The next morning Homicide Detective Johnny Hart was playing a long shot. Hart was hoping one of the names of the victims of Big Evil and Terminal would lead to the mysterious man who came to the Desmond household the night before Terminal’s ravaged body was found. He had a list of 127 names of victims, victim’s families, and victim’s known friends and associates. The brothers Desmond had amassed a frighteningly extensive roster of sufferers, dead and alive.
LaBarbera, taking a short break from a meeting with superiors on the progress of several homicide and shooting investigations, including those of Bobby Desmond and Michael Lyons, approached Hart’s desk. “Anything pop?”
“Sal, this is ridiculous,” said a frustrated Hart, his third cup of weak in-house coffee in hand. “First of all, the guy that came to see them, if Mrs. Desmond is accurate, seemed like he was about to soil himself, not to brutalize one of the baddest Bloods in this whole jacked-up city. And secondly, yes, I’ve got enough football-related names on this list to make a decent NFL team. Got a Joe Green—”
“Mean Joe Greene. But, with the third ‘e’”?
“No, Sal. No. But, if Mystery Man said Joe Greene, I don’t think Term would ask that third ‘e’ question. You see what I mean? This is a waste of time for a superior detective. Me.”
“Where is he from?”
“This says, hold on, um, Maywood.”
“Who else you got?”
“Got a Steve Smith. Victim.”
“Carolina Panther receiver.”
“Oh, yeah. He still a Panther? But, no. Too common. Don’t you have anything that sticks out? No Unitas? Jurgenson? No Tarkington?”
“Damn, Sal, how old are you? Those are some triple OGs.”
“Yeah, yeah. I knew this was a shot in the dark. Figured, though every now and then, you get an upset. Ask Man o’ War.”
“How about Payton Sims?”
“Payton Sims? I know that name. Payton Sims. Oh, yeah. Of course. He got Uzied walking to the car wash on Central. The one the task force finally got Evil for. Evil and Poison Rat.”
“Yeah, Payton Sims and Marcus Washington.”
“Yeah, but, I don’t see any football name connection.”
“Payton Sims. Walter Payton and Billy Sims.”
“A stretch, but yeah, okay. Or Phil Simms,” said LaBarbera. “Won a Super Bowl.”
“Yeah, but Phil Simms has two ‘m’s.”
“How’re the Desmonds supposed to know that?”
“Sal, you’re the nit-picking detective asking if Joe Green had the “e” at the end.”
LaBarbera nodded in admission. “Okay, okay. Where’d Payton Sims live? I remember it was close, because he walked to that car wash. And you remember we could never figure out why anyone would walk to a car wash? Think about it.”
“Maybe,” Hart said, “the shower at his house was broke and he went to wash himself.”
“You’re stupid. Anyway, where’d he live?”
“Let’s see. Nine twenty-seven East Eighty-Ninth Street. That’s right across Central from the Desmonds.”
“Interesting. His family still there?”
“This is old, but says survivors were his parents who lived there. Edward and Jennette. Should I check it out?”
“Yes. Let’s cover all the bases. Tell Waxman to check it out. It’s his case. I gotta go back to this bullshit meeting.”
On his trek from Orange County, Detective Ralph Waxman chugged along in his son’s 1991 Honda Accord, heading toward Edward and Jennette Simses’ home in the Kitchen, a neighborhood where he had investigated several homicides. He didn’t want to take his own car, a maroon Cadillac STS, so he traded with his nineteen-year-old son who was so thrilled with the swap he didn’t even ask his dad why.
Waxman stuck to the slower lanes of the 91, 605, and 105 freeways as his son’s Honda was misfiring badly. Kids these days, Waxman thought. He was planning on dropping the car off for a tune-up later, not that his son would even notice the difference.
