New Hope for the Dead

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New Hope for the Dead Page 20

by Charles Willeford


  Hoke lit a Kool, then offered the pack to Ray Vince.

  Vince shook his head. “I don’t smoke.”

  “We’re from Homicide, Vince,” Henderson said. “What do you have to tell us?”

  “I want outa here. I was supposed to get out next month, and now it looks like I’ll have to spend six more in here. I want to make a deal of some kind.”

  “You shouldn’t’ve fed the man the towel,” Hoke said.

  “What was I supposed to do? He shouldn’t’ve stole it. If the guy had asked to use my towel in a nice way, I might’ve loaned it to him. But he stole it.”

  “I don’t think you’d’ve let him use it, no matter how nicely he asked,” Henderson said.

  “Maybe not, but the sonofabitch stole it. Can I sit down? I was playing volleyball, and I’m a little pooped.”

  “Grab a chair,” Hoke said. “What kind of deal do you have in mind?”

  “Just tell the judge that I’m cooperative, and to give me a little consideration, that’s all. My wife wants me out, and so does my boss. So I shouldn’t have to pull another six months in the stockade because some sonofabitch in here’s a thief. It ain’t fair.”

  “We can’t promise you anything,” Henderson said. “You’ll just have to tell us what you’ve got.”

  “It may not be anything, and I’ll admit that. But I’m trying to be cooperative with the law. I’ve had some domestic problems, just like any married man, but I’m a good citizen.”

  “So talk,” Henderson said.

  “Well, the other night some guys were in the latrine drinking bang-bang, and they were all bragging to each other about how tough they were. Usually it don’t mean nothing, they’re just mouthing off, you know.”

  “Were you drinking bang-bang with ’em?” Henderson asked.

  “No, I don’t drink that stuff. It makes you crazy. I was just in there takin’ a shit. Then this one guy, Wetzel’s his name, bragged about killing a nigger in Overtown a few years back.”

  “What was his name, the black man’s name he said he killed?”

  “Wetzel was slurring his words, being pretty drunk, but it was either Burford or Buford, something like that.”

  “Was it the man’s first name, or last name?”

  “I don’t know. He didn’t say, but people in here ain’t much on first names. They usually call a guy by his last name.”

  “Did he say how he killed him?” Hoke said.

  “He torched him. That’s what he said, but he said he took eighty dollars off him first. He might’ve been lyin’, but Wetzel’s an arson suspect, and he’s in here now for carryin’ a can of kerosene. He’s been over in the city jail, but he was transferred over here last week because of the overcrowding order. So I figgered it all adds up. He’s a firebug, he had a can of kerosene, so maybe he did torch himself a nigger a few years back.”

  “Thanks,” Henderson said. He crossed to the wire-mesh door and called out to Dyer. “We’re ready to go, Mr. Dyer.”

  “Is that all?” Vince said. “What about our deal? Will you talk to the judge for me? I cooperated with you guys, didn’t I?”

  “Sure you did, Vince,” Hoke said. “Are you sure you’ll get your old job back when you get out?”

  “I’d better!” Vince thrust out his jaw.

  “We can’t help you, Vince,” Hoke said. “But there are two other Homicide detectives who can—Detectives Quevedo and Donovan. They’ll be over to talk to you a little later. Just tell them what you told us, and try to remember any details. They’ll take care of you. In the meantime, see what else you can find out about Wetzel. Detective Quevedo is very interested in firebugs.”

  “Can’t you guys say something nice about me, too?”

  Bill laughed. “It’s hard to say something nice about a guy like you, Vince, but we’ll put a note in your file.”

  Dyer unlocked the door. He took Vince down to the end of the corridor and turned him over to another corrections officer, who would escort him back to the yard.

  Dyer rejoined Henderson and Hoke, and Hoke returned Vince’s stockade file.

  “He wasn’t much help to us, Louis,” Henderson said. “But there’ll be two more Homicide detectives coming over to see him later. Quevedo and Donovan. Vince told us our man was torched to death, but Buford was killed with an icepick through the ear. The handle was still in his ear when they found him, and he wasn’t burnt. But Quevedo and Donovan are looking for a firebug.”

  “Quevedo?” Dyer said, frowning. “I know him. He was the guy who fell in love with a painting, wasn’t he?”

