Shadow Men - Part 5
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Part 5

She made coffee when we got to her house and spiked it with a creme rum that turned it sweet and light brown. I didn't object. She climbed into the big hammock with me and her movement set it lightly swinging.

"You comfortable, Freeman?"

"Very," I said. She had turned out the porch lights, so the only light was the soft iridescent blue from the pool.

"What am I going to do about my friend, Max?"

I knew what was eating at her. I knew how it could.

"Listen to her," I said. "Suggest some counseling. You know the PBA has programs for this. Maybe she can get him to go before it gets too far. If it hasn't already."

She was quiet. Thinking quiet. Running the scene through her internal eye as a good investigator does.

"I'm not sure she'd go for that," she said. "And I doubt seriously that he would."

We both sipped our coffee and watched a breeze ripple the pool water and set its light flickering.

"And if she admits he's been hitting her? What do you do?"

"You gather the evidence and arrest his a.s.s. It's a crime," I said, though it came out harsher than I expected.

She sat her coffee cup on the deck and stretched out next to me, her head on my chest. The smell of her hair was in my nose, and I was afraid she was listening to the elevated race of my heartbeat.

"Will you tell me about your father someday, Max?"

I ran the scene through my own internal eye.

"Yes," I said.

Later, when she was asleep, I lay staring up into the trees. I would use my left hand on occasion to push off the near railing and set the hammock swinging, because I did not want to close my eyes eyes and did not want to dream. and did not want to dream.

I could never hear my mother's voice, no words of anger or fear or even begging to make him stop. I would lie in bed, the covers up to my neck and-forgive me, G.o.d-I would listen. The rough slam of the front door woke me. I counted the heavy steps past the staircase and down the hall to the kitchen. Eighteen. I heard the soft suction of the refrigerator opening, the clinking sound of gla.s.s against gla.s.s. A plate on the wooden table, a sc.r.a.pe of a chair being pulled back. Maybe he would stay down there tonight. Maybe he would fall asleep in front of the television and his hard snoring would be welcome music. But not this night. Not in this dream.

I heard each step up the stairs, the creak of old wood when he stopped and grabbed the smooth oak ball at the top of the banister to steady himself. I could feel him looking at my door, and then he went the other way, to their bedroom, and it would start. I tried, in the head of a thirteen-year-old boy, to make it another man's voice, the harsh, spitting curses. He was clapping his own hands together to make a point, I would lie to myself at the sound of skin slapping skin. A thump against the wall vibrated through the house. The sound of something porcelain from my mother's bureau shattering on the floor. And then, quiet. No sobbing. No gentle, conciliatory words. Just a long and empty silence.

In the morning I stayed upstairs as long as I could, listening for him to leave. I brushed my teeth, twice. I packed and repacked my football cleats and jersey. But the time forced me down and he was sitting at the kitchen table, his dark hair slicked back with Brylcreem, his shoes polished and shining, his blue policeman's uniform pressed and starched by my mother's hand.

"Running late again, Maxey?" he said, grinning, his eyes eyes only slightly bloodshot from drink. only slightly bloodshot from drink.

"Yeah, gotta run," I said, s.n.a.t.c.hing something from the fridge, standing up close to my mother, who stood clearing the stovetop and no longer said anything to me about skipping breakfast.

I kissed her on the cheek and she turned halfway to accept it. "Have a great day at school, Maxey," she said. "And here, take your lunch." Then a car horn sounded out front.

"You got a game tonight?" my father asked.

"Yes, sir. Rafferty."

"OK, I'll be there, son," he would lie. "Good luck. And tell your uncle I'll be out in a minute."

Out on the street a black-and-white police cruiser was double- parked on Mifflin in front of the house. When I came down the steps, my uncle Keith called out from inside.

"Yo, Maxey."

"Hey," I answered, stopping to greet him through the open pa.s.senger's window. He too was in uniform. He and my father had the coveted day shift.

"How you doin', kid?"

"OK."

"St. Rafferty's tonight, eh?"

"Yeah."

"Go get 'em, kid. An' give that p.u.s.s.y quarterback of theirs a shot for me, eh?"

"OK, see ya," I said, and walked away, refusing to look back, even at the sound of my front door opening.

The ringing telephone woke her, and Richards's movement pulled me out of my own fitful sleep.

