Detective Billy Able
Cops like me wonβt admit it out loud, but a lot of us
believe murder has its right time and proper reason.
Especially in Memphis, where Elvis died and the blues were
born out of pride, anger and need. Thereβs a timetable.
Shit has its own schedule.
Knifings happen on Friday night. Shootings on Saturday
night. The streetlights come up and the shooting begins.
Monday mornings? Itβs road rage if I-240 backs up and
people get a chance to look each other in the eye.
Count on multiple killings the week of a full moon or
any day the temperature breaks a hundred degrees and air
conditioners give out and die. Thatβs when murder happens.
The calls come in. The squad responds.
But Saturday morning is different. People shouldnβt kill
each other on Saturday morning. They should mow their lawns
and pick up groceries. Murder ainβt your proper Saturday
morning activity.
Except in Memphis. In Memphis you can commit murder any
Saturday morning you like.
Chapter One
Saturday, 9:30 a.m.
The elderly black man lay crumpled and dead in the
marigolds bordering his clapboard house. He lay on his
side. The fist-sized gnome that sat beside his head in the
flowerbed grinned.
Detective Sergeant Billy Able of the Memphis PD Homicide
Squad circled the body then squatted down for a closer
look. It was August in Memphis, Tennessee, a city founded
on the bluffs above the Mississippi River. Hot, flat,
tornado bait. The bluffs were one of the last bunkers on
the eastern seaboard before everything flattened toward the
Midwest.
Sometimes Billy knew how Memphis felt. Like an
outpost on the Southern frontier.
He wiped sweat off the back of his neck and glanced at
the blue skies. Too clear to be this humid in the morning.
Then he remembered rain would be moving in from Arkansas
some time in the evening.
Billy Able was a thirty-two-year-old Mississippi boy,
tall and lanky, with the inherited good looks of Southern
aristocracy gone to seed. Just that morning his partner had
ragged him about his hair. Said he wore it too long for the
squad to take him seriously.
Screw that, Billy thought. What does a haircut have
to do with closing a case?
The Crime Scene Unit had finished with the body. Billy
took out his steno pad, noted the blood on the gnomeβs
concrete hat, and shifted the gentlemanβs face out of the
flowers. The neck and jaw had stiffened only slightly, the
eyes turned milky behind the lids.
Billy shot his own photos of the body. The camera lens
made the old manβs whittled-down frame look fragile as a
boyβs. His legs were contracted into a fetal position as if
heβd hit the ground and drawn up. No shirt. One shoe, a
scuffed wingtip, no socks. Fly unzipped. Penis exposed.
Fingers curled in on themselves like dry leaves.
Billy scanned the side yard for anything out of the
ordinary. The neighborβs dog barked at him through the back
door screen. Billy sniffed. The air around the body smelled
like marigolds and Old Spice. A fly landed on the old manβs
nose and waded through blood clotting on the upper lip.
Billy waved it away, giving the man his dignity.
A shadow passed over him from the porch above. His
partner, Lou Nevers, could sneak up on a person, quiet as a
bat. But not on Billy. Theyβd worked together six years,
and he knew all of Louβs best moves.
Like this morning when Lou started complaining about
Billyβs second-hand suit. Lou wanted to get the upper hand
because Billy was mad about the overtime shift Lou had
lined up. And what the hell, Billy liked his suit, black
and summer-weight with a white shirt and black tie, all
bought at the St. Vincent DePaulβs thrift store off Vance
Avenue. Add dark shades and he looked like a Beale Street
blues player. He had a reason for not wearing the same
polyester crap as the rest of the dickhead detectives.
Going against type had its advantages, especially in the
interview room.
Lou frowned at him from the porch, saying nothing.
"You get any sleep last night, old man?" Billy said.
"Iβll sleep when Iβm dead. Thereβs a wingtip up here on
the porch."
His partner had lost twenty pounds in the year since his
divorce. At sixty-one, the weight loss made him look gaunt,
not fit. He wore the same kind of short sleeve shirt as
yesterday, the same polyester slacks, and one of two blue
striped ties given to him by his ex-wife last Christmas.
Lou rarely let himself off the leash where style was
concerned.
Since the divorce, Lou had turned into a private man
living by his own private rules. That meant, in his
dealings with Lou, Billy was shooting in the dark. Best he
could do was to try for business as usual.
"Other wingtipβs down here with the body," Billy
said. "Somebody whopped this old boy in the back of the
head. Knocked him out of his shoes. And his flyβs open."
