The 19th Christmas

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The 19th Christmas Page 2

by James Patterson

Julian’s long strides ate up the pavement, and despite the blood pounding in his ears, he listened for sirens. He still had the ball, but the clock was ticking. He glanced over his shoulder and saw, finally, two people who looked like cops running up behind him.

  He was winded, but he didn’t stop. Show me what you’ve got, suckers. He put on another surge of speed as he headed toward Dragon’s Gate and the Chinatown district. He slowed only when a lady cop’s authoritative voice shouted, “Freeze or I’ll shoot!”

  He thought, In this crowd? I don’t think so. And he kept running.

  Chapter 3

  My partner, Inspector Richard Conklin, was running out of time, and he needed my help.

  He said desperately, “Would be nice if she’d tell you what she wants.”

  “Where would the fun be in that?” I said, grinning. “You figuring it out is kind of the point.”

  “I guess. Make our own history.”

  “Sure. That’s an idea. Romantic, Rich.”

  We had slipped out of the Hall of Justice to do some lunchtime Christmas shopping in San Francisco’s Union Square because of its concentration of upscale shops. Richie wanted to get something special for Cindy. He wanted his gift to make her speechless, but when he asked her for a hint about what she wanted, she’d offered practical ideas. A multiport device charger. New cross-trainers. A gel-foam seat for her car. He grinned, thinking about her.

  Rich had wanted to marry Cindy from pretty much the moment he met her. And she loved him fiercely. But. There’s always a but, right?

  Rich was from a big family, and while he was still in his thirties, he’d always wanted kids. Lots of them. Cindy was an only child with a hot career—one that took her to murder scenes in bad places in the dead of night. And Rich wasn’t the only crime fighter in the relationship; Cindy had solved more than one homicide, had even shot at and been shot by a crafty female serial killer who’d become the subject of Cindy’s bestselling true-crime book.

  All this to say, Cindy was in no hurry to start a family.

  It was a conflict of priorities that in the past had broken up my two great friends, and it was tremendous that they were back together now. But as far as I knew, the conflict remained unresolved.

  Rich pointed out an emerald pendant around the neck of a mannequin in the window of a high-end jewelry shop. “Do you like that?”

  Just as I said, “Beautiful, Rich. And very Christmasy,” I heard a scream behind us.

  I whipped around to see a man in a red down jacket running hard, bowling down shoppers. He closed in and then passed us, yelling, “Coming through! No brakes!” He collided with a group of people walking out of Neiman’s. They scattered and he just kept going.

  An elderly man in a shearling coat was hobbling down the street in pursuit, blood streaming out of his nose. He cried, “Stop, thief! Someone stop him!”

  Rich and I are homicide cops, and this was no murder. But we were there. We took off after the man in the red down jacket who was running with all the power and determination of a pro tailback.

  I yelled, “Freeze or I’ll shoot!” But the runner kept going.

  Chapter 4

  I didn’t trust myself to run full out. My doctor had recently benched me for two months because I was anemic. So I slowed to a walk and yelled to my partner, “You go! I’ll call it in.”

  I got on my phone and summed up the situation for dispatch in a few words: There had been a robbery, a grab-and-dash. Conklin was pursuing the suspect on foot, running east on Geary Street between Stockton and Grant Avenue.

  “Suspect is wearing a red jacket, dark pants. We need backup and an ambulance,” I said and gave my location.

  I trotted back to the elderly man with the bloody nose who was panting and leaning against a building.

  He said, “Are you the police?”

  “Yes. I’m Sergeant Boxer. Tell me what happened,” I said.

  He said, “I was minding my own business when that guy in the puffy red coat knocked me down and stole my shopping bag. How could he do that to a senior citizen?”

  “What’s your name, sir?”

  “Maury King.”

  “Mr. King, an ambulance will be here in a minute.”

  He shook his head. “No, no. I’m okay.”

  “We won’t let him get away. My partner is in pursuit. Stay right here,” I said. “I’ll be back with your shopping bag.”

