Read Live Bait Online

Authors: Ted Wood

Live Bait (12 page)

Svensen sniffed, unwrapping a fresh stick of gum. "You do real neat work," he said.

 

 

 

 

Chapter 14

 

 

"G
et real. He was taken by the same guy who hit me." I managed to keep my voice level, with no trace of pleading in it, but I had been at too many incidents with Svensen as my partner not to recognize how thin my story sounded.

Svensen put his gum wrapper neatly in his pocket. Anywhere except a crime scene he would have tossed it over his shoulder. "Cute," he said, folding the gum into his mouth as if it were part of some complex technical process. "The guy ices Tony. I'm not sure how many times he was hit, but there's all kinds of bruising I can see. We'll know better when the coroner's been here. So, anyway, he beats Tony to a bloody pulp, then he comes out and gives you a neat little lovetap on the head so you can just come out of your sleepybyes as the big bad policemen get here."

"You were watching." I said it mockingly but I was worried. On the evidence in front of him there was no other conclusion he could have reached. I tried to brazen it out. "Why aren't you looking for the kung fu kid?"

"Because there isn't one." He took three quick angry chews at his gum with his front teeth, like a squirrel. "You and Tony were on the outs from the first time you met him. First off that phony deal, you fighting a couple of his boys on Queen Street. Then, next thing you're in his hangouts looking for him. He caused you trouble and you wanted to square him. Well now you have, kiddo, and you're going inside for ten years."

I said nothing. He had a case, but not much of one. I concentrated on telling myself that story. I didn't want to think about getting sent to one of the penitentiaries where men I had arrested were doing time. The last policeman that happened to ended up cutting his own throat one night, rather than have it done for him in the exercise yard.

The next hour went by like the first act of a play I'd seen too many times. The homicide squad arrived, then the coroner, then the local inspector. The media people gathered outside. It would have been tedious, except that this time I was the prime suspect. The homicide men took me back to the station when they had finished their preliminary investigation and sealed the apartment.

Normally they would have spent four or five hours going over the place, digging through the last pocket of the last suit in the closet looking for information that might point to Tony's killer. But this time they didn't have to. They had me.

There were two of them, both equally tired and gray-faced, even now at the tag end of the hottest summer in years. One was heavy and worried looking, the other was thin and a little short. By one of those department coincidences that can sometimes wreck a career they were named Hooper and Cooper, close enough to cause a lot of confusion in court. Somebody in the department had rhymed it to give them their nickname, the supersnoopers.

Hooper was the lean one. He took me through my story again, listening without comment. When I'd finished Cooper jumped on me.

"This is the second time you've been busted for murder, right?"

"It was manslaughter. And you know what happened. I came across three bikers and a grocery store clerk. The guys came at me and I put two of them down."

Cooper sighed. "Yeah, I know the story. It's part of the goddamn folklore of this department. Lord knows why. A lot of guys have done the same thing."

Hooper interrupted him, waving his cigar. "Not so, Coop, this guy was in the U.S. Marines." He made a joke of it, then snarled at me. "I was in Korea for crissakes, what's the big deal."

"Look, send me home, it's been a long day. I've been hit in the head. I don't need any more war stories," I complained.

Hooper waved his hands, like a grade school music teacher conducting the Christmas pageant. "You're missing the point, like how come you could take out two bikers, big sonsabitches with leatherboots an' sweatstains an' all that. Yet you walk in on some dinky little Chinese kid an' he puts you down?"

"Don't you ever watch TV? This kid was a skilled kung fu fighter. The only surprise to me is, why he didn't finish me off while I was down."

"Yeah," Cooper nodded. "That's exactly where Hoop an' me start to wonder what gives."

And so, as I had known I would have to, I told them all that had happened to me since leaving Murphy's Harbour. They listened, noncommittally, smoking. Then Hooper said, "So let's go over to your place and pick up this envelope that came to you today, if it's there."

Cooper nodded. "Good idea. How much d'ya say there was in it?"

"Just over a thousand dollars."

