The Only Good Lawyer - Jeremiah Healy

Free The Only Good Lawyer - Jeremiah Healy by Jeremish Healy Page B

Book: The Only Good Lawyer - Jeremiah Healy by Jeremish Healy Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jeremish Healy
middle of it.
    About forty and stocky, Cosentino was wearing rumpled
blue jeans and a rugby shirt, cuffs pushed halfway up his hairy
forearms. There was a little less of the hair on his head than I
remembered, but the wide mouth and plug-ugly face hadn't changed
much, still belonging more to a bullfrog.
    Cosentino turned to the woman sitting at the next
desk. "Al, this is the guy I told you about, had that shoot-out
with Las Hermanas ."
    The woman swung her chair around. Early twenties, she
was petite and pretty, wearing a brown tweed skirt and a yellow
blouse. Her eyeglasses rode up at her hairline, the hair itself a
shade to the blond side of brunette and drawn into a ponytail above
her left ear, trailing down onto the shoulder. "Alicia Velez."
    "John Cuddy."
    "Oh, sorry." said Cosentino, finishing with
his shoe and getting both feet back on the floor. "I forgot,
Yollie and me were still partnered up back then."
    I said, "She's left the unit?"
    Velez nodded. "Yolanda moved over to a district
detective slot." The eyebrows went toward Cosentino. "Couldn't
stand Larry's one-liners anymore."
    Cosentino said, "The thanks I get, breaking her
in. Sit down, sit down."
    As I pulled over a straight-back chair, Velez said,
"You went up against those BWA's, we're lucky to be seeing you."
    "BWA's?"
    " 'Bitches with an attitude!' Girl joined Las
Hermanas, she got mean in a hurry and didn't go back."
    Cosentino cracked his knuckles, grew serious. "You
been visited by any of them, Cuddy?"
    "Not so far."
    "Well, then." He seemed to relax again.
"What can we do you for?"
    "I'm helping the defense in the Alan Spaeth
case."
    "Be seeing you," said Velez, standing.
    Cosentino lowered his voice. "Al, just a second,
okay?"
    "Larry, this guy's—"
    "A second, please?"
    Velez sat back down.
    Cosentino turned to me. "Cuddy, inside the
department, an officer or an A.D.A.—even an ex-A.D.A.—gets
killed, we still call it by the name of the victim, you know? To us,
it's not the 'Alan Spaeth' case, it's the 'Woodrow Gant' case."
    Velez stuck in, “The man's vocabulary isn't why I
was I leaving."
    "I know that, Al." Cosentino never moved
his eyes off me. "But Cuddy here took down some pretty bad kids
we couldn't protect him from, and I heard he risked his fucking life
when one of them had another citizen by the balls out in suburbia. So
maybe we hear what he has to say."
    Velez didn't like it, but she stayed seated as I
tried to figure Cosentino out. He might be trying to help me, or he
might be trying to get information on my client that he could feed to
the prosecution, with Velez as a corroborating witness in case I
tried to backpedal on anything. Either way, though, I needed
Cosentino more than he needed me.
    I said, "Somebody suggested I ought to come see
you."
    Velez asked, "Who?"
    I glanced at her. "Whoever you guys tipped about
something not being right in the Gant killing."
    Cosentino said, "Al?"
    Her eyes went to her partner.
    He said, "I told Murphy over in Homicide what I
told you."
    "Great." Velez's eyes now went to her lap.
"Just great"
    I looked from one to the other. “There are some
things about the murder that don't add up to Alan Spaeth as the
shooter. Since Gant once prosecuted gang members, and the killing was
done execution-style, I'm thinking maybe somebody decided to settle a
past grudge."
    Cosentino crossed his ankles, swinging his sneakers
back and forth a little. "Eight, nine years ago, there was this
task force set up, trying to deal with Asian gangs"
    "I remember reading about the Chinatown
prosecutions."
    "Yeah. The triads started out from Hong Kong,
then the tongs got organized here in the states by Chinese-Americans,
then the young-punk street gangs arrived on the scene. But it wasn't
just Chinese."
    Velez put in, "Vietnamese, Cambodian, you name
it. Very equal opportunity."
    I looked at her. "But all that's Boston. Gant
prosecuted in the suburbs."
    "Right," said Cosentino, "but bear
with me a minute, okay?"
    "Okay."
    He

Similar Books

Thoreau in Love

John Schuyler Bishop

3 Loosey Goosey

Rae Davies

The Testimonium

Lewis Ben Smith

Consumed

Matt Shaw

Devour

Andrea Heltsley

Organo-Topia

Scott Michael Decker

The Strangler

William Landay

Shroud of Shadow

Gael Baudino