  The man in the red jacket had cleared a wide path for Rich, as screaming shoppers had thrown themselves against parked cars and buildings. I took off again, jogging in their wake.

  I could see that Rich was keeping up with the runner but not gaining on him. I was following behind them on the wide, shadowed corridor of Grant Avenue, close enough to see someone pop out of a doorway and step right in front of the runner.

  The runner stumbled and almost fell. I saw him push off the pavement with his free hand. He regained his footing but he had lost his momentum.

  I yelled again, “Freeze or I’ll shoot.”

  Just then, Rich fully extended himself, lunged—and tackled the runner. They both went down.

  Breathless and dizzy, I caught up in time to hold my gun on the runner as Rich pulled the man to his feet and shouted, “Lace your fingers behind your neck.” Rich kicked the runner’s legs apart and patted him down.

  “He’s not packing,” Rich told me.

  “Good.”

  I unhooked my cuffs and, with shaking hands, linked the runner’s wrists behind his back. A cruiser pulled up to the curb.

  I asked the runner for his name as I closed the cuffs.

  “Julian Lambert. Still smokin’ after all these years,” he said, sounding far too pleased with himself.

  I arrested Lambert for battery, theft, disorderly conduct, and resisting arrest. Conklin read him his rights and stuffed him into the back seat of the cruiser. After my partner slapped the flank of the departing vehicle, I said to him, “Did you notice? That jerk actually looked glad to see us.”

  Chapter 5

  That day Yuki was in sentencing court, standing before the bar.

  Across the aisle, defense counsel Allison Junker stood with her client Sandra McDowell. McDowell was a fifty-three-year-old woman who had lost control of her car and plowed into a gang of kids exiting a sports bar on Fillmore Street.

  There had been no fatalities, thankfully, but three of the boys she’d hit had been hospitalized with an assortment of injuries to heads and limbs and one had been in a coma since the incident, which had happened weeks before. McDowell had admitted to driving while intoxicated and making an illegal left turn. She had pleaded guilty, been remanded to the court without bail, and been in jail since her arraignment. Yuki expected the sentencing hearing to be swift, smooth, and punishing.

  Judge Judie Schlager was on the bench, presiding over a full courtroom. It wasn’t yet the end of the day, and she’d sentenced over two hundred people since nine a.m. She looked unfazed, even chipper. A small pin reading “#1 Nana” sparkled on her collar.

  The judge said, “Ms. Castellano. Talk to me.”

  Yuki looked up at Judge Schlager and said, “Your Honor, Mrs. McDowell was indisputably drunk when she took an illegal left turn and plowed into pedestrians crossing with the light. She injured four young college students, one of whom, a rising football star, is still comatose. First officer on the scene gave Mrs. McDowell a Breathalyzer test. Her blood alcohol was 0.15. In his words, she was severely impaired.”

  The judge flipped through papers in front of her and asked, “She called the police of her own accord?”

  “Yes, Your Honor,” said the defendant’s counsel, Ms. Junker.

  “And she pleaded guilty?”

  “Yes, Your Honor.”

  Yuki said, “Your Honor, this is not Mrs. McDowell’s first DUI. We’re asking for a sentence of three to five years, time commensurate with the pain and suffering of her victims. It’s too soon to tell, but some of their injuries may be permanent.”
/>   The defendant was now weeping noisily into her hands.

  Judge Judie Schlager addressed the defendant. “Mrs. McDowell, it says here that you’re a pharmacist, married, two children in college. And this prior DUI was a one-car accident?”

  “Yes, Your Honor. I hit a tree. Came out of nowhere.”

  The judge said, “Don’t you just hate those jaywalking trees?”

  “Your Honor,” said Ms. Junker, “Mrs. McDowell is a good citizen. Her entire family is dependent on her income, including her husband, who has MS and is confined to a wheelchair. She has accepted responsibility for this accident from the time it happened and is unbelievably sorry. She intends to join AA upon her release. We urge the court to show leniency.”

  Judge Schlager wrinkled her brow and looked toward the back of the courtroom at a scuffle that had gotten out of control. She banged her gavel and demanded silence in the court even as Sandra McDowell continued to cry.