"How much over a thousand?" Both of them had become suddenly more interested. Hooper took his cigar out of his mouth to wait, as if smoke might interfere with his reception mechanism.

"Eighty bucks. There was a thousand and eighty dollars in it." I looked from one to the other, wondering what I had missed so far. Neither one spoke. They just looked at one another with beams of satisfaction. I waited and when they didn't speak I asked, "Well, aren't you going to let me in on it?"

"Sure." Hooper gave a dry little cough. "Ever hear of the Triads?"

"Sounds like a college football team."

He shook his head. "No, these guys are for real. They're the closest thing there is to a Chinese Mafia."

I said nothing. It was all news to me but I was wondering how they had gotten on to the subject. Cooper explained as he led me out to the elevator. It was still very relaxed, they hadn't charged me, didn't put the cuffs on. "Seems like there's a temple, monastery, something, in China. It was full of kung fu monks. This was, what, Hoop, four hundred years ago?"

Hooper nodded. The elevator came. We got in. Cooper went on. "So the king got mad at these guys for whatever reason makes kings mad. And he sent his soldiers to wipe 'em out."

"And there were a thousand and eighty of them?" I was excited. The men I had surprised at the job site had been Oriental; now I was sure they were kung fu experts. It was starting to fit.

"No, it was a hundred and eight of them, left after the crap cleared," Hooper explained. "And that's the figure they use in all o' their negotiations. It's always some factor of a hundred and eight."

"The guy who spoke to me on the phone didn't sound Chinese." I was replaying the memory, trying to make the voice conform to a physical type. I remembered forming the image of a heavy middle-aged Caucasian, blasé, bored, casually cruel. "No," I said slowly. "The guy who called me was a Canadian. A used car dealer type."

We came to ground level and they went out with me to their car. I wasn't under arrest but there was one either side of me, they weren't sure how much to trust me. If I'd run away, they would have shot without hesitation.

I went into the back. It wasn't a cage car, for which I was grateful. But I didn't try the buddy-buddy trick of leaning forward ingratiatingly. Policemen spend so much time in cars that they have relaxation down to an art form. Hooper drove and Cooper carried on with the conversation, not turning his head, just cranking up the volume on his growl.

"So it gets kinda mystifying to me," he said. "You got somebody makin' like he's Chinese only he isn't, sending you Triad money. Then you got some little gook kickin' you in the head."

"Or…" Hooper said. They looked at one another like an old married couple and grinned happily. "Or," Cooper continued, "you got a vivid imagination and a lot of things you want covered up."

There was nothing to say. I'd sat in his place enough times, next to a partner who had heard all the pathetic lies with me a thousand times and we had laughed and looked for the obvious answers, the ones that are almost always right. There's an old saying that some doctor dreamed up, talking of diagnosis but applying equally to crime: When you hear hoofbeats, think horses, not zebras. These men were thinking that way, and that meant I was due to end the evening in a cell at headquarters. It was the only answer that fit all the facts they had.

The lights were out at Louise's house. The two detectives came out with me quietly. There had been no mention made to me but I guessed they had a search warrant. I hoped they wouldn't execute it. I didn't want Louise's kids woken up and frightened.

And that was what reminded me of my previous fears. I had put them out of my mind once Sam was in charge. If anyone came into the house he would be pinned to the floor. I didn't think a kung fu background would help against Sam. He was quicker than any man he'd ever been up against. And besides, if there was a fight, surely Louise would call the police station right away.

If I had been alone I would have walked the perimeter of the house before going in, but with two detectives along I just unlocked the front door and switched on the light.

In a low voice I called "Sam!" and from the back hallway I heard his savage working growl.

"My dog's pinning somebody," I said quietly. "There's no tricks, I have to walk through and see what's happening."

I sensed the detectives glancing at one another but didn't turn back. I went carefully through the door that led to the basement. Sam was on guard, standing over a man who was lying face up on the short stairway, his eyes bulging with fear and congestion from being kept with his head lower than his feet for a long time. The detectives came and stood at the doorway, gazing down at the man for about fifteen seconds before Hooper asked, "This the same Chinaman who jumped you at Caporetto's place?"

