The First Law dh-8 Read online

Page 7


  By the time he was twenty-four, his football career over, he came out to the left coast, where nobody knew him, to explore his sexuality. He'd heard there was more tolerance for alternative lifestyles in San Francisco than anywhere else, and that turned out to be true. To support himself, he got a job as a bouncer at the Condor, a strip club in North Beach. For almost three years he did okay, until in a misplaced burst of enthusiasm he bounced one tourist too hard and got charged with manslaughter.

  Now, thirty years old and a convicted felon, he'd served his four years at Folsom. He'd had sixteen months to get reaccustomed to living outside of prison walls, and he liked it way better than in. He had a partner he loved, and didn't need much more. This bartending gig was about as good as he thought it was ever going to get, and he didn't want to lose it.

  The cops finally made it to an open spot at the rail.

  Terry swiped at the bar with his towel, threw down some coasters. As always, when he spoke to law officers, his stomach fluttered high up under his ribs, but he ignored that as best he could and offered up a smile. "Hey, Roy. Help you gentlemen?"

  The badges, the flat no-nonsense faces, one black and one white. Homicide inspectors. Then the black guy saying, "We're looking for John Holiday. You know where he is?"

  "No, sir. I haven't seen him. He hasn't been in today."

  "When's the last time you saw him?" the white guy asked. He'd picked up his coaster, holding it in one hand and flicking it with the fingers of the other.

  "Yesterday, I think. He opened up. What's this about?"

  Roy Panos moved forward, put his elbows on the bar. "Let's see if you can guess, Clint. We'll make it a quiz. What do you think homicide inspectors would be interested in?"

  Terry wiped his hands on his towel, shifted his eyes up and down the bar. He had maybe a dozen drinkers for the twenty stools, and none of them looked ready for a refill.

  "You nervous, Clint?" The white guy again, still flicking the damn coaster. He seemed pretty high-strung, maybe nervous himself.

  "No." He wiped his bar rag across the gutter. "It's just I'm working…"

  "That was the other thing," the black guy said. "We were hoping you could give us a minute, maybe go to the office. You got a room in the back here I assume?"

  "Yeah, but as I said." He motioned ambiguously around him. "I mean, look."

  The white guy sighed heavily and finally put the coaster back down. "So you won't talk to us?"

  Terry wasn't too successful keeping the fear and worry out of his voice. "I'm not saying that. I'm talking to you right now. Tell me what it is you want to know."

  "He wants to help, Dan," the black cop said. "We can tell his parole officer he wants to cooperate."

  "That's an intelligent response," the cop named Dan replied in a cheery and suddenly frightening tone. "And especially coming from an ex-convict. It gives me confidence that the prisons are doing a good job after all." His eyes never left his partner. "Ask him where he was last night."

  "Last night? I was here. The whole night, six to two."

  "And I didn't even ask him yet," the black guy said. "See? He's just volunteering everything. Mr. Cooperation."

  "Yeah," Dan said, "but you notice he happened to know what hours we'd be asking about?" He came back to Terry. "What about that, Clint?"

  "I don't know what you're saying. You asked where I was last night and I told you. I was here."

  "So then you couldn't have been up at Silverman's pawnshop?" Dan flashed some teeth at him. "Did you hear about that?"

  Terry felt sweat breaking on his forehead. "Yeah. Sure. But I heard that was like a gang."

  "No. Just three guys," Dan smiled across at him. "But let me get this straight. You didn't know what we wanted to talk about when we came in here tonight. Even hearing we were from homicide? But you knew about Silverman?"

  "I just didn't put that together," Terry said. "And that couldn't have been John." He shook his head, wiped down the gutter again. "John wouldn't have done anything like that."

  "That would be the same John Holiday who got arrested last year?" Dan asked.

  "That was different," Terry said. "And he got off on that. Besides, that wasn't violent. John wouldn't do anything violent."

  "Actually," the black cop said, "it's interesting you brought up Holiday again and mentioned violence, because as it turns out we don't think he was the shooter. He just thought up the idea, is what we hear. Kind of like a white-collar idea that went south."

