Текст книги "The Guilty"
Автор книги: Sean Slater
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Eighteen
The bomber stood cloaked in the shadows of the bridge overpass on the Granville Island docks and waited for the toymaker to arrive. She would be there soon. Keisha Williams was always on time. Like clockwork.
Today it would be her undoing.
The thought of it made the bomber shiver with anticipation. Despite the growing heat of the day, a coldness filled him – one that came from somewhere deep within. He understood why he felt this way, even if he could not put it into words. The past had made it this way. Made him this way. Killed any warmth left inside of him and scrambled his mind like a grey-matter omelette.
Like always, he tried not to think of it. He closed his eyes. Felt the humid wind sweep in off the False Creek waterways. Smelled the reek sourness of the salt water and seaweed and—
The radio crackled at his side:
‘The target’s en route. Five minutes until arrival.’
He opened his eyes, squinting against the pale white sun. He pressed his radio mike. ‘Copy. Five minutes until arrival.’
Five minutes. It seemed an eternity.
Dressed in a workman’s suit, he slid the radio into the inner pouch of his orange utility vest. He then lifted the binoculars from his chest and used them to examine the toy shop.
Inside the store, all the toys had been removed from the far shelf and replaced by one wooden duck. It stood there now, a twelve-inch bird, dressed in a blue policeman’s suit with a big red number 5 painted on its chest. In behind it was the bomb; just a small cardboard box containing miscellaneous cell phone parts, a steel pipe, aluminium wiring, explosives, and a power source consisting of nothing more than D-Cell batteries.
It was armed and ready for detonation.
The bomber checked his watch.
Three minutes to go.
The wooden boards of the dock bobbed beneath his boots, making him shift his weight to maintain balance. The action caused the screws in his leg bones to burn – burn like the tension inside of him. There was an anxiety there, an inner swelling difficult to control. More than anything, he wanted some Skoal. Wintergreen. Spearmint. Hell, even Regular would do.
But this was not possible. People noticed a man chewing tobacco.
It would have to wait until after the mission.
He focused in on the Toy Hut. It was a quaint little place. Just a small Swiss-style cottage that sat beside a duck pond and an adjoining playground, one which would be filled with children by noon.
Next door, in the same building but separated by a wall, was a coffee shop. The Ol’ Bean, its wooden sign read. There were people inside. Three of them. And a woman in a patio chair outside with her dog tied up nearby.
Collateral damage.
He watched with a sense of numb acceptance as the toymaker finally came walking down Anderson. She was a big woman, rotund, and black as night. She was dressed in a fuchsia shawl with purple tights – easy to spot.
Target Number 5.
In the bomber’s pocket was the remote detonator. The first button armed the fusing system, and it had already been pressed. The second button triggered the igniter. He kept his finger alongside the trigger as the toymaker approached from the south. She walked past the Ol’ Bean coffee shop, singing a song only she knew.
The moment the target went inside, the bomber left the docks and walked quickly up to Anderson Street. Staring through the toy shop window from across the street, he saw the woman milling about. Preparing for the day like it was just another ordinary Wednesday in July. When she spotted the toy duck in the policeman’s uniform, she paused, and a bewildered look crossed her face. She moved towards it.
And he knew the time had come.
He stepped forward, moving into the middle of the road, and stopped in front of the Toy Hut. Immediately, the radio crackled at his side and Molly’s digitized voice came across the air: ‘What are you doing? You’re too close. You need more distance.’
He ignored the command.
‘Get back.’
He pressed the mike. ‘I need this.’
‘No! You’re too close! Too close—’
The bomber reached down and turned off his radio. Detonator in hand, he took one step closer to the toy shop, swept both his arms out to the sides, tilted back his head, and closed his eyes.
Then he pressed the button.
Click – spark – combustion.
And the entire south side of the toy store exploded in a ball of light and flame and smoke, engulfing him in the process.
Nineteen
Dr Sharise Owens did not show up for work and was still not answering her cell phone. Aside from flagging the woman as a Missing Person, there was little else Striker and Felicia could do on the matter. So they headed for Cambie Street Headquarters to locate the department’s weapons expert Jay Kolt.
