It was quiet but a current ran through the room, the charge of adrenaline.
“I know how you feel about this suspect,” Steele went on, “but if we get a track on Lacey there will be no quick triggers, no hot heads. I want it by the book.”
Louis looked at Gibralter. As he gazed at Steele, Gibralter lifted his cigarette to his lips and took a slow drag. His face was like granite but there was something new in it. Louis stared at Gibralter, trying to read it. Jesus, it was fear. It barely registered, just a flicker in the eyes, but it was there. Gibralter didn’t want Lacey caught alive; he wanted him dead. He needed him dead so he couldn’t talk about what Cole had told him about the raid.
Steele left, going out to face the reporters. Louis looked back at Gibralter. He was gone, his door closed.
Louis rose and went to the locker room. Jesse was gone but Dale was there, pulling on a sweatshirt. He looked at Louis as he approached.
“It didn’t work, Louis,” he said.
“What didn’t?”
“Telling the truth. Steele says I could be arrested for…hell, I was so nervous I forget. Assault and coercion and something else.”
Dale hung up his uniform shirt, running a hand down the front.
“What happened in there?” Louis asked.
“Steele was ripping Jesse apart, saying he was out of control, a renegade. He called him stupid.” Dale looked at Louis. “I had to say something so I said to Steel what you said to me.”
“What?” Louis asked.
“That Gibralter sent us and he did it knowing what Jesse would do.”
Jesus, the kid had guts. “What did Gibralter say?” Louis asked.
Dale’s face clouded. “He denied it, just out and out denied it. I couldn’t believe what happened next. Steele was telling Gibralter that Jesse and me should be fired. Next thing I know, the chief turned to Jesse and said, ‘You’re through.’ Just like that.”
Louis shook his head. “What about you?”
Dale pulled on his parka. “Jesse tried to tell him I didn’t do anything and I tried to tell Steele I wasn’t a real cop and I didn’t even have a gun but he wouldn’t’ listen. He was yelling, saying we weren’t fit to
“So he fired you, too?”
“I quit.”
Louis stared at him in disbelief.
“I can’t work here anymore,” Dale said. “I just can’t.”
“Dale…”
Dale zipped up his parka. “I gotta go,” he said briskly. Dale brushed by him, heading back out to the office. He stopped then slowly came back.
“Guess I better go out the back,” he said.
Louis reached out to put a hand on his shoulder but Dale moved quickly away. Louis heard the door close and let out a slow breath.
This stunk, every damn part of it. Jesse was beyond his sympathy now, even if Gibralter had sacrificed him to Steele. But damn it, Dale didn’t deserve this.
Louis went back out to the office. The men had dispersed and only two of Steele’s aides lingered. Steele was on the telephone. With a glance at Gibralter’s closed door Louis unlocked his desk drawer and pulled out the garbage bag. He went over to the command desk and stood, waiting.
Steele hung up the phone and swiveled around to face Louis, his eyes dark with anger. “What do you want?” he said.
“I need to talk to you,” Louis said.
“I don’t have time.”
“I have something — ”
The phone shrilled impatiently. “Do something about these phones!” Steele yelled.
Louis held out the bag. “You need to see this. It’s — ”
Steele stood up. “Listen you little ass kisser. There are real cops here working damn hard to save your incompetent asses. Steele grabbed his overcoat off the chair. “Now get out of my way, I have a chopper to catch.”
Louis stepped around the desk, blocking Steele’s way. “Look, I need to talk to you. Now!” he said.
“Make a damn appointment!”
He brushed by Louis, knocking him aside.
Louis glared at Steele’s back, debating whether to follow him and shove the damn garbage bag down his throat right in front of the cameras. He saw one of the aides looking at him.
“What are you staring at?” Louis demanded.
The suit gave a shrug.
“When’s your boss coming back?”
“In the morning.” The aide smiled. “You want to make an appointment?”
Louis felt his hand curl into a fist. The hell with Steele. He would see this through himself, take the damn evidence wherever he needed to take it, give it to NBC or the fucking FBI, if he had to. They liked to bust cops, too.
He went back to his desk, tossed down the bag and dropped into the chair. Make a damn appointment. Fuck him.
He was staring vacantly at Pryce’s doodles on the blotter, the curlicues and numbers fading in and out.
Slowly, a phone number came into focus in his head. He looked down at the blotter, at the number. He grabbed the phone and dialed it.
“Michigan State Police. How may I direct your call?”
Louis swiveled to look out the front window. He could see the chopper lifting off. “Mark Steele’s office, please.”
“That line is busy. For future reference, the extension is thirty-one.”
Louis hung up. He unlocked his desk drawer and pulled out Pryce’s small notebook. He flipped through it, stopping when he found the right page.
C.L. was Cole Lacey.
J.L. was Johnny Lacey.
CIS was Chief Investigator Steele.
And 5661 X 31 was his phone number.
That was exactly what Pryce had done. Pryce had found the proof about the raid that he needed to bury Gibralter and the others and he planned to take it all to Steele.
Louis redialed the state police, asking for extension thirty-one this time.
“Chief Steele’s office,” a woman answered.
Louis introduced himself, explaining he was investigating the death of a police officer and needed to track the officer’s last movements.
“How can we be of help?” she asked politely.
“I need to know if Thomas Pryce made an appointment with Chief Steele around the end of November,” Louis said.
He heard pages turning. “No, I don’t see one.”
Louis started to thank her when she interrupted. “I do have one for December third but Officer Pryce didn’t keep it.”
Louis thanked her and hung up. His thoughts began to coalesce, coming together with cold certainty. Pryce had found out that something about the raid was dirty and started his campaign to get out of Loon Lake. But