As he exited the 105 and lumbered up Central Avenue, past the infamous Nickerson Gardens housing project and the all-boys Verbum Dei High School, past the Watts Community Action Labor Committee and Ted Watkins Park, past boarded-up two-story apartment buildings and store front churches, past enough liquor stores to get Moscow drunk, Waxman thought Johnny Hart’s request to check out Ed Sims was a waste of time.
Waxman had called Sims from the road, saying he wanted to go over some details of his son’s case. Purely routine, he said.
Sims was waiting for him on the porch. He hadn’t bought Waxman’s “purely routine” bullshit. What did they have on him? A witness? DNA in the alley? Had he cleaned his car’s bloodied underbelly thoroughly enough? He came close to panic. He sipped some Hennessy. He considered running. Pack up the Cutlass and hit the road. He drank more Hennessy. And more. The French brandy started to work its dangerous charm. He relaxed. Fuck it. I’m dead already. It doesn’t matter.
He had checked the load on his 9mm. It was full. Sims had decided he was not going to prison. Not even jail. He switched off the safety and stashed the gun under the pillow of his son’s bed.
Sims heard the coughing Honda Accord before he saw it. When he did, it made him sad.
“Hi, I’m Detective Ralph Waxman, LAPD.” They shook hands. Waxman smelled the booze.
“You need a tune-up. Heard you belchin’ a block away.”
“Tell me about it. My son’s car.”
“Let’s have a look. I’m a mechanic.”
“That’s okay. I’ll take care of it later.”
“Take a minute. C’mon. Pop the hood and start her up.”
Five minutes later, Sims came out of Frank’s Auto Supply, his old place of employment on Central Avenue, with a Phillips screwdriver, a feeler gauge, and a package of contact points. He took out the old points and showed them to Waxman, who knew as much about car engines as he did about nuclear physics. “See these points right here, all pitted. That’s your problem. My son, Payton, had a Honda just like this. His first car. Hell, his only car. I changed the points probably five times.”
He put in the new points, had Waxman blip the ignition to get them in the right position so he could measure and set them. Cinched them up and they were on their way. Night and day.
“Damn. What a difference. What do I owe you?”
“Just a ride home.”
Waxman took out forty dollars. Sims refused, but Waxman insisted, and he took it. He already had that money spent. His Hennessy was running a bit low, and he could use some more bullets. Hopefully, he thought.
Back at the house, Waxman took a look around. Roses in the front yard, older Cutlass way up the driveway, bars on the windows. Inside, Sims didn’t hide the booze. He poured a glass, didn’t bother to offer any, and took a gulp. “Ever since I lost my son and wife, this has been my best friend.”
“Your wife was killed, too? I didn’t know that.”
“She left me. After Payton did.”
“At least I did something this morning. I love to fix cars.” He took a gulp. “I know this lady, Dorothy, she’s ’bout seventy-five. Runs the Watts Rose Garden. All by herself. Over a hundred bushes. She told me once, when she be working on those roses, she’s in her own world. Her rose world, she calls it. This beautiful world of sweet smells and all them colors. She don’t even see them thorns, even though they scratchin’ her crinkly, ol’ black skin. That rose garden? It’s two blocks from Jordan Downs, Grape Street Crips, one of the worst places in the city. Hell, you know that.” He took another belt. “But, anyway she’s right there and she’s in paradise. I saw you checkin’ out my roses by the driveway. Dorothy planted them. That one there, the red one all creamy in the middle? It’s called Double Delight. It’s my favorite. They call it that because it’s beautiful and smells sweet too. Just like a fine woman. What I’m getting at is, I guess I’m rambling now, but that’s how I feel when I work on cars. It’s like the car is sick, and I’m the doctor in my car world.”
“Well, Doctor, thanks again.”
“Anyways, I know you didn’t come to my beautiful neighborhood to get a tune-up. What’s happening?”
“Mr. Sims, did you know a Bobby Desmond? Better known as Terminal.”
Sims took a shaky sip. “His brother killed my son.”
“You heard anything about him lately?”
