“Someone needs to come take me in,” says Sofia’s voice, then pauses and I can hear the whiskey clunk in the neck of a bottle as she swigs it down. “I attacked a lady with a hammer. Can you believe that? I was a pageant queen. Now I’m getting hammered and hammering people.” A laughing jag then and more whiskey. “It’s not safe being me anymore. I need to be locked away. You don’t believe me? What about this? I killed my asshole husband. Oh yeah, I killed Carmine with his own pistol. Kept shooting till there was nothing left in the gun. I loved that man and he treated me worse than a dog. I shot my husband and I should go to prison. Can’t be any worse than where I am now.”
Ronnie whistles. This is incriminating stuff and it’s not over yet.
“No?” continues Sofia. “Forget prison. You guys come down here, you better be ready to shoot me. I’ve got weapons. And anthrax, I have a bag of that. So shoot first and ask questions later. I am a danger to the public and I need to be dead. You guys listening? I’ll be a-waiting.”
And that is the end.
Anthrax? Bollocks.
I decide to be brazen. “Who’s that supposed to be?”
All Ronelle Deacon can do is laugh and I don’t blame her. “Yeah. Whatever, Dan. Just be on your way. I’ve got business here.”
“It isn’t Sofia, if that’s what you think.”
Ronelle shakes out her arms, which is a well-known precursor to police brutality.
“I knew who it was right away, Dan. So I checked into Carmine Delano. A nasty piece of work, small-time pusher and wannabe pimp. Turns out he beat the crap out of your lady friend for years before taking off. They found his car over in Wildwood by the pier. A little blood but nothing too suspicious. Everyone thought Carmine had run off with one of his various lady friends. Now, it’s looking like your sweet Sofia filled him full of lead, washed down the car and dumped him in the ocean. Now I gotta take her in, and run DNA on all the bloaters from around that time. I am presuming the anthrax comment was bullshit.”
My head is spinning. What the hell happened to Deadwood? That was only two minutes ago?
I want to protect Sofia but I don’t know what to do. This problem cannot be coaxed out of existence with fists or snappy one-liners.
Unless we go on the run. I could truss up Ronnie and make a break for Canada.
Deacon reads the thought in my eyes.
“Oh no you ain’t thinking about running,” she says, incredulous. “You think I came here alone after the anthrax thing? There are a couple of guys checking their safeties outside. The only reason Homeland ain’t up in here is because I assured them that your woman is crazy.”
“Sofia is not crazy!” I mutter. “She has issues and we’re working through them.”
“Issues? Are you listening to yourself, Dan? You sound like a goddamn commercial for Valium or some shit. You gonna read me the side effects now? No, let me tell you. The side effects of dating Sofia Delano may include having to pretend you see shit that ain’t there, watching her assault police officers and finding out that loony tune Mrs. Delano busted half a dozen caps in her shitbag husband’s ass.” Ronelle claps her hands, delighted with her little speech.
“You got a mean side,” I tell her like a spurned lover. “I knew you were tough, Ronnie, and straight as an arrow. But you’re wringing every drop of humiliation outta this arrest. Were you actually hoping I’d be here?”
She has the grace to blush a little. “Just get out of my way, Dan. I only got one set of cuffs on me or I’d book you for obstruction.”
A man does stupid things for love, so I say: “I ain’t obstructing you. Not yet.”
Ronnie raises her eyebrows. “Are you serious? You wanna to get into it for a nutcase?”
My blood is up now so the voice of reason in my head is barely a mosquito whine.
“Yeah, I wanna get into it. And Sofia is not a nutcase.”
And, as if on cue, I hear her small voice behind me. Every word saturated with despair.
“Yes, Daniel. I am. I’m a freaking nutcase.”
Sofia came up behind me in bed socks so I didn’t hear a thing. Was a time a mouse couldn’t surprise me but now I’m getting old and my senses are as ragged as my emotions.
“No. No, darlin’. You say things you don’t mean. You remember things that didn’t happen, but it’s nothing we can’t fix.”
Looking at her standing there with every spark of the girl she used to be drained out of her by that monster Carmine I realize that I believe maybe 60 percent that she is innocent and the other 40 percent does not give a shit.
Whatever it takes. This woman will be happy.
“I’m here, Sofia,” I say, scooping her into my arms, and she seems smaller that she did minutes ago. There’s a radical weight-loss plan: Develop psychoses and homicidal tendencies and watch those pounds melt away.
“We’ll get through this,” I say. “I ain’t leaving.”
“That’s touching,” says Ronnie, in the room now, thumb hooked through the cuffs on her belt.
I shoot her a poisonous glare. “You enjoying this as much as you’d hoped, Detective?”
Ronelle scowls. “No, I ain’t, Daniel. I’m closing a cold case here, which oughta be a feather in my cap, and you’re making me feel like I shot this Carmine douche myself. Don’t you know that gloating is one of the perks in this job?”
I hold Sofia tighter. “Sorry to piss on your glory day, but this is a person we’re talking about.”
Sofia pats my chest. “Carmine is a person too. If I did something to him, something terrible, then I should answer for it.”
I don’t see any way that Sofia is not going to Police Plaza for questioning. I hold up a finger to Ronnie.
“Just gimme a second, okay?”
“I’ll give you ten, killjoy. Then I’m calling for assistance.”
Sofia pulls away from me. “You gotta let me go, Dan.”
I grip her shoulders, making full eye contact. “Okay, darlin’. They’re going to put you in a cruiser and take you downtown for questioning. What they’re really doing is fishing because they got nothing but a phone call made by a drunken, bipolar woman who doesn’t remember a thing about it. Don’t say a word until I get a lawyer down there and even then, your story is you don’t remember. Got it?”
“I don’t remember,” says Sofia, then gives herself away by attempting a brave smile.
My heart sinks. Sofia will say whatever I tell her until the interview room door clangs behind her, then she will say what the depression tells her. I feel my extremities tingle and a blackness eats at the edges of my vision, and for a second I understand Sofia’s despair.
“It’s okay, baby,” she says, reaching up to stroke my cheek. “It’s better this way.”
Ronnie taps her cuffs and I know my time is up. If I don’t release Sofia right now the restraints are coming out and the backup will rush the stairwell.
“Just hold on for me, darlin’,” I tell her, as close to tears as I’ve been for a while. “Hold on until I get there.”
“I will, Dan,” she says and I know it’s all over.
She would sign a contract with Satan now if it meant earning herself the punishment her disorder thinks she deserves.
Ronnie has Sofia by the wrists and is gently pulling her from me when I register a figure at the door, and my Celtic sixth sense of doom informs me that things are about to get worse.
How the hell could things get worse?
The guy in the doorway looks like he had the crap beaten out of him by monkeys. His hair is all up on one side, and styled into a perfect quiff on the other. He’s wearing a neon-blue suit with honest to god shoulder pads that are either retro or way ahead of the fashion curve, and his fleshy upper lip is adorned by a Prince moustache that ripples like a worm in time to his heavy breathing. Physically, he doesn’t appear to pose much of a threat unless he clamps himself onto my face and smothers me with his beer gut, but for some reason the sight of this greasy character extinguishes the last spark of hope that I was nurturing that this day might turn out okay.