'Hey, what you be doing with my bale, man?'

Shane grabbed Chooch by the collar, spun him, and backed him up, slamming him hard against the refrigerator, pinning him there.

'Hey, asshole, take this to the bank. Rule one: You're not gonna smoke grass in my house. Not today, not ever!'

'That shit was hydro, man.'

'And you can stow the rap dictionary, okay? We're talking English in this house.'

'Fuck you.'

They were nose to nose, breathing hard. Shane was close to the edge, focusing his frayed nerves and growing depression on this angry fifteen-year-old. He took a deep breath to calm down. Then he let go and took a step back. 'I don't know whether you get away with stuff like this at school, but it won't work here,' he said in a calmer voice.

'I don't wanna stay here. I'm leaving,' Chooch said softly.

'Okay, here's the deal… One: Use any dope in this house, you're gonna get a chin-check from me. Two: You do what I tell you, when I tell you. Three: Knock off the Hoover Street attitude. Four: You're gonna do your own homework and not farm it out to girlfriends. If you live up to those four rules, here's what you get from me in return. You get room and board. You get my friendship and respect. You get a fair deal; I'll lay it out straight. I won't ever lie.'

'Like I give a shit.'

'And clean up your mouth.'

'You think I wanna stick around and go to your bullshit white-slice Gumby boot camp?'

'You take off, I'll put the LAPD Runaway Squad on you. You'll go to juvie detention and then to a CYA camp, where you won't have to worry about some private-school geek in a bow tie who teaches chemistry. You'll be slappin' skin with the heavy lifters from south of Hawthorn.'

The two of them held gazes. Even though Shane was tired and mad, he had to admit that Chooch Sandoval had been dealt a bad hand. Sandy had made a bunch of horrible choices when it came to her son. Now Chooch was full of anger and resentment. His hormones were raging, and he was looking for a place to park all that frustrated hostility. On the plus side, Chooch had not whimpered. He didn't feel sorry for himself, and he was no cupcake. Somewhere deep down inside, Shane had already begun to respect him.

'I'm through going to that school,' Chooch said. 'I got no friends there. It's not what I'm about.'

'That's one of the best private schools in California. You're throwing away the chance of a lifetime, and for what? So you can hang with a bunch a' street characters?'

'They're my brown brothers. My home slice.'

'They don't care about you, Chooch.'

'And you do? Or Sandy? I ain't for sale, asshole. You can't buy me with clothes or a school or this crummy deal you got here. You ain't got what I need, Mr. Policeman.'

'Get your shoes on. Where are they?' Shane asked. 'And change out of that shirt.' Chooch snorted but didn't move, so Shane went into the guest room, found another T-shirt and Chooch's tennis shoes. He reentered the kitchen and handed them over. 'Let's go… Put 'em on, or face the consequences.' Chooch changed shirts, then slipped his shoes on without bothering to tie them. Then he exited the back door, insolently brushing Shane with his shoulder as he went past.

Shane followed him out into the alley behind the house, where the department Plymouth was parked. It was a detective car but looked exactly like a regular black-and-white minus the Mars-bar light on the roof.

Back in 1997, Chief Willy Williams had started making sergeants drive them instead of the preferred plainwraps. In the old days, before Chief Gates, one of the perks of being a detective had always been driving an unmarked car, but now nobody bothered to check out a department car off duty except in extreme circumstances. Trying to work a stakeout or surveillance in a slickback was absurd, so detectives ended up using their POVs personally owned vehicles.

'I ain't gonna show up at school in this,' Chooch said, looking at the car, appalled.

Shane opened the passenger door, then spun Chooch around, took out his cuffs, and slapped them on, cuffing his hands in front of him.

'What you doin', man? What's this for?'

'Comin' to school handcuffed in a squad car oughta harden your rep. You'll be chasing the fly bitches away for a week.' He pushed Chooch into the front seat of the car, and he could see the boy smile slightly as he walked around and got behind the wheel.

It was 7:45 A. M. before Shane finally caught his first minor break of the day. Traffic on the 405 was unusually light. It took him only forty-five minutes to get over the hill, into the Valley. Harvard Westlake was half a mile up Coldwater Canyon, on the left side. All the way there, Chooch had remained silent. He had pulled his CD player out of his book bag and plugged himself in.

Even with the break on the traffic, Shane arrived at Harvard Westlake fifteen minutes late. He pulled past the Zanuck Swimming Stadium and the Amelia and Mark Taper Athletic Pavilion. He let Chooch off at the Feldman Horn Fine Arts Building, where his first-period class had already convened. The intended image-enhancing uncuffing ceremony passed without audience.

'I'll pick you up at three-thirty,' Shane said, putting his handcuffs away.

'Whatever,' Chooch growled. Then with his book bag over his shoulder, he did a gangsta lean into the building.

Shane watched him go, feeling a sense of frustration and uselessness. What on earth was he ever going to be able to give this boy? It had seemed like a good idea two weeks ago when he'd told Sandy yes… A chance to contribute to Chooch Sandoval's life in an important way. Shane had been fighting recent bouts of intense loneliness and had seen himself helping Chooch sort out his adolescent problems. Shane hadn't expected him to be such a hard case. Now that he had him, he doubted he would be able to make any deposits in Chooch Sandoval's adult experience account. This boy was already molded by the strange circumstances of his life. And now, in the harsh reality of Chooch's anger, it occurred to Shane that maybe he had just planned to use Chooch to find meaning in his own life. While Shane was pondering these thoughts, his cell phone rang and dropped him back onto an even more distressing playing field.

'Yeah.'

'Shane, Captain Halley.'

'What's up, Skipper?'

'I don't exactly know how to tell you this, but the Molar shooting is turning into a red ball.' A red ball was any department case with such a high priority that failure to succeed threatened career advancement. 'They're not going to take it to a Shooting Review Board.'

'Whatta you mean, they're not gonna? They have to.'

'Your case is jumping the Officer Involved Shooting Section and going directly to a full Internal Affairs Board of Rights.'

'It's what?' Shane couldn't believe what he was hearing. 'How can they send it to a Board of Rights without first giving me a shooting review?'

'The chief can send any case he wants to a full board on his sole discretion. He doesn't have to give any reason. Look, Shane, I don't know why this is happening, but you can't stop it. It's inside departmental guidelines.'

'Sir, you gotta talk to them. I mean, I don't wanna go through another BOR. I'm gonna get time off without pay. It's career poison. It's gonna be in my jacket. This is nuts. Anybody would've done what I did. For God's sake, he fired on me. It was self-defense.'

'It's what the chief wants.'

'I don't even know Chief Brewer. I only met him once. He gave me a Citation of Merit.'

'I've gotta go. You'd better get in touch with a defense rep. Who handled your case last time?'

'DeMarco Saint.'

'You like him?'

'I guess. He got me off,' Shane said dully.

'I think he's retired, but because of IAD crowding, there's a new provision for using retired officers. If you

Вы читаете The Tin Collector
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату