Vega ran his hand over his hair and it popped back up like porcupine quills. “So, Lou, I don’t know anything about him. Never even met the guy. It’s an effin’ shame, what happened.”
“You hear anything about him? What’s the scuttlebutt?”
“There isn’t any.”
“Hard to believe.”
“Lou, I don’t know what my dad told you, but I only been in the district two months. I just got paired with Citrone.”
Lou nodded. “Citrone knows Lenihan, though?”
“You heard him. No.”
“I heard you. You said he did.”
“I musta made a mistake.”
Lou blinked. “I don’t think so, son, and I gotta know what you know. Lenihan got dead tryin’ to kill somebody I care about. I want to know why.”
“I don’t know. I don’t know anything.”
“You said Citrone knows Lenihan. What made you say that?”
Vega swiped his hair again and squinted around for the waitress. “Where’s that coffee?”
“Why’d you think Citrone knew Lenihan?”
Vega waved a hand, caught the waitress’s eye, and made a drinking motion. She nodded, grabbed the pot by its brown plastic handle, and scored two mugs on the fly.
“Ed, why did you think Citrone knew Lenihan?” Lou asked again, but the kid kept squinting at the waitress, avoiding his eye. “Ed?”
“Here’s the brew,” Vega said, turning around as the heavy mugs arrived and the waitress set them on the table with a harsh clatter.
“I was gettin’ the menus for you, Skippy.” She poured the coffee into one mug, then the next. Lou noticed a dark tattoo on her forearm, a Chinese symbol, and wondered when girls started getting tattoos. Right after they joined the police force, but before they started law firms? Lou watched the waitress walk away and saw with satisfaction that some things still remained the same.
Vega gulped his coffee and hunched over the table. “Mr. Jacobs, Lou,” he said, in a low voice. “My dad says you’re a great guy, so you’re a great guy, but I’m not about to go up against Joe Citrone for you. You understand?”
“I’m only asking for information.”
“Information is going up against Citrone, and I don’t know anything anyway, I swear.”
Lou sipped his coffee and looked at the kid’s face. “You’re afraid.”
“Bullshit.”
“Don’t work in clothes, kid. They’d make you in a minute.”
“I’m not afraid, there’s nothing to be afraid of. That I don’t want to fuck with Citrone? Nothing wrong with that, I’m new on the job.”
Lou edged over the table. “What’s the big deal? Citrone the President of the United States? Did I miss something when I was in the can?”
“Citrone’s the old man. He knows everybody.”
“Then he must know Lenihan, like you said the first time.” Lou held his coffee cup. “Kid, Lenihan was in business with two guys from the Twentieth. They were in it together, with a detective, Della Porta, who got it last year and who used to be in the Eleventh. You think Citrone knows something about it? He’s an old-timer, like you said.”
Vega stood up abruptly, reached in his pocket, and flipped open his wallet. “Don’t call me, don’t find me, don’t bother me.” He threw a creased five on the table. “Stay away from me. Stay away from my father.”
Lou rose, his knees creaky. “Listen, I just want to talk.”
“You heard me,” Vega said, and lumbered from the booth and out of the diner.
Lou watched him jog across the parking lot to his patrol car. Running scared, Lou thought.
“What happened to your friend?” she asked. The waitress appeared and tugged a pad and a stubby pencil from a black apron.
“My friend? He had to see a man about a horse.”
“Wha?” The waitress scratched her head with her pencil.
“It’s an expression. Don’t you know that expression?”
“No. You wanna order?”
“Gimme three scrambled eggs and answer me this. You see a lot of cops in here, don’t you?”
“Yeah.”
“You ever see a cop in here named Lenihan? He was from the Eleventh.”
“Lenihan? Isn’t he that blond babe from the newspaper?”
Babe? Lou thought he heard her wrong. Maybe he did need a hearing aid. “Babe? When did men become babes?”
“Wha?”
Lou wiped his forehead, still damp. “Forget it. Did Lenihan eat here?”
“Sure.”
“Who’d he eat with?”
“Other cops.”
“Which other cops?”
The waitress shrugged. “How would I know?”
“Cops wear nameplates, for one thing.”
“I don’t read their nameplates. Besides, I don’t talk about my customers.”
“It’s just a question. Who’d he eat with, usually?”
“You a cop? I thought you were a cop.”
“No, I’m just a guy. An old guy who wants to know.”
“Well, you’re shit out of luck, old guy who wants to know,” the waitress said, and shifted her weight. “You still want those eggs?”
“You got ketchup, right?”
“’Course.”
“Then yes,” Lou said, and sipped his coffee as she sashayed off.
72
Bennie faced the blood expert on the witness stand. “Dr. Pettis, you and I have met before, so I won’t introduce myself.”
The professor nodded, with a jowly smile. “Good to see you again, Ms. Rosato.”
“And you, sir,” Bennie said, hamming it up. The jury liked Pettis and she wanted them to know that Pettis liked her, too, so she wasn’t the enemy. It was the best tactic with a reasonable expert put up by the other side: make him your own. “Dr. Pettis, the Commonwealth has provided you with various items to examine in this matter. It has provided you with photos, a complete file, blood samples, and a sweatshirt, is that right?”
“Yes.”
“The Commonwealth did not provide you with a weapon to examine, did it?”
“No.”
“Is it your understanding that the police have not recovered the murder weapon in this case?”
“Yes.”
Bennie was watching the jurors’ faces. They looked attentive, and she guessed they were already wondering about the absence of the murder weapon. She walked calmly to the witness stand. “Dr. Pettis, what kind of forensic evidence can be found on a gun used to commit a murder?”
“Objection,” Hilliard said, half rising. “This is beyond the scope of direct examination. Dr. Pettis didn’t discuss murder weapons on direct.”
Bennie faced Judge Guthrie, who sat listening behind his tented fingers. “Your Honor, Dr. Pettis has been qualified as a forensics expert, and I’m asking him some basic questions about forensics.”
“I’ll permit it,” Judge Guthrie said, and his mouth disappeared behind his finger steeple.
Bennie returned to Dr. Pettis. “Please tell us the type of evidence you usually find on a murder weapon, such as a.22 caliber gun, for example.”
“Obviously, one would find fingerprints on the gun, which may result in a positive identification. There may also be flakes of skin, hair, or other trace evidence that could help identify the person who shot the gun.”
Bennie raised a hand. “But in this case, there was no weapon, so no suspect can be identified or eliminated on that basis in this case, is that right?”
“Yes.”
“Dr. Pettis, are you also aware that a sweatshirt was found in a Dumpster in an alley, is that right?”
“I was told that by the prosecutor, yes.”
“No gun was found in the Dumpster, that you know of?”
“Not that I know.”
Bennie took a moment to look at the jurors’ faces, one by one. If they were wondering, let them wonder. “I have another forensics question, Dr. Pettis. When a person fires a gun, from any distance, aren’t certain residues deposited on their hand?”
“Yes, provided there’s no intermediate barrier, such as a glove.”
“Can you test for the presence of such residues in your lab?”