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Michael Wiley

A Bad Night's Sleep

The third book in the Joe Kozmarski series, 2011

To my family, near and far

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Thank you to Julie and Sam, for reading, rereading, and advising; George and Sally, for teaching me more than a few things along the way; Dave, for making me look better in lights than I might otherwise look; Isaac, Maya, and Elias, for keeping me laughing; Philip and Lukas, for representing and advocating for this, that, and everything better than anyone else; and Toni and Ruth, for making everything right.

Fifteen Illinois law enforcement officers were charged Tuesday in an FBI sting on counts that included accepting cash in exchange for providing armed protection for drug dealing operations in south suburban Chicago.

– The New York Times

ONE

THE SOUTHSHORE CORPORATION OWNED a seven-block chunk of land on the south side of Chicago. If they’d let it sit for twenty years, it would have turned back into the prairie that had stood there a couple of centuries ago. Thirty years and you could’ve put on a coonskin hat and gone deer hunting. But the Southshore Corporation hadn’t let the land sit. Two weeks after the owners signed the final contracts, workers had poured the foundations for a mix of single-unit houses and condo blocks that the corporation was advertising as Southshore Village. The corporation promised to build a small town in the middle of the city. The brochures included a picture of kids playing baseball on a cul-de-sac and another of a middle-aged man and woman sitting on a porch swing. The faces were black, white, brown, and yellow. It was a pretty dream and the Southshore Corporation had the money to make it come true.

I sat in my car on the construction site on a cold November night. The street was packed dirt and clay. Bare bulbs hung from wires strung from poles but the place was mostly dark. Ripped plastic sheets blew through the open windows on the buildings. Three A.M. had come and gone. I cranked the heater and the warm air made me sleepy. I flipped the heater off. Above, the moon shined dully through a thin layer of clouds.

The thefts had started right after the Southshore Corporation began putting up buildings. Tools and building materials disappeared first, then appliances and construction equipment. The corporation had strung a wire-link fence around the site, put up security cameras, and paid for extra police patrols, but the thefts had continued. One night the thieves stole the security cameras. Another, they took thirty thousand dollars’ worth of copper wire from a storage trailer.

Jen Horlarche, the corporate vice president in charge of development, had hired me to camp out at the site and stop the thefts. I figured I would do no better than the security cameras and police patrols and I told her so. I also said, “I don’t do security, not even glamorized.”

She said, “There’s nothing glamorous about this job.”

I looked at her eyes and her smile and said, “I find that hard to believe. Besides, I’ve seen the Southshore brochure.”

“You don’t get to spend time with me,” she said, “and the place won’t look like the brochure for another fourteen months-longer if the thefts don’t stop.”

I said, “I’ve got a seventeen-year-old Buick Skylark with a heater that still works. If that interests you.”

Her smile fell but her eyes still made me think I would like to get to know her better, so I let her write me a check and I put it in the bank and now I sat alone in my cold Skylark, waiting and watching.

When I started to drift to sleep, I shifted into drive and bounced over the dirt until I found an almost completed house with an open garage on a street that dead-ended into three storage trailers. I backed my car into the garage and peered into the night like an animal snug in its burrow. I closed my eyes. Opened them. Closed them.

A car engine woke me, and tires grinding over the dirt and clay. It was still dark. The car neared and I slid low in my seat, wondering if my Skylark was visible from outside. The car slowed and stopped next to the storage trailers.

I laughed. It was a police cruiser making its rounds.

Two cops sat in the car. The driver got out and went to the trailers, rattled the padlocked doors. They were secure. He walked back to the cruiser, pulled out a cell phone, and talked into it for awhile. He hung up and got into the car. The cops sat some more. The night was quiet. They were in no rush.

The other cop got out and went to the trunk, opened it. He removed a pair of bolt cutters and looked up and down the street. He went to the closest trailer.

“Don’t do it,” I mumbled.

He did it. The lock fell to the ground and he swung the trailer door open. Then he went to the other trailers.

His partner got out of the car with a flashlight. He shined it everywhere but at me. He went to the first trailer and looked inside.

More engines approached. More tires rolled over the dirt and clay. Three dark vans pulled behind the patrol car and guys in jeans and jackets climbed out of each. They shook hands with the cops and went to the first trailer. They rolled large spools of wire out of the first and loaded them into the vans.

I fished my cell phone from my jacket. I punched in the number Jen Horlarche gave me when she hired me. Her home number. “Just in case,” she’d said with that smile. It was 3:30 in the morning but this was a just-in-case moment.

She answered the phone on the second ring. A light sleeper. “Yeah?”

I told her who was calling, explained the situation, and asked, “What do you want me to do?”

“Call the police.” Like it was obvious.

“The police are already here.”

“Call the other police,” she said.

“With cops involved on both sides, it’ll be messy,” I said. “No one will be happy about this coming into the open.”

She thought about that for a moment. “Call them,” she said.

I dialed 911. The operator sounded doubtful when I told him what was happening. His supervisor sounded doubtful when I explained again. “No sirens or lights,” I said, “and if you put this on the radio, they’ll be gone before you get here.”

The supervisor said, “You’re telling me to send officers into a situation without radio contact?”

I knew she was worried I was setting up a trap. “Yeah,” I said. “You use the radio and they’ll hear you.”

She asked for my name and identification.

“They’re moving to the second trailer,” I said. They were unloading more spools of wire. Southshore Village was going to go without electricity.

“Name and ID,” she said, like we had all the time in the world.

“Joe Kozmarski,” I said and gave her the nine digits on my private detective’s license.

She never told me if the police were coming without radio but eight minutes later four squad cars rolled around the corner onto the dead-end street. The two lead cars flipped on spotlights and the cold night went brilliant.

The men at the trailer froze.

The four squad cars stopped. A car-mounted bullhorn told the men to raise their hands and step forward into the light.

The uniformed patrolman who’d snipped the locks off the trailers took five steps toward the squad cars, his hands in the air. He moved slow, like he was walking into a fire, but he did as he was told.

The others stayed frozen. Four of them. That meant three more, including the other patrolman, were hiding in the trailers.

The squad cars rolled closer. The bullhorn crackled and told the men again to raise their hands. The amplified voice sounded frightened.

Two of the thieves ran, one onto the dirt lot behind the trailers, one toward a van. The others stayed where they were.