“Heard he got hisself kilt. Gotta say I din’t burst into no tears when I heard the news. In fact, I think I had a drink to celebrate.” Sims took another drink. Laughed.
“Mr. Sims, where were you last Tuesday night?”
“Is that when he got it? Now you’re flattering me.”
“Sir, tell me your whereabouts Tuesday from six p.m. until eight a.m. the next day.”
“I love it when you guys call people ‘sir.’ I knows what ‘sir’ means. Means ‘asshole.’ Anyways, sir, I don’t think I can prove it by anyone, but I was right here. Probably passed out on this here couch. Sometimes I don’t even make it to the bed, sir.”
Waxman tried to ignore the “sir” comments. It wasn’t easy. “I’m sure it has been tough, sir, but what’s it been? Eight, nine years?”
“Seems like last week to me,” said Sims taking another sip. Then another.
Waxman asked why Payton would walk to a car wash.
“I wondered that, too,” said Sims. “But, I think I might know why. The other day, I don’t know, a week ago, a month ago, I was outside and a neighbor walked over and told me he was going downtown and wanted to trade me a five dollar bill for a bunch of quarters. You know, for parking. I told him I’d go in inside and check, but he said it was all right, he’d just go to the car wash. You know, those change machines them places have to get quarters to start the wash. Maybe that’s why he went. Man, that made me weak all over when the neighbor said that. Quarters. Get killed for wanting some change.”
Waxman just nodded.
“Sometimes I sleep in Payton’s room. I’ll show you.” He led the way to Payton’s room. It’s very neat, preserved, just the way it was when Payton slept there, except for the used 9mm under the pillow. Sims glanced at the pillow. He hoped he wouldn’t have to go for it. He wasn’t going to prison, he’d rather die. Detective Waxman was not part of the Revenge. He had nothing to do with Big Evil living the good life in prison. Still, if he had to use it, he would. As Sims looked at the pillow, Waxman looked at the three Pop Warner football trophies on a dresser. On the wall was a framed poster of number thirty-four of the Chicago Bears.
“I loved that guy,” said the detective. “I was a Chargers fan, but I loved Walter Payton.”
“Everybody loved Sweetness,” said Sims getting emotional. “I named my boy after him.”
• • •
Later, at South Bureau, Waxman saw LaBarbera. “I went and saw that Edward Sims, the father of Payton Sims, one of Evil’s victims.”
“Ralph, I know who he is. And?”
“He’s a beaten-down drunk. No way in hell he coulda got the drop on Terminal. No way. You were right about the Walter Payton thing, though. Even had a poster of Sweetness in the kid’s room.”
LaBarbera nodded and walked away.
“Say, Sal, let me know if you ever need a good mechanic around here.”
Back on 89th Street, Sims packed a large suitcase, a case he had bought with exhilaration years ago in anticipation of where it would take him. He remembered so vividly walking into the house with the suitcase, putting Sammy Davis Jr. on the turntable and moving the needle to the fourth track—“Faraway Places”—taking hold of his wife and dancing around the room as Sammy sang of going to Bombay and Rio, Beirut, Barcelona. The years chewed away at that joy until the day Payton died and it was vanquished. He’d never used that suitcase until that bitter day. He threw it angrily into the trunk of the Cutlass, took a last look at his home, and backed out of the driveway. He was to the curb when he looked at his roses, his glorious rosebushes. He pulled back up and ran over Double Delight.
At the Bank of America on Central and 104th Street in Watts, he withdrew all his savings, just over $1,400. He rented a room at the Dare-U-Inn, a 32-unit, U-shaped motel on Main Street in an industrial area between Gardena and Compton. The Dare-U-Inn offered a nice degree of privacy as it catered to the illicit affair crowd or couples who stayed with other family members and couldn’t really let it all hang out. He paid the Korean owner for a week in advance, $280 in cash. The clean, large room had a TV with cable. He wanted to watch the news tomorrow morning.