Monday, August 6, 7:15 PM
Murphy drove through the nearly empty streets toward his apartment. The wind was blowing so hard it was difficult to keep his car on the road. The fat raindrops slamming into his windshield sounded like bullets. On Claiborne Avenue he saw an electric transformer explode. A few minutes later, he passed a couple of patrol cars crawling along with their blue and red flashers on.
His right shoulder hurt, but as far as he could tell it wasn’t fractured. He needed something for the pain, though. A megadose of ibuprofen would help. He also needed a change of clothes. His narrow escape from Jeffries’s apartment had left him wet and muddy. But what he really needed was another gun.
He was going to the address on Burgundy alone. Backup was not an option. If Jeffries was there, this wasn’t going to be an arrest. It was going to be an execution. Murphy needed a clean gun, one that could not be traced back to him, one he could shoot Jeffries with and then toss into the river.
At his apartment he had just such a gun, a two-inch. 38 revolver with a ground-off serial number. A few years ago, he had taken it off a small-time heroin peddler he and Gaudet arrested in the old Saint Thomas housing project. The dope dealer didn’t want to go to jail, so he ratted on everybody he knew. By the end of the night, Murphy and Gaudet had six felony arrests and two hundred grams of China white heroin. They cut the snitch loose. Since there were no charges against their informant, the. 38 wasn’t evidence, but Murphy hadn’t wanted to return it because the guy was going right back to selling smack. So Murphy had kept it just in case he needed it one day. That day was today.
Murphy pulled to the curb in front of his building, a onetime mansion that had been converted into a six-unit apartment house. It looked deserted. When he climbed out of his car, a wind gust hit him so hard it felt like it was going to peel off his raincoat. He hobbled up the steps and pushed open the front door.
He limped down the central hallway toward the stairwell at the far end. On the way, he passed a pair of two-bedroom apartments, one on either side of the hall. He climbed the stairs to the second floor, which had been remodeled into four single-bedroom units. From the top-floor landing, Murphy’s apartment was the first one on the left.
On the top step he caught his toe and stumbled. The light fixture mounted to the wall was out, leaving the rear half of the hallway in darkness. He grabbed the railing with his right hand. A sharp jolt of pain stabbed through his shoulder.
At his apartment door, Murphy pushed his key into the dead bolt. He sensed movement behind him. A shadow slid across the floor. Before he could turn around, he felt the cold steel of a pistol pressed against the back of his neck.
“Keep your eyes on the door,” Gaudet said.
Murphy tried to turn around, but Gaudet shoved the pistol deeper into his neck.
“What are you doing, Juan?”
“Open it.”
Murphy pushed open the door.
The pistol nudged him forward. “Inside,” Gaudet said.
They stepped into the apartment. Murphy felt the weight of his Glock on his right hip, but it was buried under his raincoat. The zipper was pulled up to his neck. An old firearms instructor’s adage popped into his head: You can’t outdraw someone else’s trigger pull.
As Gaudet pushed the door shut, Murphy kept walking until he reached the small bar that separated the den from the kitchen. He wanted as much distance between him and Gaudet as possible. When he turned around, he said, “Are you the mayor’s official hit man now?”
Gaudet kept his pistol leveled at Murphy. “I tried to keep you out of it.”
“Out of what, stealing money and killing cops? That’s why you’re here, isn’t it, to kill me?”
“I put eleven years into this job. Next year I’m vested and can take early retirement. By then I’ll have enough money put away so I can do whatever I want.”
“So what’s stopping you?”
“You, you’re what’s stopping me,” Gaudet said.
“How’s that?”
“You threatened to go to the captain. If you make a complaint to Donovan, he’ll have to notify PIB.”
“So what?” Murphy said. “The mayor controls PIB.”
“But he doesn’t control the feds, and the feds have snitches inside PIB. If the feds get involved, everything comes apart. I told the mayor you weren’t serious, though. That it was just talk, but he didn’t believe me. He says you’re a loose cannon.”
“Why are you here, Juan?”
Gaudet waved his pistol around. Nervous sweat beaded his forehead. “What the fuck’s wrong with you, Murphy? You’ve got no life. All you’ve got is the fucking job, but no matter what heroics you pull on this case, DeMarco is going to smash you into little pieces over that newspaper article. Your only way out will be to make a deal, and now, because you saw that money, you have something to trade.”
