Snitch (The Bea Catcher Chronicles) (8 page)

BOOK: Snitch (The Bea Catcher Chronicles)
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Junior releases his knees and stretches his long legs out on the bench. “What you drawing?”

“You.” I tear the page off, crumble up the piece of paper, and throw it to him under the bars—under the camera, I hope.

He sits up, bends over, grabs it, and folds the paper flat. “Damn. That looks like me. You an artist or something?”

“Or something. I do tats, a little taggin’, train bombin’.”

“I probably cleaned up your art.”

“Huh?”

“Forget it.” He looks away. “I said too much.”

“Well, what else we gonna do to pass the time? We might as well shoot the shit.” I think about the tennis balls, wondering what they mean. “You into sports?”

“Sure. Why you ask that?”

“I dunno. You look buff, is all. Not that I’m checking you out or nothin’.” I smile at him.

He smiles back. “I do a little running, lift weights and stuff with a team.”

“Oh, yeah, where?”

“Around.”

And it happens again . . . crackling fire this time, burning its way into my head like a branding iron: the image—slowly,
menacingly, ferociously—takes a swat at and grabs a hold of my mind’s eye. A bear claw flashes in front of me, through me, travels down my right hand, and I draw the claw on the page. I scratch out the furry paw on the paper in front of me—unsheathed, threatening sharp talons. And my head feels as if it’s been torn open.

Two images in one day—and I’m paying for it big time. The room starts to spin. I lower my head between my knees, and the pad of paper falls to the floor.

Junior jumps up off the bench. “What the hell is that?” He backs up against the rear wall of his cell.

“A claw?” I eke out.

“Who the fuck
are
you? Why did you draw that?”

I squeeze the back of my neck. I’m in too much pain to lie. “I dunno. ’Cause you were thinking of one. That’s how it normally happens.”

“What you talking about?”

It feels like a nail is lodged, stuck in my brain. “It’s crazy, I know, but I see stuff. Sometimes stuff I don’t want to see—what other people are thinking, but only when I draw.” I approach the bars, my vision blurred now.

“Get the hell away from me, you freak.” He hugs the back wall.

The room keeps spinning, and I fight to stand on my two feet. “You don’t have to be here. You know that, right? Just tell them—tell them what you know.”

“I can’t. I can’t.” His voice cracks with emotion. He starts to cry, wail.

“Why not? Why can’t you tell them the truth? Who are you protecting?”

“Me! I’ll be back on the streets if they release me.”

“Isn’t that a good thing? What you want?”

“You don’t get it. He’ll kill me, just like he did to Jamal.”

“Who will?”

“We both saw him hide his stash. Jamal threatened to rat on ’im. I had no idea what he did to Jamal . . . until that cop told me. . . .” Heavy tears drip down from his eyes. “I need to stay here. Don’t you get it?” He kicks at the wall. “Leave me the fuck alone. Get away from me.” He cowers in the corner.

“Okay, okay, I get it.” I feel the insides of my stomach coming up, and I
so
don’t want to hurl. I manage to pull the hat off my head and turn it around.

Immediately, I hear a jangling of keys, the sound of heavy boots clomping down the hallway.

“Please, please don’t say nothin’.” Junior whimpers, mops up tears with his sleeve.

I crumple up the drawing of the claw, stuff it in my sweatshirt pocket. “I won’t. I promise you, Junior,” I whisper back.

He looks up at me. “Wait. How d’you know my name?”

The sergeant approaches my cell, a tough expression firmly in place. “We have a few more questions for you.” He unlocks the cage, pulls me out, cuffs my hands again, and drags me down the hall.

I glance back at Junior, see his dark eyes wide, like pools of black, thick ink, weighed down with . . .

Secrets and lies.

I lie on Daniels’s office couch, take a sip of water, then place the cold plastic bottle on my forehead.

He pushes his desk chair over and sits. “How are you feeling?”

