“Pooks,” Bryan said quietly, “get back here, now .”
Pookie stepped around the table before reaching into his jacket for his Sig Sauer, but the men were faster. Their hands came out of their jackets — one raising a semiauto, the other leveling a sawed-off pump shotgun.
Before the men even cleared their weapons, Bryan drew his own Sig with his left hand, reached out and grabbed Lanza with his right. In the same motion, he kicked the table over so the top faced the gunmen, sending plates of food flying. Bryan shoved Lanza down behind the overturned table.
The sawed-off roared, shredding linen and splintering wood.
Bryan’s pistol barked twice, bam-bam . The shotgun guy twitched, then Bryan fired for the third time in less than a second. The man’s head rocked back and he dropped.
Screams filled the air. Pookie found his gun in his shaking hand. The other attacker backpedaled for the front door, firing wildly toward the table. Pookie aimed — people on the floor, ducking behind tables, too crowded, traffic outside, people on the sidewalk — but didn’t fire.
A gunshot to Pookie’s right. Tony Gillum, firing as the perp ran out the restaurant door.
Bryan came at Tony from behind, grabbing Tony’s right hand and lifting it, pointing the gun to the ceiling even as Bryan drove his left foot into the back of Tony’s right leg. Tony grunted and fell to his knee. Bryan twisted sharply, throwing the bigger man facedown onto the food-strewn linoleum floor.
Bryan remained standing, Tony’s gun still in his hand. He ejected the magazine and pulled back the slide, then walked four steps forward and kicked the sawed-off shotgun away from the downed gunman.
“Pooks, cuff Tony and call this in.”
The fear finally hit home. It had all gone down in four seconds, five at most. Pookie pointed his weapon just to the left of Tony’s back.
“Don’t move! Hands behind your head!”
“Relax,” Tony said as he obliged. “I got a permit.”
Pookie set his knee into the small of Tony’s back, making the man carry his weight. “Just stay right there. Bryan, you going after the other gunman?”
“No way,” Bryan said. “We wait for backup. First guy to peek his head out that door might get it shot off.” He then shouted to the restaurant patrons. “San Francisco Police! Everyone just stay where you are! Is anyone hurt?”
The patrons looked at one another, waited for someone to talk. No one did. A chorus of shaking heads answered Bryan’s question.
“Okay,” he said. “Nobody move until backup arrives. Stay down, stay calm. Do not try to leave the building, the gunman might still be outside.”
Ten seconds of panic had rooted the patrons in place. They didn’t relax, not even close, but they obediently stayed put.
As Pookie cuffed Tony Gillum, Bryan knelt next to the would-be assassin and opened the man’s jacket. Glancing over, Pookie saw two spreading red spots staining the perp’s white T-shirt, blood circles merging into a solid figure-8. Blood also oozed from a spot just under the man’s left nostril.
Two to the chest, one to the head.
Pookie called for backup. He also requested an ambulance, but unless someone got a splinter from the ruined table the paramedics wouldn’t have much to do — Bryan’s perp was already dead.
“Holy shit,” Lanza said. “Holy shit.”
Bryan sighed, closed the gunman’s jacket. He looked back at Lanza.
“They were after you, Lanza,” Bryan said. “Like I told you, you probably want to lie low, if not just throw in the towel and go back to Jersey.”
A wide-eyed Lanza nodded. “Yeah. Lie low.”
Bryan walked to Lanza and helped the man to his feet.
“You owe me,” Bryan said.
Pookie watched. Bryan had just killed a man, yet he acted like that was about as upsetting as opening the fridge to find someone had drunk the last of the milk. The casual nature and the cold stare seemed to shake Lanza up as much as the shooting itself.
“You owe me,” Bryan said again. “You know that, right?”
Lanza rubbed his face, then nodded. “Yeah. I … holy shit, man.”
“A name,” Bryan said. “We want a name for this Ablamowicz thing.”
Lanza looked back to the dead gunman lying on the floor at Bryan’s feet, then nodded.
Pete Goldblum had hit the deck as soon as the shooting started. He stood and wiped spaghetti sauce off his suit coat. “Mister Lanza, you don’t owe this cop shit.”
“Shut up, Pete,” Lanza said. “I’d be a grease spot right now. You and Four Balls didn’t do a god-damned thing.”
“Hey,” said a facedown Tony Gillum. “I got a round off.”
“Sure, Tony,” Lanza said. “You’re like a regular Green Beret.”
Pookie heard his own long release of breath before he knew he was letting it out — the situation was contained. It wasn’t the first time he’d seen Bryan Clauser in action like that, but he hoped it would be the last.
Bryan’s Lie
The sun had hidden itself somewhere behind the apartment buildings. Bryan was only minutes away from his bed and sleep. Usually he had trouble sleeping at night, but not today — he’d be out like a light.
“Riddle me something, Bri-Bri.”
Bryan’s forehead rested in his right hand; his elbow rested on the inside handle of Pookie’s Buick. Whatever bug he had was rapidly getting worse: fatigue and body aches, the start of sniffles, throat full of razor blades, a first hint at a monster headache.
Bryan leaned back and yawned. Pookie had been talking nonstop since they left the restaurant. That was in a manual somewhere — keep the shooter talking after the incident, don’t give him time to get all introspective.
Pookie meant well, for sure, but Bryan just wanted silence. He couldn’t tell his friend and partner why. Some things you just couldn’t share. They were almost back to Bryan’s apartment, then he’d be done with Pookie’s constant chatter.
“Bri-Bri? You hearing me?”
“Yeah, sure. What’s the question?”
“How does a grown man not have a car?”
Bryan had to clear his throat before he could talk. “Don’t need a car. I live right in the city.”
“You don’t need a car because I schlep you all over the place.”
“Also a factor.”
Pookie double-parked in front of Bryan’s building. Horns behind them started honking instantly.
“Bri-Bri, you going to be okay? I can hang here tonight if you want.”
Bryan put on his best fake-solemn expression. “Thanks, but no. This ain’t my first rodeo. I just need to be alone and think this through.”
Pookie nodded. “All right, playa. But call me if you start wigging out, okay?”
“Thanks, man.” Bryan had to coax his exhausted body out of the car. He stumbled into his building. What a day. A shooting, handling the crime scene, giving his statement, the preliminary shooting review — too damn much. There would be more long days to come. With all those witnesses, with a gunman opening fire in a crowded restaurant, Bryan wouldn’t catch any shit for this. That didn’t mean, however, that he didn’t have to go through the motions. A full shooting review board was already scheduled. That was always such a good time.
And at the crime scene itself, before he could even leave, there’d been the mandatory chat with the police shrink. Was Bryan okay? How did the shooting make him feel? Did he think he could be alone that night?
Bryan said what he always said — that killing a man felt awful.
And, as always, that was a lie.
Did he enjoy killing people? No. Did he feel bad about it? Not in the least. He knew that he should feel something, but just like the last four times, he did not.
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