Striker was driving over the Granville Street Bridge, passing over the market, when a horrific thrashing sound filled the air and the entire bridge shook. Automatically, he hammered on the brakes and gripped the wheel so tightly his knuckles blanched.
Beside him, Felicia jolted in the passenger seat. ‘What the hell was that?’
‘Sounded like something exploded right below us.’
Striker hit the gas and cut down the off-ramp that circled onto the Granville Island Market. By the time he made the sharp turn onto Anderson Street, the screams had already started.
And what he saw shocked him.
On the south side of the street, the front section of one of the buildings had been completely destroyed. Thick white smoke poured from a large gaping hole, and flames climbed all along the building walls. In the street out front, shattered glass, splintered two-by-fours, and metal fragments littered the pavement. And covering everything was a thick layer of grey-white dust; it floated through the air like a poisonous pollen, dissipating slowly into the harbour beyond.
‘Looks like a gas main went off,’ Felicia said.
Striker was unsure. He cranked the wheel, turned the car sideways, and blocked access to the area. ‘Call it in. We need ambulance, fire, and every patrol unit that’s not already on a Priority 1. Notify the gas and electric companies too. And get Rothschild down here – we’re gonna need a good sergeant to set up containment.’
Felicia got to work.
While she called Dispatch, Striker climbed out to look for casualties. Immediately, his ears were hit with the harsh roar of the fire and the strident cries of numerous car alarms.
On the opposite side of the road, a group of paramedics – perhaps already on scene when the explosion had occurred – were tending to a small group of people who had obviously been injured by the blast. Most of them looked stunned and bloodied, but conscious and aware.
Striker pointed at them. ‘They okay?’
One of the paramedics nodded. ‘Nothing critical. But who knows who else needs help.’
Striker turned his eyes away from the medic and scanned the perimeter. Here and there in the road, cars had been abandoned. Citizens wandered through the smoke like brain-dead zombies, gaping at the fire. Under an awning on the next block, a group of shop owners and customers was gathering, with many of them snapping shots with their cameras or taking video with their cell phones.
YouTube was just a click away.
Striker approached the front of the burning building. Splintered wood, torn-apart aluminium, broken concrete pieces with embedded rebar, and other rubble covered everything from the sidewalk to the docks. Also within the mess were numerous toys – wooden cars, dolls and other such stuff, most of which was half blown apart. The sight of the toys made him realize that kids could be victims here, and his guts tightened as bad thoughts flooded his mind.
He killed the thoughts and got moving. He searched through the area for more casualties, but found none.
Just smoke and fire and destruction.
At the south end of Anderson Street, a patrol car emerged. Striker waved them to a stop, then crossed the road to meet them. The car doors opened, and two young constables jumped out. Both of them looked newbie fresh from the academy and out of their element.
Striker grabbed the first man, a tall, thin East Indian guy. ‘You, block off the road and start stringing up tape.’
Then he turned to the other cop, a smaller but stockier Chinese kid. ‘And you, go around back and assess the damage. Look for survivors – but do not go inside. We don’t know what we’re dealing with here.’
When the two constables raced off in different directions, Striker ran back to the front of the building and began searching through the rubble. Smoke made the air thick, and the hot ash burned his throat. He had just finished lifting up a large piece of blown-apart drywall when Felicia joined him in the haze.
‘Everyone’s en route,’ she said. ‘Medics, fire, patrol – you name it.’ She looked around. ‘Any casualties?’
He threw the drywall to the side. ‘Still looking.’
Felicia stared at the building. The flames had grown larger and were rising up over what remained of the roof. The fire was out of control. A hungry beast devouring everything in its path.
‘Someone might still be in there,’ she said.
She started for the building; Striker grabbed her by the arm.
‘No,’ he said.
She pulled away from him, but he held her tight. ‘Someone could be trapped in there, Jacob.’
‘There’s no one alive in there now.’
‘You don’t know—’
‘No one inside could survive that explosion, Feleesh . . . No one.’ He looked at the flames devouring everything in their path, and at the poisonous smoke flowing out of the building. To attempt entry was beyond foolhardy – it was suicidal.