“My head still hurts, but not as bad.” I roll over on my side and face him. “Hey, I’m sorry I couldn’t get anything out of him.”

“You didn’t see anything? Nothing at all?”

I finger the bear claw sketch—stuff it down a little deeper in my sweatshirt pocket.
I’ve got to keep him safe—off the streets.
“No. He wouldn’t make eye contact. I don’t know; I’m not so sure he’s innocent anymore.”

“What? Why do you think that?”

“He’s just meaner than I thought. Cold son of a bitch.”

“But I saw you talking with him—”

“Yeah, yeah,” I interrupt. “I tried to get him to talk, but he clammed up.”

The lights in the room dim for a second, with a crack of lightning.

“Huh.” Sergeant Daniels crosses over to the window . . . peers outside at the sudden rainstorm.

“What’s going to happen to him now?”

“I don’t know yet. I don’t have much to work with—no murder weapon, no witnesses.”

I sit up. “But the drugs . . . you found the pot on him, that has to be something.”

“Yeah. Possession on school grounds, suspicion of distributing—a misdemeanor at best. We’ll schedule a court hearing,” he says, sifting through papers. He picks up the drawing of the tennis balls.

“Oh, that. . . . I’d forget about that sketch.” I force a laugh. “Crazy, right? I bet it doesn’t mean anything. I think it was because of my headache. There were, like, spots in my vision. I’ve been getting them with the migraines.”

He walks toward me. “I shouldn’t have had you down there. You sure you’re okay?”

I wave him off. “I’m fine. No biggie. Just sorry I couldn’t get you what you wanted. I better get home now. . . . Don’t want to wig my parents out.”

“I’ll escort you out the back door.”

“Nah, don’t worry. I’ll see myself out.” I hitch up my jeans, roll them at the cuff. Pull off the sweatshirt. “Without my hat and hoodie I look kind of boring, don’t you think? No one will notice me.”

“Bea, you could never look boring.”

I would savor that last comment if it weren’t for the guilt I feel for fudging the truth. But the kid is petrified—no way I
can ignore that. He knows something . . . a lot of something. Tennis balls, a bear claw.
What do they mean?
I have to find out, and without anyone knowing it came from Junior.

Without them thinking that he snitched.

6 days
6 hours
35 minutes

I
see Willa’s car parked in Zac’s driveway when I get home. She used to stop by my house, to say
hi
at least, when she came to see him, but now it’s all about her obsession with him. I’m totally out of the picture.

Zac’s little brother, a sophomore at Packard, hangs a huge banner along their fence in the rain. It reads: CORNELL (in big red letters). CONGRATULATIONS, ZACHARY! Jeremy’s hair is soaked—stuck flat on his head—and he looks totally miserable.

Unbelievable. I know Willa got in, but Zac did, too? That bonehead? This really pisses me off.

Zac was the first person I met (sort of) when we moved to Ann Arbor. I saw him from way up high in the tree, that day we moved into our house. He was one of the boys playing football in the yard next door; he was taller and huskier than
the rest, and I could tell, even then, that he was the neighborhood bully as he charged, chased down a boy half his size, and tackled him—smashing his little body into the lawn.

“That’s not fair, Zac!” the little boy cried. “It’s supposed to be touch football. That was the rule.”

Zac ignored his cries and snatched the ball from the kid’s puny arms, ran across the grass to the drive, raised his arms, and shouted, “Touchdown.” Then he jackknifed the football onto the asphalt. It ricocheted off the drive and like a bullet, crashed through the front window of the house.

They all froze. I froze, too, along with the birds sitting in the tree. It was like all the oxygen was sucked out of the air. The front screen door squeaked open, and a woman came stomping out. She looked at the broken window, whirled around to the boys, and yelled, “Who did this? Who?”

They all stood there—tight-lipped—all stared at Zac.

He lowered his head; his voice cracked. “Jeremy did, Mom.” Zac pointed to the scrawny kid. “I saw him. He did it.”

