The old Smith & Wesson 19 had sat in my bottom desk drawer for almost twenty years. I did carry it for a couple of years after I got it from Walt's widow. That was before I decided I really didn't need to have an extra two pounds hanging from my shoulder.
The blue on the front sight was completely gone now and every sharp edge and a couple places on the cylinder were steel-colored instead of the deep blue it had once been. That's what all those years of sitting in a holster does to any blued gun. I was cleaning it and getting ready to wear it again, at least until I got finished with this job.
Walt was a cop I'd admired from the time I was about ten. He patrolled the neighborhood where I grew up, and as long as we behaved ourselves he never hassled us kids. I played with my buddies all over the neighborhood back then, and my parents weren't worried because Walt and the other cops kept the neighborhood safe. All I had to do was be home in time for dinner. Walt would drive by as we were playing catch in the park or riding our bikes, and he'd always yelp the siren on the patrol car and then wave.
I did have one run-in with him when I was fifteen. You know how it is when you're a fifteen year old boy and the testosterone has kicked in. You think you're a real badass and can take on anybody. That "anybody" for me was Sean O'conner.
Sean was as Irish as they come, and had the red hair and a temper to prove it. One Saturday while we were playing basketball in the park, he ran over me and knocked me down. I got up, looked at the scrape on my elbow, and then lit into him with all I had.
It was a pretty even match. Sean was a little taller and heavier, but he was leaving his belly open. He could keep me from getting too close unless he threw a punch at my head. I'd duck that punch and hit him in the gut as hard as I could. I had a bloody nose from a couple of punches he did connect with, but every time I punched him in the gut, he'd double up for a few seconds.
We'd been at it for a couple of minutes when I heard a police siren. Walt squealed the tires when he stopped, then jumped out and ran up to us. Walt was a pretty big guy, and he grabbed us both by the shirt collar and pulled us apart, then shook the living shit out of us until we stopped fighting him. He didn't mince words when he told us we were in trouble.
"What the fuck do you two think you're doing? I oughta haul both your goddammed asses down to the station. What the hell started this anyway?"
We both tried to explain at the same time, but Walt wasn't having any of that. He let go of my collar and then grabbed my by the front of my shirt.
"Did you start this shit like Sean says?"
"Well, he knocked me down."
Walt smiled.
"That's all? He knocked your ass down so you figured you'd knock his ass down too. What if I kick your ass right now? What the fuck would you do?"
Walt didn't wait for me to answer. He just swung his heavy cop shoe and booted me in the ass. Looking back now, he probably didn't kick me that hard, but it felt like it then. He pulled me back up straight and pushed his face so close to mine I could smell the cigars on his breath.
"OK, Harry, I just kicked your ass. You gonna try to kick mine now?"
I don't remember being afraid of Walt when he said that, but I was embarrassed all to hell and I couldn't look him in the face.
"No, Sir."
Walt looked at Sean then and pulled him close enough his nose was almost touching Sean's.
"You run over Harry like he said?"
Sean looked at the ground.
"Yeah, I suppose so, but he was in my way."
Walt shoved me back about ten feet and then yelled at Sean.
"Well, I'm in your fucking way now. Go ahead, try to run over me. Don't grin at me, you little shit. You're bigger than Harry, so you thought you could do whatever you want to him. Well, I'm bigger than you, so let's see how fucking tough you really are."
Sean stopped grinning then. He just looked at Walt, and for a second, I thought he was going to cry.
Walt laughed.
"Not gonna fucking do it, are you, 'cause you know I'll kick your ass so hard you'll be shittin' through your nose."
Walt let go of Sean then and his voice got softer.
"All right, you two banty roosters, listen to me. Fights never solve anything. The loser always wants another shot at the winner, and sometimes that ends up with one of them hurt bad and sometimes one ends up being dead.
"Sean, I know your dad because he has a beer in the same bar I do every Friday night. Harry, I know your dad too. He works down at the courthouse and we've had a few talks while I was waiting to testify in court. They're both proud of their sons, but I know both of them would take a belt to you if I told them what happened here today.
"If you shake hands and apologize to each other, I won't say anything to either of them, but if I even hear of this happening again, I'll haul your asses off to jail and then I'll call your dads to come get you. I'll wait for a couple of hours though, so you can meet some guys in holding who thought they were big and tough until they fucked up bad enough they got caught. When your dads get there, we'll walk down to the morgue so you can see what happens to some of the tough guys who weren't as tough as they thought."
Well, Sean and I shook hands and said we were sorry. Walt got back in his patrol car, but he waited to leave until we started playing basketball again. Sean didn't run over me again, and we never fought about anything from that day on. He ended up buying that same bar a few years ago, and when I stop in for a scotch, he reminds me of that fight. We both have a laugh at how fucking dumb we were back then.
Walt carried the Smith on his ankle for thirty years while he was in uniform, and then for another ten until he had a heart attack. About three years before he passed away, I started my PI business, and once in a while, I'd go over and ask for his advice about something. He was always happy to see me, and he always asked if Sean and I were still friends.
After Walt's funeral, I walked up to Brenda, Walt's widow, and said the usual stuff everybody always says at funerals only I really meant it. She held my hand and smiled.
"Harry, Walt always said you were one of his successes, and he was so proud of that. Come by the house in a few days. He left something he wanted you to have."
Three days later, Brenda handed me the Smith and a box of cartridges.
"Walt told me to give this to you when he died. He thought you might understand why he wanted you to have it."
Well, I did understand, because when I was just starting out, Walt had told me why he carried the Smith on his ankle.
"Back in '66, when I was just a rookie cop, I thought I could talk people into coming with me when I arrested them and usually it worked. Then one day, a guy decided to wrestle with me, and he managed to get my service revolver out of my holster. If my backup hadn't pulled up right then and shot the guy, I'd have been dead.