  “That’s the rumor,” Bill said, “but he got over it. If I was you, I wouldn’t mention it to him, though.”

  Bill and Hoke retrieved their pistols and handcuffs, and headed back to the station.

  When they got back to the interrogation room and the files, Hoke sent Henderson out to the bullpen to fill Quevedo and Donovan in on the information Vince had given them about Wetzel. Hoke then called the morgue from his office and asked the secretary if he could talk to Doc Evans.

  “He can’t come to the phone now, Sergeant Moseley,” the woman told him. “He’s doing a P.M. and can’t be interrupted. But I can give him a message.”

  “Do you know if you’ve done the autopsy on Hickey, Gerald?”

  “Let me check …” Hoke waited for almost two minutes before she came on the line again. “No, not yet. But they might get to him tonight. Evans is supposed to get a part-time pathologist in tonight to help out with the Descanso Hotel victims. We’ve been pretty busy around here.”

  “Okay, but just ask him to check—when he does the P.M. on Hickey—and see if the man had piles. And if so, what kind of suppositories he was using.”

  “You mean like Preparation H?”

  “That, or whatever. Whether he had piles or not, I mean hemorrhoids.”

  “I’ve made a note. Where should he call you?”

  “I don’t know where I’ll be yet, but tell Doc I’ll call him back about this later on.”

  “You spell ‘Moseley’ with an e, don’t you?”

  “That’s right. Most people leave out the second e. And thanks a lot.”

  Hoke looked at his Timex. It was only 3 P.M., but he couldn’t face the idea of reading files for another hour and a half. There were times, he knew, when he could no longer look at the outside world from inside the asshole. This was one of those times. He left his office and returned to the interrogation room.

  Sanchez looked up from her file and frowned. “Bill told me you’d been over to the Dade County Stockade. You should’ve left me a note. I didn’t know where you were.”

  “You don’t need to know everything, and we weren’t gone long.”

  “I know that. But if someone wanted to know where you were, and I couldn’t tell them, it would make you look bad. How could I cover for you?”

  “All right. Next time I’ll leave you a message. What else?” Jesus, Hoke thought, she’s already practicing to be a mother.

  “Did you sign my voucher?”

  “I didn’t see it.”

  “I put it in your in-box.”

  “I didn’t look in my in-box. I’ll sign it now, and then I’m going back to the hotel. You can put the files away, and tell Bill to go home, too. He can fill you in on what we found out at the stockade. Okay?”

  “It’s only a little after three.” Ellita glanced at her gold watch.

  “I know what time it is. I’ve got to go out tonight, and I don’t know what to do about the girls.”

  “Go ahead. I’ll take them out to dinner, and maybe we’ll go to a movie.”

  “That would be very kind of you.”

  “Not really. That hotel depresses me as much as it does the girls. Maybe instead of a movie I should look for an apartment. I’ve circled some classifieds in the Miami News.”

  “Hold off on that for a while, Ellita. I’ve got an idea I want to talk to you about later. All right?”

  Ellita shrugged.
“There’s no great hurry, I guess.”

  “Just put the stuff away and go back to the hotel, Ellita. As far as I’m concerned, it’s quitting time.”

  Hoke signed Sanchez’s voucher, placed it in Lieutenant Slater’s in-box, and left the station. Hoke would need Ellita to help him with the girls, but this wasn’t the right time to suggest that they share a house together.

  * * *

  Sue Ellen and Aileen were waiting for Hoke in the lobby of the Eldorado. Aileen ran to meet him when he came through the double doors, hugged him, and stood on tiptoe to kiss him on the cheek when he pulled back. She handed him seven one-dollar bills.

  “I washed two dogs, Daddy,” she said, looking down at the floor, “a dachshund and a little toy poodle. The lady who owned the dachshund paid me five dollars, but the man who had the poodle only gave me two. He said the job wasn’t worth more than two.”

  “Did you tell him in advance that you charged five?”

  “Yes, I did. But he only gave me two.”

  Hoke returned the seven dollars. “Here, put it in your purse. You earned it, and it’s your money. Do you remember where this guy lives?”

  “The Alton Arms.” She nodded and pointed. “On Third Street.”

  “What’s his name?”

  “Mr. Lewis.”

