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Authors: Jeffrey Siger

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“Is now a good time?”

“Yeah, Yianni, come in.” Andreas pointed to the chair closest to his desk. The men met when detective Yianni Kouros was a brash, young rookie and Andreas the new police chief on Mykonos. They’d been together ever since.

“I had the pleasure of a drop-in visit today from our minister. This just arrived from his office.” He patted the pile of folders Maggie had put on his desk. “It’s on those two Tinos murders.”

“I thought that was your friend’s case?”

“No more. Our minister wants us to close it out ASAP based upon what’s in the file. He asked me to get Tassos to sign off on it. But no way I’m going to raise that with Tassos until I know what’s in here.”

“In other words, until I tell you what’s in there.”

“Smart thinking, detective. Get back to me by this afternoon.” Andreas handed him the folders.

“Any ideas?”

“Yeah, let’s try not to be as narrow-minded in our thinking as our dear minister.”

“Huh?”

“The dead are
tsigani
. Somehow he thinks that’s the answer to everything and a reason for closing the case. Understand?”

Kouros nodded and stood up. “So what else is new? Since when haven’t
tsigani
,
metanastes
, or for that matter, foreigners in general not been our politicians’ fall guys of choice?” He gave a casual salute and left.

Andreas turned his head and stared out the window. There had always been refugees fleeing despots and turmoil in Greece’s region of the world, but when Greece joined the E.U. in 1981 it was essentially a homogeneous land of less than ten million. With financial prosperity came Filipinos to serve in domestic jobs no longer done by Greeks and the fall of the Soviet Union in 1989 brought a wave of Eastern European immigrants seeking better lives, but it was after 2002 and the confluence of the euro currency launch, America’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and Greece’s all-out building boom for the 2004 Athens Olympics, that the floodgates opened.

Romanians, Bulgarians, Albanians, and Poles came to put their much needed construction skills to work for pay far greater than any they could dream of back home, and Greece’s porous island and mainland borders became an irresistible magnet for those fleeing Turkey, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and what at times seemed all of struggling Africa. They were the
metanastes
—the foreigners who came to work or simply escape a life in chaos elsewhere.

Greece’s population was now almost eleven and a half million of which ten percent were estimated to be immigrants. No one knew exactly how many more were living hidden lives within the country, but with the abrupt change in Greece’s financial fortunes virtually every lost job or criminal act now seemed somehow blamed on the
metanastes
or
tsigani
. No one had to tell Andreas how ugly the anger was brewing—on all sides.

***

Maggie’s voice came over the intercom. “Yianni’s here. He said to tell you he’s read the file.”

“Send him in.”

Kouros walked in and sat in a chair across the desk from Andreas.

Andreas looked at his watch. “That was quick. Just a little more than an hour.”

“A lot of paper but not much to read. No one saw or heard a thing except for smoke just before dawn. The victims were brothers, one twenty-two and the other eighteen. They were from a
tsigani
camp set up on the southeast part of the island near the port and far away from where the bodies were found. They left the camp the day before they were found. Their family began to worry when they heard about the murders and the two hadn’t returned for three nights. The victims were preliminarily identified from jewelry found on their bodies, later confirmed by DNA testing. The Tinos police chief personally interviewed everyone in the camp and came up with nothing. No one had any idea of who might have wanted to kill either brother or of a possible motive. The most anyone had to say was that this was ‘not the
tsigani
way’ of settling scores.”

“What did forensics come up with?”

Kouros leaned in and rested his elbow on the desk. “That’s where things get interesting. The victims died of asphyxiation before the fire.”

“They were dead before they burned?”

“Looks like it.”

“How did they suffocate?”

“Can’t be sure, but forensics thinks it might be gas.”

“Carbon monoxide poisoning?”

Kouros gestured no. “Nitrous oxide.”

“Nitrous oxide?”

“Yes, laughing gas.”

“That’s the sort of stuff my dentist uses.”

“And some use it as a recreational drug. Makes you euphoric, happy. You feel no pain.” Kouros shook his head. “They think that’s what it was because they found a nitrous oxide cylinder in the back of the van behind the bodies.”

