The Hunting Hour: A Novel
By Andrew Corsaro and Frank Corsaro
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The Hunting Hour - Andrew Corsaro
Contents
THE KILLING
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
THE
SEARCH
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
THE INVESTIGATION
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
PIGTOWN
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
COUNT THE GAINS;
TOSS THE
LOSSES
Chapter Twenty-Four
THE
PARTY
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
THE
CLOTHES
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
FRANK’S
DIARY
Chapter Thirty-One
A FAMILY
AFFAIR
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
FREE WILL
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
CROSSROADS
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Chapter Forty
FATE
AND
CHANCE
Chapter Forty-One
For all the lawmen
who have worked and died in the gray areas
of police work.
There is no hunting like the hunting of man, and those who have hunted armed men long enough and liked it, never care for anything else thereafter.
~Ernest Hemingway
THE KILLING
Chapter One
This is the way I think it happened. I know these killers. There’s an art to it, and, as I see it, this one was an immaculate kill.
He got to the place around dusk and parked his car three cross streets away. His target had been pointed out to him, and he had a full face photo. Thinking of how it would go, he felt a spasm and tightness in his chest. Sometimes they get them when realizing they’re bringing down a full grown man that could fight back.
He’d been careful to eat something before the hunt. The stomach can growl on empty and give you away. Next morning, all they found was the suspect’s bloody clothes stuffed down a storm drain and a few blood-soaked shoe impressions on the sidewalk.
While waiting for it to happen, he’d probably exhausted his what ifs
. No matter how long you’ve been at it, you can’t escape nerves of some kind. Nerves of anticipation are usually worse than the act itself. Besides—The victim was going to be a cop.
He was due home from a local Baltimore bar called Hogan’s Alley, a hole in the wall place known to be a hangout for lawmen.
Dusk thickened into night. Heavy sky. No stars or moon to light the way to a silent death. Victims dispatched this way hardly have time to make a sound; they’re usually dead before they even know it. The assassin listened to the buzz of I-95 traffic on the freeway above. The victim would be driving back; Hogan’s was too far to walk from. He was known as a heavy drinker and might be showing it, or high on dope, or both! Still his experience on the street counted. He’d acquired a don’t give a shit swagger from all those years protected by a badge. This might make it difficult for a straight hit. The assassin had been warned that the cop could be dangerous. The job could turn messy and if he were to fail nailing him, there could be consequences; there are always consequences. His legs suddenly felt cold and cramped.
The only light was a small yellow bulb over the dumpster close to the back entrance to the building where the cop lived. Dressed in black, the assassin eased into the shadows outside the radius of the yellow glow. After parking his car, the target would have to pass him.
And he waited.
For safety’s sake, he reached into his hoodie pocket and pulled out a six-inch fixed blade knife from a small leather sheath and bladed the dull side against his wrist to protect the blade. He was sweating. He commanded himself to stop sweating, but his command had come too late. The body has its own ways in survival mode.
He heard the sound of a car coming down the side street, the wheels squeaking as the brakes made its final stop at the house.
He was posed at the periphery of the street’s shadows near the dumpster. A trickle of sweat fell off his forehead onto his cheek and hung there.
He heard the muffled thwak
of the car door being open and shut. A quick look out of the shadow confirmed it could be him.
The sound of the cop’s quick approach breathed heavily into the dank night air. Then came a rough cough and the rasp of him spitting twice into the street. He came towards him, defenses down, totally unaware of the danger that waited.
In one silent move, the sweating assassin lunged out of his hiding place and sank the blade deep, deep into the socket between the man’s collar bone and neck.
He pulled the blade out in a twisting motion. An eruption of blood shot up into the air. Then another! And another!
As the victim struggled to figure out what the fuck was happening to him, he tried grabbing the killer’s arm, but the slickness of his own blood made it impossible.
The attacker pushed the bleeding man onto his stomach, his neck now pulsing out volumes of blood.