There was a reason why firefighters called cops blue canaries.
‘We’re not going in there,’ he said.
Felicia pulled her arm away. ‘But what if—’
She’d barely spoken the words when a second explosion rocked the street. A giant spire of flame burst upwards and was followed by a dirty gust of wind that sent the dust and plaster particles hurtling into their eyes. Striker raised a hand to shield his face. He turned away, closed his eyes, grabbed Felicia.
‘Get back,’ he said. ‘Back.’
Together, they retreated.
They moved out of harm’s way to the far side of the road, then began scouring the area to make sure no one else had been injured in the second blast. The building was now completely engulfed by the fire and shrouded in a thick unfurling smoke that was quickly blocking out the blue sky.
Felicia looked back at the flames with a sick expression on her face. ‘I hope to God no one’s in there,’ she said again.
Striker offered no reply. It was going on noon, he realized. And a Wednesday. That made the odds pretty good – almost a guarantee – that someone had been working today. He expected fatalities.
The only question was how many.
Twenty
When the first fire truck took a wide turn onto Anderson Street, only to be blocked by the undercover police cruiser, Felicia called out for the keys. Striker threw them to her, underhand, and she ran back up the road to move their car.
As she went, Striker covered his mouth with his hand and tried to dampen out the burned smell. He began analysing their surroundings to make sure he hadn’t overlooked anything.
The small crowd that had gathered across the street moments after the initial blast was now thickening as more and more onlookers came to watch the fire burn. Several times, he’d warned them about the toxicity of the smoke and the randomness of the explosion, but it made no difference.
They were sheep.
Reporters were already on scene too. A guy with a CBC news shirt. Another from Global. A woman from News 1130. And all of them screaming out questions:
What caused the explosion?
Was it a gas tank?
A bomb?
Do you have any leads?
Striker ignored their questions, but soon the entire crowd was muttering about ‘the bomb’ that had destroyed the toy shop.
Having had enough, Striker grabbed a couple more patrol cops, and the three of them guided the crowd down Anderson Street to a safer gathering point. Then he pointed out an access line. ‘Cordon off the entire street starting there. No one in but emergency personnel. And don’t speak to any of the reporters about what’s going on. Leave that to Media Liaison.’
The two cops nodded, then got to work.
With the scene now preserved as good as they were going to get it, and with fire crews now preparing to tackle the ongoing blaze, Striker began the slow, monotonous process of a grid search. No doubt, search and canvass crews would be called out – Inspector Osaka was a stickler for following procedure – but an extra pair of eyes never hurt anyone.
Striker started at the farthest end of the sidewalk, just up from the dock, and got to work. Searching was always a painstaking task, and a job that could never be rushed. In ten minutes, he’d gone less than six metres.
But he found something – two dark squares on the boardwalk.
He crouched down for a closer look and saw that they were actually glass fragments. Their cuboidal shape suggested safety glass, likely blown from one of the nearby car windows, or perhaps that of the toy shop.
Striker gloved up with fresh latex, picked up the two pieces, and turned them over. As he did this, Felicia came up behind him. ‘Take this,’ she said. ‘We might need it with all the chaos going on.’
Striker looked back at her, saw that she had brought two portable radios from the car, and nodded. ‘Good thinking.’ He clipped the portable to his belt, then held up the glass for her to see. ‘Look at this.’
She did. ‘Safety glass. Probably blown from one of the toy shop windows.’
‘Look at the colour of the glass. It’s tinted.’
Felicia took a closer look. ‘That’s not tint, it’s residue from the smoke.’
Striker nodded. ‘Exactly. The glass surface is oily and dark – which could suggest there was a fire in there before the first explosion occurred. Otherwise, the surface would have been clean.’
He looked back at the shop, then at the road and walkways before continuing.