“Is that why you’re here, to make sure I can’t make that deal?”
“I’m here to offer you a seat on the gravy train,” Gaudet said. “There’s still time, brother.”
“What does the mayor want in return?”
“Your word that you’re not a threat.”
“Is that all?” Murphy said. Then casually, like he wasn’t even thinking about it, Murphy reached up with his left hand and unzipped his raincoat.
“And he wants to bring you on as part of the team.”
“Why does he need us?”
Gaudet hefted his pistol. “Because sometimes the negotiations get sticky, and nobody argues with a man holding a gun.”
“Why did you get involved?”
Gaudet shook his head at the stupidity of the question. “Why do you think? I got two kids in private school. I got a wife wants a new car. I got a girlfriend wants her apartment paid for. Everything is all crossways, man. Shit just got cattywampus on me, and I needed the money.”
“But why you?” Murphy said. “Why did the mayor pick you to be his bagman?”
“Right place, right time, I guess.”
Murphy shook his head. “It was payback for you throwing the case against his brother.”
Gaudet stared at Murphy. “That case wasn’t going anywhere. If it wasn’t me, it would have been a captain, or a deputy chief, or somebody at the DA’s office. You can’t put the mayor’s brother in jail, Murphy, and expect the case to go to court. Not in this city.”
A sudden anger swelled through Murphy. He took a half step forward.
Gaudet jabbed his pistol at Murphy. “You stay right there and keep that Irish temper of yours under control.”
Murphy nodded toward the pistol in Gaudet’s hand. “Now what?”
“Depends.”
“On what?”
“On whether you’re with the man or against him.”
“What happens if I’m against him?”
“I told him you wouldn’t be.”
“Why would you do that?”
“Because you’re no choirboy, Murphy.”
“This is different,” Murphy said. “There’s bent and there’s crooked. This is crooked.”
A bead of sweat rolled down Gaudet’s cheek. “He wants to see you.”
“Why?”
“To explain your situation to you.”
“Right now?”
Gaudet wiped a sleeve across his face. “He’s at the Emergency Operations Center. I’ll call him when we get close. He’ll meet us outside.”
“What about his daughter?” Murphy said.
“What about her?”
“Does he want to get her back?”
“Of course he does,” Gaudet said. “He’s worried sick about her. He’s counting on you to find her.”
Murphy doubted that. Gaudet was stalling, trying to work up his nerve. Only five feet separated them. Murphy lowered his right hand near his holstered pistol. He wasn’t going down without a fight. “What if she’s already dead?”
Gaudet shrugged. “If it turns out that way, he’ll mourn for her, but life goes on. We’ve got a city to rebuild.”
“How much is it worth?” Murphy asked.
“What?” Gaudet said.
“The skim.”
“Five percent of every contract.”
Murphy did the math. Five percent was fifty thousand dollars for every million, and the city had awarded hundreds of millions of dollars in contracts since the storm. “That’s a lot of money.”
Gaudet shrugged. “Not every contract is part of the program. The mayor has good instincts. But it’s still very… lucrative.”
“What’s your end?”
“Two hundred thousand so far.”
Gaudet reached behind his back and tossed Murphy a pair of handcuffs. “Put those on.”
Murphy caught them in his left hand. He kept his right hand down. “I’m going to see the mayor in handcuffs, like a prisoner?”
Gaudet nodded. “Until you two straighten out your differences, he’s not taking any chances.”
The meeting with the mayor was a ruse. Gaudet was going to drive him somewhere and kill him. “What if we don’t straighten out our differences?” Murphy said.
“He’s a persuasive man.”
“But if we don’t,” Murphy said, “your job is to kill me, right?”
Gaudet shook his head. “Quit being so dramatic. It ain’t like that.”
Murphy rattled the handcuffs. “Tell me what it’s like then.”
“First, you two talk and straighten out the bad blood. Then he’ll give you an envelope. The first of many.”