“That’s not what
tsigani
are known to traffic.” Big time drug dealing by some
tsigani
was another mark borne by the many.

“Like I said, it makes things interesting.”

Andreas picked up a pencil and tapped it on his desk. “Check to see where you can find laughing gas on Tinos.”

Kouros shook his head. “The Tinos police already did. No luck there. It’s available just about everywhere, on and off the island. And it’s not just used by dentists. Hospitals use it in surgery, motor racers use it to boost engine power, and restaurants use it to puff up whipped cream.”

“Whipped cream?”

Kouros nodded. “Find whipped cream and you’re likely to find a nitrous oxide cylinder somewhere. And that’s the dangerous stuff because it’s not mixed with oxygen. If you’re breathing pure nitrous oxide—”

“You suffocate. Shit. Anything else interesting?”

“The victims were from a clan that came to Tinos a month before the murders. But their clan wasn’t one that usually spent the tourist season working on Tinos or came there to celebrate the Assumption of the Virgin Mary on August 15th.”

“August 15th is Tinos’ biggest celebration of the year,” said Andreas. “And it draws huge crowds, which means major opportunities for what
tsigani
do. Maybe the new boys on the block pissed off another clan who thought they might be muscling in on their action?”

Kouros shrugged. “Could be, but it’s not unusual for transient clans to pass through Tinos this time of year. They always did when we were stationed on Mykonos.
Tsigani
revere the Virgin Mary and go there to pay their respects. Besides, why pick those two brothers and this year to make a point?”

Andreas tapped the pencil against his forehead. “Odysseus probably came to the same conclusion. I’ll give him a call to see if he had any ideas he didn’t put in the file.” Cops did that sort of thing, especially with politically sensitive cases. “By the way, is the victims’ clan based in Greece?”

Kouros nodded. “Menidi.”

“Ouch.”

Menidi was an area about three miles west of the center of Athens just south of Mount Parnitha, and perhaps the most dangerous neighborhood in all of greater Athens. Here was where those who gave
tsigani
a bad name threw babies in front of out-of-place expensive cars in the hope of getting a settlement for “the accident,” where the poorest of the poor found a place to live, and drug lords and human traffickers ruled. It was a no man’s land for cops. But
tsigani
weren’t the only bad guys in Menidi. They shared the criminal turf with the
ians
—Russians, Romanians, Ukrainians, Albanians and other eastern Europeans—and the
is—
Afghanis, Pakistanis, Iraqis, etcetera.

“If this involves
ians
or
is
out for revenge I can definitely see the two
tsigani
being fried alive,” said Andreas.

“Yeah, but they’d have been wide-awake when it happened,” said Kouros.

“I’m not sure what we have here. But it definitely doesn’t look like ‘
tsigani
fighting
tsigani
.’”

“As long as it’s what our minister considers non-Greek bad guys killing other non-Greek bad guys he won’t give a damn about their ethnicity. He’s broadminded that way.” Kouros smiled.

“Spoken like our good friend Tassos. Which reminds me.
Maggie, come in here. I need you for a minute. Please
.”

Maggie popped her head through the doorway. “You’re the boss.”

Yeah, right. Andreas and everyone else at GADA knew Maggie’s mastery of GADA’s bureaucratic ways made her more important than any chief inspector.

“Could you find Tassos for me?”

“He’s at home.”

“On Syros?”

“No, my place.”

Tassos was a widower, and Andreas’ chance mention of him to Maggie, not knowing of their long ago romantic past, had helped put them back together.

“Do you think you could get him to come in here this afternoon? I need his help.”

Maggie smiled. “Don’t we all.” She closed the door.

Kouros said, “You can’t be serious about asking Tassos to sign off on this case.”

“I’m not. But the minister said he wants everything ‘wrapped up,’ and I intend to do just that. Which means I need Tassos’ help. No one knows the Cyclades better than he does. I want to know if bad guys are killing bad guys and, if so, who and why. And if it’s something else…” Andreas waved his hand in the air. “We’ll cross that bridge when we come to it.”

“And no doubt burn it to ashes in the process.”

