by Frank Zafiro
“I’m chillin’.” Morris tried to keep his voice calm. “Just don’t beat me like that last cop did. That man is a racist.”
The door opened and pudgy hands helped him from the car. He walked into the officers booking area and straight through to the prisoner’s receiving area. The fat jailer began booking him into jail, a process familiar enough to Morris. He cooperated completely, anticipating the jailer’s questions and orders. He knew hard time and he knew easy time. There was a lot less leeway in here than out in the street. And fewer witnesses.
The hotshot cop who arrested him came in and read him his warrant. He knew it was required by law and made no effort to interrupt.
“This is your warrant,” the punk bitch intoned. “It’s in Superior Court for failure to appear on an original charge of possession of crack cocaine. Bail is set at $25,000. Signed on August 24th of this year by Judge Antonio Calabrese.” The cop looked up. “Any questions?”
“Fuck you,” whispered Morris.
“Same to you,” the cop replied in a low, even voice and turned to walk away.
“I’ll get you,” Morris gritted, anger seething inside him. “One-eight-seven, motherfucker.”
The California penal code for homicide, ‘one-eighty seven’ was a common way among gang members to threaten to kill someone. The cop must have known what it meant because he snarled something under his breath and took a step toward Morris. Two jailers intervened, holding the young hothead back. Morris wished the jailers hadn’t been there so the cop could have hit him. How sweet would it be to press charges against him with all these witnesses who were too stupid to lie?
The jailers walked the cop out of the receiving area. Morris smiled and blew him a kiss. “One-eighty-seven,” he repeated as the cop reached the door.
“Shut up, Isaiah,” the fat jailer told him, “or we will do this the hard way.”
Morris remained quiet. He answered all questions and signed that his property had been removed. Then he signed his booking notification on the warrant with $25,000 bail and for assaulting an officer with $5000 bail. He cooperated patiently as the jailer meticulously snapped his picture and fingerprinted him. Finally, they allowed him to use the phone.
It took one phone call to his cuz, $4500 out of his stash and a second call, this to a bail bondsman, before he was booked back out. The process going out seemed even quicker than going in, an irony that was not lost on Morris. He hit the street and got into T-Dog’s car exactly one hour and forty-eight minutes after being brought to jail.
Sunday, August 21st
0021 hours
Stefan Kopriva left the property room where he’d just written his report and placed the magazine and ammunition on the property book. He heard a screech of tires from the corner. A Cadillac approached, the silhouette of a head sticking out the rear window.
Kopriva drew his pistol and held it at his side. He moved quickly to the patrol car for cover.
The car rolled closer and he saw Morris in the window.
“One-eighty-seven, motherfucker-r-r-r-r-r!” the gangster yelled.
Kopriva raised his gun in case Morris fired, but the tires squealed and the Cadillac pulled away. At the intersection, they took a right and disappeared.
What is he doing out of jail already? Kopriva shook his head. What a screwed up system.
When he holstered his gun, he suddenly realized he was breathing rapidly. Damned adrenaline. Kopriva took several deep breaths, taking his time and forcing himself calm before he got into the patrol car and started the engine. By the time he notified dispatch that he was clear, he felt steady again.
Sunday, August 21st
Day Shift
1132 hours
There are some things that a man should be left alone while doing. As far as Sgt. David Poole was concerned, working on his car was one of them.
He adjusted the valves on his 1969 Chevrolet Chevelle Super Sport. It had a huge engine, a 396 large block that sucked gas like a greedy bitch. He’d put a stock, stiff four-speed in it and it had never given him any trouble. Then again, he never missed a power-shift, either.
He’d sipped a Michelob throughout the valve adjustment and now that they were fine-tuned, he allowed himself a deep draught. It felt good to have completed something worthwhile for a change. Something that made him happy. The beautiful rumble of the 396 did just that. He reached down near the carburetor and revved the engine slightly. The rumble rose to a slight roar.
Beautiful.
Then his sister Angela arrived and broke into the sanctity of his garage.
