Chapter One
Detective Leslie Consorte didn’t like being woken up in the middle of the night. In fact, he didn’t like it enough to have turned off his cell phone and taken his home phone off the hook. The desk sergeant, a busybody named Roman Stevenson, had felt the situation warranted sending a unit by his house to pound on his door until he had dragged himself out from under warm sheets, grumbling, groaning, and belching out every cussword known to man, and a few based loosely on Latin roots: crapepsia, shitalgia, cockpluribus.
Stevenson hadn’t been wrong. Leaning on his car door and surveying the damage, Leslie dreamed of the stacks of paperwork headed his way. A fifth-year cop named Lapeyre, dressed in uniformed blues, approached, picking through the crime scene, not so much to preserve evidence as to preserve his clothes. Lapeyre was a handsome kid, close-cropped black hair, dark skin, driven, focused, taller than Leslie by half a foot.
“It goes on for another three miles.”
“This is a grisly thing here.”
Leslie squinted his eyes, staring down the dilapidated Clairemont street. Clairemont was proof positive that racism was a baseless concept, or, put more simply, that white people could fuck up a community just as efficiently as any other race. It was a rotten little housing project of about fourteen hundred units: dirt lawns; peeling paint; ugly, unwashed cars and motor homes and non-working boats.
This street, Triana, was particularly bad because it was smeared with blood, muscle and bone. Someone had been dragged behind the bumper of a GMC truck. For about a mile.
“What are we looking at?”
“Dispatch got a call at 12:03. A neighbor reported hearing screaming, squealing tires, and then a grinding sound. Desk jockey logged it as a domestic dispute, though I think that’s a bit of an under-classification.”
“That’s funny, Lapeyre. Any chance we can identify the victim?”
“It’s unlikely. There’s only about a third of the body left. It shook loose from the car down by the mesa.”
Leslie crouched in the street, running his hand over the drying blood.
“Radley found fragments of a jawbone on the next block over. We might be able to get a dental match. I also managed to extricate a patch of hair from the fender of the murder car. I’ve bagged it for a DNA analysis. A SID team is prepping the car for impound on Derrick Drive. What do you want to do about this?”
“Let’s knock on a door or two.”
Leslie and Lapeyre walked up the nearest driveway, Leslie’s suit looked like he carried it to work in a plastic bag. The top button was loose on the shirt, his tie hung low, the edges of the cuffs were frayed, and the collar was badly wrinkled. Leslie believed it was possible to machine wash and dry his dress shirts. The collar, it seemed to him, was the only part that didn’t turn out so great.
Before they reached the door, Leslie pulled Lapeyre to a stop.
“I forgot something,” he said. He dug around in his pocket, finally drawing out a shiny, metallic object roughly the size of a billfold. He handed it to Lapeyre.
Lapeyre fumbled with it, trying to get it open with shaky hands. “Is this what I think it is?” he said.
“Congratulations, Detective. The captain passed word down to me as I was leaving work. I was going to tell you tomorrow, but I guess this is tomorrow.”
Lapeyre didn’t say anything else, but his eyes never left the badge. It reminded Leslie of his ex-wife’s expression when he’d first popped open the engagement ring box. “It’s a good moment, Lapeyre. You only make detective once, if you’re lucky. Enjoy it.” Leslie waited a moment while Lapeyre polished the badge on the front of his shirt. “Okay, let’s solve this case, huh? After you, Inspector.”
“Are you going to show me how to grill a witness?”
“I will show you the ways of the master.”
The nearest house was a tiny three bedroom, one bathroom with a rotting fence and a weed-strewn yard. Leslie knocked on the door. They waited a few minutes. Lapeyre pulled out his badge to look at it again and Leslie told him to put it away. He knocked again, louder this time. No one answered. They moved to the next house, walking directly across the lawn. It was a small structure, probably close to seven hundred square feet. The roof was dilapidated, and a Trump flag waved above the faded painting of a bald eagle stretched across the garage, wings wide. They knocked and waited. No one answered.
On the third house, a blond woman in her fifties came to the door. She was wearing pajamas covered by a tattered robe. Her hair was unwashed and had a frizzy-fried texture Leslie always associated with the very poor and the chemically addicted. She smelled of recently smoked cigarettes.
“Yes?” the woman said. She was rubbing her eyes and blinking at them.
Leslie knew Lapeyre was waiting for him to speak but he didn’t. After an awkward silence Lapeyre finally said, “Sorry we woke you.”
“What do you need?” the woman asked; her voice held a slight edge.
“We were hoping you saw something tonight. There’s been a crime. Outside your home, all up and down the street.”
“That’s terrible. I’m sorry I can’t help you.”
