Home > The Poet (Jack McEvoy #1)(69)

The Poet (Jack McEvoy #1)(69)
Author: Michael Connelly

Glimmering like a cache of diamonds against the curb was a pile of shattered safety glass. She toed her shoe through the glass stones.


The trailer park’s manager was already about three shots into the day when we opened the door and stepped into the cramped space advertised outside as an office. It was clear the place was also the man’s home. He was sitting in a green corduroy La-Z-Boy chair with the feet extension up. Its sides were scarred by cat scratches but it was still the nicest piece of furniture he had. Other than the television. That was a new-looking Panasonic with a built-in VCR. He was watching a home-shopping show and it took him a long time to pull his eyes off the tube to have a look at us. The device being sold sliced and chopped vegetables without all the mess and setup time of a food processor.

“You the manager?” Rachel asked.

“That should be obvious, shouldn’t it, Officer?”

A wise guy, I thought. He was about sixty and he wore green fatigues and a white sleeveless T-shirt with burn holes on the chest through which a crop of gray chest hair protruded. He was balding and had a drinker’s red face. He was white, the only white person I had seen so far in the park.

“It’s Agent,” she said, showing him the inside of her badge wallet.

“FBI? What’s the G care about a little car break-in? See, I read a lot. I know you people call yourselves the G. I like that.”

Rachel looked at me and Thompson and then back at the man. I felt the small tingling of anxiousness.

“How do you know about the car break-in?” Rachel asked.

“I seen you out there. I got eyes. You was lookin’ at the glass. I swept it up into a pile. Street cleaners only come ’round here maybe once a month. More in the summer when it’s dusty out.”

“No. I mean, how did you even know there was a car burglary?”

“ ’Cause I sleep back there in the back room. I heard ’em break the window. I saw them messing about inside that car.”

“When was this?”

“Let’s see, that’d be Thursday last. I was wondering when the guy’d report it. But I didn’t think no FBI agent would be coming out. How ’bout you two, you with the G, too?”

“Never mind that, Mr.—what is your name, sir?”

“Adkins.”

“Okay, Mr. Adkins, do you know whose car got broken into?”

“Nope, never saw him. I just heard the window and saw the kids.”

“What about a plate?”

“Nope.”

“You didn’t call the police?”

“Don’t have no phone. I could see Thibedoux’s over to lot three but it was the middle of the night and I knew those cops wouldn’t come running on a car rob’ry. Not here. They got too much to do.”

“So you never at any point saw the owner of the car and he never knocked on the door to see if maybe you heard the break-in or saw anybody?”

“That’s right.”

“What about the kids who broke in?” Thompson asked, robbing Rachel of the payoff question. “You know them, Mr. Atkins?”

“Adkins. With a D, no T, Mr. G.”

Adkins laughed at his command of the alphabet.

“Mr. Adkins,” Thompson said, correcting himself. “Well, do you?”

“Do I what?”

“Know who the kids were.”

“No, I don’t know who they were.”

His eyes strayed past us to the television. On the program they were now selling a glove with small rubber bristles on the palm for grooming pets.

“I know what else you could use that for,” Adkins said. He made a masturbation motion with his hand and winked and smiled at Thompson. “That’s what they’re really selling that for, you know.”

Rachel stepped over to the TV and turned it off. Adkins didn’t protest. She straightened up and looked at him.

“We’re investigating the murder of a police officer. We’d like your attention. We have reason to believe the car you saw burglarized belonged to a suspect. We are not interested in prosecuting the boys who broke into the car, but we need to speak to them. You were lying just then, Mr. Adkins. I saw it in your eyes. The boys came from this park.”

“No, I—”

“Let me finish. Yes, you were lying to us. But we’re going to give you another chance. You can tell us the truth now or we’ll go back and get more agents and police and we’ll go through this dump you call a trailer park like an army laying siege. You think we’ll find any stolen property in those tin cans? You think we might run across some people wanted on warrant? How about some illegals? What about safety code violations? We passed one back there, I saw the extension cord going out the door into the shed. They’ve got somebody living in there, don’t they? And I bet you and your employer charge extra for that. Or maybe just you do. What’s your employer going to say when he finds out? What’s he going to say when the receivables go down because the people who are supposed to be paying you rent cannot because they’ve been deported or they’re in lock-up on warrant holds for not paying child support? What about you, Mr. Ad-kins? You want me to run the serial number off that television on the computer?”

“The TV’s mine. Bought it fair and square. Know what you are, FBI lady? Fucking Bitch Investigator.”

Rachel ignored the comment, though I thought Thompson turned away to hide a smile.

“Fair and square from who?”

“Never mind. It was those Tyrell brothers, okay? They’re the ones what robbed that car. Now if they come in here and beat the shit outta me, I’m suing you. Got that?”


With directions from Adkins we arrived at a trailer four units in from the main entrance. Word had spread that the law was in the park. There were more people on stoops and sitting on the outdoor couches. When we got to Number 14, the Tyrell brothers were waiting for us.

They were sitting on an old glider beneath a blue canvas awning extending from the side of a double-wide trailer. Next to the door of the trailer were a washer and dryer set beneath a blue canvas cover to keep the rain off. The two brothers were teenagers, maybe a year apart and of mixed race, black and white. Rachel stepped to the edge of the shade provided by the awning. Thompson took a spot about five feet to her left.

“Guys,” Rachel said and got no response. “Your mother home?”

“Nah, she not, Officer,” the older one said.

He looked at the brother with slow eyes. The brother started rocking the glider back and forth with his leg.

“You know,” Rachel said, “we know you’re smart. We don’t want any trouble with you. Don’t want to give you any trouble. We promised Mr. Adkins that when we went in there to ask where your trailer was.”

“Adkins, shit,” the younger one said.

“We’re here about the car that was parked out on the road last week.”

“Didn’t see it.”

“No, we didn’t see it.”

Rachel walked over close to the older one and bent down to talk directly into his ear.

“Come on now,” she said softly. “This is one of those times your mother told you about. Think now. Use your head. Remember what she told you. You don’t want trouble for her or for yourselves. You want us to go away and leave you alone. And there’s only one way we’re going to do that.”

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)
» The War of Two Queens (Blood and Ash #4)