City of Dark Corners Jon Talton (heaven official's blessing novel english TXT) đ
- Author: Jon Talton
Book online «City of Dark Corners Jon Talton (heaven official's blessing novel english TXT) đ». Author Jon Talton
Those boom years now seemed like a lifetime away, only the elegant art deco structures and inviting neon remaining. The globes of the streetlights resembled collections of full moons orbiting hidden planets. A light rain had fallen, and the pavement reflected the luminescence. The unique pleasing smell of wet desert was in the air.
âRemember when we went to church in the little brick building down at Monroe?â Don said. âNow itâs gone, and theyâre talking about merging our M.E. South with the northern church. Our Confederate forebears wouldnât be pleased.â
He pulled out a Lucky Strike and offered me one. He lit us both.
âI canât believe youâre still singing there,â he mused. âYou have a beautiful voice and all, but how could you believe in God after all we saw in Europe, and then the flu? Millions and millions dead. What kind of God would let that happen? No God Iâd want anything to do with.â
I tried to conceal my sigh. âHumans caused the war, not God, who gave us free will. And the good guys won the war.â I was instantly sorry I had taken his bait.
âYou think so?â he said. âThe Versailles Treaty that forced the Germans to accept total responsibility for starting the Great War? You can count on this, little brother, it only set up a twenty-year armistice, and another war will come. My boys could be fighting the Germans again. Wait and see. I sure as hell hope not. We should have stayed neutral in the big one, and we should stay neutral next time. These are Europeâs quarrels. Let them sort it out. How did Wilsonâs grand plans as savior of the world turn out? Badly. What an arrogant asshole.â
He said all this in a lazy Western drawl that dampened the anger behind the words. It helped Don get away with plenty of abuse. His voice was part of his charisma, and a dangerous weapon when he was a detective interrogating a suspect.
âHowâs Mary?â
He let out a long plume of blue smoke. âBigger bitch than ever. Bad marriage getting worse.â
âSheâs a nice woman, and things might get better if you tried. You have two young sons to think about, Don. If you didnât go to Chinatown for the dream waxâŠâ
Don smiled. âClean Gene, Clean Gene, Clean Gene Hammons,â he singsonged. âNot very Christian of you to be so judgmental.â
âI care about you.â
âSpare me. You just have different vices. Anyway, Iâm not using opium anymore.â
I raised an eyebrow.
He broke a wide smile. âCocaine is better.â He held up a hand. âGene, I need it because I hurt, and use it only occasionally, you bastard. I was wounded, shrapnelâs still inside me. Iâm no hophead. And, by the way, Iâm still on the police force, while youâre trying to make ends meet as a peeper, sneaking around to catch cheating husbands. And in the middle of the Great Depression. What a shit job, Mr. Perfect.â
I didnât take those kinds of cases. But I said, âThen Iâm not so perfect, am I?â
But he wouldnât let up. âGoing to church doesnât give you a right to judge me, Clean Gene.â
âIâm not judging you.â But I was starting to get sore.
He tossed the nail away and watched it roll like a sparkler across the wet sidewalk. âIâll never figure you out. You were the best detective we had.â That was an astonishing admission by my brother.
He continued: âYou rose quick and caught the University Park Strangler. Hell, you could have become chief someday. McGrath loved youâŠâ That would be chief of detectives John J. McGrath, officially a captain. âBut you fell in love with Winnie Ruth Judd when you and the sheriff brought her back from Los Angeles. You should have stuck with Amelia Earhart.â
âI didnât fall in love with her. The brass shoved a shoddy conclusion on us and withheld evidence.â
âSo pure, Clean Gene. You pulled the pin to save your precious integrity. You think she was innocent?â
âThe evidence was consistent with her claim of self-defense. And thereâs no way she had the strength to dismember two women, put them in trunks, and take them to the train station. Sheâs five-five and a hundred-ten pounds. âHappy Jackâ Halloran helped her. You know that. But the evidence that would have implicated him was never introduced.â
âJust an innocent woman with those gorgeous blue eyes and auburn hair.â
âI donât know if she was innocent. But the evidenceâremember evidence, Don?âthe evidence was not consistent with premeditated murder or her acting alone. My best guess is that sheâs a little crazy, she was pressured into a hasty confession, and Halloran has powerful friends.â
âHe was indicted. His trial is coming up.â
âYou know the fix is in.â
âAnd your testimony wasnât introduced in Ruthâs trial. Poor Clean Gene.â
I felt my face flush. âI wasnât allowed to testify, Dirty Don, even though I was the first detective on the scene. And I didnât pull the pin. I was laid off, remember? Budget cuts, they said. Four patrolmen and one detective were cut loose.â
He smiled, unflappable. âYou wouldnât have been the one detective if youâd been willing to go along. McGrath really tried to save you.â
A couple walked by, arm in arm. After they passed, Don said, âYou were always stubborn. The first rule of life is to get along you have to go along.â
âSpare me the philosophy.â
Of course, he wouldnât.
âAll you had to do was keep your head down, do the job your bosses asked you to do, and youâd still be on the Hat Squad,â
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