“Davey?”
Damn, he hated being called that.
“Over here, Ang.”
Angela Poole-Nyerson appeared at the edge of the garage. “Working on the racecar?” she teased.
“Yup.” Poole took another slug of his Michelob. “What’s up?”
“I’ve been trying to reach you all day. Have you been home?”
“Been home.” Poole started to wipe off his tools and put them away. Damn. And today had been a fairly decent day, too. Not like I get many of those these days. “I turned off the phone.”
“Hiding from work again?” she needled playfully.
He looked up. “Would you want the Bon Marche calling you on your days off?”
Angela smiled and winked. “What days off?”
Poole softened the tone in his voice. He knew Angela meant well. Hell, she was the only one in the family who even talked to him since the divorce. He probably shouldn’t alienate her as well, but he had no patience any more. He’d heard somewhere that you shouldn’t burn bridges that you don’t have to or something like that. That thought ran through his mind like a logic problem, and he found that he really didn’t care either way.
“What did you want, Angela?” He wiped off a wrench, and hung it on his pegboard.
“Okay, grump. Mom’s birthday is next Monday. Donald and I are putting together a surprise party for her. It’s a picnic at Franklin Park. Can you come?”
Why was she asking? Poole wondered.
“I don’t know,” he said.
“Come on, Davey. It’s her birthday.”
“No one will miss me if I’m not there,” he told her.
“Mom will.”
Poole shrugged. His mother had been the first person to tell him that he blew it with Sherrie. Not that she was sad that it hadn’t worked out or even that she’d always liked Sherrie. That he blew it. “I doubt it. If so, she’ll be in the minority.”
“Well, what do you expect?” Angela flared.
“Nothing.” He refused to look at her but his jaw clenched. “I expect nothing.”
Angela swore and turned away. Then she stopped. “No. You need to be told.” She stepped around the car to face Poole. “I really do want to know what you expect, Davey. I mean, you cut yourself off from everyone in the family. Your kids never see you. Mom doesn’t, either. You don’t hardly ever call me or Donny. What are we supposed to do?”
Poole didn’t answer, so she went on.
“I’m sorry your life is the pits, Davey. I’m sorry you got divorced, that you’ve been alone this past year. I know it’s hard.”
You have no idea.
“And I’m sorry if your career isn’t going the way you want. But all I’m asking you to do is show up for one lousy afternoon on your own mother’s birthday.” Angela paused. She opened her mouth to say more, but stopped again, half-sobbing instead. “Goddamn you.”
Poole looked up and caught her eye. Tears streamed down her face, but it didn’t move him. Through clenched teeth, he told her, “Don’t preach to me, sis. Everyone in this whole happy family knew Sherrie was fooling around on me. Did anyone think to tell me? No.”
“It was none of our business!” she protested, wiping her eyes.
“Well, it certainly became everyone’s business when I filed for divorce, didn’t it? When, suddenly, I somehow became the bad guy? Tell me how the fuck that happened!”
�
�No one can talk to you!” Angela yelled at him and ran out of the garage.
Poole listened to her descending footfalls. He heard her Jeep start and squeal off. He tried to care but failed.
It wasn’t so bad that he got the divorce. It was being played the fool that made him angry. He never really loved Sherrie. Just a pair of kids themselves, they’d married because she’d gotten pregnant. It wasn’t like she’d been the love of his life.
Somehow, being duped and having everyone know it seemed worse when no heartbreak had been involved. Or maybe he just noticed the anger more because there wasn’t any heartbreak taking up space on his emotional hard drive.
Most of the real anger came from betrayal. Not so much from Sherrie, but from the rest of the clan. She got to each of them with her sweet public persona and they bought into it, leaving him to play the role of the bad guy in the whole affair.
Poole replaced the valve gasket and cover, trying not to hurry. Dark anger continued to build inside of him. Anger at his family, whom he considered a pack full of traitors. Some for Sherrie, for not just breaking it off with him first before she started sleeping around. And the job, of course. The fucking job. Hart making his gold bar and everyone considering him the lieutenant’s flunkie. Hart probably most of all. Some friend he turned out to be.
