This story is the sixth in the timeline of thirteen Max Pemberton detective stories. You're encouraged to read the stories preceding this one to give you additional background, though this story can stand on its own.
Many thanks to migbird for acting as my muse on this journey.
Here's the chronological breakdown of Max's stories:
Maelstrom
Deception
Blindsided
Jackknifed
Tailspin
Crash Landing
Cold Steel (although in the middle of the series, this story was written first, followed by Hot Steel)
Hot Steel
Pink Ice
Betrayal
Loss of Innocence
Revenge is Best Served Cold
To Hell ... And Back
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, merchandise, companies, events and incidents are either the products of the author's imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental. All characters in sexual situations are 18 years or older.
Chapter One
The Sky is Falling
"Wait!" my partner Lesley called out to me as she chased me. "Don't do this Max!" she shouted at the top of her lungs. Her pleas were falling on deaf ears.
We had been on a routine patrol in the commercial district of Cincinnati's notorious West End. Shoppers teemed the busy thoroughfare, with its collection of cut-price shops and fast food restaurants. I had bolted out of our cruiser and was running flat out after Minh Tran, who I not so affectionately called "Mr. Tattoo." Minh was a henchman of DaVanna Caruso, who was shaking down my best friend, Maddy Bailey, for money, and accidentally (or purposely) shoved her down a flight of stairs, breaking her neck and killing her. Minh was casually strolling down the sidewalk when I spotted him. I barked to Lesley to pull over and make an emergency stop.
He was a burly guy with a pockmarked face and a colorful tattoo of a dragon wrapped around his right forearm. We'd tangled twice before, once with him beating the shit out of me and the other with me giving him a paralyzing swift kick to the balls. He was well aware of my vendetta against him and was huffing and puffing down the street, knocking people out of the way like bowling pins. I followed in his wake, eventually catching up to him after chasing him for a block. Lesley was sprinting to try to catch me.
I tackled him in front of a hardware store, with us both crashing to the pavement. He took the brunt of the fall, getting a nasty road rash on his face. We knocked over a display of garden shovels and one fell within my reach. I grabbed the handle near the business end of the spade and was about to smash the back of his head in. Luckily, Lesley grabbed my arm before I could finish him off.
"Let me go!" I bellowed at her, blinded by rage. I'd forgotten I was a police officer. I was only thinking about exacting revenge for my best friend's death. Lesley put me in a headlock and bulldogged me off Minh.
"Max, you're going to kill him! Max!!" she hollered, trying to jar me to my senses.
I was flush with adrenaline and had murder in my eyes. I raised my hand to hit Lesley with the shovel before I knew what I was doing. Then my mind cleared and I realized I was about to make a terrible mistake. I dropped the shovel and heard the metal clang on the concrete as I slumped to the sidewalk, exhausted. Minh was groaning and struggling to get to his feet. I pulled my nightstick out of its holder and whacked him in his midsection as a parting gift.
"Ohhhh," he moaned. I think I cracked at least one of his ribs. He clutched his side and labored to get to his feet. Gawkers had gathered around us, some with phones recording the incident.
"Let him go," said Lesley in a calm voice. "We'll get him the right way, not like this."
Thank God Lesley kept her cool and was a fast runner. She saved me from a long prison sentence. I was still breathing fast as she lifted me to my feet.
"C'mon Max," she told me. "Let's go get a cup of coffee."
* * *
My mind was racing as Lesley drove us to Happy Donut, a West End institution, and our usual first stop in the morning. It was almost noon, and the usually bustling shop was empty. One of the owners, Binh, who was affectionately known as Bea, was making a fresh pot of coffee while her husband Nguyen leaned against a faded pink Formica countertop reading a Vietnamese newspaper.
I didn't give my usual cheery greeting as we sat down at a small round table.
"Coffee please Bea," Lesley said to her.
Nguyen lowered his newspaper to see who had come in, and then raised it back up when he recognized our faces.
Bea came over with the freshly brewed pot and two cups. She glanced at me before speaking to Lesley.
"Max no look so good," she said to my partner, shaking her head.
"No, she doesn't," said Lesley. "She needs to settle down."
Bea took my hand in hers. "So sorry about your friend Maddy."
"Thanks Bea," I said. The familiar surroundings and Bea's tender words helped my blood pressure drop to normal.
"You good person Max. You get past this," she assured me in a soothing voice.
"I don't know Bea," I said forlornly. "I'm not sure I'll ever get past it." Minh was forgotten and the sense of loss I had been feeling since Maddy died came front of mind.
I took a sip of the piping hot coffee. It warmed my aching heart.
"Max, we'll get through this together," said Lesley. "Just like you helped me."
I'd helped Lesley kick a nasty Oxy addiction she picked up after she was shot in the line of duty. It did me good to know she had my back.