Leslie didn’t like her, but he tried to remain professional. He leaned in and sniffed her.
“What the hell are you doing?” she said.
She smelled like very strong alcohol. Maybe 100 proof. “There was a brutal murder fifteen feet from your house,” he said.
“I didn’t see anything. I was sleeping.”
“The murderer dragged his victim through the street. He tore the victim’s body to pieces. His flesh is part of your asphalt now. It’s part of your street.”
“I don’t know anything.” The woman said, her shoulders shook in a quick jagged motion, but she got them under control again immediately.
“You watched it from the window.”
“No.”
“I don’t know how much you saw, but it was enough to send you back to the kitchen. A decent person calls the police. Lets us get here in time to help, maybe. But you poured yourself a shot.” Leslie sniffed again. “Several shots. Did it work? Did it make you forget the sounds?”
“Get out of my house!” the woman said angrily. “I’ll call the cops.”
Leslie idly waved his badge. “We’re not in your house.”
“I’ll call my brother then. He’ll kick your ass right out of here.”
“Go ahead and call him. We’ll wait,” Leslie told her.
The poor, rugged blonde took a step back and pulled her phone from her pajama pocket. Then she lurched forward and struck Leslie with her phone-clinched fist. Lapeyre moved to interfere, but Leslie called him off with a curt head shake. With her other hand she clawed at him for a moment, like a sick bird, then she fell to her knees, crying.
“We need to know everything you can remember. The coloring, height, and weight of the victim. The same for the killer.” His voice softened. “If you tell us everything you saw, it will help you forget. I promise.”
The woman remained on the floor. Leslie pulled Lapeyre aside. “Get a statement,” he said. “Be as gentle as possible.”
“Yeah, right. Thanks,” Lapeyre said.
“I’m going to go check out the murder car. Join me when you can.” Leslie moved back out of the house without looking at the crumpled form of the woman on the floor, still sobbing. He walked slowly up the street to Derrick Drive.
He had been suffering from acute lower back pain for the last thirteen years. The cause had never been completely diagnosed but Leslie figured it to be a combination of too many nights chasing lowlifes down alleyways, too many hours behind desks perched on cheap chairs, his tendency to buy his own furniture and mattresses at thrift stores, and all the collective stresses of trying to keep a city safe from itself. The mileage of life. The pinching pain caused him to shuffle his feet when he walked, and he always appeared to be leaning slightly forward.
When he reached Derrick Drive, he followed the portable lights, flares, and flashbulbs to the murder car—which was, in fact, a murder truck. He pulled on a pair of rubber gloves and pointed his belt light at the truck’s bumper. A SIDs guy, short for Scientific Investigation Division, was already swabbing at it with a Q-tip. Leslie didn’t recognize him, but then as all the other departments felt the pinch of deep budget cuts, the SIDs were growing like weeds.
Leslie ran his light along the left side of the truck. He noted deep, jagged scratch marks in the faux chrome of the bumper, on the right fender, and just above the tailpipe. The SID was working over his shoulder on the taillight. Leslie told him, “It looks like the victim tried to keep up with the car long as he or she could. They must have been affixed to the bumper by something other than their arms. Make sure you run tests for trace elements of rope, tape, whatever the hell kind of epoxy could stick a person to a vehicle long enough to grind their bones to dust.”
“Of course.”
Leslie looked again at the long, snaking red swath as it disappeared down the street and around the corner. “No motive. Few witnesses. Not much left of the body. This must have made a hell of a racket, though. Make a visual record of the entire trail. Then call the fire department out to turn a hose on it. I don’t want people waking up to find this on their street.”
“You want to destroy the evidence?”
“No. Gather the evidence but do it quickly and get this massacre cleaned up.”
“Are you sure, sir? Whitmire’s going to be pissed if we compromise—”
“You SIDs guys are supposed to facilitate our investigation, not run it. Guy gets butchered in the street; it still belongs to homicide; right?”
“Yeah.”
Leslie slid his hands into a rubber glove and gingerly felt around the back of the bumper. Something sticky transferred from the bumper to his index finger. He held it up to the light. It looked like candy from a toy store vending machine. He lifted it up for the pale man with the camera and the plastic baggies to see.
“Got an idea of what this is?” Leslie asked him. It wasn’t quite the right texture to be brain or flesh.
The SIDs man shone a light on it, moving his face just inches from its quivering surface. Leslie turned his wrist to give him a better look, and it split, letting an inky mess free to run down onto his knuckles.
“Looks like sclera,” the man said, taking it from Leslie gingerly and dropping it into one of his bags.
“I made detective because of my tenacity, not my brains.”
“I’m pretty sure you found an eyeball, sir.”