“Okay, I’ll check in with you if I have anything to report.”
Ballard left the house and headed to her car, looking at her phone for a message from the watch office. There was none. When she got to her car, she looked back at the streetlight at the front corner of Cindy Carpenter’s property. It was still out.
19
Before she got to her city ride Ballard’s phone buzzed again. This time it was her detective commander calling. This meant that the watch commander had roused Robinson-Reynolds at home to complain that she was not responding to radio or cell calls.
“L-T,” she said. “I’m about to check in with the watch commander.”
“What the hell, Ballard?” Robinson-Reynolds said.
“I was with my rape victim. She was very emotional and it wasn’t a good time to take the call. Plus I pulled a dead rover when I left the station. It’s charging in my car.”
“Well, they fucking need you at a scene.”
“I’m on my way. What is it? Where is it?”
“I don’t know, some kind of an assault in Thai Town. Get the details from the watch commander.”
“I’ll call him next.”
“I don’t like getting calls about my people, Ballard. You know that.”
“I do, L-T. It won’t happen — ”
Robinson-Reynolds disconnected.
“ — again.”
She had hoped to keep him on the line so she could update him on the cases she was working. Now she would have to wait till Monday. A lot could happen between now and then.
It was a good thing Ballard liked working alone, because the department had a freeze on promotions and hiring until the world cleared the pandemic. But what made solo work difficult was not having a partner to divvy up responsibilities with. Ballard had to cover everything and still fight to keep the cases she wanted to keep. Once in the car, she called the watch lieutenant on the rover. She chose this because the conversation would go out live on the radio. A cell call would have given him carte blanche to harangue her for not answering the initial calls.
Because it was a holiday weekend and people with seniority were taking days, there was yet another watch commander on duty, making it three in three nights. Lieutenant Sandro Puig kept a modulated tone when he told Ballard to respond to an address on Hobart Avenue to investigate a home invasion and assault. She asked if there were any Thai officers on duty and he responded that 6-A 79 — the designation for the patrol unit assigned to the Thai Town area — included an officer who could translate.
It took Ballard five minutes to wind her way down and out of the Dell and then another five to get to the address, which was a 1950s two-level apartment building with parking underneath. It looked like the last time anyone had taken a run at painting the place was the previous century. She parked behind a patrol car. She saw no EMT wagon yet, even though the call was billed as an assault.
The entrances to the apartments were along an outside walkway. As she headed up the steps toward apartment 22, a shirtless man with a bloody eye suddenly appeared on the upper landing, saw Ballard coming up, and charged down the stairs toward her.
At the same moment, she heard a woman’s shrill voice yell, “Hey! Stop!”
Muscle memory took over. Ballard took a sideways step into the middle of the concrete staircase and brought her arms and hands up to take on the body charging at her from an upper angle. The man hit her with all of his weight. He was small but the impact was solid and she was propelled backward and down. She landed butt-first on the lower landing with the man’s weight coming down on top of her. After impact, he immediately started to roll off her. She tried to grab him, but without a shirt, there was no purchase on his sweat-slick body. As fast as the collision had occurred he was up and gone. Ballard could see a female officer coming down the steps toward her. The officer hit the landing, jumped over Ballard’s sprawled body, and continued the chase, yelling something that sounded like “Yood, yood, yood!”
Ballard realized she had hit her head on the concrete. She wanted to get up and join the chase but the world was beginning to spin. She turned onto her side and then her stomach and then finally raised herself onto her hands and knees.
“Ballard, are you all right?”
She turned her head toward the stairs and saw another officer coming down. Soon she felt a hand on her arm as someone tried to help her up.
“Wait,” Ballard said. “Give me a second.”
She paused and then looked up at the second officer. It was Victor Rodriguez, her translator from the night of Raffa’s killing.
“V-Rod,” Ballard said. “Who the fuck was that?”
“That was our goddamn victim,” Rodriguez said. “He suddenly jumped up and took off.”
“Go after your partner. I’m all right.”
“You sure?”
“Go.”
Rodriguez hurried off, and Ballard, grabbing the staircase rail, climbed up into a standing position. She was hit with vertigo and held on to the railing for support. Her head finally cleared and she tentatively let go of the railing. After taking a few steps to see if everything was working, she swung her hand up under her jacket to the small of her back to check for blood or other damage but found nothing. She touched the back of her head. There was no blood but she felt a bump swelling at the impact point.
“Shit.”
Soon she heard a helicopter cutting across the sky above and knew the officers had called out an airship to help find the running man.
But it was not to be. Rodriguez was soon back with the other officer, Chara Paithoon. Both were huffing from the unsuccessful foot pursuit.
“He got away,” Rodriguez said.
“You okay, Renée?” Paithoon asked.
“I hit my head,” Ballard said.
Paithoon was one of the few Thai-born officers in the department. She was short and compactly built and wore a short haircut with shaved sidewalls and a waxed front wave. Ballard knew that plenty of female officers adopted utility hairstyles to ward off the unwanted attention of male officers.
“Can I see?” Paithoon said. “Let me check your eyes.”
Paithoon snapped on a flashlight. She held the light so the outer edge of its beam touched lightly on Ballard’s face. Paithoon was standing in close, looking up at her eyes.
“You’ve got some dilation,” she said. “You should have the EMTs check it.”
“Yeah, where are they?” Ballard asked. “I thought this was an assault.”
Paithoon stepped back and put away her light.
“We called them but I guess they’re tied up,” Rodriguez said.
“So what exactly happened here?” Ballard said.
“Neighbor called it in, said there was a fight in twenty-two,” Rodriguez said. “We got here, and suspects were gone on arrival. Chara was talking to the guy and then suddenly he pushes her into me and takes off. You know the rest.”
“Was he illegal?” Ballard asked.
“Never got to it,” Paithoon said. “He wasn’t Thai, though. The neighbor who called it in was Thai but this guy was Cambodian. I think this was ABZ business and he was afraid we were going to arrest him, so he hightailed it.”
Ballard knew that ABZ meant Asian Boyz, a gang that preyed upon immigrants, legal and otherwise, from Southeast Asia.
Two paramedics entered the apartment building’s central courtyard, and Paithoon greeted them.
“Our victim is GOA but you need to take a look at Detective Ballard here,” she said. “She took a tumble and hit her head.”
The paramedics agreed to check Ballard but wanted to do it at their truck. Paithoon and Rodriguez stayed behind to do mop-up on what was turning out to be an assault call without a victim.
Ballard sat under a light on the fold-down tail of the EMT wagon while a med tech checked her vitals as well as her eyes for dilation and her scalp for bruising and swelling. The name patch on his uniform said single.
“Is that your name or relationship status?” Ballard asked.
“It’s my name but I get asked that a lot,” Single said.
“Of course you do.”