"You want to let it go?" I said.

"I would," she groaned, getting up, "if it had stopped on the ninth d.a.m.n ring."

She went inside. I blinked the haze out of my eyes and tried to judge the hour by the lightening sky to the east that swayed back and forth above me with the rock of the hammock. Twenty seconds later Richards returned with her portable in hand and an unpleasant look in her face.

"It's for you, and the a.s.shole won't I.D. himself or leave a message," she said, then pressed her palm over the mouthpiece. "And I don't think I appreciate you giving out this number as a place to reach you, either."

She pushed the phone at me, spun, and walked back inside.

"Who is this?" I said into the phone, Richards's anger quickly transferring into me. The line was silent, but open.

"h.e.l.lo!"

"Stay out of this Noren issue, Mr. Freeman," a man's voice said. "It's ancient history, and believe me, you're better off without it."

I tried to process the words, tried to come up with something to keep the guy talking. But before I could, the line went dead.

CHAPTER 8.

"I've been bribed before. Asked to st-stay away from a case for p-1 political reasons. h.e.l.l, every criminal case c-comes down to a plea bargain offer at s-some point." Billy did not resort to swearing easily, so I knew he was p.i.s.sed, or frustrated, or both.

When I got to his office at eight he was already working the phone. Allie served me my big mug of coffee at her desk in the reception room before showing me in. Billy had actually sounded congenial until I told him about the phone call to Richards's home two hours earlier. The information seemed to click things into focus for him. He started pacing the carpet in front of his windows, ignoring the view outside.

"These were corporate lawyers. I expected they w-would stonewall, say how impossible it would b-be to find any detailed records from all the way b-back in the twenties."

Billy had done a thorough job of tracking the name of the eighty-year-old corporate owners of Noren. Linking them, like a family tree, he had found the names and then the spin-off companies that the people behind the names had formed over the years. When he got into the sixties, he'd narrowed the list to a handful of real estate firms, independent contractors and a couple of large home-building enterprises. He went to the biggest of the group first, PalmCo, one of the largest and best-known development names in all of Florida. From the suburban tracks to the beachfront high-rises, to the shopping malls and now the business castles that were spiking up in every major city along the coast, PalmCo had a hand in the recreation of a one-time soggy seaside landscape. Billy had asked for, and with some hard pushing, been granted a meeting with PalmCo's legal representatives. It was held in the office of a private firm in West Palm Beach. Billy's reputation would precede him. Knowing this, he was astounded by the clear message the attorneys delivered.

"I even expected th-them to deny that they even hired itinerant workers on the old t-trail p-project. But they all b-but flat-out tried to buy me off. 'This historical matter would all b-be better off left in the p-past. It was a d-different time when business was so m- much less, uh, businesslike,'" Billy said, mocking the "boys will be boys" tone of the lawyers.

"Then he blows me a lot of sm-smoke about my reputation and wouldn't my time be much, much more valuable working on some big money eminent domain cases they c-could steer my way."

Big mistake, I thought to myself, being condescending to a prideful man who spent his life proving to himself and the world that n.o.body needed to hand Billy Manchester anything.

"And now this, this, amateurish th-threat against you."

He stopped pacing and stared outside. He could have been watching the dark bruised clouds to the west as they built over the Glades and marched east with a guarantee of showers. He never looked down. Billy never did.

"So what do you make of it?" I asked, to bring him back.

"They're scared."

"h.e.l.l, scared of what?"

"What we know."

"They don't know what we know. The d.a.m.n little bit we do know."

"Sure they d-do. They know everything, Max. Even where you go to d-dinner. Even Sherry's phone n-number."

I didn't know how to respond.

"C-Corporate information gathering, Max. No big company s- survives without it. You're thinking l-like a cop instead of a P.I."

"Yeah?"

"First thing you'll have t-to do is get your truck swept for a tr- tracking device." I was still just staring at him. "Then, get r-rid of the cell phone you've b-been using. I'll get you a c-clean one."