‘Look at those large flats of drywall that were sent flying onto the road. And this smoke residue on the glass . . . This explosion might have been the result of faulty gas lines.’ He moved back to the front of the building that had once been the Toy Hut. He gestured to one of the large squares of drywall that was still lying flat on the road, then to the area where the gas lines ran. ‘There’s definitely a natural gas source there. And the way the walls were blown out, it could be indicative of a pooling effect.’ He pointed to another large chunk of wall in the street. ‘See?’
Felicia shook her head. ‘No, I don’t see. It all looks like rubble to me.’
Striker tried to explain it better. ‘This could be another case of copper thieves. They turn off the valves, steal the lines, then recycle them for cash. Problem is, they don’t always shut off the valve when they’re done. Then you get a pooling effect of the gas. One spark is all it takes.’ He looked at the gas lines one more time and then shook his head. ‘Either way, gas or bomb, we need to call the City.’
‘Already done. An engineer’s en route.’ Felicia gloved up and took one of the cubes from Striker. She studied it for a moment, then spoke again. ‘You’re assuming, of course, that this glass was a result of the first explosion and not the second.’
‘It had to be. There was no window left when the second explosion occurred.’
‘No window maybe, but there could have been fragments stuck in the frame. Bits that were blown out when the second explosion went off.’
Striker thought this over; she was right about that, and it frustrated him.
‘We’re gonna need a tech here,’ he said.
Felicia handed Striker back the glass, and he dropped it into a brown paper evidence bag. He marked the front with black felt and was in the process of stuffing it into his pocket when something caught his eye – a gleam of sun on something metal.
It was coming from across the harbour.
Striker turned westward for a better look. There, on the small section of grass that fronted the Granville Island condos, was a man. He was standing under the foliage of a cluster of maple trees, a foot or two back from the seawall. His attire – dark orange vest; tool belt; a baseball cap with sunglasses on the rim – suggested he was a utility worker. But something about him didn’t fit.
‘He’s watching us through binoculars,’ Striker said.
Felicia saw him too. ‘Maybe he’s with the gas company.’
‘Then why doesn’t he come down and help?’ He turned to Felicia. ‘You got your monocular on you?’
‘Always.’
‘Give it.’
She took it from her inner jacket pocket and handed it over.
Striker peered through the mini-telescope. As he focused in on the man across the way, two things became apparent. One, the man was Caucasian. Two, he was bleeding from the left side of his cheek.
From exploding glass?
Striker tried to zoom in for a better look, but the man suddenly let the binoculars fall to his chest. Slipped the sunglasses down over his eyes. Spun away and began walking.
Striker lowered the monocular.
‘Something’s wrong with that guy,’ he said. ‘I want him checked. Now.’
Twenty-One
Harry Eckhart heard the check request come over the radio as he drove his unmarked patrol car across the Granville Street Bridge. Part of him wanted to ignore the call. Ignore everything about this whole rotten day, and just go back home, get into bed, and pull the comforters over his head. Maybe drink some rum. Some vodka. Do whatever it took to get him through another 21 July.
It was always a hard date. Today was the twelfth anniversary of Joshua’s death, and he missed the boy as much now as he ever did. Maybe more.
The hurt never went away.
Normally, on every 21 July, Harry wouldn’t even manage to drag himself from bed. But today Ethan had roused him.
Little Ethan. The boy born six years after Joshua’s death.
Little Ethan. The boy who had brought Harry back to the world of the living.
Little Ethan. The only thing that mattered any more.
The boy was a six-year-old little saviour with foppish blond hair and chocolate-brown eyes. And the boy had not only roused him, but somehow managed to lighten him. To bring him back from that dark and hollow place, just as he had so many times before. Even now, the thought of the little boy brought a weak smile to Harry’s face.
The child was innocence and joy.
Over the radio came several responses to the check request. Bravo 11 said they could do it, but they were coming from the downtown core. And Fox 13 said they could also take the call, but they were just as far. Even Car 10 – the current Road Boss, Inspector Osaka – offered to perform the check, but he was currently out on foot.
Too far from the scene to be of any use.
Harry cursed under his breath. He was the closest unit, and his conscience wouldn’t let him ignore the plea from another officer. He reached the turn-off onto West 2nd Avenue, glanced west, and spotted the exact man Homicide Detective Striker had been describing on the radio:
A utility worker.
