The Oath

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Book: The Oath by John Lescroart Read Free Book Online
Authors: John Lescroart
Tags: thriller, Suspense, Mystery
treatment—it had simply come with the territory. Political people in the department thought they could make the mayor happy by being nice to the Bracco boy, and they weren’t all wrong.
    But when Fisk had told him that he was thinking about going to his aunt, the city supervisor, to complain about their continued ill-treatment on the fourth floor, Bracco had talked his partner out of it. One thing he’d learned from his father was that cops didn’t whine. Ever. The thing to do was talk to Glitsky, he’d said. Ask straight and deal with the answer, which was that there was probably no intentional homicide here with the hit and run, and hence nothing to look into.
    Bracco believed that this was the truth. But what else was he doing with his time?
    So after he dropped Harlen off downtown, he spent a few hours checking leads that they’d picked up on the car during the course of the day. He didn’t expect any results, but you never knew. His experience in hit and run had taught him that most of the time, the drivers would wait until they thought nobody was looking for their car anymore. They’d park it out of sight, keep the garage door closed. After a month, they would take it to a car wash or body shop. And that would be the end of it.
    But maybe this time—long odds, but possible—it would be different. They’d gotten eleven patrol call-ins during the day. These were vehicles fitting the description that were parked at the curb or in driveways around the city, reported by patrolling cops. Fisk hated this kind of legwork. Bracco, on the other hand, put in a couple of hours checking out each and every one. The impact that had thrown Markham would have left a sign even on an old, thick-skinned American car, and a quick walk around with a flashlight would tell him if he would need to come back with a warrant. But none of the cars had anything close.
    Not exactly knowing why, he killed another half hour walking through the parking garage at Portola Hospital, but there wasn’t one old green car. So, feeling like an idiot, he sat in his car and wrote some notes to jog his memory tomorrow—check the Rent-A-Wrecks, don’t forget the call-ins to H&R from citizens interested in the reward from the supervisor’s fund (ten thousand dollars for information leading to the arrest and conviction, et cetera).
    Finally, on his way home after a piroshki gut-bomb he bought at a place on Nineteenth Avenue, he decided to head back up to Seacliff, to Markham’s house. Start, as Glitsky said, with the family. Look at the cars parked outside. After all, he reminded himself wryly, he was the car police.
     
     
     
    “Can I help you?”
    Bracco straightened up abruptly and shone his flashlight across the hood of the white Toyota he was examining. It was the last one of what had been twenty-three cars parked on Markham’s block. The beam revealed a man of above-average height, who brought a hand up against the glare, and spoke again in a harsh, strained voice. “What the hell are you doing?”
    Bracco noted with alarm that he was reaching into his jacket pocket with his free hand. “Freeze. Police.” It was all he could think to say. “Don’t move.” Bracco didn’t know whether he ought to flash his badge or draw the gun from his shoulder holster. He decided on the latter and leveled it at the figure. “I’m coming around this car.” His blood was racing. “Don’t move one muscle,” he repeated.
    “I’m not moving.”
    “Okay, now slowly, the hand in your jacket, take it out where I can see it.”
    “This is ridiculous.” But the man complied.
    Bracco patted the jacket, reached inside and removed a cell phone, then backed away a step.
    “Look, I’m a doctor,” the man said. “A patient of mine who lives here died today. So I come out after paying my condolences and somebody’s at my car with a flashlight. I was just going to use the cell to call the police myself.”
    After a moment, Bracco handed the phone back

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