Chapter Three

Tassos was in Andreas’ office by four and up to speed by five. That was when Maggie swung in with coffee, a
meze
selection of food, and a quick apologetic, “Sorry to interrupt, but I must keep up my men’s strength.”

“Stick around,” said Tassos. Kouros and Tassos were sitting on chairs next to Andreas’ desk. “We’re about to start guessing at what has our fearless minister so hot to close an investigation into two murders.”

“Which ones? Things are happening so quickly these days that I’m losing count,” said Maggie.

“The ones on Tinos while we were at your grandniece’s baptism in Thessaloniki. You’re probably better qualified than we are at guessing what’s on a bureaucrat’s mind.”

Maggie set the tray on the desk in front of Tassos. “Make that on any man’s mind.” She dropped onto the couch.

“Okay, let’s start with what’s on yours,” said Andreas nodding at Tassos.

Tassos picked up a
spanakopita
. “Your friend, the police chief, has been on Tinos for only a little over a year, but he got the interviews right.
Tsigani
don’t take revenge that way.” Tassos pointed the tiny spinach pie at his chest. “I know the
tsigani
very well and they know me, but I wouldn’t have gotten any more out of those interviews than Odysseus did. The two were killed to deliver a very specific message. Any response had to come from the one who received it. No other
tsigani
would dare make that decision. Certainly not by talking to cops. Besides,
tsigani
know from experience that cops don’t give a shit about what happens to them.”

“Some of us do,” said Andreas.

“We know that, they don’t.” Tassos popped the
spanakopita
into his mouth.

“So, what do you suggest we do?” said Kouros.

Tassos finished chewing. “Find a
tsigani
who can get us answers. My money’s on this not being
tsigani
revenge killings, but since the victims were
tsigani
that’s where I’d start.”

“Have anyone particular in mind?” said Andreas.

“A few. Even the
tsigani
king owes me some favors. He shows up on Tinos every year a few days before August 15th to join in the celebration of the Assumption of the Virgin. Makes quite an entrance.”

“I bet,” said Andreas.

“What does our minister have to do with all of this?” said Maggie.

“He implied the Prime Minister is all over him to close the case,” said Andreas.

“Do you believe him or is it just more of that name-dropping bullshit he thinks gets us to do what he wants?” said Tassos.

Andreas shrugged. “I reached Odysseus on vacation. He said everything he knows about it is in the file and that if we want to call it closed, ‘be my guest.’ But he told Spiros he wouldn’t be the one to do it.”

“I always liked Odysseus,” said Tassos. He looked at Andreas. “If it’s not the Prime Minister pushing him, why do you think Spiros is so anxious to end the investigation?”

“I hope it’s not because he’s trying to protect someone,” said Kouros.

Maggie shook her head. “Spiros isn’t an idiot. He just treats everyone like he thinks they are. No way he’d be dumb enough to bring you guys into this if he wanted to pull off a cover-up.”

“I don’t know,” said Kouros. “Our politicians are so arrogant these days at all they’ve gotten away with that I think they believe they can do just about anything they damn well please.”

“What do you think has Spiros so anxious, Chief?” said Maggie.

“I think he’s honestly afraid that something might turn up along the lines of
tsigani
being victims of a hate crime. And he knows if that happens at least he, if not the whole country, will be back in hot water with the press.”

“I can see his point,” nodded Maggie. “Remember how fired up the international media was when the crazy French started deporting
tsigani
? Just imagine how they’d tear us apart, the E.U.’s bad-boy, if they could run a story that has Greece addressing its immigration problems by declaring open season on
tsigani
.”

“I’d rather not,” said Andreas.

“Me either,” said Tassos. “We don’t deserve it.” He stood up. “If you’ll excuse me, folks, I have a
tsigani
to find.”

“Happy hunting,” said Kouros.

Andreas stared at Kouros. “At times your sense of humor is worse than his.”

“Then buy me a beer. I’ll try to be funnier.”

“Deal.”