  “Okay, we’ll go over and talk to him.”

  “Can I go too?” Sue Ellen said.

  “No. Ellita’ll be here in a few minutes, and you can tell her we’ll be back soon. Otherwise she’d worry about where you were.”

  Hoke and Aileen walked the three blocks to the Alton Arms, a fading pistachio-colored apartment house two stories high with a pink Spanish tile roof. There was a veranda in front, and a half-dozen residents—four old ladies and two old men—were sitting on plastic-webbed chairs and looking across the street. Their view was another two-story apartment house, with four old people sitting on webbed chairs looking back at them.

  “Is that Mr. Lewis, honey?” Hoke asked. “The man with the poodle in his lap?”

  “That’s him. He’s holding Thor. That’s the dog’s name.”

  Hoke and Aileen climbed the porch. Hoke took out his badge and ID case and showed it to the old man. Mr. Lewis, who had gray hair and a gray face, turned pink, and his arms and legs trembled.

  “Police Department, Mr. Lewis,” Hoke said. “I understand that you owe this little girl three dollars.”

  Mr. Lewis got to his feet and handed the miniature poodle to the old lady in the next chair. The tiny dog snarled at Aileen and began to bark. Mr. Lewis took out his wallet, removed three dollars, and held them out to Hoke. His fingers were trembling, and he worked his mouth in and out. Hoke shook his head and inclined it toward Aileen.

  “Give it to the girl.”

  Mr. Lewis gave Aileen the three dollars. “I was planning to eat on that money this week,” he said. “I hope you’re satisfied.”

  “Bullshit,” Hoke said. “If you can pay a hundred a week to live at the Alton, you can pay for getting your dog washed. You can also apologize to the little girl.”

  “I’m sorry,” Mr. Lewis said. He put his wallet back into his hip pocket and retrieved Thor from the old lady. The dog stopped yapping immediately. Mr. Lewis walked to the doorway that led into the apartment house foyer. He opened the door and turned. “I’m not sorry! I’m not sorry!” he said in a high reedy voice. He then stepped swiftly through the door and into the foyer, pulling the door closed behind him.

  On their way back to the Eldorado, Aileen said, “If Mr. Lewis needed that money to eat on, Daddy, I’d rather not take it. But he never told me that this morning.”

  “He’s a liar, Aileen. Don’t feel sorry for him. A miniature poodle like the one he had, if he’s got the papers on it, sells for two or three hundred bucks. If he gets hungry enough, he can always sell the goddamned dog. At any rate, you’ve washed your last dog over here. Some of these people over here on South Beach are crazy as shithouse rats. You and Sue Ellen put on your bathing suits and we’ll all go over to the beach for a swim. If we’re lucky, maybe we can get an hour or so on the beach before the rain starts.”

  19

  Hoke only had one credit card, a Visa card from an obscure bank in Chicago. He had applied for it in person when he had taken a prisoner to Chicago, and the bank never checked his abysmal credit rating. He called two different seafood restaurants before he made a reservation; he wanted to make certain that his Chicago card would be honored. The card itself was good because Hoke always paid the ten-dollar minimum charge every month. He knew it was the only credit card he was ever likely to have.

  La Pescador Habañero’s maître d’ assured Hoke over the phone that his Visa card was acceptable. Jackets were required at La Pescador, but if Hoke didn’t have a jacket, there was a suitable selection in the cloakroom, and he would be furnished with a jacket at no extra charge. Ties, of course, were not required, but if the visitor from Chicago found the evening too humid, he could have a corner table in the courtyard, where the absence of a jacket would not be noticed by the other patrons.

  “Never mind,” Hoke said. “We prefer the dining room, where it’s air-conditioned. And I’ll be wearing a leisure suit.”

  “Excellent!” the maître d’ said. “As I understand it, leisure suits are coming back into style again.”

  “And I’ll want a bottle of wine. Bordeaux, if you have it—”

  “Any particular vintage?”

  “I don’t care. Just have it uncorked and breathing on the table when we get there.”