  Yuki would be happy with a three-year sentence. It would get McDowell off the street, and during that time, she hoped that those college boys could recover from their injuries, get PT, and return to the lives they’d had planned before McDowell ran into them with her Buick.

  Judge Schlager said, “Mrs. McDowell, before I impose a sentence, do you have anything to say?”

  Mrs. McDowell dabbed at her face with a tissue and blew her nose. When she had regained her composure, she said, “Your Honor, I’m more sorry than I can say. I’m only grateful that I didn’t kill anyone, but what I did was inexcusable. Whatever sentence you think fair is acceptable to me.”

  Judge Schlager said, “Mrs. McDowell, I’m revoking your driver license and giving you a year of probation, including eight months of community service, twenty hours a week. Do not drive. If one year from now your probation officer reports to me that you’ve attended AA and completed your community service and automotive abstinence, this court will be done with you.

  “I’m releasing you today for time served. Next time there will be no leniency, do you understand me?”

  “Yes, Your Honor. Thank you very much.”

  “Thank my Christmas spirit. That’s all. Next?”

  Allison Junker smirked over her client’s shoulder, and Yuki gave her a Drop dead look before leaving the courtroom feeling like she’d been punched in the face by Santa Claus.

  Chapter 6

  Conklin and I faced each other across our abutting desks in the Homicide squad room. The exasperation on his face mirrored my own.

  The Robbery Division was overworked in the first degree. Likewise, Booking was packed to the walls. Conklin and I had caught this case, literally, and now we owned it. Julian Lambert was in cuffs, swiveling distractedly in the side chair while we wrote him up for larceny, assault and battery, and, for good measure, resisting arrest.

  Lambert handed over his driver license and answered our questions, telling us his full name and address and that he worked in the stockroom at Macy’s. Just before I accessed our database to see if the guy Conklin and I had tagged as the Grant Avenue Dasher had a record, he made an announcement.

  “I’m on probation,” he said.

  “For what?” I asked.

  “Shoplifting, from Best Buy. I did four months and was let out on good behavior, long as I don’t screw up this year. My parole officer is a hard-ass. If you don’t violate me, I can help you out,” he said.

  I asked, “How can you help us out, exactly?”

  “I’ve got some information to trade for a get-out-of-jail-free pass.”

  I seriously doubted Lambert’s claim, but what the hell. Let him try. I ran his name and found the arrest from three years ago as well as his release for time served and his current ongoing probation.

  Conklin had read him his Miranda rights. He knew he could have an attorney present but apparently didn’t want one. We were free to hear what he had to say and use it against him—if there was anything worth using.

  We walked Lambert out of the bullpen and down the corridor to Interview 2, entered the small interrogation room, and took seats around the scarred metal table.

  Conklin said, “Okay, then. You see that mirror?”

  “Two-way. This isn’t my first time in the box.”

  Conklin grinned. “You probably think there’s someone back there listening in, watching your body language, right?”

  “Yep.” Lambert waved at the glass and said, “Joyeux fucking Noël, everyone.”

  “Well,” said my partner, “you just waved at nobody. We’re short-staffed this week. So lay your cards on the table and there’s a good chance we can move you along with a minimum of red tape. You could be out on bail by New Year’s.”

  “Okay, but I’m supposed to go to Florida, to my mom’s place in Vero Beach, the day after Christmas.”

  I jumped in.

  “Mr. Lambert, your victim is going to have something to say about your traveling across state lines. You threw an old man to the ground, broke his nose, and took about twenty-eight hundred dollars in Prada belts and Hermès ties. Sorry to tell you this, but that’s grand larceny. And your victim is not feeling well disposed toward you. Last thing he said to us was ‘Toss him in a dark cell and leave him there for good.’”

  “I thought there was food in that bag. I swear,” Julian Lambert said to the camera in the ceiling. “But he’ll get his property back, right?”

  Conklin said, “Yes. But you hurt him and traumatized him. You want us to help you, let’s hear what you’ve got. Make it good. And quick. And truthful.”

