Stranglehold - Hardcover

Book 4 of 7: Detective Greene

Rotenberg, Robert

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9781476757766: Stranglehold

Synopsis

Fact or fiction? Current events in the City of Toronto echo the plot of Robert Rotenberg’s latest legal thriller Stranglehold. Everyone is saying he predicted the future for Toronto’s mayor. Read it and find out!

Ripped from the headlines, Stranglehold is bestselling author Robert Rotenberg’s most shocking book yet, featuring Detective Ari Greene in the fight of his life.

It is just after Labour Day and the city is kicking into gear. All eyes are on the hotly contested election for Toronto’s next mayor and crime is the big issue. Greene is no stranger to the worst of what the city has to offer, but even he is unprepared for what happens next when he stumbles upon a horrific homicide.

In one nightmare moment his world is flipped upside down. Soon Greene is pitted against his young protégé, Daniel Kennicott, who arrests him for first-degree murder. Tied down on house arrest as he awaits his trial, Greene has to find a way to clear his name, and also must face some very hard truths: that he didn’t really know the people he believed in most; that there are unseen forces at work prepared to see him take the fall; and most of all, that he should never underestimate the price people will pay for love.

Eerily reminiscent of the scandal surrounding the current Toronto mayor, Stranglehold is Rotenberg’s fourth gripping mystery set on the streets and in the courtrooms of the city, capturing audiences with his masterful knowledge of the intricacies of the criminal justice system and feel for the emotions that make people tick.

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About the Author

Robert Rotenberg is one of Toronto’s top criminal lawyers and the author of several bestselling novels, including Old City Hall, The Guilty Plea, Stray Bullets, and Stranglehold. He lives in Toronto. Visit him at RobertRotenberg.com or follow him @RobertRotenberg.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

1

THIS WAS NOT THE WAY ARI GREENE HAD EXPECTED TO BE SPENDING HIS MONDAY MORNING. No self-respecting homicide detective would be caught dead driving a motor scooter. And yet, here he was putt-putting along Kingston Road, home to a string of low-rent strip malls, tax refund specialists, tired-looking furniture stores, and cheapo motels that rented out rooms by the week, by the day, and by the half day. The type of places cops called “have-a-naps.” Today’s predetermined destination was the Maple Leaf Motel. Maybe it would be a step up from the inappropriately named Luxury Motel, the tacky place where they’d met last week. Of course, this get-together was not about the decor, but about the one thing in his life that never seemed to change: cherchez la femme.

The silly scooter was the best way he could think of to get across town during the day, not an easy thing to do because he was one of the best-known policemen in Toronto, and his car was a distinctive ’88 Oldsmobile that every cop on patrol would recognize. Buying a second car, or renting one, was out of the question. Left a paper trail. A bicycle was possible, but it was too far to ride. Plus, he didn’t want to arrive all hot and sweaty for what had become over the previous five weeks their regular Monday-morning “romantic rendezvous.”

It had been easy to find a scooter for sale in the newspaper – no traceable computer searches on his laptop – and buy it and a helmet for cash, no names given. He hadn’t registered the ownership or gotten a motorcycle licence. If he were ever stopped he’d just show his badge and that would take care of that. He’d found a paved lot behind an abandoned garage a ten-minute walk from his home where he could park and lock it. Even the gas was simple. He’d go to a different independent station when they were busy at rush hour, buy twenty dollars’ worth, and hand over the cash with his gloves and helmet still on. No credit cards. No trace. Invisible.

In a strange way he enjoyed the challenge of covering his tracks. He’d always thought that the many criminals he’d chased and arrested over the years had been motivated by the game, not the crime. The feeling of beating the system. Fooling everyone. Being on the outside, looking in.

Now he was playing. Not that having an affair with a married woman was a crime. Well, at least it wasn’t illegal. And, thankfully, this was the last Monday he’d be doing this. Next week she was going to split with her husband, and everything was going to change.

Being on a scooter made Greene much more aware of the weather. He’d driven a patrol car along Kingston Road hundreds of times, but had never before realized how windy the street could be, thanks to its proximity to the lake, and the long, uninterrupted line it followed near the shore. Today was sunny and warm, the sky was a startling blue although the wind was strong. But the traffic was unusually slow and now it had ground to a halt.

He shot his left hand from the sleeve of his leather jacket to check his watch. Damn. He was going to be late. It was already ten-thirty. He was supposed to be there by now.

Ten-thirty on the first Monday in September after Labour Day. A time when the rest of the world was hard at work. Kids in school. People at their desks. Criminal trials in their opening stages.

As a homicide detective, Greene’s time was his own, and it was easy for him to slip away for a few hours, once a week. But for Jennifer Raglan, it was more complicated. She was the head Crown attorney in Toronto. It was a job she’d had for years, had given up, then had returned to at the end of July when Ralph Armitage, the lawyer who’d taken over from her, was arrested for obstructing justice.