“I did not, he did!” Jeremy sputtered, protested, “I can’t believe you just said that, Zac.”

The Zac kid started to cry big, phony fat tears, and then wailed, choked out, “Guh . . . you’re such a liar, Jeremy. Mom told us to never lie. Fine. I’ll take the heat for you.” He skulked to his mom, head hung low, and tightly hugged her. “I’m sorry,” he feigned. “I’ll clean it up, and you can take it out of my allowance.” His voice was muffled in the waist of her jeans.

The mom stuttered, stammered, and then we all watched her make the call, like a referee on the field, as she petted the thick, brown, sweaty mop of her older son’s head. She then shouted the penalty: “Jeremy. You get in this house right now, young man, in your room. You’re grounded for a week.”

Jeremy whimpered, “But, Mom . . .”

“Don’t
but Mom
me. Now! Did you hear me?”

His skinny shoulders slumped as he passed his big brother, walking toward the house, whining under his breath. The screen door squeaked open and slammed closed. The other kids scattered.

And there I was, sitting way up in the tree, getting my first big dose of suburban family dynamics, thinking . . .
the big brother is ratting on his little brother? Lying about it?
Even at six I knew it was obviously WRONG.

I wanted to jump down from the tree, right the wrong, knock on the door, and tell the mom the truth. But Zac, alone in the yard now, kind of snickered, high-fived the air, started toward his house, and then spotted me—caught me spying on him from the tree.

Our eyes locked, and he did that weird twitching thing with his jaw and then gave me the finger, pulled the back seam of his shorts out of his butt crack, and huffed inside his house.

He was a jerk then, and a bigger jerk now.

I pull over to the side of the road, roll down the window, and yell out to Jeremy, “How did he manage that?”

“I dunno. Beats me.”

“Well, why are you putting up the banner, and not him?”

“What . . . you expect the king to do it in the rain? I’m just happy he’ll be out of the house.” He turns, walks to his front door—his shoulders slumping in defeat like they did twelve years ago in his front yard; like they probably did so many times in his life.

I fly up the stairs to my room before my mom sees my gangsta getup.

She calls out, “Bea . . . dinner in a half hour. Dad’s coming home.”

Dad’s coming home?
Huh.
My dad hasn’t been home for dinner in ages, ever since this dean job thing came up. “Okay, Mom.”

My phone pings with a text:

BILLY: Stan the man’s down w/a meet’n’greet w/u

I text back:

ME: Awesome! TY Billy

I jump on my bed, flatten out the crumpled sketch of the bear claw, and study it now that my head is free of pain, my eyes clear. Damn . . . this would make a wicked tattoo.
Huh. A tat . . . Junior had a few of them.

I open my laptop, pulling the screen in close, and type in:
Bear Claw tattoo Ann Arbor
, and hit images.

A picture of a bakery pops up; a girl’s racy (bordering on porn) Facebook page; Stan’s the Man Tats tattoo parlor. I bookmark the site and then scroll down the page at dozens of images. And then I see it—the bear claw Junior was thinking about, what I saw in his eyes—the claw I drew. Primal, almost primitive. I click on
visit site
and it directs me to a YouTube video.

“I’m Coach Credos.” The camera focuses in on a huge—I’m talking
gigantic
—Hispanic guy with a shaved, shiny head. His gapped-tooth smile is neatly tucked into a fleshy face on top of a heavily tattooed neck—black ink barbed-wire circles the collar of his shirt; a scary inked eye stares out over his Adam’s apple.

He resembles a rabid shar-pei dog ready to bite. A heavy brow flaps over beady eyes—underneath, a tatted teardrop drips down his cheek. He’s super macho—tacky, thick gold chains hang around his neck. He flexes his right bicep—as wide as it is long and tattooed with a bear claw, and he wears a skintight black T-shirt that has the same claw printed on the front.

BOOK: Snitch (The Bea Catcher Chronicles)
11.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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