Deja Dead Page 0,140
Number 201. Come on down.” He mimicked the game show invitation.
We stood a moment, sizing up the building as one would an adversary, preparing ourselves for assault and capture. Two black kids rounded the corner and started up the block, rap music blaring from an enormous boom box. They wore Air Jordans and pants big enough to house a nuclear family. Their T-shirts bore totems of violence, one a skull with melting eyeballs, the other the grim reaper with beach umbrella. Death on Vacation. The taller boy had shaved his scalp, leaving only an oval cap on top. The other had dreadlocks.
A mental flash of Gabby’s dreadlocks. A stab of pain.
Later. Not now. I yanked my attention back to the moment.
We watched the boys enter a nearby building, heard the rap truncated as a door closed behind them. Ryan looked in both directions, then back at us.
“We set?”
“Let’s get the sonofabitch.” Claudel.
“Luc, you and Michel cover the back. If he bolts, squash him.”
Claudel squinted, tipped his head as though to speak, then shook it, exhaling sharply through his nose. He and Charbonneau moved off, turned back at Ryan’s voice.
“We do this by the books.” His eyes were hard. “No mistakes.”
The CUM detectives crossed the street and disappeared around the graystone.
Ryan turned to me.
“Ready?”
I nodded.
“This could be the guy.”
“Yes, Ryan, I know that.”
“You all right?”
“Jesus, Ryan . . .”
“Let’s go.”
I felt a bubble of fear swell in my chest as we mounted the iron stairs. The outer door was unlocked. We entered a small lobby with a grimy tile floor. Mailboxes lined the right wall, circulars lay on the floor beneath them. Bertrand tried the inner door. It was also open.
“Great security,” said Bertrand.
We crossed into a poorly lit corridor shrouded in heat and the smell of cooking grease. A threadbare carpet ran toward the back of the building and up a staircase to the right, secured at three-foot intervals by thin metal strips. Over it someone had laid a vinyl runner, at one time clear, now opaque with age and grime.
We climbed to the second floor, our feet making faint tapping sounds on the vinyl—201 was first on the right. Ryan and Bertrand placed themselves on either side of the dark wooden door, backs to the wall, jackets unbuttoned, hands resting loosely on their weapons.
Ryan motioned me beside him. I flattened myself against the wall, felt the rough plaster pluck at my hair. I took a deep breath, drawing in mildew and dust. I could smell Ryan’s sweat.
Ryan nodded to Bertrand. The anxiety bubble swelled up into my throat.
Bertrand knocked.
Nothing.
He knocked again.
No response.
Ryan and Bertrand tensed. My breath was coming fast.
“Police. Open up.”
Down the hall a door opened quietly. Eyes peered through a crack the width of a security chain.
Bertrand knocked harder, five sharp raps in the sweltering silence. Silence.
Then. “Monsieur Tanguay n’est pas ici.”
Our heads whipped toward the sound of the voice. It was soft and high-pitched, and came from across the corridor.
Ryan gave Bertrand a stay-here gesture and we crossed. The eyes watched, their irises magnified behind thick lenses. They were barely four feet off the floor, and angled higher and higher as we approached.
The eyes shifted from Ryan to me and back, seeking the least threatening place to land. Ryan squatted to meet them at their level.
“Bonjour,” he said.
“Hi.”
“Comment ça va?”
“Ça va.”
The child waited. I couldn’t tell if it was a boy or girl.
“Is your mother home?”
Head shake.
“Father?”
“No.”
“Anyone?”
“Who are you?”
Good, kid. Don’t tell a stranger anything.
“Police.” Ryan showed him his badge. The eyes grew even larger.
“Can I hold it?”
Ryan passed the badge through the crack. The child studied it solemnly, handed it back.
“Are you looking for Monsieur Tanguay?”
“Yes, we are.”
“Why?”
“We want to ask him some questions. Do you know Monsieur Tanguay?”
The child nodded, offered nothing.
“What’s your name?”
“Mathieu.” Boy.
“When will your mother be home, Mathieu?”
“I live with my grammama.”
Ryan shifted his weight and a joint cracked loudly. He dropped one knee to the floor, propped an elbow on the other, rested chin on knuckles, and looked at Mathieu.
“How old are you, Mathieu?”
“Six.”
“How long have you lived here?”
The child looked puzzled, as though other possibilities had never occurred to him.
“Always.”
“Do you know Monsieur Tanguay?”
Mathieu nodded.
“How long has he lived here?”
Shrug.
“When will your grammama be home?”
“She cleans for people.” Pause. “Saturday.” Mathieu rolled his eyes and nibbled his lower lip. “Just a minute.” He disappeared into the apartment, reappeared in less than a minute. “Three-thirty.”
“Sh . . . Shoot,” said Ryan, uncoiling from his hunched position. He spoke to me,