point.â
âGordon?â
âDownstairs. Stairwayâs at the end of the corridor on the right.â
Back here, the reek of old cooking oil was added to the stench of beer. The steps to the basement were sticky and slimy at the same time. Pratt gripped the railing tightly.
At the bottom he found a small square room. Painted flat black some years ago, it was now a dusty dark gray. A door on the left stood open. Two white-suited crime techs were in there. Pratt could clearly see the body slumped over a desk. There wasnât as much blood as heâd expected with a stabbing.
He didnât need to ask where Gordon was. His loud voice could be heard behind a door marked Employees Only .
Gordon looked up as Pratt entered. His face wasnât friendly, but then, it seldom was when Pratt was around.
The space was a locker room for employees and doubled as the dressing room for bands. Everything was low-rent and dirty: lockers, a few chairs, a table, a cheap metal coatrack. The full-length mirror on the back wall had a big crack through it. On a chair in front of it huddled a scared-looking twenty-something kid. Gordon motioned Pratt out of the room. He followed and shut the door.
âDo you think itâs wise leaving your suspect alone?â Pratt asked.
Gordon ignored him.
âSo you got sent?â
Pratt nodded. âHow come Snow isnât here?â
âHe got sick earlier this evening. Says he has the flu. Itâs bullshit. He wanted a head start on his weekend. Well, the jokeâs on him. You too, for that matter. This is an open-and-shut case.â
âThat kid in the room?â
âGuilty as sin. I was about to take him downtown.â
Pratt raised his eyebrows. âHeâs confessed?â
âGet real, Pratt. They all say theyâre innocent. Here are the facts. The kid is the leader of the band playing here tonight. He had a screaming argument with Lewis, the owner, this afternoon when they were setting up. Everybody saw it. Then he went around telling everyone what a scumbag the guy was. Said he was going to get him. The club manager heard him. A few hours later, someone sticks a knife in Lewisâs back. And guess who was always flashing a knifeâincluding earlier this evening? The one he claims has now gone missing.â
âThatâs pretty compelling.â
âDamn straight it is! I had to laugh when the kid said he didnât do it.â
âAnd what if heâs telling you the truth?â
Gordon stepped right into Prattâs face.
âKnow what your problem is, Pratt? You think youâre smarter than everyone else. Well, youâre not, and Iâm going to prove it. A couple hoursâ grilling downtown and this kid will fold like a cheap suitcase. Youâll see.â
As Gordon went back into the room, Pratt was thinking it was a good thing they had CCTV in the interview rooms now. In the bad old days, cops like Gordon would have beaten a confession out of the kid.
He sighed. Seldom was a case this easy. The problem wasnât that he thought he was smarter than anybody. The problem was Gordonâs lack of imaginationâand his laziness. If the kid got a good attorney, Gordonâs case could wind up shredded. It did look bad for the suspect, but every aspect of a case should be carefully studied. That was the only proper way to investigate a murder.
He sometimes wished he could take the easy way outâlike Gordon.
But then, he knew, he wouldnât be doing his job.
Chapter Two
Pratt moved back to the doorway of the crime scene room. Two techs in their white âbunny suitsâ were busy working it up. He knew better than to enter.
âHave a minute, guys?â
The one closest to the door took a few more photos of the body before turning.
âSure, Pratt. What can I do for you?â
That was unexpected. Usually, they told detectives to bugger off and let them work.
âAnything
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