***

Beer was a big seller in Greece. Ouzo and retsina surely were too, and plainly the romanticized choice of tourists, but beer was the day-to-day staple. Andreas and Kouros were in plainclothes alone at a table in the back of a rundown taverna in a graffiti-covered, 19th Century, two-story neoclassical building. It was tucked away on one of the narrow commercial streets at the western end of Alexandras Avenue by the Victoria metro station. As shabby as the place was it had a certain old-world charm definitely not present in any of its late 20th Century, anonymous concrete neighbors.

“How the hell did you find this place?” said Andreas.

“A buddy brought me here a couple weeks ago. Said his father used to take him here. There aren’t many places like this left in Athens, what with all the old neighborhoods changing. I thought you might like it. Besides, it’s even cheaper than the ones across from headquarters. I figured that since you’re paying I’d help save you some money for the wedding.”

Andreas lifted his beer. “
Yamas
.”

Kouros lifted his bottle and clinked on Andreas’ bottle. “
Yamas
.” He took a sip. “Less than a week to go. Bet you’re nervous.”

Andreas shrugged. “Only about the dancing. Not the getting married part.”

“Come on, you have to be scared just a little bit. You know, one woman, the rest of your life.”

Andreas gestured no. “As crazy as it may sound, I feel strangely at ease.” He smiled. “Doubt you’d understand, youngster.”

“You bet. I like my life just as it is.”

“Some day, if you’re lucky, you’ll know what I mean. Until then just keep playing your
kamaki
games, but be careful where you put your spear, you wouldn’t want to dull it permanently.”
Kamaki
was the Greek name for the little trident used in hunting octopus—and slang for the Greek man’s real or imagined skills at pursuing women.

“Safe sex lecture duly noted.” Kouros took another swig of beer.

The bar area in the front of the taverna was filling up with what seemed mainly foreign workers, but the man behind the bar was Greek and spoke only Greek to his customers.

“So, what do we do while Tassos looks for a lead?” asked Kouros.

“Exactly what I planned to do before the minister popped into my office. Get ready for my wedding.”

“Terrific. But don’t forget about your bachelor party.”

“What bachelor party?”

“The surprise one on for the night after tomorrow. Remember to act surprised.”

“Anything else I should know?” said Andreas.

Kouros paused and smiled. “Your world, as you know it, is about to change.”

Andreas finished his beer. “Let’s get out of here. I want to get home before Tassaki goes to sleep.” He threw five euros on the table and headed toward the door.

“I have to take a leak,” said Kouros.

Outside the street was surprisingly quiet. Then again, it was August and that meant Athens was deserted by anyone who could get out of town. As Kouros came through the front door a man ran past them on the sidewalk screaming in a language neither cop understood at another man running fifteen yards behind him.

When the second man reached the two cops he abruptly turned and pointed a gun at them.


Dose mou to porto foli su!
” It was heavily accented Greek but he’d made his point.

Andreas and Kouros immediately reached for their wallets. The man held the gun in his right hand and kept waving it back and forth between Kouros to his right and Andreas to his left. Andreas held out his wallet in his right hand and Kouros did the same with his left. The man hesitated as if deciding which to take first. He reached with his left hand for Andreas’ wallet, taking his eyes off of Kouros for a split second.

Kouros’ right hand shot up and caught the barrel of the gun between his thumb and forefinger and drove it up and into the man’s forehead as he stepped in to put his right hip behind the man’s right side and force him backwards into the ground. There was the dull thud of the back of a head striking concrete.

Andreas leaned over the unconscious gunman and took back his wallet. As Kouros checked him for other weapons, Andreas walked to the front of the taverna and picked up a chair. There was the high-pitched whine of a motorbike coming up fast alongside the curb.

Andreas stepped to the edge of the sidewalk and swung the chair into the face and chest of the oncoming helmetless driver, sending both bike and driver sprawling onto the street. As the driver stumbled to his feet, Andreas delivered a Champions League quality soccer kick to the man’s midsection, putting him back on the ground. The man tried to stand again. This time Andreas hit him with a roundhouse right that put him out cold.

Andreas dragged the driver onto the sidewalk and dropped him next to the gunman. He gestured for Kouros to handcuff them both and punched in the code on his phone for “officer needs assistance.”

“What the hell was all that about?” said Kouros. “The guy you just beat the shit out of was the one the other guy was chasing.”

