Crimes Of August - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Do you need anything?" he asked when the old man finished singing.
"It's not much, my young man, my good friend, my son, just enough to pay the room rent, which is overdue."
"How much is it?" said Mattos, taking his checkbook from his pocket.
"Two hundred eighty cruzeiros," Emilio said quickly.
Mattos filled out the check. Then he asked for the bill. He noticed that Emilio made a stealthy gesture to Robledo.
"Mr. Emilio has a tab. Can I include it in the bill?" said Robledo.
"Yes," Mattos said.
four.
"IS THE MONEY GUARANTEED? What about the house?" asked Alcino.
"Yes, yes, didn't I tell you that already?" replied Climerio. "And the job, too. Investigator. Besides that, if I go to Vice, like they promised, I'll take you with me. Getting a spot in Vice is better than winning the lottery."
"I got a wife and five kids to support," said Alcino.
They were at Climerio's house, 32 Rua Sicupira, in Cachambi, where Alcino had gone to settle on the details of his undertaking. Climerio picked up a leather briefcase, and they left.
They walked down the dusty unpaved street. In the middle of the street a group of urchins were playing marbles. Climerio was fat; Alcino, short and skinny.
"When I was a kid, I was real good at that," said Climerio, looking at the boys. "How about you? Were you good at marbles, too?"
"I used to like building carts with ball bearings for wheels. Ever since I was a kid, I liked doing carpentry stuff. I don't know why I liked that profession," Alcino lamented.
"Your life as unemployed carpenter is over," said Climerio, clapping Alcino on the back.
Climerio's words failed to a.s.suage Alcino. The obligation he had taken on of killing that journalist had become endless agony for him. But it had been the way he had found of satisfying his lifelong dream, to have a house of his own, for he was constantly late in paying his monthly rent of five hundred and fifty cruzeiros for the house where he lived. Since May Climerio had been advancing him the rent money. As well as money for groceries. His wife Abigail, on one occasion, had gone to Climerio's house to receive a thousand cruzeiros; other times she had received two hundred.
They took a bus to Meier. In Meier they took a taxi.
"Rua Baro de Mesquita," Climerio told the driver. Their final destination was the So Jose school, where the journalist Lacerda was to make a speech.
They got off at a bus stop on Baro de Mesquita.
"Wait here," said Climerio.
Climerio went into a bar and asked to use the phone. He dialed.
"Is Nelson there?"
He wasn't. Climerio made several phone calls trying to locate Nelson Raimundo de Souza, the driver of the taxi in which they planned to flee after Alcino killed Lacerda. He finally left a message for Nelson to come find him on Baro de Mesquita, at the bar whose address he left with the person taking the message.
Climerio went to the bus stop to look for Alcino. The pair, now back at the bar, drank beer as they waited for the cab driver to arrive.
"Is this Nelson guy reliable?" asked Alcino.
"I've known him a long time. He stations his cab on Silveira Martins, that street beside the palace. I see him practically every day."
Night fell.
"The Crow is gonna leave, and that son of a b.i.t.c.h Nelson doesn't show up," said Climerio. If he failed again, Gregrio would skin him alive.
Nelson arrived shortly before ten that evening.
"G.o.ddammit! Where the h.e.l.l have you been?"
"I got your message an hour ago," said the cabbie.
The three got into Nelson's Studebaker taxi. First, Alcino noted the license plate, 5-60-21. "Tomorrow I'm gonna play those numbers."
They stopped on a cross-street with Baro de Mesquita, near the So Jose school. Climerio opened the leather briefcase and took out a .45 revolver. The weapon, a Smith & Wesson, had been stolen in 1949 from the Second Infantry Regiment in the military compound, by the sergeant who was head of the regimental a.r.s.enal. That sergeant had sold it to another sergeant. It had been bought and sold several times, until it was acquired by Jose Antonio Soares.
Alcino's hands trembled when he held the gun. He'd never had a .45 in his hands. The steel was cold, and the weapon seemed to possess enormous weight.
"All you have to do is pull the trigger, and this cannon will do the job for you."
Climerio gave Alcino six more bullets, which Alcino put in his pocket after sticking the revolver in his belt.
They got out of the car. Alcino remained close to the entrance to the school. Climerio posted himself at the door. The plan was to kill Lacerda as soon as he appeared. The pair would take advantage of the confusion to flee.