By 11:00 A.M. A.M. I was back down at Global Forensics on Billy's suggestion. As a Philadelphia street cop, and even during my short and less than stellar stint in the detective bureau, I had little experience in electronic surveillance. We'd strapped up a couple of waiters and a shop steward with body wires while trying to work a South Philly mob case. I'd stood around watching a tech from the auto theft squad pull a LoJack unit after we followed a stolen Mercedes with a kilo of cocaine in the trunk for thirty miles into Jersey. None of that seemed to impress Billy, or William Lott. I was back down at Global Forensics on Billy's suggestion. As a Philadelphia street cop, and even during my short and less than stellar stint in the detective bureau, I had little experience in electronic surveillance. We'd strapped up a couple of waiters and a shop steward with body wires while trying to work a South Philly mob case. I'd stood around watching a tech from the auto theft squad pull a LoJack unit after we followed a stolen Mercedes with a kilo of cocaine in the trunk for thirty miles into Jersey. None of that seemed to impress Billy, or William Lott.

"n.o.body uses body bugs anymore, Max. These days you wire up a microphone to the inside of your cell phone. Everybody uses the d.a.m.n things now, it's like wearing a f.u.c.kin' tie, you're considered naked without it.

"Your partners dial up your phone before you go into a meeting, they can hear every d.a.m.n thing that's said and record it. s.h.i.t, they can monitor the thing from f.u.c.kin' Langley without ever having to get off their a.s.ses."

Lott was dressed in ratty, kneeless Levi's and a white doctor's lab coat with splatters of some reddish brown across the left chest and sleeve, the origin of which I was not about to ask. We briefly discussed Billy's, and now my, suspicion that somehow my movements were being tracked and my phone conversations were being intercepted.

"G.o.dd.a.m.n government," Lott said. "You see that story about the medical chips? Surgically slip them under your skin and voila! voila! Your own doctor can monitor your heart 'and several other serious medical conditions so that you'll be worry free.' How long before one of them comes with every f.u.c.kin' social security number, eh?" Your own doctor can monitor your heart 'and several other serious medical conditions so that you'll be worry free.' How long before one of them comes with every f.u.c.kin' social security number, eh?"

I tried to keep my face as neutral as possible while the big man raised an eyebrow with his rhetorical rant.

"Uh, bugs, William?" I finally said.

He nodded in approval, maybe giving me more credit than I was due for my silence.

"Never can be too careful, Max," he said, continuing to wipe his thick fingers, and moving to the doorway that led back outside to the parking area.

"I don't do the work myself," he was saying over his shoulder as I followed him past my truck. "But I will personally refer you to the best in the business."

We were halfway across the access road, heading for the warehouse door on the other side, when Lott called out: "Ramon! Mira, Ramon!" "Ramon! Mira, Ramon!"

"These cats are not early risers," he said over his shoulder. I looked at my watch. We were headed for the open door where I had seen the young group of Hispanic kids working on the tricked-out Honda.

"Ramon! I got business for you, dude!"

Before we reached the door, a young man poked his head out from the garage bay and then stepped out, still fastening the snaps on his calf-length shorts.

"Hey, Mr. Lott. What up?"

They greeted each other with extended fists, barely touching knuckles. Ramon appeared to be in his mid-twenties, dark, almost black eyes, a thin line of a mustache, and a collection of spa.r.s.e beard under his chin. His hair was shaved to the top of his ears all around his head and then it was long and slicked back to a braided pony- tail. He was a.s.sessing me as sure as I was him.

"This is my friend, Max Freeman," Lott said. "He's got some bug problems with his truck that maybe you could help him out with."

I extended my hand in a more traditional manner and Ramon shook it.

"You look like a cop, Mr. Freeman," he said without the slightest tone of accusation or disrespect.

"I used to be," I replied, trying to match his composure. I looked at the tattoo on his right arm, impressive artwork of the Virgin Mary, much higher quality than prison ink work.

"He's a P.I. now," Lott said, cutting in. "He works mostly for Billy Manchester."

Ramon's placid eyes reacted immediately to Billy's name, as though absorbing the glint of light. A smile came to his face.

"OK," he said, the flat wariness gone. "Wheel it over, man. My friends and I will take a look."

Lott and I walked back to my truck and parted in front of his lab.

"No questions asked, and believe me," he said, "these kids know more about the electronics of this s.h.i.t than any FBI tech I ever met."

When I backed my F-150 into his garage, Ramon explained his work terms. "One hundred in cash and we keep whatever hardware we find. You don't get it for no evidence in some courtroom," he said, then changed the seriousness in his voice and winked. "But you do get to drive around free."