Life just plain sucks.I need some heavy metal.
He pushed a button and Metallica roared out of his boom box. Carefully, he tightened down the valve cover. By the time he slammed the hood, he really needed to drive.
1216 hours
The robbery alarm tone caught Karl Winter by surprise. Scarface had never hit before eighteen hundred, and Winter couldn’t recall a robbery on day shift since June or so. He slipped his sandwich back into his lunch cooler and brushed the crumbs off his shirt as he listened intently.
“Suspect fled eastbound. White male, tall and thin wearing black jeans and a blue windbreaker. Long black hair with a scar on the left side of his face.”
That had to be him. The description was too close. Winter dropped the car into gear and headed in the direction of the robbery. He decided to put his theory to the test, so he drove to Grand Boulevard and parked. He watched cars as they cruised past, looking for single females driving large cars.
Ridgeway and Giovanni both radioed their arrival at the area of the robbery near Southeast Blvd.
There!
Winter saw a slender white female with dark, stringy hair westbound on 29th approaching Grand. She appeared nervous and made the right turn without using her signal. A thrill shot through Winter. That could be it.
He radioed in his intention to stop the vehicle. The dispatcher sent Reiser to back him up. Winter swung in behind the large car and waited for her to clear the intersection and continue for another two blocks. As he watched, the driver nervously glanced in her rear-view mirror. When she changed lanes, again without signaling, he turned on his overheads and broadcasted his final location.
“I’m about a minute off,” Reiser advised.
Winter approached the vehicle carefully. He rested his hand lightly on his gun, something he rarely did anymore. The driver watched him, stock-still. Both of her hands clutched the steering wheel.
Winter scanned the back seat. Empty. And surprisingly clean. Nothing other than three unopened cans of motor oil lay on the vacuumed floor. The front passenger seat was likewise empty.
“Is there a problem, officer?”
Winter met her gaze. He saw nothing there beyond the nervousness most motorists displayed when stopped by the police. “You failed to signal for a lane change.”
The woman turned red. “Oh, my God, did I?”
Winter nodded.
“I’m so sorry,” she said.
Winter asked for her license and she handed it over. Winter scrutinized it, his suspicion fading.
“Charlie-253, I’ve got him by the Buck Bonanza.” Ridgeway’s voice held steady. “He’s heading across the parking lot toward a blue Datsun pickup.”
“-257, I’m with him,” Gio radioed.
“Charlie-252,” came Reiser’s voice, “I can divert if -251 is code four.”
Winter keyed his mike as he handed the woman back her license. “Charlie-251 is clear and en route.”
The woman gave him a confused look.
“Drive carefully,” he told her, and hustled back to his cruiser.
The Buck Bonanza, where everything in the store cost just one dollar, was located at about 27th and Freya, a straight shot down 29th. Winter, usually a cautious driver, activated his lights and siren and drove like a graveyard officer. Civilian cars peeled off to the right to make way for him. He cranked the volume on his police radio and listened, knowing it would all be over before he could get there.
As he approached Southeast Boulevard, Gio’s voice came over the air, out of breath. “Charlie-257, one in custody. Have units lower their code.”
Winter shut off his sirens but kept his lights on as he cruised into the parking lot. He spotted Ridgeway rummaging through a small blue pickup. Gio stood over a proned out and handcuffed white male. Winter parked his car and approached.
Gio smiled at him and held up a black wig. “Lookee here, Karl.”
Winter returned the grin.
Gio hooted. “Whew! Day tour nabs Scarface! Graveyard would’ve needed forty troops and an hour to do this.”
Winter eyed the suspect lying very still on the ground. Hands cuffed behind his back, the man’s head faced toward Winter. He remained motionless, his eyes wide open and staring. Winter would have suspected the man was dead if hadn’t noticed him breathing heavily and blinking occasionally.