  Chapter 7

  Lambert gave a long, reluctant sigh, clasped his cuffed hands in front of him on the table, and said, “This is going to blow your minds.”

  He paused for effect, and when he got no reaction, he said, “I heard that something big is going down in a couple of days. I promise this is worth more to you than this little bust for stealing what I thought was a fruitcake and then bowling with pedestrians.”

  Conklin said, “Get serious, Lambert. You scared a lot of people, and Mr. King is looking to press charges. What’s this ‘big’ something? Be specific.”

  “There’s going to be a heist on Christmas Day,” said Lambert.

  “A heist?” Conklin said. “An armed robbery?”

  “Yeah. Maybe the biggest one in the history of this town.”

  I thought, Yeah, sure.

  But movies with big heists flashed through my mind. Heat, Ocean’s Eleven through Thirteen, Diamonds Are Forever, and Goldfinger. And my favorite, the Pink Panther movies. My sister and I still found them hilarious and watched one whenever we spent time together.

  I said to the dasher, “So you’re talking about a bank robbery? Underground tunnels, things like that?”

  “I overheard this conversation in a bar, so I don’t have all the pieces.”

  “How about some pieces?” I said. “Do you have some?”

  Crickets.

  I turned to Conklin and said, “Mr. Lambert is just making stuff up. It’s been a long day already, and I’ve had enough. Time to send him up to his cell and move on.”

  Lambert said to Conklin, “A little patience, please, Officer. I’m getting to it. It’s dangerous for me to talk to you, understand?”

  Conklin shrugged, stood up, pushed his chair in, and said, “Sergeant Boxer is the boss. She says we’re done, we’re done.”

  “Okay. Listen,” said Lambert. “I’ve got the crew chief’s name. Loman. You’ll have something on him in your database.”

  I asked, “Like the off-price clothing chain? L-o-e-h-m-a-n-n?”

  “No idea. I’ve never seen his name in writing.”

  “Mr. Loman’s first name?”

  “Mister. Look, he just calls himself Mr. Loman. That’s all I know.”

  “Wait here. I’ll be right back,” I said.

  I went to my desk, said hey to a couple of colleagues, then brought my computer to life.

  I ran the names Loehmann, Lowman, and Loman through all available
databases. Too many hits came up, dozens in San Francisco. I’d need more information about who we were looking for to do anything with this tip, and the first name “Mister” wasn’t cutting it. My fingers were warmed up, so I ran Julian Lambert’s name again. As he’d said, he’d served short time and was currently on probation for shoplifting. But now that he’d claimed knowledge of a huge heist, I punched his name into the FBI database. I found zip, zero, nada. And Lambert had no known associates named Loman on record.

  Our runner looked to be a liar, a nobody, and an utter waste of time.

  Chapter 8

  I returned to Interview 2 with two guards from our jail on the seventh floor.

  I said, “Stand up, Mr. Lambert. Your escorts will take you to your cell. You should consider using your phone call to get a lawyer.”

  “Wait. Wait a minute, will you?”

  “I don’t have time for bull, Mr. Lambert. Tell your story to the judge.”

  Lambert asked, “What? You found nothing on Loman?”

  “I found a lot of names like that with many different spellings, dozens in Northern California, dozens in town. Without a first name and a location, your hot tip isn’t worth jack.”

  “I have more information,” he said.

  Our petty-thief runner was sounding desperate and no longer looked as happy to see me as he was when we arrested him.

  Conklin said, “I’ve worked with Sergeant Boxer for a long time, Mr. Lambert. I know when she’s ready to lock up for the night.”

  “Okay, I hear you,” he said. “Just—I need to tell you about this heist. Alone.”

  I asked the guards to step outside, but I didn’t sit down.

  “Speak,” I said to Lambert.

  “I know one of the crew. I’ve got his name and address and I know that he’s the kind of guy who is always heavily armed.”

  I sat down.

  “His name is Chris Dietz. I know there will be a lot of people by that name. But that’s his real name.”

 

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