INSPECTOR PDUA TOOK OFF HIS COAT; his short-sleeve s.h.i.+rt displayed his white, muscular arms. In a holster under his arm, a snub-nosed revolver with a two-inch barrel. He had just made the entries for his s.h.i.+ft in the blotter. Mattos, who would relieve him, sat down beside him.
"You planning to release the b.u.ms I caught on my s.h.i.+ft?"
"If I think I should release them, I'll release them."
Padua had the tic of repeatedly contracting his voluminous arm muscles when nervous. His muscles began to shudder and jump. Padua had thought about killing this idiot Mattos the first time he had released the criminals he had caught, but he had checked himself upon learning that the guy wasn't on the take from anyone, something rare in the department, a perfect white-hat.
"Let's imagine a situation, Mattos. You're walking down a street here in our jurisdiction at two in the morning and see a suspicious-looking guy standing on a corner."
"What's suspicious-looking?"
"s.h.i.+t, Mattos, a guy standing on a corner in the middle of the night is always suspicious."
"Especially if he's black."
"s.h.i.+t, d.a.m.n right. You're walking down a street in our district at two in the morning and see a black guy standing on a corner. What can a black guy be doing at that hour? Or even some s.h.i.+theel white? I'll tell you what he's doing: waiting for somebody to mug or looking for a house to rob. I'm gonna arrest the son of a b.i.t.c.h. A cautionary measure pure and simple. Then I'll send for his record. If he's clean, I'll cut the f.u.c.ker loose."
This topic had been debated between the two of them before. Whenever Mattos relieved Padua, they had a similar discussion. Padua believed he would one day convince Mattos that his point of view was correct in every aspect.
"That stuff of St. Thomas Aquinas that it's preferable to acquit a hundred guilty men rather than convict one innocent man is bulls.h.i.+t. Pure fairy tale. It's not by that kind of thinking that we're gonna protect decent people. What is it you're afraid of? The s.h.i.+tty, corrupt, illiterate press? That c.o.c.ksucker of a con man who's our superintendent? The city's been handed over to the criminals, and cowardly philosophies like that are nothing but the excuses of self-serving cops who wanna run away from their responsibilities."
In earlier days, Mattos would get irritated with Padua, and the two would argue heatedly. Now, he was just bored.
"Changing the subject, did you meet the madam at the Senate Annex?"
"Why?"
"I need to know if a certain guy frequented her trysting place."
"A senator?"
"Yes."
"Some of the guys I hauled in yesterday have a record, I guarantee you," said Padua craftily.
"I'm very sorry, if you want to help me, I'm grateful, but I'm not going to bargain with you. Anyone brought in just for questioning I send home. s.h.i.+t, Padua, the lockup is full of poor devils, and you want to throw more wretches in there."
"Wretches? f.u.c.king h.e.l.l, you're one stubborn guy."
"So are you."
Padua's muscles twitched convulsively, as if an electric current had coursed through them. He put on his coat.
"s.h.i.+t. Holy f.u.c.k, Mattos, you're gonna drive me crazy. I'm gonna end up as batty as you." Pause. "We're going to the Senate Annex this afternoon."
THE PORTUGUESE ADELINO, father of Cosme, a short, stocky man with gray hair, arrived at the precinct around three in the afternoon. He was taken to Mattos.
They were alone in the inspector's office.
"Have a seat."
Adelino sat on the edge of the chair. He avoided making eye contact with the inspector, who stood beside him.
"Your son is in a bad situation . . . He was caught in the act . . . When the police got there, the guy was dying . . . You were there, weren't you, in the workshop?"
"Yes."
"I can't hear you. Louder."
"Yes, I was."
"You saw everything, didn't you?"
"Yes."
"What? I didn't hear you."
"I saw it."
"How did it happen?"
"That individual was a very rude person, he insulted and hit my son . . . The boy lost his head . . ."
"Speak louder. What did the boy do?"
"My son was much weaker . . . And the other man hitting him, hitting him mercilessly . . . Then he picked up the lug wrench to defend himself . . . Just one blow and the man fell . . ."
"Cosme and his wife are expecting a child, aren't they?"
"Yes."
"Speak louder."
"Yes."
"It'll be your first grandchild?"
"Yes."
"Louder."
"Yes."
"Louder."
"Yes. Yes. Yes."
"The first grandchild . . ." said Mattos.
Adelino lowered his eyes.
"Why are you crying?"
"I'm not crying," said Adelino, wiping his eyes.
They remained silent for several moments.
"Where are you from?"
"From Sabrosa . . ."
"Sabrosa . . . Where's that near?"
"Vila Real."
"Tras-os-Montes?"