“You used Rooster Mintz and Tad Ford,” Behr thought aloud. “Ford was a driver. You ship ’ em out.”

Riggi ’ s mouth opened but emitted no sound, and Behr realized how hard his grip was on the man ’ s throat. He forced himself to relax it.

“You send them away. To where?”

“South…to Mexico,” Riggi said as the life began to seep from his eyes.

Behr shuddered at the thought of the cold transit. Then he remembered the small wooden key chain he ’ d been given by the exotic dancer, which had been given to her by Tad Ford. It was in the Stor-Box that housed all the paperwork and meager evidence he ’ d assembled so far.

Paul was right there. “Ciudad del Sol,” he said.

Riggi blinked and panted. His eyes began to lose focus and color.

Behr slapped him on the cheek harder to bring him back. “They ’ re taken to Ciudad del Sol. I don ’ t want to hear you fucking deny it. You only say ‘ no ’ if I ’ m wrong.” There was no response, only the labored and scraping sound of Riggi ’ s breathing. Behr and Paul looked at each other over the bleeding man, understanding the enormity of what they ’ d heard.

“What ’ d you do with him, you bastard?” Paul demanded, spittle flying out from between his teeth. Riggi ’ s head just rolled from side to side in response. “What did you do to my son?”

“Don ’ t know…” Riggi croaked.

“Where ’ s his body?” Paul practically screamed in the man ’ s face.

“I ’ m…I ’ m a businessman,” Riggi gasped in faded defiance. “…in nomine Patris… ” He said no more.

Only the wind rustled the thin branches high above them. Paul looked at Behr, then down at the dying man, and then at the rosary and crucifix in his own hand, the beads making a quiet clicking sound. He closed his eyes for a long moment, then opened them and, with a look of pure disgust, reached out for Riggi ’ s open hand and dropped the beads into his palm.

Riggi closed his eyes like an old man taking a nap. His body stopped moving. A vibrating sound escaped his lungs, which caused Paul to jump back.

“Death rattle,” Behr said to the question in Paul ’ s wide eyes.

Behr stood, his knee joints cracking in protest, and walked off a few yards. Paul moved back several feet, sat on the grass, and hung his head.

“When they ask, you waited in the car,” Behr said. Paul just nodded. “You don ’ t know how I got inside. There was no Toombakis.”

The police were first to arrive, a cruiser and then another. They spotted up on Behr and Paul and made radio calls for half a minute. The ambulance was next. Paramedics climbed out, and while the driver got a box from the back, the other, a Latino with a pitted face, crossed to Riggi.

“Ho, Doc,” the Latino called out to his partner as he checked for vitals, “zeroes across the board.”

“Ho,” the partner called back, putting the box away and closing the doors. He approached the body with a clipboard and began filling out paperwork.

The responding officers photographed the scene and then began asking vague questions. Before long a silver Crown Vic rolled up.

Captain Pomeroy climbed out and surveyed the scene for only a moment before crooking a finger at Behr. Behr nodded and crossed over to him.

“I thought I was done with you when I fired your ass,” Pomeroy began, loud enough for a few officers to hear. Behr bit down hard on his tongue against the insult.

“Get in.” Pomeroy gestured to his car, and Behr did.

The dove-gray velour was plush, but the fabric seemed to hold on to Pomeroy ’ s cologne. Over time it had gone sour. Sitting in the car gave Behr an immediate headache. He sat there as Pomeroy moved around the scene and oversaw Riggi being zipped up in a body bag and placed in the back of a coroner ’ s van. Then he crossed to Paul and they had a brief conversation. Pomeroy had gained weight in the few years since Behr had seen him. The flesh under his chin had gone soft and would double in a few more years. Dark command circles had formed under the captain ’ s eyes as well. Behr felt the changes he himself had undergone reflected in his old superior. But the captain still had the look of a hawk — piercing eyes over a prominent nose bone — while he recognized himself as a failure. Behr may have been full of promise as a young officer. He may have added knowledge and experience to that promise and for a moment been on his way to becoming a fine policeman. But then things got in the way. An ill-fated partnership, poor political skills, too much drinking, and then Tim ’ s death, topped off by a busted marriage and more drinking. He could ’ ve viewed any single one of those factors as bad luck, but taken together he knew it was less a question of chance and more one of limitation or even destiny.

Pomeroy got in the car and slammed the door, bringing a fresh wave of cologne with him. There were no pleasantries, as Behr expected.

“Time for the eternal questions, Frank. Why am I here? Why are you here? What the hell happened?”

“That ’ s my client.” He pointed at Paul.

“I know him.”

“I ’ ve been working his son ’ s case. It led me to Riggi — the DB.”

Pomeroy just grimaced.

“I was looking to talk to the man, get something firm, then turn it over. I ’ d been in his house waiting when he showed up — ”

“Is that so?” Pomeroy cut in. Behr figured he may as well put it out there. It could be found out later and then there ’ d be problems.

“The door was open.”

“Uh-huh. Was your client with you?”

“He was out in the car. Then the guy ran and we followed him and he jumped the curb.”

“Motherfucker. And why didn ’ t you come in with this at the start?”

“I didn ’ t have anything firm then.”

“Well, is it firm enough now? What ’ d you get?”

“He targeted kids who frequented medical practices in strip malls he owned. He had people grabbing them up. Selling them, I believe.”

“Selling them? Jesus Christ.”

“That ’ s right. I have reason to believe my client ’ s son was one of them. There ’ s a file of his in my car. Records.”

“How ’ d you…” Pomeroy began. “Don ’ t tell me that. How many are we talking about?”

“About seven in this area, a thirty-mile radius the best I can figure, over the past few years. Boys of a certain age. Many more before that.”

Pomeroy ’ s complexion grew ashen. “Shit, this is going to be a major followup investigation. I ’ m gonna need this all on paper.”

Behr nodded. “I ’ m gonna need time.”

“Why didn ’ t you give when I sent my guys around?”

“I didn ’ t have any of this then. It just came together,” Behr said convincingly.

Pomeroy rubbed his face, massaging in the aftershave oil, Behr imagined. “I ’ ve heard rumors. You were behind a prisoner getting a pretty severe trimming in County. Same prisoner is now dead.” Behr felt Pomeroy study him for a reaction and did his best not to give one beyond his natural appreciation for the swiftness of prison justice.

“I don ’ t know anything about that — ”

“Don ’ t bother. Just don ’ t bother, all right? The prisoner was stabbed to death. Do you have any information on it?”

“None.”

“Where? What the hell does he do with them?”

“I don ’ t know, Captain.” It was a grand-scale lie, and one Behr had planned on telling since the moment Riggi ’ s car had flipped and hit the tree. If he gave up Mexico, the department would contact local authorities, there would be tipoffs, and the resolution he and Paul had been looking for would vanish forever.

Behr watched Pomeroy chew over questions in his mind and either answer them or realize there were no answers. A wrecker arrived on the scene and the driver began to hook cables to the rear axle of Riggi ’ s broken

Вы читаете City of the Sun
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