We took our time finishing our coffee. By the time we left I'd calmed down. Lesley knew how to handle me.
"C'mon partner," she said to me. "We'll sign you out at the station and then I'll take you home."
* * *
"Home" was room 204 of the Royal Palms Motel. There was nothing "Royal" about the place and there was nary a palm tree on the premises, except one in neon on the gaudy sign in front. It was a dump located in the heart of the West End. My neighbors were prostitutes and drug addicts.
Even though I was down, Lesley couldn't resist taking another run at moving me out of the sleazy motel.
"Please Max," she said as we pulled into the parking lot. "Let me help find you another place."
"I like it here," I said, like a broken record.
"You're living like a bum."
"I am a bum," I said. "I belong here. I'm with my people."
"Fine, fine," she said, disgusted. "I'm not going to ask you again."
"Please don't," I said. My pixie cute blonde partner could be a nag, but her heart was in the right place.
She motioned to the passenger door.
"If you're going to be in one of these moods I think it's time for you to leave."
I was in one of those moods. I left without us exchanging another word.
* * *
I stewed in my small motel room for the afternoon, eating junk food, watching
Seinfeld
re-runs, and generally feeling sorry for myself. There was still a veil of sadness hanging over me from Maddy's untimely death. Maddy was my best friend. She was murdered during an attempt to extort money from her. I still couldn't believe she was dead. The person who blackmailed Maddy, DaVanna Caruso, ostensibly committed suicide, but I knew it was Lily Chao who engineered her death. Lily was DaVanna's lover, but also controlled the drug trade in the West End. DaVanna's unhinged behavior was attracting too much unwanted attention and had become a liability who needed to be taken off the books. Lily was a tidy bookkeeper.
As a chronic drinker, I tried to dissuade myself from visiting the local liquor store to quell the pain I was feeling, but I lost the argument. It was getting dark outside, and the darkness reminded that I was alone, truly alone.
I drove my trusty Honda Civic to the liquor store, a sad looking concrete block structure painted white, with an oversized neon "LIQUOR" sign in the front window that served as a beacon in the night to lushes like me. My good buddy Nigel was manning the back counter when I walked in. He was a transplanted Brit I'd gotten hooked on baseball and was diligently watching the beginning of a night game in Atlanta. The Reds were on an uncharacteristic hot streak, and Nigel was fully invested in the team.
"What's the score?" I asked him, more to make small talk then out of interest. Baseball and everything else had lost its luster after Maddy died. He had a small monitor on the counter. His eyeballs never left the screen.
"2-0 Reds, top of the second," he answered. "Brandon Phillips is up and they have runners on second and third."
"Selling liquor these days, or just dispensing baseball updates?" I asked him, eager to get my drink on.
He looked up at me. "It's your fault for introducing me to American baseball. Now I can't stop watching it."
"You know more about the Reds than I do," I said.
"So the usual flavored vodka rubbish?" he asked me.
"Uh huh," I said. I thought my taste buds had died, so it didn't matter what I drank. The destination was all that mattered, which was a drunken stupor.
"I'm amazed you drink this crap on a consistent basis," he said, bagging up two bottles of coffee flavored vodka.
"You quite the salesman, Nigel," I quipped.
"I don't have to be with you. You'll drink anything."
"True."
He rang it up. I gave him a credit card and he gave me the bag and then the receipt.
"Seems like on a police detective's salary you'd be able to afford a better quality beverage," he mused.
"I'm saving for my Ferrari. I've only got another $170,000 to go."
He laughed. "Max, you crack me up."
* * *
Back to the Royal Palms with two bottles in hand. It's all I cared about. Somebody had parked in my usual spot by the pool. I grumbled and found another space nearby. A man and a woman were having a spirited argument not far from me by the motel's large neon sign. I recognized the woman, Sharon, a local prostitute, which meant the man she was arguing with was one of her "customers." I watched as the man grabbed a handful of Sharon's bottle blonde hair.
Sharon had helped me bust Bobby Bickel. Bobby was the supervisor over my girlfriend (soon to be ex?) Sky, who was a member of his Homicide squad. Bobby put his fat, stubby fingers in Sky's honeypot, which necessitated me making Bobby very (very) sorry he laid hands on her. Sharon and one of her very young looking buddies (with a fake ID saying she was fourteen) made Bobby think he was having sex with a minor. Bobby ended up taking an early retirement and getting the fuck out of Dodge [ed. note, see Tailspin].
I didn't like seeing men abusing women, and I owed Sharon.
"Hey . . . fucknuts . . . hands off," I yelled at the man. They were about ten feet from me, but I was closing quickly on them.
He still had hold of Sharon's hair when he yelled "Fuck off bitch!" to me.