“Do you need help parking cars?” I ask. Sometimes Rita’s catering company (which, by the way, they call the Flying Pig) hires off-duty cops to valet park at the big events. We earn a few extra bucks; nobody parks in front of fire hydrants. It’s what you call a win-win situation. “I’m totally free tonight.” And my plasma-screen TV fund needs all the help it can get.
“Yes,” says Rita. “It’s going to be huge. The guest list is nearly five hundred names long. A senator is coming. And that actress. You know, the one from that movie.”
Sure. Her.
“We’ll be there,” says Ceepak.
“Great.” Rita gives her husband a quick kiss.
Ceepak extends his hand to T.J. “Good game today, son. You really nailed that last pitch and Dominick Monetti has the fastest fastball in the league.”
“Thanks,” says T.J. “Too bad Tony had to go and blow it like that.”
“Did you have fun?” asks Ceepak.
T.J. shrugs. “Yeah. I guess.”
“Then you won.”
Now T.J. cringes the way I would’ve if my mom ever screamed, “Way to go, honey” in front of all my buddies. I know T.J. basically digs Ceepak, likes having him in his life, but, every now and then, since he’s human and seventeen, I know he can’t believe how incredibly corny his newly acquired old man can be. Like an overgrown Boy Scout. Or Dudley Do-Right.
Me?
I’m sort of used to it.
We head over to the house, which is what we call the police station.
“What’s up, gentlemen?” says the desk sergeant, Reggie Pender. “You on the clock?”
“Not today,” says Ceepak.
“So what brings you into the office on this fine and glorious Saturday afternoon?”
“The coffee,” I say. “Nobody knows how to make it like we make it here.”
“You mean burned?” replies Pender.
“Roger that,” says Ceepak. “We need to borrow the I.R.”
Pender raises an eyebrow. “You interrogating a witness?”
“Negative,” says Ceepak.
“A suspect?” Pender is a big guy. When he gets excited, he throws his whole body into it. “Is it those Feenyville Pirates? You two finally catch those rascals red-handed? They the ones running the dope?”
“I just need to talk to Ceepak. About that thing last night.”
“The suicide?” asks Pender.
Now Ceepak looks really interested.
“Did you know him?” Pender asks Ceepak.
“Who?”
“The soldier. The one who, you know.” He jabs a finger into his mouth. Cocks his thumb. Bang.
“Danny?” This from Ceepak.
“Yeah. Like I said. We need to talk.”
We’re sitting at the long table. We grabbed a couple cold drinks out of the vending machine and the cola buzz helps. I’m downloading everything as fast as I can.
The noise complaint. The soldiers partying in the house on Kipper Street. The phone call from the state police. The drive down the Parkway with Sergeant Dixon. The rest stop. Corporal Shareef Smith in the toilet stall.
I leave out the part where I saw Ceepak’s car headed home after 1:00 AM.
“I took a picture,” I say. “With my cell phone.”
I pass the phone to Ceepak. He studies the tiny display window.
It’s a head-on shot. Shareef sitting on top of the toilet lid, the top of his skull blown open, the ring of pink-tinged tissue paper around his neck, the gore streaking down the tile above and behind his head.
“He put the sanitary toilet seat things around his neck,” I explain.
Ceepak nods. Doesn’t say anything. He’s squinting at the screen. Putting himself into the crime scene. Probably seeing things in the pixels I didn’t see in person.
“So he wouldn’t make a mess, I guess.”
“Unusual behavior for a suicide,” says Ceepak.
“Yeah. That was the first thing that bugged me.”
“Who did the crime-scene investigation?”
Oh, yeah. I almost forgot. “Saul Slominsky.”
Ceepak nods. He remembers Slobbinsky, although he’d never call him that. Not out loud.
“He’s with the Burlington County prosecutor’s office now,” I add.
Another nod. “They would be the lead investigative agency in this instance.”
“They say they found drugs,” I add.
“On the soldier’s body?”
“No. I mean, he had needle marks on his arms, but his drug kit was on the floor of the stall next to his. They figure he dropped his works or kicked them over.”
“They do?”
“Yeah.”
“Busy man in the final moments of his life.”
“I guess.”
“Go on.”
“Some small-time hoods broke into his car.”
“They apprehended suspects?”
“No.”
“Then how can you say the crime was perpetrated by ‘small-time hoodlums’?”
“It’s just what, you know, what everybody was saying last night … .”
“You mean what they were speculating.”
“Yeah.”
Ceepak. The guy’s a stickler for stuff like that. Doesn’t want to deal with speculation and wild guesses. He’s Dan Aykroyd in Dragnet. Just the facts, ma’am.
“Anyway,” I say, “some … unknown individual …”
“Or individuals.”
“Right. They really tore through this guy’s car. Ripped out everything. From the air bags up front to the CD changer in the trunk.”
“Interesting.”
“Yeah.”
“What else?”
“I don’t know. There’s just something wrong with the picture. I can’t put my finger on it but it’s been bugging me. All last night. This morning.”
“As it should.”
“What? You see something?”
“Of course. The same thing you saw, Danny.”
“That’s just it, I don’t know what I saw.”