He thrust the knife handle deep into the man’s lower back and felt the spine separating like a tight rope being cut. The man’s legs went limp. His head dropped, and his breath went shallow. The killer reached his left hand around the man’s forehead and pulled his head off the ground to let him look at the dark sky.
Then he cut his victim’s throat.
The assassin listened to the rhythmic suck of the blood and air rushing to escape his victim’s gaping wound, allowing death to enter. Sheathing the knife, he almost cut his own hand. He leaned over again and watched his sweat mingling with the blood.
He quickly wiped his face with his sleeve, turned the body over to see if it matched his photo then was momentarily shocked to see how quickly the man’s features had taken on a look of peace. He instinctively took the man’s wallet and his wrist watch and made his way back to his car. He realized he was now covered in blood so he took off his hoodie, wiped his knife down with it and stuffed it down a storm drain to be lost in the rest of the city’s filth.
Only after getting into his car did he look at the wallet. $20.00 and two driver’s licenses: Frank Dixon on one, Frank Keaton on the other, the assassin must have wondered which one his victim really was.
Chapter Two
I still think you should have called me, Marie.
I thought of it, of course, but I decided not to,
and she moved away from me.
Why?,
I asked her back.
Give me a minute, will you, Johnny? It’s been a very rough day,
and she reached for the coffee cups. It was past midnight, and we were back in our apartment, Marie was still dressed in her scrubs from work, I in my uniform.
She took off her shoes and planted herself on the couch. She had deliberately stopped fussing in the kitchen to pull herself together. I removed my jacket and sat next to her.
Frank’s body had already been examined and put into the morgue; Duke had just finished his report and told me about finding him.
Marie’s face tightened, emphasizing the beauty of her high cheekbones. I was there when the coroner arrived with the body. Ordinarily, Frank’s body would have been in the freezer at the Medical Examiner’s office, but the Medical Examiner’s freezer was already full of bodies. And the overflow storage was at Shock Trauma, only a few blocks away.
Jesus,
I said and shut my eyes against the imagined scene. Dude,
she continued, August heat can start body decomposition pretty fast, so the coroner worked all night like a beaver. Meanwhile, guess what?
I didn’t guess.
Another homicide arrived to replace Frank on the slab. The morgue tech was on break, so the coroner had to wait. Last night, it was a war zone in Baltimore—blood all over the streets, ready to be hosed off, before business as usual this morning.
Marie sat up and sighed. When the coroner was done with the autopsy, I went along with Frank and the undertaker to the funeral parlor, then took a cab back home.
Was Frank… ?
I couldn’t finish my sentence.
I—I didn’t look—till after he was done. Just like I couldn’t call you.
I hung my head.
I knew you were exhausted from your own nightshift and needed all the good sleep you could get. Besides, you don’t call somebody.
I’m not just ‘somebody’, Marie,
I said testily, raising my head.
I’m sorry
she said, You’re right. That sounded all wrong. But you don’t call someone you love and tell him the man he loved like a brother was laying on a morgue slab at the hospital.
Marie looked at me with fatigue clouding her face, and a gentle wrinkle of a smile broke through. She put her cup down and hunkered down next to me on the couch. She kissed me on the forehead—my most vulnerable spot. She quickly slipped into my lap and leaned against me.
Don’t let me fall asleep,
she whispered in my ear. I could see how hard she was fighting against the fatigue itching to clobber her. Her eyes closed and in the silence, I realized what a good team we made. Marie Ricaud and myself, John Larkin, both in the service of Baltimore City. We understood what the other saw day in and day out in the city. We were both small town people. I matched her in size and slimness and she said I had a gentle anglo face. Suddenly, she sat up.
I didn’t make it strong enough.
She dumped the remains in her cup, then grabbed out of the cupboard two massive ceramic bowls we both loved.
How did you hear about it?,
she asked.
I, I was asleep at the wheel when it happened. I woke up only when J.B. called—telling me to come down to headquarters. He said it was an emergency but wouldn’t say what it was.