  "Yeah," Dan agreed, jumping right in, giving Terry no time to process this stuff as it came out. "In fact, our best witness was one of Roy's partners here, walking his beat last night. What's his name again, Roy?"

  Panos appeared to be enjoying every minute. "Matt Creed. You remember Matt, don't you, Clint?"

  He nodded.

  "This place used to be one of the beat's clients," Roy explained.

  Dan nodded, apparently fascinated with the history lesson. "Well," he said, "Matt says no question it was the big guy of the three who shot Silverman. He was the last one out, the big guy. Big like a football player."

  Terry put his hands on the gutter for support. His legs were going to give out under him. "I was here," he said.

  "I love a consistent story," Dan announced happily to his two companions. "He's said the same thing three times now, you guys notice that? No deviation at all. Always a sign a guy's telling the truth." Suddenly, he started whistling the theme song from Bridge on the River Kwai. He stopped in midphrase. "Who worked till six?"

  One of the customers slammed his glass down on the bar. "Bartend! You sleepin' down there? I need another drink!"

  Terry worked the orders for the next few minutes, finally made it back to where the cops sat. They hadn't budged.

  "You know, on second thought, I could use a glass of water," Dan said. Then, as Terry was filling it. "So who worked till six last night?"

  "Didn't I say that? I told you John opened up."

  "So he was here with you when you changed shifts?"

  "For a few minutes, yeah. But he had a date."

  "A date? With who?"

  "I don't know. You've got to ask him that."

  "I will when I meet him." Dan drank some water, did another bar or two of River Kwai. He'd taken over the interview now, moved it into high gear. "So was Randy here, too?"

  Terry gave Roy a bad look. "What did he tell you?"

  "Nothing. Just that you and Randy were an item. You're together a lot."

  "That's right."

  "You seem a little defensive."

  "I'm not defensive. Randy's got nothing to do with this."

  "With what?"

  "What we're talking about here. Silverman."

  "I didn't say anything about Silverman. I asked if Randy was here last night."

  "He's got nothing to do with it."

  "As opposed to you and Holiday?"

  "No. I didn't mean that." Terry ran his whole hand through his hair. "But listen, whatever… it's not Randy."

  "But he was here?" Again, the young white guy came quickly forward, pouncing. "Don't be dumb, Clint. If he was here, he's your alibi. Think about it."

  "I already told you he was here."

  "As a matter of fact, no you didn't. But now you do say he was?"

  Terry nodded. "We were alone here after John left for, I don't know, an hour or two. It was a slow night."

  As quickly as he'd come forward, Dan leaned back, smiled triumphantly, spread his arms out. "There! Beautiful! That's all we wanted. You, Randy and Holiday here together at six o'clock last night. That wasn't so hard, now, was it?"

  "He lives with you, doesn't he? Randy?" The black cop got back in the game. "Is he there now, do you know? Maybe you could give us the address?"

  When they came out of the Ark, the two inspectors stopped and stood on the sidewalk in front of the place. Roy Panos had gone to the bathroom, and they were waiting for him to finish up and come outside. "I like this guy Roy," Cuneo said
. "His brother was right. He knows the players."

  Russell cocked his head back toward the bar. "You think Terry was part of it?"

  "I'll tell you one thing-Roy thinks he was."

  "That would be pretty easy, wouldn't it? The first guy we talk to?"

  Cuneo shrugged. "I've heard it happens."

  "Not to us generally."

  A grin. "Maybe not yet. First time for everything, right?" The bar door swung open. "Hey, Roy, that went pretty well. Thanks."

  "My pleasure. I've got to tell you, it was awesome watching you guys work. Another minute, he would have been crying."

  "He did seem a little nervous," Cuneo said.

  "I would have been, too."

  "Why's that, Roy? You think he did it?" Russell asked. "Terry?"

  Roy gave it a second. "Was it true what you guys said about the shooter being a big guy? You didn't just make that up to spook him?"

  Russell nodded. "That's what Mr. Creed said. Three of them. One of them big."

  Roy looked back and forth at the two inspectors. "Clint's not little," he said.