“That something wasn’t as it should be.”
“Yeah. I guess.”
“It’s the floor.”
“What about it?”
Ceepak hands me back my cell phone.
“You tell me.”
Great. I’m hungry for answers; he wants to play Let’s Learn Forensics.
“I dunno.”
“What doesn’t fit?”
“On the floor?”
“Yes.”
I hate when we play this. “There’s nothing on the floor except the dead guy’s sneakers.”
“Exactly.”
No blood.
Not just under the front of the toilet, under his bent knees, because, maybe, the sanitary tissues sponged up all the blood gushing out of his nose and mouth.
There’s also none on the floor back near the rear wall.
Yeah. Ceepak’s right. That’s what’s been bugging me.
If there are thick streaks running down the back wall, how come nothing dripped all the way down to the floor?
8
Ceepak heads to his locker because he needs his cargo pants.
Every day, my partner loads up his pockets—front, side, rear—with enough tools to open a CSI hardware store. And, of course, he tosses in a handful of Snausages in case we run into a snarling dog. Any Snausages left over at the end of the day go to his pooch: Barkley. Barkley’s old. Snausages are soft. It works out.
We’ve decided to head down to the rest stop at exit 52 to “see what we can see,” as Ceepak likes to say. Nothing official, mind you—we’re not strapping on our weapons or anything. We’re just two civilians on the road looking for a restroom and willing to drive ten or twenty miles to find it.
“Traffic’s not too bad,” I say.
Ceepak looks up from the passenger seat.
“No. It’s all good.”
“How about last night?”
“Come again???
?
“When Starky and I drove the guy down here last night, I saw you in Rita’s Toyota.”
I glance over at Ceepak.
“Traffic conditions were extremely light last evening,” he says.
“Yeah. They usually are. So why were you out so late?”
“I’d rather not say.”
He’s smiling but his eyes aren’t. Time to change the subject.
“I think it’s always best to examine the crime scene in person,” I say because Ceepak said it to me once.
“Correct. Photographs can only tell us so much. Especially low-resolution images captured on cell phones.”
“Slominsky had a guy taking pictures last night. We should look at his.”
“That would work. However, the Burlington County prosecutor’s office may not grant us access to their evidence seeing how we have no official standing in this matter. Not yet, anyway.”
Excellent. I believe my man is trying to figure out an angle, some way to get us into the game. Ceepak, of course, always plays by the rules but that means he knows all of’em—even the obscure ones listed in tiny print way back at the end of the rule book where nobody else bothers reading because they’re bored or they just scored this hot new game for their Xbox 360 and want to play it already. Or maybe that’s just me.
Before we left the house, we uploaded my cell phone photos to my Verizon Pix Place account on the Internet and printed out the money shot—Smith sitting atop the toilet. Ceepak keeps studying it, trying to glean one more clue from the horrible scene.
“The commode is a built-in,” he says. “No tank as one would typically see behind a toilet at home. In his seated position, Smith is barely six inches from the rear wall. His head, canted at an acute angle after impact, is touching that wall. The expelled organic material from the exit wound created a dramatic splatter pattern in line with the established trajectory path.”
“And then all the gunk trickles down,” I add, realizing there’s probably a more forensically correct term for gunk. Maybe goop.
“Right. The droplets elongated and slid down, developing tails pointing away from the initial point of impact. But, they end in a blur on the wall about a foot above the ground.”
Just like tossing a can of paint against a wall. Eventually, some of it should dribble down to the floor. You splash it against a tilted canvas, you could end up in an art museum.
“Did Smith leave a suicide note?” Ceepak asks, folding up his printout.
“Not that I know of.”
“Perhaps it was on his person?”
I shake my head. “Slominsky only found the MapQuest map to the party house. Smith had it tucked into his shirt. Chest pocket.”
“Interesting,” says Ceepak. “‘Your Chelsea suicide with no apparent motive.’” He’s quoting Springsteen lyrics, one of his favorite autofocusing techniques. “Why would a young man like Smith take his own life?”
“Because of his drug problem?”
“Perhaps.”
“Or, you know, he might’ve been bummed out. Depressed. About the war and all.”
Oops. Didn’t mean to say that. Ceepak could’ve figured that one out all by himself. He was there, served his time in hell. Saw and did some pretty horrible stuff. He has his dark days, trust me. I’ve been there for some. So, he doesn’t need me to remind him about post-traumatic stress disorder or whatever they call it when you feel like shit for doing what you were told to do to defend your country.
“I mean, maybe—”
“It’s okay, Danny. You make a cogent point. PTSD is a definite possibility. I just wish we knew more about this man.”
“Do you have any friends in the Eighty-second Airborne?”
“A few.”
“You should, you know, give them a call.”
Well, duh. Man, I’m really saying all the wrong things today.
“Will do, Danny. Excellent suggestion.” Ceepak, on the other hand, always says all the right things. Never busts my hump, even when I deserve it. The man has a high tolerance for my latent Danny-ness.
We pull into the parking lot at the exit 52 rest area.
The place is packed. I’m guessing a thousand cars are angled into slots on both sides of the main building. Some folks are over near the trees, walking their dogs, establishing canine rest areas in the grass already burnt brown by all the dogs who peed before them.
