Blossom - Andrew H. Vachss [82]
"Tax records? Military? Passport?"
"Blank." His look was measured, just short of offended. "We know how to do it, pal, chase the paper. There's no trail. The kid don't even have a driver's license."
"Fuck." Me.
"Detective, did you by any chance pull this boy's medical records?" Blossom.
"Yes, ma'am. They're in the car." His tired eyes tracked her. "If you're thinking the blood banks, it won't fly. He's got type O."
"No, I was thinking…maybe it's not so strange he doesn't have most kinds of ID, but you'd think, a young man, he'd have a driver's license."
"So?"
"Burke, remember that report you read to me? Something about severe damage to his eyes? Maybe that's why he can't get a driver's license."
"I don't know anything about any reports, I said, the words evenly spaced, like rocks dropping into a pond.
"Me neither," said Sherwood. "We had this report of an attempted break–in at the DPW Building, but I figure, it had to be some kids playing a prank. Real rookie move, toss a rock through the glass. Not the kind you'd expect from any big–time New York heist–man."
Blossom's face flushed.
Back at Sherwood's car, we found the records. Blossom translated the big words. "He'll always have trouble with his vision, especially in daylight."
"He couldn't get a driver's license?" Sherwood.
"Not hardly."
"They got no test for buying a gun," the big man said.
152
I TOLD HIM about the Nature Center We went by to take a look. I showed him what I'd seen. He nodded.
"Wait here."
I saw him talking to a uniformed park ranger. He walked back slow.
"He says they drop the gate every night. Padlock it. Wood gate. Anyone could get through it. Nobody does. Says the kids never park here. They patrol about twice a night. If they'd see someone, they'd chase 'em off. Maybe bust 'em for trespassing, if they were smoking dope."
"He'll work with you?"
"On this? Sure. We shut down the parking spots, like I told you. This one won't get patrols."
"How about if a car was going to park in here. Every night. Would he look the other way? Stay down?"
His eyes were someplace else. "What d'you have in mind?"
"Drawing his fire."
He walked a few feet away, back to me. I let him have his silence, waiting.
Sherwood turned to face me. "You're crazy. Crazy as he is. If this boy's the one you want, he's certifiable. Got him a Get Out of Jail Free card behind his past record. Hell, he was on medication right up to the time he cut loose and disappeared."
"I'm not crazy. I'm waiting for a car. Special car. You'll see. It should be able to handle anything he can throw."
"And what's my piece?"
"You got to be in position before dark. Nice and early. I'll park right where the Lincoln is right now. You can work anywhere from the left."
He scanned the terrain. "I was in 'Nam," he said. Absently, under his breath. "Infantry. It looks like that. I could deploy a dozen men in there. Spotlights, the whole works."
I moved close to him, my voice pitched low. "It has to be a deal, Sherwood. A square deal, both sides. You work from the left, okay? Nothing to the right of that point…see, where the tracks make that kind of peak?"
"Who's gonna be on the right?"
"Someone for me. I'm not gonna testify in court, okay? This works, he throws down on me, opens up, I'm out of here. Turn the key and go. Just make sure you fire across, not down."
"What else?"
"Just your own people. You post this on the bulletin board, Officer Revis takes a look, I could have trouble. The way this is, you and your team, you're staking out the place. On a hunch. You be as surprised as anyone else, a car pulls in."
"You want me to risk my badge?"
"Up to you. All I want, you either stay out of here or come in the way I said. Either way."
"When you gonna start?"
"I'll let you know."
153
AT VIRGIL'S HOUSE that night.
"What've you got that you're sure of?"
He brought down an old lever–action .30–30 carbine, the stock burnished with generations of hand–rubbed oil. "This Winchester was my daddy's. He taught me to use it. Before this all started, I