The girl called, “Daddy, I need more soap.”
He turned to her. “In the bucket, sweets. Just go to the bucket.” He came back to Glitsky. “My daughter. She’s not all here.”
Glitsky watched her go to the bucket and squeeze out her sponge, then come back to the car. He took a breath and let it out. “Why I’m here is because you talked to a friend of mine, Dismas Hardy, and said you’d had something to do with Rusty Ingraham in the last couple of weeks. Ingraham’s missing and I wondered if you might have a lead on it, if he said anything to you about where he might go.”
Medina shook his head, as if clearing it. “Hardy said Ingraham was dead.”
“Hardy jumps to conclusions. Something went down where he lives. We found some blood matches his type, but no body. He could be alive, anywhere.”
“Shit,” Medina said.
“Shit what?”
“Shit he’s not dead, that’s what.”
“Well, he might be. We just don’t know. But either way, if you talked to him-”
“I didn’t. I told your friend I didn’t.”
“He said you’d called him.”
Medina shifted on his feet, stared out over Glitsky’s shoulder. Abe waited him out.
Medina turned around and said his daughter’s name. “Melanie.” She stopped cleaning the windshield, obedient. “You wanna get us a couple beers?”
He motioned with his head and went to sit in the shade of the cement steps by the front door. Glitsky followed, glad to get out of the heat. When Melanie came out, Medina patted next to him and she sat down. He popped the tab on a can of Lucky Lager and handed it to Glitsky, did one for himself, giving Melanie a little sip first.
“I never talked to him. You can believe me or not, I don’t care.”
Glitsky drank beer.
“I did call him, but I just hung up. What was the point? What was I gonna say that would make any difference after all this time?”
“Okay…” Glitsky didn’t know where he was going.
“I mean, Ingraham was the wrong target. If I wanted to do something, not feel so goddamn”-he stopped, searching for the right word-“impotent, there’s better fish to fry.”
At Abe’s lack of response, he said, “I’m talking about Treadwell.”
“Who’s Treadwell?”
“Treadwell. The faggot who’s trying to set up Valenti and Raines.”
“Treadwell,” Glitsky repeated. “Is there a connection here I’m missing?”
Medina wiped some sweat off his forehead with the chamois. “The thing with Ingraham, what he did to me, that’s done now. I do my job, take care of Melanie best I can. I mean since Joan left after the… the trouble, it’s been all me. And this, this anger is in me all the time.” The aluminum can made a cracking sound in his hand. “So for a minute there I had a notion to go settle things with Ingraham. That’s all it was. The call.”
“So what about Treadwell?”
Medina’s eyes narrowed to a squint as he brought the beer can up to his mouth. Stalling. “Nothing,” he said. “Treadwell was nothing too.”
“Hector,” Abe said. “You brought up Treadwell. I didn’t.”
Medina squeezed the can again, studied it. “I figured if I talked to Treadwell it might do some good for those cops Valenti and Raines. Ingraham, it was long past the time it could mean anything.”
“So you talked to Treadwell?”
“Yeah.”
“About Raines and Valenti?”
He nodded. “Tried to talk him out of it. Of his charges of police brutality, gay-bashing.”
“And?”
“And nothing,” Medina said. “Nothing. He listened to me, about what it’s like being accused of something crazy, how you never get out from under it. Then he said fuck you, good-bye.”
Glitsky looked at Melanie, watched a kid ride by on a skateboard, tried to figure what he was missing here. “So why were you afraid Treadwell had talked? When I called you, you said, ‘So the faggot told.’ Remember? What did that mean?”
“I don’t know. I guess I been afraid he’d accuse me of something again-trespass, I don’t know. Something. It’s his style. And I’m the right guy to do it to. People are lined up to believe bad shit about me.”
Glitsky gave it a moment, finishing his beer. “But nothing about Ingraham?”
“I never said a word to him and that’s God’s truth.”
Glitsky stood up, stretched out his back. “You know, Hector,” he said, “you’ve been in this business so you know. There’s a feeling you get when people aren’t telling you everything. They may not be lying exactly, but there’s something else happening.”
“I never talked to him!”
Melanie jumped next to her father. He patted her leg and she leaned into him, staring now at Glitsky.
“That’s what you said. For the record, though, do you remember where you were Wednesday night, three days ago?”
Medina didn’t even have to think. Knew right off. “I worked a double shift that day, eight to four, four to midnight. It’s in the log.”
Glitsky nodded. “I’m sure it is.”
Medina patted his daughter again, this time on the head. “Let’s do the tires next, honey,” he said. She jumped up and ran over to the bucket. “Look, I got this kid to raise. That’s what I do. I lead a quiet life, keep out of trouble.”
“But you went to Treadwell’s.”
Medina looked up at the white sky and drained his beer. “Hey, sometimes you gotta do something for your soul.” He gestured around the hopeless plot. “You think this is enough?”
Abe took it in, nodded, and thanked Hector for his time.
Back on the freeway Glitsky opened his car windows and let the wind blow over him. Hector Medina talking about the good of his soul rang as true as ex-Interior Secretary Watt claiming a deep and abiding concern for the environment. And if talking to Treadwell was good for his soul, worth threatening the quiet life he had with his daughter, how much more satisfying would it be to have aced Rusty Ingraham? Now that would have been real good for the soul.
Of course the log said he had worked a double shift on Wednesday, so he had an alibi, but alibis were made to be broken. His name might be in the log, but Glitsky wondered if anybody had actually seen him. And even if they had, it wasn’t a far stretch to imagine that a guy like Medina knew people who did bad things-either returning favors or for cash up front.
So now he had two out of three suspects with a reason to dust Ingraham. If only he could count on the fact of Rusty’s death. And maybe Hardy would find something…
He guessed it all came down to the lab. If there were prints or hairs or fibers on the barge that belonged to Ray Weir, he’d have probable cause and go get the guy. On the other hand, what if they found evidence that Baker or Medina had been there? Then, even without a body, Glitsky had to admit that things started to look bad for Rusty Ingraham. And maybe for Hardy too.
When he had been released from prison, Louis Baker was given his two hundred dollars gate money. Buying the paint for Mama’s place, the windows, some food, had run him $161.19 all told. And he’d given the Mama a ten for the tennis shoes. The bus ride home, this and that, had come to another ten, give or take some change, and breakfast this morning had been three and a half.
So he was down to fifteen bucks. And no place to stay, and still no gun.
It was different than it had been before he was sent down. Every pawnshop had bars on the windows now. He could see the thin tape around all the doors and windows with the alarm trip-wires, and although he’d always been able to pick a lock, he had never really been much of a B and E man. The technology made him cautious.
But the fact was he needed money, and he needed a weapon. He was not about to be brought back in, even for questioning. If they tried to take him back down, he’d take some of them with him. He was thinking about the wardens, about Ingraham, about Hardy, about all the people who’d done it to him. There might even be something fun about shooting it out, going out in a blaze. Quick and easy. And it sure wasn’t shaping up that he was going to have much of a life on the outside.