Andreas smiled. “Obviously, you’ve not kept up with your reading, detective.” Andreas looked at his right hand and flexed it. Nothing seemed broken. “There was a bulletin this week on a new urban crime technique. It takes advantage of our natural curiosity. One guy runs by the mark screaming at another guy, the mark stops to see what’s going on, the chaser robs the mark, the screamer returns on a motorbike, the chaser jumps on behind him, and they’re off and lost in traffic.”

“Christ. What will they come up with next?”

“Wish I knew. But there will always be something.” Andreas leaned down and checked the handcuffs as a blue and white Athens police car screeched to a halt in front of them.

“Do me a favor, Yianni. Take care of the paperwork on this. I want to go home and hug my kid.”

“No problem. Besides, I think I’ll go back inside. I could use another drink. Or three.”

Andreas put his arm around Kouros’ shoulder and smiled. “That, my friend, sums up the difference between your life and mine.”

***

Andreas, Lila, and Tassaki lived where no one existing on a cop’s pay could possibly afford, certainly no honest cop. It was Lila’s home when they met and, despite Andreas’ initial
macho
discomfort at the thought of moving into his girlfriend’s apartment, the reality of their potential living choices prevailed: either an entire, sixth-floor penthouse at perhaps Athens’ most exclusive address, next to the Presidential Palace, with unobstructed breathtaking views of both the Acropolis and its majestic sister hill, Lykavittos, or his one bedroom, slight view, maybe the elevator is working, fourth floor apartment.

Andreas was crawling on the nursery room floor watching a diaper-clad Tassaki run around him in circles. Every once in a while Andreas reached out to catch him, put him on his back, and tickle his belly until he laughed. Lila was standing at the doorway smiling.

“One of you is definitely having a good time.”

“The one with the diaper is wearing me out.” Andreas pinched Tassaki’s bottom, making him laugh even more.

“Maybe you should take him with you to your bachelor party?”

“You mean the secret one?”

“Yep, I cleared the dancers.”

“If you cleared them, I’m not sure it’s worth going.” He picked up Tassaki and handed him to Lila. “Give mommy a kiss to make up for daddy’s bad sense of humor.”

“I’ll put him to bed. Go away or he’ll never go to sleep.”

Andreas kissed Tassaki and went to their bedroom. He kicked off his shoes and plopped on the bed. He shut his eyes and his mind wandered back to that taverna. He wondered if Kouros was also thinking of how close they’d just come to being another random, street crime fatality statistic.

He’d almost fallen asleep when he heard, “Thanks for coming home early.”

He opened his eyes. Lila was standing at the edge of the bed holding a book. He wasn’t about to tell her how he almost didn’t make it home. Ever. “I figured I’m already in enough hot water with you.”

“Smart choice.”

“You trained me right.”

She smiled. “Just keep working on the ‘don’t worry I won’t miss the wedding’ part.”

“Remind me again, why do you love me?”

“Because of your wonderful mind, compassionate nature, big—”

“Finally, the truth comes out.”

“Sorry to disappoint you, stud. It’s your big understanding heart. As represented by the wonderful surprise you sent me.”

God bless Maggie. “You mean those photographs of church weddings?”

“You did pick it out!” She held up the book.

“Maggie had a hand in it.”

“Sometimes, Kaldis, you’re too honest a cop.” Lila smiled and lightly patted him on the belly with her book. “So, what has you so distracted?”

It always amazed him how Lila sensed his moods. Still, he wasn’t going to talk about the taverna. It would only upset her. Besides, he wanted to forget it. He’d take the easy way out. “I thought we agreed no more involvement in my cases.” Involvement in one had almost cost Lila her life.

“I’m not trying to get involved, just curious. I think Tassaki’s having one parent at risk everyday is more than enough of a gamble on his future.”

“No reason to get heavy on me.”

She stared at him. “I’m just letting you know why you have no reason to worry about me getting involved. Our child means more to me than solving your cases.”

He wondered if that was meant as a jab at him, but decided to let it drop. After all, it was their wedding week and he was a missing-in-action participant.

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