Karl Winter frowned. He saw a fake scar on the left side of the suspect’s face. It hung limply from his cheek, partially peeled away. Winter also noticed a very real gash on the man’s brow. A trickle of blood flowed from it.
“Stupid,” Winter muttered.
Ridgeway joined them. A black gun dangled by his pen in the trigger-guard. Winter noticed it sway back and forth easily as Ridgeway approached. Too easily.
“Plastic,” Ridgeway told them both. “Moron robbed the store with a toy gun.”
Gio shook his head. He handed the wig to Ridgeway who put it in an evidence bag, along with the plastic gun. Then Gio and Winter stood the suspect up and put him in Gio’s car. “I’ll take him to Major Crimes if you want to stay with the scene, Mark.”
Ridgeway nodded as Sergeant Michaels pulled up. With Poole on his day off, the north side sergeant was in command of their platoon, too. Not that these veterans needed much commanding, Winter thought.
After all, he added with a smile, they’d caught the infamous Scarface robber.
And that was something Swing shift and Graves had failed to do after fourteen chances.
1225 hours
When the phone call from Dispatch came, Lieutenant Alan Hart had been interviewing a citizen who wanted to file a complaint against one of his officers. Officer Jack Stone, a ten-year-veteran, worked the north side. Based on what the citizen had told him thus far, it sounded like a founded demeanor complaint to Hart.
Now, he hung up the phone with mixed feelings. It was a feather in his cap that Scarface had been caught by his shift, and not Saylor’s. But it also precluded any need for his task force, which Captain Reott had tentatively approved. As a result, he attained some small glory where he could have achieved a lot.
I just have to make the best of it.
He turned his attention back to the citizen. “Mr. Watson, I appreciate you coming in. You have a valid complaint. I will definitely forward this information to our Internal Affairs Unit. Someone will contact you for another interview. If it’s not convenient to come in, they can conduct it by telephone.”
Mr. Watson rose and shook Hart’s hand. “Thank you. I hope the officer doesn’t get in too much trouble. I just wanted to let you know what had happened.”
Hart gave his most political smile. “It’s citizens like you who help us
make this a better department.”
Mr. Watson left, obviously pleased with himself.
Hart locked his office and hustled over to Major Crimes to check on the Scarface investigation.
1845 hours
Duke’s, the bar preferred by patrol, pulsed with excitement. Still flush with their success, Gio and Ridgeway celebrated. They stood at the bar, re-telling the story over and over to cops and patrons alike. Johnny, the bartender, and Rachel, the waitress, had each heard the tale at least six times.
In high spirits, Gio tipped back his beer. He found the day tour comfortable. They handled a lot of boring calls, but you couldn’t beat the hours. During the summer, all the little hotties came out in shorts and tank tops, providing nice scenery, too. Even so, he often longed for more action. Today had satisfied that longing.
“There I was,” Ridgeway told Jack Stone, the newest arrival, “on routine patrol.”
Stone smiled at the age-old joke. “Don’t you mean, ‘It was a dark and stormy night’ or something like that?”
“This is a police story,” Ridgeway told him. “And every good police story starts out like that.”
Stone raised his hands. “All right. There you were-”
“Right,” Ridgeway said, “on routine patrol.”
Gio smiled. Though not yet five o’clock, both Ridgeway and Stone had downed two beers and two shots. Gio consciously slowed down after the first triumphant beer and shot.
“Anyway,” Ridgeway continues, “so I see this guy sneaking around the parking lot-”
“Sneaking? In broad daylight?”
“Yes, like the idiot that he is.” Ridgeway paused to take a slug from his beer. “Anyway, I know it’s him. He’s got a paper bag hanging out of his jacket pocket and long black hair. It’s obviously a wig. I mean, you can see that from clear across the parking lot.”
“What’s he wearing a jacket for, anyway?” Stone added. “It’s almost eighty degrees out today.”
Ridgeway stared at Stone in mock-anger. “You want to tell this story?”
“No, go ahead.” Stone grinned.
“All right.” Ridgeway paused and peered at his beer. “Where was I?”