  "No, he's not." Cuneo shot his partner a glance, came back to Roy. "What about this Randy? Clint's boyfriend. He with Holiday, too?"

  "They're all buds," Roy said. "Lowlife."

  "Would Mr. Creed know Terry?" Cuneo asked.

  "On sight. Sure."

  "I'm wondering if he could ID him as the shooter. Get him in front of a lineup."

  "It'd be worth checking out," Russell said.

  "We could find out pretty quick," Roy said. He looked at his watch. "He's on the beat in ten minutes. He'll be at the station checking in now. You want to walk down, I'm on my way there anyhow, to check out. It's like four blocks."

  Matt Creed was in fact at the station, signing in to come on for his night's work with the Patrol Special liaison. He greeted Roy perfunctorily, then glanced at the men with him and recognition hit. He spoke first to Roy. "This is Silverman, then, isn't it?" Then to Cuneo, "Are you inspectors having any luck yet?"

  "Getting a few ideas," Cuneo said. "Roy here says you might know Clint Terry."

  Creed's brow contracted in a question and Roy answered it. "Bartender over at the Ark?"

  "Oh, yeah. I got him," Creed said. "Why?"

  "You said last night that the shooter was a big man. Mr. Terry's a big man."

  The idea played itself across Creed's face. "You think he shot Silverman?"

  "We don't know," Russell said. "We're open to the idea. Do you remember seeing Mr. Terry at the Ark last night when you walked your beat?"

  Creed shook his head. "I didn't even look in," he said. "They're not on the beat anymore."

  "But you passed by the place, right?" Cuneo asked. "Couldn't have been five minutes before you got to Silverman's. Do you remember if it was open?"

  The young security guard tried but finally shrugged, frustration all over his face. "The door's closed, the window's boarded up. If they were open, they weren't having a party, but beyond that, I couldn't tell you. I didn't see anybody go in or come out, but I couldn't tell you I really looked." He met Cuneo's eyes. "You really think it might have been Terry?"

  "You're the one who chased him. We were hoping maybe you could tell us."

  "You said the shooter was big," Russell added. "As big as Terry?"

  Creed closed his eyes for a moment. "Maybe. But it happened fast and it was dark. Plus, I was shitting in my pants at the time. I don't think I could pick him out of a lineup, if that's what you mean."

  This was disappointing news, and both inspectors showed it. Cuneo, however, bounced right back. "All right. But you wouldn't eliminate him is the point."

  "No. I suppose it could have been him."

  "There you go," Cuneo said.

  "But who were the other guys?" Creed asked. "You must be thinking Randy Wills and John Holiday?"

  Cuneo started making a little clicking sound. "I'm thinking it a little more right now," he said. "What made you think of them?"

  "They hang out a lot. You see them around together."

  "Holiday was at Silverman's poker game," Russell said.

  Roy Panos was nodding through a deep scowl. "He lost six grand."

  Cuneo was still making the clicking noise. "Anything about the other two guys you saw make it impossible it was them? Holiday and Wills?"

  "No. But they didn't stay around to talk. The other two could have been anybody else."

  "But it also could have been them. Am I right?" Cuneo didn't want to lose his focus.

  "Yeah. Sure. Or them."

  The clicking stopped. "Okay, then."

  Dismas Hardy was listening to his wife's voice on the speakerphone in his office and taking notes about what he might want to pick up at the grocery store on his way home if he wanted to be the perfect husband and save her a trip. Ordinarily, she would have just walked over herself. The Safeway was only a couple of blocks down around the corner. But now with the rain, she'd have to drive, which meant finding another parking place possibly even farther from their house than the store was. "Not possibly, definitely," Hardy said. "I do a little victory dance whenever I get closer than Safeway. So what's on the list?"

  He wrote as she finished reciting. "Coffee, cottage cheese, cherries, Claussen's, celery."

  "Goods beginning with 'c,' I got it. Anything else?"

  A short silence. Then Frannie said, "Oh, and some copper clappers."

  "Got it, Clara. See you in an hour."

  Hardy hung up. He moved the newly framed picture of his wife to front and center on his desk and gave it a moment. The planes of his face softened, the edges of his mouth tickling at a smile.