Lou came off the porch and ducked under the crime scene
tape. Neighbors carrying umbrellas against the sun had
gathered across the street. They began to whisper when they
saw Lou leave the porch. They didnβt trust the police but
depended on them anyway, like children with a bad set of
parents. Some tilted their umbrellas like shields as a
white patrolman moved among them asking questions.
Lou studied the body in the flowerbed for a while, then
unwrapped a toothpick and stuck it between his
teeth. "Nothing more pitiful than O-M-P."
"Whatβs that?"
Lou pointed at the withered penis. "Old Man Pud."
Billy grinned in spite of himself.
Lou bent and ran his finger over the victimβs ribs.
Purplish blots under the skin shifted. "Lividity isnβt
fixed."
"Looks to be about four hours. That puts him in the box
around six this morning."
"Maybe he was out all night, came in drunk, fell over
the railing," Lou said.
"Nope. I smell Old Spice. He had a morning shave." Billy
held back the manβs ear to reveal a glob of shaving
cream. "Canβt say what happened, but the manβs business is
definitely hanging out of his pants. You find the first
officer?"
"In the house with an hysterical witness. Donβt want any
part of that." Lou squatted down to study the
contusion. "Bet I can tell you how he scratched and why,
right now, game over, weβre out of here before lunch."
"Get out."
"No, really."
"If weβre done early, how about you coaching me at the
batting cages?" Billy said. Heβd been having trouble with
his swing and making a fool of himself at the MPD league
games. Lou had played shortstop in college and coached Babe
Ruth league. He was almost as good a coach as he was a cop.
At least part of a Saturday could be salvaged.
"Hell no. If weβre done early youβre going to buy me a
steak sandwich at The Western." Louβs eyes shifted
mischievously, like old times.
"You got it."
They stood. Louβs knee popped.
"So whatβs your call?" Billy said.
The toothpick waggled between Louβs teeth. "The man died
peeing off the porch."
"This ainβt no heart attack, somebody hit him."
"Trust me. This old boy relieved himself in a natural
setting one too many times. Most likely the wife cracked
him over the head with whatever was handy."
Billy considered the lump on the back of the manβs head,
the unzipped fly. Damn. Heβd have to stop at an ATM for
lunch money. Then he smiled. "You got it half right, pard.
Iβll go with peeing off the porch, but it wasnβt the bang
on the head that killed him. What got him was falling face
down on a yard elf."
Louβs pager buzzed in his pocket. He carried a
department-issued cell phone, but heβd never given up his
pager habit. He checked the number and winced. "Pain-in-the-
ass . . . Iβll get back to him. Go on, Iβm listening."
"Adiosis by septumosis. His septum pierced his brain. I
had a friend who was fooling around on a neighborβs horse.
It reared and smashed the kidβs nose bone into his brain.
Dead before he hit the ground."
"Hit the ground," Lou murmured. He rubbed the pagerβs
case between his thumb and forefinger, not listening to a
word while he stared straight ahead at the squad cars
lining the front of the house. Heβd been doing that for a
couple of weeks, drifting outside himself. Drifting had
become Louβs regular thing.
Last week Billy asked a psychologist named Paul Anderson
over at Employee Assistance about Louβs trances, his weight
loss and his lack of sleep. Off the record, of course.
Anderson was a good guy. He offered to talk to Lou, but
they both knew it would take handcuffs to get Lou over
there.
"Who paged you . . . the Lieutenant?" Billy said.
Lou chewed his toothpick, distracted. "Peeing off the
porch. Death by elf. Iβm embarrassed to write that one up."
"Did Hollerith page you?"
"Damn it, I heard you the first time."
"Lighten up, man. You said βpain-in-the-assβ. I assumedβ"
Lou shot him a look with crazy heat in his eyes. "How
about you get your got damn nose out of my got damn
business."
"Whoa, Lou, Jesus."
Across the street two church ladies cranked up "It Is
Well With My Soul". They sang a hymn written by an 1800βs
lawyer ruined by disaster, bereaved by catastrophe, honored
in perpetuity. Heads nodded in the crowd. Hands swayed in
the air. The heat went out of Louβs eyes, and his gaze
strayed off. He bent down and knocked dried grass out of
his cuffs.
"Iβve had it with this whole damned business," Lou
mumbled and started for the porch, leaving Billy standing
alone with the body in the bed of orange marigolds.