Blackbird. Tom Wright

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Blackbird - Tom Wright

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      She made the call, checked her own .40 and pulled on her tan leather jacket. ‘Where we goin’, Lou?’

      ‘Wayne’s at a scene.’

      ‘What he got?’

      ‘He wants to surprise us.’

      Ten minutes later we were out of the garage and headed north in the rain, which had lightened a little for the moment but was still falling steadily from a sky that now had taken on the look of heavy oilsmoke. Mouncey was decked out in tight pressed jeans and a lavender turtleneck under the leather jacket, with rings on every finger and what looked like a quarter of a pound of gold hanging from each earlobe. Her hair was piled up in ringlets that flashed with opal-coloured highlights. I knew that if we were out chasing leads or doing interviews there’d be nothing grabbable attached to her ears and nothing at all on the fingers of her gun hand, but on this call she was dressed for working inside the tape.

      The plastic ID she’d just used a corner of to winkle out a popcorn hull stuck between her incisors said Mouncey, Jacquanda S., Detective II-CID, but everybody called her M. She didn’t look much like police, but she had been a major-crimes detective for almost ten years and earned three commendations for things she’d done while being shot at, two of the shooters having had to settle for obituaries.

      Looking over her outfit, I said, ‘You put me in mind of a fleeing felon.’

      ‘The job just a day gig,’ she said. ‘Nights, I out perpetrating.’

      The passing landscape of miscellaneous storefront businesses started phasing into classier re-zoned conversions, upscale shops and finally older homes set back on spacious lots under mature oaks, sweetgums and longleaf pines, surrounded by acres of tailored, unseasonably green lawns with automatic sprinkler systems. Maybe money didn’t buy happiness, but it bought lots of grass.

      M said, ‘How the single life treating you, Lou?’

      Listening to the dull cardiac thumping of the wind-shield wipers for a minute, I took in a deep breath and blew it out along with the half-dozen bullshit answers that had occurred to me. I wasn’t much good at casual social lies and hardly ever wasted time or energy on them any more.

      ‘I don’t seem to be very good at solitude, M.’

      ‘Like to see the man that is,’ she said. ‘Y’all just be layin’ around suckin’ Bud Lite till you stufficate under all them dirty socks and pizza boxes.’ She looked at me with some expression or other for a couple of seconds before deciding to go directly for the throat. ‘Seen them two girls of yours waiting for they ride after school yesterday,’ she said. ‘Both of ’em lookin’ a little floopy, Lou.’

      The only replies that came to mind were defensively self-serving and useless, and I didn’t respond. Knowing Mouncey would have used one of the tac frequencies to talk to somebody on Wayne’s crew as she was bringing the car around, I said, ‘Get anything at all from out there?’

      ‘Uniform name Hardy catch it and buzz Wayne,’ she said. ‘Call from a pre-pay, sound like a white lady, most likely local, but wouldn’t give ’em no name. Crime Scene up there a half-hour now. It that field across the interstate, west side the tracks.’

      I visualised the area, which I remembered as being mostly deserted, and started pawing around in my pockets in search of camphor.

      Noticing this, Mouncey said, ‘Told me this a fresh one, Lou.’

      I stopped pawing and said, ‘Any civilians at the scene when Wayne got there?’

      ‘’Bout a bo-zillion of ’em, way he carryin’ on. Man just cain’t handle people jackin’ with his clues. I told ’em leave ev’thing like it is till we get there and e’body stay sharp cause the Man on his way.’

      ‘Why the hell’d you do that?’

      ‘Keep they sphincters tight,’ she said. ‘Discipline crucial, got a outfit like this one.’

      Humming a tune from ‘More Than A Woman’, she swung left through the red light at Hancock, setting off a massive chorus of horns and squealing brakes, made a hard right under the trestle and took Springer north between the lake and the wooded railroad right-of-way to the zigzag below the double bridges of the expressway.

      Coming out from under the vaulted concrete, we rounded the curve under a high billboard and saw what looked like every patrol car, fire truck and EMT unit in town parked at random angles along a quarter of a mile of the access road shoulder and out across the field wherever the ground was solid enough, their red and blue roof lights twinkling.

      ‘Be a good time to stick up the town,’ Mouncey observed. ‘Protectors and servers all out here gawkin’.’

      We rolled to a stop next to an Arkansas-side pumper and Wayne’s Crime Scene bus, and I climbed out. A hundred yards away at the edge of the pines and assorted oaks on the low bluff above the tracks several dozen uniforms along with city councilmen, courthouse civilians, off-duty fire-fighters and EMTs – basically everybody in town who had a scanner – were milling around and trying to look involved. Seeing Dwight Hazen among them surprised me a little, but I didn’t take time to analyse the feeling. Outside the yellow tape the media people, bristling with cameras, microphone booms and lights, stood around in knots and cliques looking restless and surly.

      They swarmed me as I bent to duck under the tape, video cams, flashing still cameras and microphones converging a few inches in front of my nose, all of them demanding information and comment. Sticking with the rule that when you know nothing, that’s what you should say, I tried to look reasonable and trustworthy but kept my mouth shut.

      The temperature felt like forty or so by now, with no wind to speak of, the rain still fairly light but coming steadily. Low streamers of mist drifted over the uneven yellow and brown weed-fields surrounding the site, almost obscuring an abandoned-looking storage warehouse a quarter of a mile to the west, leaching the colour and depth from the mixed hardwood and pine woodlands to the north and giving them the look of an old oil painting. If you didn’t know about the country club and the upscale suburbs beyond the trees you might think the scene was completely rural, but we were actually almost half a mile inside the city limits.

      As we worked our way up the slope toward the gathering under the trees, Mouncey picking her way along behind me like a deer, trying to keep the mud off her lime-green platforms, I caught sight of Wayne, suited out in white Tyvek, nitrile gloves and a surgical cap. He saw my wave, broke away from the group and came over to meet us. He was a tall, slightly awkward, middle-aged, east Texas country boy with a strawberry-blond moustache, wire-rimmed glasses and a flash-mounted Nikon hanging from a strap around his neck, like everybody else on his crew. To him the proposition that you could overspend on photography gear, or that there was any such thing as too many pictures, would have been nothing but crazy talk.

      ‘Howdy, M. Howdy, Lou,’ he said, a drop of rain hanging from the tip of his nose. Stripping off one surgical glove, he stuck out his big hand and we all shook. ‘Y’all ready to join the workin’ stiffs?’ He tried with no success to kick some of the clingy red clay off the surgical booties covering his size-thirteen Noconas.

      I took the gloves he handed me, pulled them on and looked around at all the people who thought Do Not Cross applied to everybody but them. Hazen and a younger man who looked like a staff gofer or maybe an intern of some kind were working their way toward us, Hazen locked in on me with a grim, concerned expression, the rain plastering a couple of spitcurls

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