 

 

 

 

Chapter 15

 

 

I
told Sam "Easy" and he sat back on his haunches, beside the man's feet. "He's yours," I told the detectives.

Hooper walked down the stairs past the man, looking down at him as a civilian might look at an accident victim. When he was four steps below him he said. "Okay, on your feet and against the wall."

The man didn't move, just rolled his eyes first at Sam, then at me. I motioned to him with one hand, hooking him up. He stood, carefully. I took a step back, making it look casual, but making sure to be out of range of those hands and feet. I was still shaken from the blow I'd taken earlier. I noticed that Cooper had his hand under his suitcoat, at the back of his belt, on his gun I judged. He was being careful, too.

Hooper said, "Hands on the wall, feet well back," but the prisoner didn't respond, just glanced at Hooper as if he wondered where the noise was coming from.

"Sonofabitch don't speak English," his partner said. They stared at one another in growing wonder. "Hey, Bennett, show him what to do," he told me.

I did it, carefully not making the mistake of letting them know I spoke a few words of Mandarin. I knew that if I as much as ordered Chinese food for the next month I'd be linked to this case inextricably.

Keeping Sam between us, I pressed both hands on the wall and gestured with my head for the prisoner to do the same. He did. I shuffled my feet back until I could barely support my weight and gestured again. This time he was very slow to move. He had been counting on breaking away but could see the limitations of the posture. I straightened up and wagged my finger at him until he did what we wanted. I wasn't happy about his position. Because he was standing on stairs, his uphill leg was bent. If he were as good as the man who had jumped me at Tony's place he could bound up from that leg like a jack-in-the-box. "I wouldn't trust him, he looks a lot like the guy who hit me," I warned.

Cooper was ready for him. He came down the stairs, squeezing past me and Sam and stood his full weight on the toes of the man's uphill foot. I saw the little man flinch in surprise but he did not cry out. Then Hooper came up the stairs the other way and snapped the handcuffs on his left wrist then pulled him upright and neatly snagged the other arm behind him.

"Okay, Coop, you can leggo o' that foot now," he said amiably.

Cooper stood back and his partner gave the prisoner a little shove up the steps. I turned and went ahead of them, stooping slightly so that I could rub Sam's neck as I told him what a good dog he was. I didn't let myself think what might have happened if I hadn't left him here tonight.

The detectives didn't say anything but I could tell they were no longer interested in me as a prime suspect. It would have been possible, I guess, for me to have set up this whole thing as a charade to prove my innocence. But policemen know that people don't play clever tricks like that. Most of the lying and cheating is done after the fact and is clumsier than this.

So we had a quiet little talk in Louise's front parlor. I brought out the envelope and note I'd been sent. They took it, giving me a receipt. And then came the hard decision for me to make, whether or not to lie.

"Is this the guy who clobbered you in that apartment?" Cooper was patient but insistent. "I know they all look alike to most guys, but you were in the East, you should know."

I struggled with the urge to lie. The prisoner had said nothing, done nothing, simply stood as if rooted to the spot. He might not be the man who had jumped me, but I know the Bail Reform Act. If I didn't say he was, he would be charged with Break and Enter and would be sprung before the arrest report had been typed. He could return, this time not trying to get into the house. Instead he might just toss a Molotov cocktail at the front door.

"He could be the other guy's brother," I said. They were both too experienced to buy that and I didn't bother trying any harder. "The clothes are wrong. The one who hit me was wearing a dark doublebreasted suit. It's unlikely he's been home and changed before he came here."

Cooper picked up a pear from the bowl of fruit Lou keeps on the side table. He went to bite it then turned to me and held it up as if asking permission. I waved and he bit the end off, sensuously. "I know what's on your mind. Him or his friends may be back to carry on where he left off. Right?"

"That's what I'm thinking," I said quietly. "My sister and her kids live here."

"Yeah, well, of course, we won't be able to get him bail overnight because he doesn't understand English and he wouldn't know about showing up for his court appearance." Cooper took another bite of the pear, filling his whole mouth, talking around the edges of his pleasure.

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