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“You say the briefcase showed up where Russell used to live. Does that mean he doesn’t live there anymore?”

“That’s right.”

“Where does he live now?”

The leader shrugged. “Who knows? Ask Ben Weston.”

“Ben Weston’s dead,” I pointed out. “Did Knuckles Russell kill him?”

“Knuckles didn’t dis Ben Weston.”

“So who did?”

“That’s your job, One-Time. You find that out, ”cause most folks thinks we did it, and that makes it tough to do business. Understand?“

And then I understood why the gangs had called for a meeting. It all boiled down to public relations. Most of the time they operated with impunity, without direct, active, or vocal opposition from the African-American community at large. The slaughter of Ben Western’s family, with the accompanying media presumption that street gang activity was somehow ultimately responsible, had galvanized the black silent majority into being not nearly so silent.

“May we take the case?”

“Yo, man. Take the case if it’ll help you do your funky job. That’s what we all want.”

Just then, Chief Rankin’s pager went off. He excused himself and hurried out of the room to answer it, leaving me alone with our six guests. He wasn’t gone long. When he came back and stopped in the doorway, I could see from the look on his face that something was terribly wrong.

“Come on,” he said. “There’s a problem. Grab that bag. We’ve gotta go. I’ve got the check.”

He dashed away again while I picked up the bag, aware that my every action was being studied by six separate people, five of whom, other than ordering their food, had not spoken a word since entering the room. Only the single representative had acted as spokesman for the entire group.

It amazed me to think how the idea of arousing the ire of the entire African-American community had posed enough of a threat to force these young toughs into an unprecedented show of solidarity, but there was no hint that the truce would last any longer than the time it took to vacate the room.

Six pairs of cold eyes stared at me, and I stared back, examining each face in turn, knowing that some of them would show up on the fifth floor eventually, coming under the scrutiny of Homicide either as perpetrator or victim. I didn’t want to say thank-you to this bunch of murderous thugs. The very word would have stuck in my throat, yet I owed them something.

“Somebody here knows someone who has himself a late-model Lexus,” I said quietly. “The driver is wanted in connection with the attempted murder of a Seattle police officer. I’d get rid of them both, if I were you, send them back where they came from.”

With that, I turned and walked out of the room carrying the briefcase with me. I found Chief Rankin at the counter, dancing from foot to foot, arguing heatedly with the cashier.

“What seems to be the matter?” I asked.

“They don’t take plastic here,” he protested, waving his credit card in the air. “Not even the city credit card. There are eight meals on this bill. I don’t carry around that kind of cash, and I don’t have my checkbook with me, either.”

“How much is it?”

I took out my wallet and extracted the hundred-dollar bill I’ve taken to carrying there in case of emergencies. I paid the bill, including a double tip for Lucille, and wrote the entire amount at the bottom of the receipt.

“This is going to show up on my expense account,” I said. “And nobody better question it.”

“They won’t. Come on. Hurry.”

“What’s the matter?”

“There’s been a shooting on Beacon Hill. Officer down.”

“Where on Beacon Hill?” I asked as we raced for my car, but I didn’t have to listen for an answer. Before he told me, I already knew. The location was the home of Reverend Homer Walters, and the downed officer had to be Big Al Lindstrom.

CHAPTER 19

I drove like a maniac, but nobody pulled me over. Chief Rankin hinted that he would have preferred to stop by the department and pick up his own car. He hinted, but he didn’t issue a direct order. It’s a good thing too. If he had, I would have been forced to disregard it.

Now it was my turn to be where Big Al had been the night Ben Weston was murdered, my turn to deal with the anger that rose like bile in my throat, my turn to agonize over the part I had played in positioning Big Al in the way of that bullet. How could I have done such a thing?

Chief Rankin and I were back in my Porsche, so we were out of departmental radio contact. Luckily we did have my cellular phone. I picked it up and dialed directly in to Dispatch.

“Detective Beaumont here,” I announced. “I have Chief Rankin in the car with me. We’ll be at that Beacon Hill location in five to seven minutes. What’s the status?”

“Medic One is on the scene. There’s a doctor there as well. They’re trying to stabilize him enough to transport him to the hospital.”

“Since when does Medic One send out doctors?”

“They don’t. Evidently this one just happened to be on the scene when it all went down. Hang on a minute, Beau. I have to take another call.”

He was off the phone for some time.

“How’s Lindstrom doing?” Chief Rankin asked. “Is he going to make it?”

As soon as Dispatch came back on the line, I asked him that same question. “It’s too soon to tell. He took a bullet at point-blank range. It hit him below his vest. Evidently there’s lots of internal damage.”

“Has anyone gone to tell Molly?”

“Not yet as far as I know. Would you like to handle that? You probably know her better than anyone else here.”

“Sure,” I said, my voice cracking. “As soon as I drop the chief off, I’ll go pick her up and take her to the hospital. Which one, the trauma unit at Harborview?”

“They’re the local Roto-Rooter-of-choice for bullet extractions. When it comes to that kind of thing, it pays to use people with experience.”

Before I signed off, I gave the dispatcher my phone number in case he needed to get back to me, then, after I hung up, I prayed that the phone wouldn’t ring again because I was afraid of what the caller might tell me if it did.

“I can’t believe this,” Rankin was saying. “Has the whole city declared open season on cops?”

I knew the answer to that question was no, and so did Chief Rankin. The whole city wasn’t killing cops, and neither were street gangs. Cops were killing cops, crooked cops killing straight ones.

“Do you have Captain Freeman’s number?” I asked.

“Which one, home or office?” Rankin asked.

“Both,” I told him. “We’d better call him so he’ll be in on this case from the beginning. It may be that nobody else has thought to call him. They wouldn’t necessarily know there was a connection between this and IIS.”

Chief Rankin reached inside his jacket and removed his pocket-sized Day-Timer. He took out the tiny telephone directory notebook and consulted that. As soon as I saw it, I thought about Ben Weston’s Day-Timer, lying there on the bedroom floor, the pages filled with appointments-some kept and some forever unkept-and the elusive numbers he couldn’t remember without writing them down.

The sad truth about homicide is that most people are murdered by people they know. For that reason, a victim’s calendar in the days shortly before his death becomes a prime starting point in tracing his activities and connections. More often than not, the perpetrator will be found among those final few social or business contacts. For that reason alone, Ben Weston’s Day-Timer should have been right at the top of the task force’s concerns. I didn’t remember Paul Kramer assigning it to anyone, so I assigned myself.

By then Chief Rankin had managed to locate Captain Freeman’s number and was dialing it. Tony Freeman’s wife answered the phone and told him her husband had just left the house. She said someone had called a few minutes earlier and that Tony was on his way back downtown to his office, although it was still too soon for him to be there. Knowing Freeman was on his way made me feel better. It meant someone besides me was making the same connections and drawing the same conclusions.