Richard Hawke
Speak of the Devil
The first book in the Fritz Malone series, 2006
To Julia
How lucky are we?
IF SHE HAD KNOWN SHE WOULD BE DEAD IN ANOTHER FIVE MINUTES, maybe she wouldnt have swatted her son so hard. Thats just my guess. His balloon had been drifting into my face, that was the problem. It wasnt bugging me, but it was bugging his mother. He was a towheaded kid with a round pink face. The balloon was larger than his head. I couldnt say one way or the other if the kid was having fun, but Mom clearly wasnt.
Ezra, if I have to tell you one more time.
She seemed to be wound awfully tight for nine-thirty in the morning. But Ive never been a parent, so Im hardly the person to judge. Maybe the kid was an absolute handful and his actions drained his mother daily of her reservoir of patience. Maybe the reservoir wasnt terribly deep to begin with. Or maybe the two were running late that morning and Mom hadnt gotten her caffeine jangle for the day.
Maybe this, maybe that. Maybes all over the place. Cheaper than a dime donut, as my father used to growl.
It was a Thursday. Thanksgiving is always a Thursday, so that part is easy. Fall was playing out nice and slow. The trees in Central Park were more yellow and red than Id seen them in years. A high, bright sun was sending down just about zero warmth through the bracingly crisp air. What they used to call apple-cider weather.
I was standing at the corner of Seventy-second and Central Park West. I wasnt supposed to be standing there. I was supposed to be making my way up five flights of stairs in a turn-of-the-century brownstone halfway down Seventy-first, swinging my bag of bagels and whistling a happy tune. I had fetched the bagels (three poppy, three sesame) from a place on Columbus that makes them on the premises, but instead of trotting directly back to Margos like a good dog, I had drifted up the street, lured by the sound of crashing cymbals, and was standing on the corner dodging a white balloon and watching Mother Goose roll by. Big pointy hat. Oversize smile.
Mother Goose, that is. Not me. I was hatless. And I wasnt smiling. When I see a gun being drawn in a crowd and its not attached to a cop or to someone I know and trust, generally speaking, I dont smile.
CENTRAL PARK WEST RUNS NORTH-SOUTH. THE PARADE RUNS SOUTH. Been that way since the late twenties. Back then they used to release the big balloon figures at the end of the parade. There were only a few of them, so it wasnt as if the skies of Manhattan suddenly darkened with a flotilla of giant balloons. You couldnt do it today. Youd have scrambled F-16 fighter jets intercepting the balloons faster than you could blink.
I was standing on the west side of the street, directly in front of the Dakota, when I saw the gun being drawn. If youve seen the movie Rosemarys Baby, youve seen the Dakota, although they called it something different in the movie. In the book, too. Richard Nixon tried to get his suitcase in the door of the Dakota not long after he was bounced from the White House, but the residents there would have none of it. Its that kind of place. When I think of that story, its actually Nixons wife I imagine. Poor beleaguered Pat. I imagine her standing on the sidewalk with her skinny arms crossed over her skinny chest, one of her dull practical pumps tapping irritably against the pavement. Well, Mr. I-am-not-a-crook what next?
The gun was a Beretta 92F. Thats nine-millimeter. Eight and a half inches long, a fraction over two pounds. Magazine capacity of fifteen bullets. The Beretta is one of the most popular pistols these days with both police and military shooters. The guy holding this one was neither. And though its a good-looking gun, I didnt suspect he was pulling it out simply so he could admire it in the morning sun.
I instinctively slapped at my left shoulder. My gun is a simple.38. Short-barreled snubbie. A simple workhorse. No fancy history. I use it in my line of work, which is private investigation. Margo calls it my associate, a little joke she picked up from her father, from when he was a private investigator and he used to call his gun his associate. This was before he took on a real associate. A junior partner. Which was me. Green, eager, fearless and, at the time, extremely pissed off.
Nothing came between my slap and my shoulder. My associate was back at Margos, in its holster, up on the dresser. Safety on. Facing the wall.
The guy with the Beretta was up on the low stone wall that borders the park. It was a fluke that I had a clear view of him. There was a gap between the Mother Goose float and the marching band in front of it, a high-stepping troupe of teenagers from Berlin, Maryland, and I happened to be standing where I could see right through the gap. The man was about five-eight or so. He was wearing a green windbreaker, khaki pants, sunglasses and a baseball cap. I saw him unzip his windbreaker and pull the Beretta from his belt, then take a step backward and drop off the wall, out of sight.
The white balloon drifted into my face again. The mother slapped the boy on his small arm. Very hard.
Ezra, for the last time.
I heard the boy begin to cry as I took off running.
As I hit the street, the shooters head reappeared above the stone wall. He planted his elbows on the wall and took aim. His target was clear. The easiest of all. Mother Goose.
Get down!
I threw my bag of bagels at the float. It hit the float just below the platform where Mother Goose was standing. I yelled again.
Get down! Gun!
I got her attention. The pointed hat dipped my way, a look of irritation replacing her waving-at-the-crowd smile. I saw the spark from the Beretta across the street and heard the shot a half-instant behind. Mother Goose dropped to her knees and all hell broke loose.
I was still running. A chunky policeman who had been stationed on the corner not twenty feet from the shooter reacted simultaneously to the gunshot and to the sight of a loony-me-racing from the curb into the parade route, yelling and shouting. He started for me. I cried out, Gun! Gun! Gun! and pointed toward the wall, but the cop wasnt hearing. He was going for his own gun. Behind him, the shooter rose calmly to his full height, swung the Beretta to the street level and fired again.
I swerved, crashing into a copper-skinned teenager holding a bass drum. More shots rang out as the drummer and I tumbled to the street. The shots continued. The drum head ripped as another of the marching band troupe-a tiny girl with a shiny alto sax-planted her foot on it. Blood was pumping onto the white bib of her uniform. Nothing had even registered yet on her face.
I got to my feet. People were scrambling for cover, though here and there were pockets of onlookers who remained frozen, unable to process. The chunky policeman was on the ground, not moving. The Mother Goose float had halted, its Styrofoam wings still flapping mechanically. The shooter might as well have been standing at a carnival shooting gallery. He was pointing and shooting, pointing and shooting, pointing and shooting. To my left, a skinny guy in a Macys T-shirt lifted off the ground with the force of the bullets slamming into his chest. Pop! Pop! Pop!
Hunched over, I scuttled across the pavement to the policeman. He was lying on his right side. I knelt down and shoved him onto his back. A piece of skull the size of a doorknob was gone from the right side of his head. Ignoring the gore, I unsnapped his holster and pulled out his service revolver, then ran to the near side of the float, putting it between me and the shooter. I ran along the float, flipping off the guns safety, and came around the rear with the gun in both hands, aimed at the stone wall.
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