Murphy slid his right foot back half a step and angled his left side toward Gaudet. He reached behind his back with both hands like he was going to handcuff himself. As his right hand swung past his side, it was hidden from Gaudet’s view. Murphy hooked the bottom of his raincoat with his thumb and pulled it back away from his pistol.
Gaudet relaxed.
Murphy whipped out his left hand and flung the handcuffs into Gaudet’s face. He lunged to the right and jerked his Glock from its holster. He snapped off three shots. Two bullets hit Gaudet high in the chest. The third put a hole in the wall. Gaudet fired once. His shot punched through the empty space where Murphy had been standing.
Gaudet sagged to the floor. His mouth hung open. He was drooling blood as he fought for breath.
Murphy stood over him while he died.
No one knocked on Murphy’s door. No sounds came from the hallway or the stairs. Nothing but the shrieking of the wind.
Gaudet weighed at least two sixty and was too heavy to move. Murphy knew that if he survived the night he was going to have to explain why he had killed his partner. But that was only if he survived the night. He dug Gaudet’s keys from his pocket. He left his ex-partner’s pistol on the floor where it had fallen.
When Gaudet had raced out of the back lot of the police academy this morning, he had Murphy’s gear bag in the trunk of his car. In that bag were Murphy’s bulletproof vest and two spare magazines for his Glock. He planned to use the five-shot. 38 to kill Jeffries, but he had enough experience to know that plans don’t usually work out the way they’re supposed to.
Murphy walked into his bedroom and pulled a shoe box from the shelf at the top of his closet. Inside, the. 38 was wrapped in an old yellow T-shirt. Murphy unwrapped the snub-nosed revolver and snapped open the cylinder. It was loaded with five rounds of. 38 +P hollow points. He tucked the gun into the front of his pants.
Back in the den, Murphy walked around Gaudet’s body, careful not to tread in the blood that had pooled on the floor. He opened the door and stepped into the hall. As he locked the dead bolt and turned toward the stairs, he heard a frail voice behind him. “Did you hear that awful noise, Mr. Murphy?”
He turned around. It was his shriveled neighbor. She stood at the far end of the hallway, near a picture window that looked out onto the street. “It sounded like a gunshot,” she said. “Did you hear it?”
“Yes, ma’am, I did. I think it was a transformer that blew.”
She was dressed in a shabby housecoat that she clutched around her throat with one arthritic hand. It was the first time Murphy had ever seen her not dressed.
“Are you evacuating?” she asked.
“No, ma’am. I have to work. I’m a policeman.”
She nodded. “I saw you in the newspaper, remember?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Well, you be careful.”
“You too.”
Outside on the street, Murphy walked around the block pressing the panic button on Gaudet’s key fob until he got close enough to the car to set off the alarm. He found the Caprice parked on a parallel street one block from his apartment. He opened the trunk.
Lying next to Murphy’s gear bag was Gaudet’s briefcase. To keep it closed, Gaudet had wrapped it with a bungee cord. Murphy carried his bag and the briefcase to his Taurus. He threw his gear into the backseat and sat down behind the wheel with the briefcase beside him. He turned on the dome light and opened the case. It was still stuffed with cash.
Protruding from an interior pocket was a leather datebook. Murphy opened it. A paper clip at the top of a page marked the current week. He flipped back through the weeks and saw marks indicating work days, notes on court dates, and in some places, initials with numbers beside them. Each number had the letter k behind it, as in thousands.
AD 25k. BH 50k. One entry from three months back read, “DWC 100k.”
Gaudet had kept records of his cash pickups for the mayor. Murphy had worked with Juan for years and knew he wasn’t stupid. He would have known that keeping such records was dangerous, but they were also evidence if things went bad and he ended up having to testify against the mayor. Gaudet had been planning on riding the mayor’s cash cow into the sunset, but if he got jammed up, he was going to flip.
Murphy dropped the datebook on top of the cash and closed the briefcase. He rewrapped the bungee cord and tossed the case onto the backseat. There was something more immediate he needed to worry about. He reached into his raincoat pocket and took out Richard Jeffries’s utility bill. He looked at the service location printed in the top left corner.
4101 Burgundy Street.
He felt the pressure from the. 38 revolver wedged into the front waistband of his pants.
Be there, Jeffries. Be there.