When I got there, I was told to prepare something to say at the service. I was too numb to say or do anything coherent. I kept thinking it was just a bad dream and then I came home—and waited till you got here. And Marie—they’re asking for contributions to help with the funeral arrangements—oh, God!
Johnny, please, don’t blame yourself. You would have done anything to prevent it…
And she reached up and grabbed my face between her palms. Sometimes, when I look at you, I see Frank, and when I looked down at him laying on that cold slab, I lost my grip. I thought I was seeing you. I look at you now and see you’ll always have him with you—and to tell the truth, I don’t think I want another cup…
Tell me one thing, Marie. When the Medical Examiner finished with Frank, was his Marine Corps service ring still on his finger?
You know—I noticed it when he first came in. It was where it always was on the ring finger on his left hand.
I just nodded. And there were no more blues to bother with—only a night of comfort in each other’s arms.
Chapter Three
I suddenly sat up. I wasn’t still in my car. I checked my watch. It read 5:04am. Frank had been dead for two days. Marie was still asleep, with her back to me. The early morning light both reflected and etched out her nakedness. I almost reached out to touch its loveliness, but I quietly slipped out of bed and tip-toed into the living room. It was still cool, but the early August heat was beginning to filter into the apartment. My nakedness took some pleasure in that. At 9:30, I’d switch the air conditioner back on to home-saver mode. Marie and I had become cost conscious.
I was sitting on the couch holding a large framed photo of the three of us at the beach. Frank and I in swim trunks, Marie in the middle wearing a white beach robe covering her teal blue bikini. We’re standing, posing, with Marie’s arms around our shoulders. This was the third time Frank had been with us. Marie and I had met only four months before—at the University of Maryland shock trauma hospital—in the midst of another Baltimore bloodbath. I was there filling out a report on a near fatal shooting. Vital personal information passed between us, before the next emergency wheeled her away. The original beach photo, taken by an obliging passerby, so charmed Marie, that she popped up with a proposal.
I think this might make a really special Christmas card to send out. Aren’t you both tired of all that tinsel crap? We’ll sign it the three musketeers under our names.
No snowman with a carrot nose? Great!
I concurred.
My sister, Bea, won’t like that,
Frank objected. She loves tinsel crap. But except for Bea, I don’t send out cards.
Not even to your parents?
Marie asked wistfully.
Oh, they’ve been gone for a long while,
Frank mumbled and planted his empty Budweiser can in the sand.
I’m sorry,
Marie said and looked at me.
You don’t have to be,
Frank answered. I think they were better off, gone.
He said this with a sad smile on his face, and his hand went through his dark blond hair. I jumped in. My parents will definitely appreciate this view of their errant boy. They haven’t seen me like this since prep school. They have a drawer full of me in uniforms.
Can I have one more Bud, Miss Marie?
We all chuckled at the Miss, as she obliged.
Well, when I go home for Christmas,
Marie said, handing me one more beer, I’m going to take a 12 by 9 framed copy of the picture with me. Alicia will just love it.
Who’s Alicia?,
Frank asked, cracking open his beer.
Alicia’s my mother,
Marie replied.
You call your mother by her first name?
Frank seemed astonished by the idea.
Well, she’s not my real mother—I mean…
And Marie looked at me again. I prompted, so she went on.
I meant Alicia is not my birth mother—I was adopted when I was two months old.
I see,
said Frank gently. And what do you call your father?
Er—Dad or—Father
Why’s that?,
Frank asked. Doesn’t he deserve some equally intimate cognition?
My father died when I was seven years old. I didn’t really get to know him—but that’s how I became a nurse.
And she finished her Coke.
Well,
I offered, My parents are still there for me. I love them, but I don’t really know them. Although I know about them, you understand? It happens. Maybe, someday? Meanwhile we all do the best we can.
I guess this puts us all in some—well—dysfunctional category—wouldn’t you say?,
Frank asked.
I haven’t thought of it that way—but I guess—yes,
I conceded.
