Read Shotgun Lullaby (A Conway Sax Mystery) Online

Authors: Steve Ulfelder

Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Hard-Boiled

Shotgun Lullaby (A Conway Sax Mystery) (2 page)

Matt Bogardis climbed from the cruiser. Matt's a good guy, a big guy. The cop gear on his belt jangled and clanked as he came and stood behind the Infiniti. He watched me put on the differential cover with a fourteen-millimeter hand socket.

Matt said, “Wouldn't the job go faster if you used the air gun?”

“The gun's for taking things off. Hand tools are for putting things back together. Ram a bolt in with an air gun, you can strip the threads.”

“I've seen a lot of mechanics put things together with air guns.”

“Dealerships, Jiffy Lubes, Midas Mufflers,” I said. “Those aren't mechanics. They're trained chimpanzees. Only they're not trained.”

“Picky bastard, huh?” Matt said it to Floriano Mendes, my partner. Floriano was kicking support arms beneath a Civic at the next lift over.

“Tell me about it,” Floriano said.

Matt watched us work.

“Marlborough cops are wondering were you out that way last night,” he said after a while. “Route 20? The Ocean State Job Lot?”

“No.”

“Reason they're wondering,” he said, “some guy got the shit kicked out of him. Kid named Andrade, works at the Job Lot.”

“Don't know him.”

“Parking lot security cam caught an F-250 like yours. Light in color, like yours. Partial plate that kinda-sorta-maybe starts the way yours does.”

I snugged up the last bolt. “Kinda-sorta-maybe, huh?”

He shrugged.

I said, “What's Andrade say?”

“Not a damn word. He was pissed the hospital called us in the first place. Said he'd take care of it himself.”

I wiped the differential cover with a shop rag. “Can't help you, Matt.”

“Thought so.” He paused. “Andrade sells used cars on the side. Shitboxes, nothing over fifteen hundred bucks. He bootlegs the inspection stickers and sells to people who can't afford anything better. Illegals, mostly. They get pulled over and the cop notices the sticker, they're shit outta luck.”

“Marlborough cops all bummed out because he got beat up?”

“I didn't get that feeling. But Conway”—he waited until I looked at him—“one of these days, you'll beat up the wrong guy. He'll have a gun, or a bunch of shitfaced buddies. There's only so much I can do. I'm a cop who you know, but I'm not your friend the cop. See the difference?”

I nodded and watched Matt jangle and clank back to his cruiser. Good guy.

*   *   *

A soft spring rain was starting as I pulled over for Gus. He waited under the sub shop's green awning, finishing off a bag of potato chips. Didn't notice me for a few seconds. Under the light brown hair, longish, that fell across his forehead with no real part, he had round brown eyes. Looked even younger than he was, with a peach-fuzz face and a chin that made him look a little like an elf. When you spoke with him, he had a presence, but looking at him there on the sidewalk, I realized he was shorter and skinnier than Roy.

He spotted me. Wiped hands on pants, climbed in. “Anybody else coming?”

“Charlene'll meet us there with a carload of Barnburners.”

Gus lip-puffed hair from his eyes. “As I was saying last night, I'm not sure this is the ideal time for me to lose my AA virginity. I'd feel more comfortable doing a little recon, get my drift? Observing and absorbing. I mean, if I speak tonight, doesn't that rob an AA veteran, somebody like yourself, of a chance to lay some wisdom on the flock?”

“You'll speak tonight.”


Je
sus!” He pounded a fist on his thigh, then folded his arms in a five-year-old's pout. Which is identical to a junkie's pout.

We drove.

“The Barnburners asked me to show you the ropes,” I said after a while. “These are the ropes. You want me off your back? Then find a sponsor, get a job, show some progress. Until then, I'm it. Barnburner-appointed.”

“The Barnburners this, the Barnburners that. You talk like they're the C-I-fucking-A. As far as I can see, they're a bunch of cliquey old alkies.”

Without taking my eyes off the road, I grabbed a handful of his button-down shirt. “The Barnburners saved my life. I do what they ask me to do. Sometimes I throw a scare into shitbirds like Andrade. Sometimes I slap some sense into bigmouth college boys fresh out of rehab.” I let go of his shirt all at once, feeling like a jerk. “You'll speak tonight.”