Her first week back, she’d got in touch with Greene and invited him out for lunch.

“I told them I’d do the job until Christmas, not a day longer,” she had said. They were in a booth in the corner of the City Hall cafeteria, a place where cops and Crowns regularly ate. Underneath the table, unseen, she’d slipped off one of her shoes and was caressing his calf.

“Very loyal of you,” he said.

“On one condition. That I get my Mondays off until I’m in a trial.”

“Sounds fair.”

She smiled at him. There was a little dimple in her cheek that showed when she was very happy. She rubbed his leg harder. “Howard has a client in Boston, and he flies down there every Monday.”

Howard was her husband. A year earlier she had left him and their children and soon after that started seeing Greene. They had worked very hard to keep their relationship secret. But after a few months, the ordeal of splitting up her family had become too much for her, and she had returned home.

“You want the day off to be with the kids,” he said.

“No.” She tucked her toes up inside his pant leg and stroked his skin. “I want Monday mornings with you.”

Then she told him how she had begun long-distance running again. How it was a brisk, half-hour jog from her house to the strip of cheap motels on Kingston Road. How they all took cash and didn’t ask for ID. And that she’d already paid for a room at the Dominion Motel for the following Monday. Sixty bucks. No tax. Room 8.

He offered to pay half and that made her laugh. “Money’s tight but I think I can handle it,” she said. “And besides, this is all my idea.”

He shrugged. “I’m not exactly unwilling.”

“And you’re not exactly comfortable with it either.”

She stared at him with her bold brown eyes. There was no point in denying it.

Last winter, when her mother was dying and he was in a tough trial that involved the murder of a child, they’d spent a night in an out-of-town hotel. It was the only time they’d slept together while she was still living with her husband.

He had thought that was the end of it. Stress of the moment.

Over the next few months, they’d occasionally run into each other in court, say hello. He’d ask about her kids. She’d ask about his father. Her message was clear: It’s over.

She pulled her foot away.

“If you don’t show up,” she said, getting back up to leave, “I can watch Law and Order reruns for two hours.”

She insisted he take every possible precaution to hide his identity. He’d come up with this idea of the scooter and for the last five Mondays had walked into whatever motel room she’d booked, always number eight, at exactly 10:30. Their two hours together always went quickly. And now, thanks to the damn traffic, it was 10:39 when he finally pulled into a strip mall that had a payday loan shop, a nail salon, an out-of-business adult video store, a convenience store, and a place that sold discount goods from almost every country of the world. The motel was less than a block away.

He parked the scooter beside a bank of newspaper boxes between the Money Mart store and the Cupid Boutique. The city had four major dailies, and all but one of them had huge front-page pictures of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie getting out of a stretch limo or walking up the red carpet to a movie theatre. It was all part of TIFF, the Toronto International Film Festival, a September ritual that saw top-flight movie stars parachute in each year. In his early days as a division cop, Greene had been one of those policemen he now saw in the photo, holding back the crowds.

He walked past a poster featuring a group of bulky high-school boys in rugby uniforms. They were black, Asian, East Asian, and white. Typical of a suburban Toronto school. In big type the words SCARBOROUGH SCRAPPERS NEED YOUR SUPPORT! In smaller type there were details of how to send money to help the team.

The sign was a typically clever move by Hap Charlton, the chief of police and Greene’s mentor for many years, who now was running for mayor. Since becoming chief, he had got a huge amount of publicity for his work as the coach of this team of underprivileged students. Most of it very positive, except for the time when former U.S. president Bill Clinton was in town for a conference and Charlton missed it because of a game.

Charlton was a master at knowing the rules, and bending them just enough so they wouldn’t break. The election rules very clearly stated that no signs could go up until thirty-eight days before the vote. This was his way of getting his message out there, without showing face.

A month earlier, Charlton had gone on a talk-radio program and announced he was running for mayor. His campaign pitch was that he was tough on crime, that he was going to get rid of wasteful spending at City Hall, that he would drive his own car, no more limo service for the mayor, and his own personal obsession: He’d declared war on graffiti. He’d held his first press conference in front of a vacant suburban warehouse where he’d taken a power washer and cleaned off a whole wall of what his critics called urban art and he called garbage. Pictures of him wielding the nozzle like a gun had been picked up by the press across the country.

The local media pundits, who almost all lived downtown, were not impressed. But Charlton immediately jumped to an early lead in the polls, leaving his main challenger, the left-leaning mayor, Peggy Forest, flat-footed. Since then he’d kept gaining momentum. On Wednesday night, he was going to have his first big rally at a hotel near the airport. Greene would be there, along with every other homicide cop on the force.

Someone had spray-painted in HAP IS A HAZARD on the sign. The poster and the graffiti pretty much summed up the radically divided sentiments about his campaign.

There was no one else on the narrow sidewalk. In the six times Greene ...

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