to get away with it, they threw up eight thousand units of public housing between Pitt and the East River, and when they all go condo and their tenants get relocated like Indians to reservations, OâHara and Krekorian will have to find somewhere else to make their overtime. In the meantime, theyâre paying a visit to apartment 21EEE, following up on a domestic abuse, the crime that keeps on giving. Since theyâd prefer to arrive unannounced, theyâre freezing their asses off waiting for someone to step in or out through the locked door.
Shielding herself from the worst of the wind, OâHara turns her back on the door and looks across Pitt Street. Facing the projects and their captive populace of thousands are a nasty little Chinese restaurant, a Western Union that cashes child-support payments and a liquor store named Liquor Store, with more bulletproof glass than the Popemobile.
âI havenât even told you about my latest Thanksgiving fiasco,â says Krekorian, who is built like a fire hydrant, the swarthy skin on his face pulled tight across prominent cheekbones like a pit bullâs. After four years as partners, OâHara and Krekorian are deeply familiar with the toxic ruts of each otherâs dysfunctional lives. She knows that Krekorian only dates black women with two or three kids, and he knows that OâHara hardly dates anyone, and the two indulge each other by acting as if their emotional cowardice is primarily due to the stress and fucked-up schedules of police work.
By now, OâHara is well aware of how little regard Krekorianâs family has for his unlucrative line of work. To her own family, OâHaraâs becoming a cop and promptly earning her gold shield is viewed as a minor miracle, particularly after the untimely arrival of Axl. To Krekorianâs parents, who squandered over one hundred thousand dollars to send him to Colgate, where he was the backup point guard on the basketball team for three years, itâs a profound disappointment, bordering on disgrace. At family gatherings his younger brother, an investment banker, loves to underline this fact by talking ad nauseam about all the money heâs raking in.
âWhat you say this time, K.?â asks OâHara.
âNot a word, Dar.â
âWow. I think you had what Dr. Phil calls a moment of clarity.â
âHe went on and on about his bonus and stock options and being fully vested, and I just let him.â
âLike water off a duckâs back.â
âExactly. Not a peep. I just sat there with my mouth shut and waited until it was just me and him in the den.â
âAnd then?â
âI hit him.â
âMaybe I spoke too soon,â says OâHara, staring at her shoes, trying not to laugh.
âIf heâs going to make me feel bad, Iâm going to make him feel bad.â
âExactly.â
Finally, an elderly Gompers resident ventures forth into the great outdoors, and the two detectives slip in behind him. The elevator is open on the ground floor, and as the doors close in front of them, Krekorian flares his enormous nostrils to draw his partnerâs attention to the puddle of cat piss in the corner. OâHara knocks on 21EEE and announces herself and Krekorian as police.
Dolores Kearns, who came to the precinct and filed a complaint on her boyfriend the day before, takes about a week to come to the door. Kearns wears nothing but a bathrobe, and her ample breasts spill out of it. âIt took you ten minutes to put that outfit together?â asks OâHara, but Kearns is no more put out by the arrival of NYPD than Chinese food.
âI was taking a nap,â she says, music seeping out from behind her.
âWith Al Green playing?â
âI havenât seen Artis since that one incident,â she says.
âThat one little incident,â says OâHara, âwhere he slapped you around and held a knife to your
Irene Garcia, Lissa Halls Johnson