Orange vest with tool belt.
A baseball cap and sunglasses.
And binocs.
The man was limping a little as he hustled along, his right leg kicking back on him but moving well enough. He was heading south towards West 4th Avenue, cutting into the laneway behind the Starbucks.
Escaping.
Harry grabbed the mike and pressed the plunger.
‘I’ll take that check,’ he said.
He turned down the off-ramp, ready to perform another one of the millions of checks he’d done in his 25-year career. But within ten feet, the traffic came to an abrupt stop. Swearing, Harry tried to steer around the gridlock, but there was nowhere to go. And far below the man in the utility vest was running now – fleeing in long, awkward strides.
Harry pressed the plunger on the mike one more time.
‘We got us a runner.’
Twenty-Two
Striker was already racing around the seawall when he heard Harry come over the radio. The suspect was running. Goddammit, he was running! And with most of Patrol already dealing with the explosion scene, and only him and Harry in pursuit, the odds were against them.
Striker grabbed his radio and hit the plunger: ‘I’m coming north from the harbour. Can you take him from the south, Harry? Trap him in?’
‘Negative. I’m boxed in on the bridge.’
‘Okay then, just hold your position.’
Striker raced on.
Outlining the harbour, the swerving red-brick path of Island Marina Trail slowly angled southward around a man-made lagoon. It was the centrepiece for the Granville Island condo development. Striker raced around the path into the complex. He knew the area well from previous Patrol calls. Up ahead, Marina Trail bifurcated, with one path leading west along the inlet to Kitsilano Beach, and the other cutting south through the condo complex.
When Striker reached the mouth of the divide, he stopped. Glanced west. Saw nothing but dock workers. Glanced south. Saw a winding brick pathway leading between two Japanese plum trees.
In front of them, an elderly woman was walking two Yorkie terriers.
‘Did you see a man run through there?’ Striker asked her.
She glanced back the way she had come. ‘You mean that construction worker? Yes, he went that way.’
Striker bolted on.
The trail cut deeper into the condo development, then ended on West 2nd Avenue. To the west sat an empty stretch of road with no one on it. To the east was a Starbucks coffee shop. And three storeys above it, on the off-ramp, was Detective Harry Eckhart, yelling and pointing.
‘Through the lane! The lane!’
Striker raced in behind the Starbucks. Within a half-block, all visual contact with Harry was cut off by the Honda dealership. Littering the lane were bald tyres, rusted oil drums, and bags of recyclable oil containers. Trash.
But no sign of their man.
Parked in the lane was a white van, and behind it was a small woman with sandy-brown hair. She had wide sturdy hips, and beneath her blue bandana was a pale and pudgy face. Other than the bandana, she was dressed in a pair of blue jeans with a beige work shirt. She was carrying a cardboard box.
‘You see a guy run this way?’ Striker asked her.
She put down the box and took a moment to wipe her brow. ‘You mean that tourist?’
‘What tourist?’
‘Guy with the binoculars round his neck.’
‘That’s him.’
She nodded and pointed. ‘He ran that way. Up the alley. He was really motoring though – what he do, steal somethin’?’
‘Stay here,’ Striker said, and raced on.
When he reached the end of the lane, he found himself standing at the mouth of West 4th Avenue. All his hopes faltered. Cars were backed up all along the drive, running from east to west, and the backlog extended all the way up the off-ramp onto the bridge where Harry was stuck.
The explosion had turned the area into a congested nightmare.
Striker looked left, looked right, looked straight ahead. There was no sign of the man. And when he approached many of the drivers who were stuck in the backlog, none of them recalled a man in a utility uniform.
He was gone.
‘Goddammit.’
Striker grabbed the radio from his belt and broadcast the man’s full description and last known direction of travel. Then he headed back. Halfway down the lane, he looked for the woman he’d seen loading the van, but she was already gone. And there was no surveillance video he could see. Not a single camera adorned the lane.
Frustrated, cursing this entire day, Striker headed back down the walkway. The explosion scene was waiting for him.