. But I will ask my mother.”

“That is always a wise way to begin any enterprise,” said Tran.

Marlene was at her kitchen table drinking coffee when they hit her with this. Hearing it, she didn’t know whether to laugh or cry, for she was exhausted with overwork. In the first place, Harry was moving out of the office for his new life with the Osborne Group, leaving Marlene to cope with all their various protective operations. She had spent the morning in court, filing orders and representing several abused women at hearings, then up to St. Vincent’s to see Mattie, who had prevailed upon her to watch the shelter while she was laid up. The shelter was, naturally, in an uproar. Verda and the rest of the small staff were trying hard, but Mattie had kept the operation of the place very close, especially the financial end. The records were a mess, Mattie apparently having filed much of the comings and goings of the residents in her head and in piles of loose papers stuffed in folders. Marlene had worked in the tiny office for hours, interrupted by continual crises—fights between residents, sick children, and the necessity of convincing thirty-odd women that the place was still safe, that they were better off in than out, despite the recent gunplay. Cops were, of course, in and out, interviewing the residents, collecting bits of evidence, and generally stirring things up. She had ordered her calls forwarded to the shelter’s phone, which, of course, never stopped ringing.

Other books

Torrent by Lisa T. Bergren
Sacred by Elana K. Arnold
Jose's Surrender by Remmy Duchene
Alien Contact by Marty Halpern
The Pastor Of Kink by Williams, Debbie
No Reason To Die by Hilary Bonner
In the Shadow of a Dream by Sharad Keskar
The From-Aways by C.J. Hauser