Two canopied pushcarts near the south-side entrance are open for a brisk business selling sunglasses. It’s bright today. The sky’s as blue as the freshly painted lines in the handicapped parking zones, one of which is occupied by an obese guy wolfing down a Whopper, his belly pressed tight against the steering wheel, even though his seat is slid back as far as it can go without becoming the backseat. Guess being a blimp is his handicap.
We enter the main building. If there’s a thousand cars, there must be two thousand people. Most of them sipping something. Snapple. Grande mocha whip-a-chinos or whatever words Starbucks invented this month. Jumbo tubs of Pepsi.
“Where’s the men’s room?” asks Ceepak.
I point. He nods.
Then he turns around. Studies the walls.
I do the same thing.
I see this huge ad for the Trump Marina casino in Atlantic City. A sexy lady in a tight red dress and stiletto heels with a come-up-to-my-suite twinkle in her eye is holding a pair of dice. The headline reads: First. Best. Wildest.
I can’t tell if Mr. Trump means his casino or this girl.
“Only one security camera,” says Ceepak.
Apparently, he wasn’t looking at the poster with me.
“See it, Danny?”
He points.
“Wouldn’t tell us much. Doesn’t seem to cover the entrance to the men’s room. It’s aimed toward the gift shop.” Ceepak does a three-finger hand chop at the store with all the pegboards dangling brightly colored bags of candy, chips, crackers, and antacids. “Low potential for shoplifting in the opposite direction.”
Yeah. There ain’t much worth stealing in the restrooms.
“Security camera footage won’t help us very much,” says Ceepak. “Let’s hit the head.”
You ever walk around a men’s room staring at stuff?
Guys inside doing their business give you the evil eye, wonder what the hell you’re gawking at. This doesn’t stop Ceepak. He pulls a small digital camera out of his left thigh pocket.
Guys shuffle closer to the urinals.
The layout is just like I remember it. On each side, there are a half-a-dozen urinals on a tiled wall leading down to three sinks. Fresh-cut carnations stand guard in slender vases atop the porcelain washbasins. There’s a paper towel dispenser, big-mouthed garbage barrel, and electric hand blower attached to the wall perpendicular to the sinks. Everything has electric eyes. The urinals. The sinks. Maybe even the towel dispenser. You never have to touch anything to make it work.
Except, of course, the doors to the toilet stalls.
“Stainless steel,” Ceepak comments as he studies the four doors on our side of the men’s room. Three regular, one wider for the handicapped toilet. All currently closed and occupado.
Stainless steel is an excellent surface for grabbing fingerprints. All five billion of them. The men’s room is currently crowded. If a toilet opens up before a urinal, you can bet the next guy in line is going for the stall and everybody behind him will just have to pray he raises the seat.
Ceepak faces the closed door on the walled-in box where they found Lance Corporal Shareef Smith.
“You say it was locked? From the inside?”
“Yeah. The janitor had to flick the latch open from out here.”
Ceepak snaps a flash photo.
“Hey!” says whoever’s inside. Some guy in those new Nikes and Calvin Klein underwear.
“Don’t worry, sir,” says Ceepak. “You’re not in the picture.”
“Jesus H. Christ,” mutters the man behind door number three as he rises off his throne. Th
e toilet does its thing and automatically flushes itself. The door swings open and Calvin K. comes out hitching his belt.
“What’s your problem, pal?” he asks Ceepak, who’s already busy lining up his next shot: a close-up of the toilet itself.
“Sorry. I didn’t mean to intrude on your privacy.”
The flash strobes.
The guy who just finished up stomps away.
Doesn’t hit the sink.
Men.
Why do they even give us sinks with fancy automatic faucets? They should just hang up a few more urinals on the wall and let us wipe our hands on our pants in peace.
“You usin’ it?” asks a man who’s doing a nervous Texas two-step to keep his mind off what he really needs to be doing.
“Sorry,” says Ceepak. “We’ll only be another minute.”
We?
Ceepak steps into the stall. I don’t follow. I could easily fit in there with him but two guys squeezing into the same toilet booth at the same time might earn us more stares than Ceepak’s Kodak moment with the commode. People might think we’d just been playing footsie between stalls and have decided to run for Congress.
Fortunately a urinal opens up and dancing man doesn’t explode.
“They’ve cleaned it up,” says Ceepak, examining the rear wall.
“Yeah.”
“Completely scrubbed it down. There’s not a trace of evidence. Nothing. Not even any stained grout.”
“Well, they clean in here every hour.”
“Come again?”
“They clean in here every hour.”
“You’re certain?”
“Yeah. There’s a chart on the wall in the hall. It’s a grid. Days across the top. Time down the side. The janitors have to initial the box when they come in and clean up. Note the time.”
“Show it to me.”
I lead the way to the mounted clipboard. It’s attached to the frame of an HMM Host poster proclaiming The HMM Five Star Advantage. Cleanliness, Quality & Service. I look at the boxes. Somebody came in at 4:03 Runt. And 3:05. And 2:06. Every hour, pretty much on the hour, since midnight.