âThey drove down the block, jumped out of the car, and began to fire as they approached the victim. The brass is 9mm, laid down in a pair of converging tracks, and the casings are evenly spaced, at least for the most part. Given the number of rounds fired, the shooters probably used something exotic, a TEC-9, maybe, or an Uzi. A pair of ordinary handguns wonât hold enough rounds to leave that much brass.â She paused long enough to gesture at the crime scene, then continued. âThe victim was on the sidewalk when the first bullets hit him. Thereâs blood on the concrete and more blood on the railing where he jumped the fence. By this time, his thighs were pumping blood and his pressure must have been dropping because the best he could do was crawl toward the house. At least one of the shooters followed him into the yard. The fatal shot was fired into his head from no more than a few inches away.â
At the other end of the block, a woman burst from a house and began to run toward the crime scene. She was intercepted by a pair of newly arrived officers bearing paper bags that displayed the Dunkin Donuts logo. The cops spoke to the woman briefly, then waved to Vinny Murrano who walked over to join them. It was time to get moving again.
I opened the door and set a foot on the street. âThanks for the warning, lou,â I said. âWe appreciate it.â
Though Sarney was barely into his forties, his noticeably rounded skull was entirely bald on top. When he was being serious, he liked to lower his chin, to present his subordinates with that shiny dome. He did it now, at the same time cocking his head to the right.
âDonât fuck around with this,â he warned. âCross the t âs, dot the i âs. And if anything unusual comes up â and I mean anything â I wanna know about it right away.â
Sarney was looking directly at me as he spoke, and I had the feeling that he was asking for a commitment. Certainly, he had the right. Sarney was my mentor, my rabbi. If not for his personal efforts, neither my promotion, nor my transfer to Homicide â an assignment Iâd coveted from my earliest days on the job â would be in the works.
I smiled reassuringly and winked. âTen-four, lou. Message received.â
TWO
W e made a pair of stops before interviewing the witnesses. The idea was to alert the two sergeants on the scene, Murrano and Gutierrez, to the victimâs celebrity. Gutierrez thanked us for the tip, then went back to supervising his workers, one of whom was photographing the shoe impressions leading to the victimâs body.
Vinny Murrano was more informative. âThat woman who ran down the block,â he told us before we could deliver our message, âis Ellen Lodge, the vicâs spouse.â
âYou put her on ice?â Adele asked.
âI told her youâd be wantinâ an interview. Seems like she runs a day-care center out of her house and wonât be going anywhere until the parents come by to fetch the kiddies.â
A flurry of movement drew my attention away from the conversation. I turned just in time to see a cardinal land on a telephone wire across the street. The birdâs red feathers were puffed out against the cold, lending it an almost round profile, like an escaped Christmas ornament. It sang once, a complex song that seemed expectant to me, as though it anticipated a response. But when the only response was a gray morgue wagon turning onto the street, the bird flew into the upper branches of a sycamore thirty feet away.
When I looked back, Adele was explaining the significance of Lieutenant Sarneyâs arrival. Murrano listened closely, then said, âSo thatâs what the wife meant when she told me her husband just got out of jail yesterday morning.â He ran his fingers through his hair as though checking to make sure he hadnât lost his most precious asset. In his mid-thirties,