  It was a head and shoulders shot he'd taken recently in their home on an Indian summer Saturday morning. For the first time ever, Rebecca and Vincent had both spent the night with separate friends. Frannie was turning away from rearranging the caravan of glass elephants on the mantel over the fireplace in their front room. In the picture, Frannie's eyes were full of mischief, her own smile about to break. The unseen story was that they'd just finished making love on the living room floor, by no means a daily event. The camera had been sitting next to Hardy's reading chair and he'd grabbed it, called her name, and got her.

  "Mooning over your wife again?"

  Caught in the act. "We are having a bit of a renaissance."

  "Good for you." David Freeman stood in the doorway, a large wineglass in each hand. He schlumped his way across the office, put one of the glasses on Hardy's desk, and pushed it across. "Chateauneuf du Pape, Cuvee des Generations, nineteen ninety. It's just too good not to share and the pups downstairs are all working."

  "Maybe I'm working, too."

  The old man shook his head. "Not likely this time Friday night. I know you. You're done." He had come around behind Hardy. "New picture? That is a good one. Though I'm surprised she's letting you display it in public."

  Hardy feigned ignorance. "What are you talking about? Why wouldn't she?"

  Freeman gave him a knowing look. "Maybe because under that innocent and pretty face, she's not wearing anything?"

  Hardy had long since given up being surprised at Freeman's perspicacity. But even so. "How in the world…?"

  "Completely obvious to any serious connoisseur of naked women, one of whom I pride myself on being." Freeman pointed. "Taste the wine. Tell me what you think."

  Hardy did as commanded. "It's pretty good and I think you may actually be mythically ugly. And I've only got about five minutes if you're really here on business and the wine is a ploy."

  Over at the couch, Freeman lowered himself into a sit. "The wine is genuine largess on my part, but as a matter of fact I did hear from Dick Kroll on the Panos thing."

  "I'm starting to love the Panos thing."

  "I'm still a little more in the infatuation stage myself. Especially with your recent input."

  "That wasn't through much effort on my part, David," Hardy said. "That was Abe and John Holiday."

&nbs
p; Freeman made a face.

  "Okay, you don't like him. But you've got to admit he's doing us some good."

  This was, and both men knew it, quite an understatement. Holiday had come to believe that some of the WGP guards had played undercover roles in his own sting and arrest, and he was out for vengeance. In the past four months or so, he'd brought in no less than seven disgruntled WGP clients and/or victims to Freeman's offices, out of which four were on board with causes of action ranging from fraud and intentional infliction of emotional distress to assault and battery. Named defendants in the lawsuit included Wade on all the causes of action, of course, but also his brother, Roy, his nephew Nick Sephia, and nine other WGP current and past employees.

  By the same token, common scuttlebutt at the Hall had made Glitsky realize back when he was still in homicide that Panos was a bad egg, his organization fairly corrupt. His "rate increase" of the year before had been nothing more than a thinly disguised protection racket. Glitsky knew that several businesses had at first elected to drop out of Thirty-two only to sign back up after windows had been broken or goods stolen. Two men had been mugged. One storefront cat killed. All of them had filed complaints with the PD, only to drop them. Glitsky, up in payroll, found it entertaining to chase these paper trails and identify potential plaintiffs for his friend Diz. Was he doing anything else worthwhile? Eventually, he had turned all of these names over to Hardy, and most had joined the other plaintiffs in the lawsuit.

  Hardy thought it was starting to look pretty solid for the good guys. "So what did Mr. Kroll want?" he asked.

  "He wants to talk some more before the next round of depositions."

  Hardy shrugged. "Did you tell him that that's what depositions are all about, everybody getting to talk?"

  "I believe I did. Told him we could talk all we wanted starting Tuesday, but he wants to put it off, maybe till early next year."

  "If I were him, I'd want that, too. What'd you tell him?"

  "No, of course." Freeman cleaned out his ear for a minute, his eyes somewhere in the middle distance. He picked up his glass and swirled it, then took a sip. "My gut is he's feeling us out for a separate settlement."