He shut up for the rest of the ride. I glanced at him a lot. Wanted to say I was sorry, but couldn't. And couldn't figure out why I couldn't.

*   *   *

I chaired the Milford meeting. Gymnasium, Catholic school next to a Wendy's. Through the gym's open windows, you could hear tires hiss on wet pavement. You could smell french fries.

Usually, the chairman doesn't do much except introduce speakers and pull the raffle ticket. But most of Charlene's promised Barnburners had crapped out, and the ones who did show kept their stories short.

I finally introduced Gus. He rose, dragged himself to the podium, faced the room.

Then he opened his mouth, and he did damn well. Better than any first-timer had a right to. I'd known he would, natural-born bullshitter that he was. He told his drunk log and his drug log, made everybody laugh a few times, pumped out clichés about learning from old-timers like me, and sat to genuine applause.

As I returned to the podium, I shook Gus's hand. Whispered that I was proud of him. Meant it. Hoped he knew I was sorry for roughing him up.

I was fresh out of speakers and had fifteen minutes to fill.

Hell.

I looked at Charlene. She batted her eyes at me, laughing inside, knowing I didn't like to speak but was trapped.

Deep breath. “I'm Conway,” I said. “I'm an alcoholic and a drug addict.”

Hi, Conway.

I squared up and told my story.

 

CHAPTER TWO

Back to Framingham in the rain. Gus was quiet all the way up Route 16, most likely replaying his speech in his head. I asked how it felt to stand up in front of so many people. He shrugged, said okay I guess. I told him he did fine.

Downtown Framingham. The GM plant was long since closed. The retail had moved out to malls on Route 9, a busy east-west road. Some sap had bought the old Dennison factory and turned it into yuppie condos, but as far as I could see there weren't a lot of takers.

North of Route 9, Framingham was a nice suburb. Down here, south of 9, it was a beat-up red-brick city scratching its head. Losing its industrial, its retail. Gaining methadone clinics and soup kitchens, puzzling out its next move.

We hit gridlock near the center of town. I figured the gates guarding the railroad tracks had jammed again. Wrong: we cleared the tracks, but not the traffic, and crawled.

A block from Almost Home, the jam was explained: cop cars, fire trucks, ambulances. Parked every which way, the way they park them.

Matt Bogardis was directing traffic with a flashlight, orange poncho over his uniform. I honked, cracked my window. He hustled over, crouching against the rain, strobed blue by his own roof lights.

“Some mess, huh?” he said. “Take a left, try Franklin Street.”

I thumbed at Gus. “I'm dropping him off on this block.”

Matt looked at Gus for the first time. “Where on the block?”

“Almost Home,” Gus said. “The halfway house.”

Matt motioned for me to roll my window farther. He flashlighted Gus. “Where you coming from?”

I said, “AA meeting in Milford.”

“Let me see some ID.”

Gus passed his license over. Matt's visor dripped on it. He passed it back. “Come with me, both of you.” He wiped rain from his nose, looked at Gus. “Everybody thinks you're dead.”

*   *   *

A half hour later, I stood under the sub-shop awning. Crowded spot: it was the closest shelter to Almost Home. The halfway house itself was out of the rain, obviously—but I got the feeling the cops and EMTs didn't want to spend any more time in there than they had to.

Gus had been pulled aside as soon as Matt Bogardis told the Framingham police chief who the kid was. He was a full forty feet away. I couldn't hear anything Gus said, or the questions they asked him. Had to make do with body language.

Which was pretty plain: this was a clusterfuck. Framingham's big enough to get its share of druggie knifings and the occasional home-invasion murder, but this was way bigger. The fact that the chief, a silver-haired glad-hander who spent as much time in Boca as he did behind his desk, was here in full dress uniform told me that.

The news trucks confirmed it. Channels 4, 5, 7, 56, Fox, Bay State Cable News.

Then the state cops rolled in, silently taking over—the Framingham chief looked relieved about that—and I began to pick up conversation snatches from coffee-drinking ambulance folks and street cops.
Bloodbath. Execution style. Damn near puked. Real
Scarface
stuff, I shit you not.