  That’ll cost me, Hoke thought, but what the hell? He hadn’t been laid in a long time …

  Hoke had mixed feelings about having dinner with Loretta. He was horny, but he was far from confident that he would end up in Loretta’s bed. Was she interested in him as a lover, or did she take him up on his invitation just because she wanted an expensive dinner? In a way, Hoke knew he was indirectly trying to buy a piece of ass, but a man could spend a lot of money on a woman and end up without so much as a good-night kiss.

  This woman was sexy as hell, and physically attractive, but Hoke knew how he looked. He had no idea how Loretta felt about him. One thing Hoke knew for sure: Some women liked to fuck cops just because they were cops, and he hoped that Loretta was one of them. This was something he and Henderson had talked about and taken advantage of often enough in their police careers.

  Women were attracted to power and money—not just to a man’s looks. They were interested in a man’s personality, his occupation, especially interesting occupations. How a man looked was way down there, about seventh on the list. As Henderson had put it once, “Every woman wants to fuck her daddy, Hoke. A cop’s got a badge and a gun, so he’s an authority figure. She can’t screw her daddy, so a cop’s the next best thing.”

  Henderson’s opinion was oversimplified perhaps. Still, look at Harold Hickey. He had power and confidence, plus good looks, or Loretta wouldn’t have married him. Hickey had been on the verge of big fees when she had married him, and she had known he would make it. That’s why Hoke hadn’t believed Hickey when he said Loretta had been sleeping with Jerry. She was too smart to jeopardize her marriage by sleeping with a skinny, run-down junkie. It didn’t make sense—unless there was something going on Hoke didn’t know about.

  On the other hand, Hickey took himself so seriously that he didn’t recognize sarcasm when he heard it. What did the kid say when Hickey had charged the boy with screwing Loretta? “I didn’t think you’d mind, Mr. Hickey.” If that wasn’t sarcasm, what was it? And if the fat next-door neighbor had really told Hickey about the so-called affair, how had she found out? Did she peep through the windows? She was purportedly a friend of Loretta’s, but it didn’t seem likely that Loretta would confide that kind of information to anyone. More likely, Ellen Koontz had merely suspected it, then reported her suspicions to Hickey as fact. And he had bought her story.

  Loretta was attracted to power all right. Otherwise she wouldn�
�t want to own her own shop—a business she could run her own way—instead of working as a designer for someone else who would have all of the problems. The problem was, Hoke didn’t know Loretta well enough to make any educated guesses about her. The best thing to do, Hoke decided, was to get Loretta to talk about herself. Once he got to know her a little better, everything would work out fine.

  Before Hoke left the hotel, he shifted his holstered pistol from the small of his back, where he usually carried it, to the front. When they got to the restaurant, he would unbutton his jacket so Loretta could see the butt of his revolver showing above the waistband. As Henderson once said, “Showing a woman your pistol is just like showing her your cock.” Maybe so, and maybe not, Hoke thought, half-amused at Henderson’s ready theories; but with a face like mine, I need every advantage I can get.

  The dinner went very well, Hoke thought. The bottle of wine was only twenty-eight dollars and the bouillabaisse for two, as recommended by their waiter, only thirty. A green salad and a rice pudding with raisins were included with the dinner, and they finished their meal with two dollar-fifty espressos.

  Loretta Hickey, in a low-cut white chiffon dress, looked lovely to Hoke. She was wearing a lavender orchid (Hoke had ordered it and charged it to the Eldorado’s telephone) pinned to her narrow waist. Hoke had told the Vietnamese girl at the Bouquetique to hand the orchid to Mrs. Hickey when she left the shop, figuring that if he was going to order a corsage, he might as well give Loretta’s shop the business. Loretta was delighted with her orchid.

  “You may not believe it, Hoke,” she’d said when he picked her up at her house in Green Lakes, “but it’s been years and years since I’ve been given any flowers. People think that because I have my own shop, I can get all I want free. That may be true, but I do love flowers, and I certainly didn’t expect such a lovely orchid. Even if I did pick it out myself.”

  “On the phone I told the girl to pick it, and to hand it to you when you left.”

  “Oh, no, Dotty wouldn’t dare risk her taste against mine. She’s a Vietnamese refugee, you know, and she’s practically helpless around the shop. But she’s all I can afford at the moment. What I really need is a good designer. Because I’m usually working in the back, I miss a lot of gift sales in front. Dotty Chen couldn’t sell a Cuban a cup of coffee.”

 

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