What do you think, Miss Marie?
I think it’s time for lunch. Chicken sandwich anyone?
She lifted the top to the cooler and handed them out on little paper plates.
Well, this only goes to prove what I said.
We looked at Frank, waiting for the rest of his thought.
Just think of this chicken here—all chickens,
They grow up—if they grow up—into chicken slices, chicken fingers, chicken nuggets. This little chicken,
he said as he raised his sandwich, was probably a baby chicken, a pullet. The world is beginning to love everything little—baby spinach, baby salad, baby this, baby that,
and he paused.
But what’s your point?
Marie sounded exasperated.
The point is, Miss Marie, this chick proves the prevalence of the dysfunctional in our world.
Now Marie was smiling in confusion.
These days, none of them—animal, vegetable and even probably mineral has been given a chance to really know their mommies and daddies before,
and he munched on his sandwich.
The price of civilization,
Frank concluded.
What an absolutely antic theory,
Marie said.
We had come a long way, Frank and I, from standing in line, polished and creased in our formal dress uniforms, me with my parents in tow, Frank right behind us… the loner who had just me, or about to have me as the biggest asshole buddy he’s ever had.
It was another August, seven years ago, equally hot, but who cared? We were at the Baltimore Police Academy graduation ceremony, inching toward Al Gore, the principal speaker honoring us newly-sworn officers of his political project funding our training. We, the cream of the crop from criminal justice institutions all over our country, the future breed of officer that was supposed to think outside the box and permanently heal Baltimore’s dying neighborhoods.
You should be proud of yourselves,
Gore said, and meaning it while craning his neck to read our name tags. Larkin, Dixon, LeBlanc, Presgraves.
I turned around to Frank. He winked. We’d made it!
Frank had been dead for two days and a eulogy would be spoken, honoring a fellow officer, fallen in the battle waging in the streets of Baltimore, Maryland, aka Bodymore Murderland.
What do I say? Where do I start? I looked at the beach picture once more, and a lump came to my throat.
Chapter Four
The house was packed. The officers sat with their hats on their laps. I was standing behind a podium with my eyes on the closed coffin just below me. I looked up and saw that Daddy, J.B. and Sgt. Hawke were standing in the back. Sgt. Hawke was handing the collection box monies over to Officer Peter Niles who had found Frank’s body during his tour of duty. I had put in a large check—for Marie and myself. A large donation was also contributed by the Marine Corps.
The room fell into a respectful silence. I felt the sweat prickling at my temples and gathering in my palms. I removed my hat and placed it at the edge of the podium. The outline was now in my right hand. I cleared my throat and began.
Fellow officers and friends, I will be brief. First, let me thank all of you for your contributions.
My voice escalated a step. Detective Frank Dixon was born and raised in upstate New York, to a family that was living from paycheck to paycheck.
There was no emotion in my voice. I was in control. Early on, Frank had a strong sense of dedication—but knew that any success in his life would be accomplished only through his own efforts. Because of this, his attitude was often misconstrued as cocky…
There was a sympathetic rustle through the audience. After graduating from high school with average grades, Frank joined the Marine Corps. Yet he continued to take night classes in criminal justice, hoping someday to gain enough credits to get a degree. It took him a bit longer to achieve this, because he spent a year fighting in the Gulf War. As a tank gunner, it was in the desert that he got the name ‘Frank the Tank’. It was a good name, because it described his physical appearance—five foot eight inches tall, compact in build, with an open face. But don’t let that face fool you. When necessary, Frank fought like a tank—fast and hard.
I hit the podium in emphasis, and my outline notes fluttered down to rest on the coffin. Duke,
Officer Jeff Stone rose from his seat up front and handed the sheet back to me.
Thank you, Duke, but I had it memorized anyway.
Returning from the war, Frank finished his studies to earn his degree. After several years of applying to police departments, he was offered a position to join the Baltimore City Police Department.
I paused. "Baltimore was—and still is—known as one of