At the far end of the awning, Gus was talking to a guy who had to be a state police detective. He was shorter than most, but otherwise had the look: bowed legs, weightlifter's chest that his Windbreaker couldn't hide, black hair an eighth-inch too long to be called a buzz cut. Gus seemed to be handling himself fine. If the cop was like the others I've run across, he was repeating and tweaking questions to catch Gus in a lie. But Gus had a hole card: he didn't have a lie to tell. Not about something that'd happened while we were in Milford.

I got bored. Watched the TV crews set up, wished for coffee. Every so often, one cop would ask another who the hell I was, then come over and get my story. I told the Framingham cops, then the staties about the Milford meeting. I said fifty people'd seen us there, go ahead and check. Gave phone numbers.

The detective in charge said one last thing to Gus, then came to me. He had a high-mileage face that looked older than the rest of him. Smart brown eyes. And he wore braces—those translucent plastic ones adults get when they want to fix their teeth but are embarrassed about it.

He stood close, looked up, studied me, didn't try to hide it or be polite. Slapped a reporter's notebook against his thigh. Finally said his name was Lima. I told him mine.

“I heard about you,” he said.

I said nothing.

“Yeah, I heard a lot about you. Everybody at the Framingham barracks knows you. You're on paper.”

“Not for long.” It was an understatement. My parole was due to end at midnight. I didn't see any reason to tell Lima that.

“Manslaughter,” he said.

“Self-defense. I got hosed by a DA running for office.”

“'Course you did.”

“You're new,” I said. “In Framingham.” Did he blush? I guessed and pressed. “No, it's more than that. You're a new
detective
. Three months ago, I bet you were running speed traps in … Fall River?”

He blushed like hell.

“It was just a good guess,” I said. “I've never seen a Brazilian detective on the staties.” I said the last part in Portuguese. I've learned some out of necessity.

“First in the commonwealth,” he said, puffing out his chest. If he was surprised at my Portuguese, he hid it.

When Lima realized he wasn't controlling the conversation, he stepped back and forced his eyes to go flat. Produced a pen, bit off its cap, fired questions at me while writing in his notebook.

Everything he asked I'd already told at least twice. But I played along. Realized I enjoyed having a straight story to tell. It was a new feeling for me. It made things easy.

Lima soon figured out he wasn't going to catch me in a lie. He sighed, made a sharp whistle, motioned at Gus to join us.

“You've lived here three weeks,” he said to Gus.

“Yes.”

“How long you going to stay?”

“I'm not sure.” Gus shuffled his feet. “My counselor suggested six months at least, but I got the feeling that was flexible. Some guys stay longer, but most leave sooner.”

“Why?”

“They don't make it. They pick up, you know? They go back out there.”

“You mean they take drugs.”

“Or drink.”

“How does anybody know that?”

“Random testing, for starters,” Gus said. “You had to pee in a cup whenever Ellery asked. He's the housefather. Weird dude. But the thing is…”

Lima waited.

“… the thing is,” Gus said, “even without the testing, everybody knew. You get a half-dozen junkies all living in a little house together? It was easy to tell when somebody was high.”

“What happened when people got caught?”

“They had to split immediately. Ellery would get a phone call with a positive. Then he'd shuffle down the hall—all I ever saw him wear was shower clogs—and knock on a door, and you'd know someone was getting tossed.”

“How many guys been tossed since you got here?”

Gus squinted. “There was a black guy who barely lasted a day. I don't even remember his name. Then last week, a guy named Cal split after two weeks.”

“Either of 'em pissed off about it? Make any threats? Start a fight?”

“Nah. When guys left, they were mostly ashamed. They couldn't look you in the eye. They just wanted to go back out and use.”

Lima closed his notebook. “If this was a movie made in 1954,” he said, “I'd tell you both not to leave town. But you”—pointing at me—“got a parole officer I know pretty well. And
you
”—pointing at Gus—“answer to him, far as I can tell. So I don't have to say all that, do I?”

“You know Luther?” I said.

Lima ignored me, turned to leave.

Gus grabbed the sleeve of his Windbreaker. “Who got shot? Why was everybody worried about me?”

The cop faced us. Gus's hand still clutched his sleeve, but Lima spoke to me. “I don't have to tell you this, okay? I'm doing you a favor.”

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