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She had caught the wind and was in full sail, coming straight at him, her course irreversible. He had to get off the phone. The sweat was now dribbling down the side of his nose.

‘What I need, Ben, is a line on a pusher, somebody out in your territory who maybe scored very big in red devils in the last two, three weeks.’

‘Two or three weeks,’ Colter repeated, watching the jumpsuit slink closer.

A customer reached out and took her by the arm. But she looked down, said something terminal, and he dropped his hand.

‘Red devils, hunh?’ Ben said. ‘Lemme see, that could be, you know, three or four shovers I know of. Gimme an hour, I’ll see if I can pin it down without blowing my cover.’

‘Thanks. Should I call you?’

‘Use the squad room drop. Give ‘em a number at. eleven o’clock. I’ll call in and get it.’

‘That’s cool, Ben. And thanks.’

‘Any time, buddy. Later.’

He hung up. She was three feet away, staring up at him with eyes that looked like they had dust in them.

‘Lining up your dance card for the rest of the night?’ she said. The voice was perfect.

‘I just broke all my plans until after the holidays,’ Colter said.

‘Aren’t I the lucky one?’

War Eagle came out of the men’s room with tears in his eyes, wiping his tie with a paper towel. A blast of heat and noise hit him like a tidal wave. His cheeks bulged and he turned and fled back through the door.

‘I bet you’re gonna need a ride home tonight,’ Colter said.

‘Nope,’ she said, ‘he is.’

‘I’ll call a cab.’

The Nosh leaned intently over the controls of his electronic magic set, a carefully organized series of tape recorders, filters, re-recorders, and other electronic hardware that looked like a small radio station. He was in his glory, punching buttons, twisting dials, hunched under padded earphones as he worked to lift the voices from one of Sharky’s tapes.

He looked up suddenly, startled by the appearance in the doorway of Sergeant Anderson. The Nosh felt sorry for Anderson, a man beaten down by life, his hair an ugly tangle of grey, his shoulders sagging under the weight of an unhappy marriage. Anderson seemed always to be around, offering help where it wasn’t needed and advice where it wasn’t wanted. The squad room was his home. He remained there, night after night, until he was too tired to stay awake or until he ran out of excuses to avoid going home.

The Nosh pulled off the earphones.

‘Give you a hand?’ Anderson said.

‘Nah. Thanks anyway.’

‘Coffee or something?’

‘Thanks anyway, Sarge.’

‘What you up to, anyway?’

‘Just giving Vice a hand. A little wiretap operation.’

The tape was still running and a cacophony of sound emerged from the loudspeaker. A combination of soft music and cries of passion.

‘What in God’s name is that?’ Andersen asked.

The Nosh giggled. ‘Sounds like a Chinese orgy,’ he said. ‘Well, I’ll be around a while longer if you need anything.’ ‘Tell you what, Herb. I got a fingerprint report coming in on the telex from the Bureau. If you hear the bell ring, gimme a call, will ya?’

‘Glad to,’ Anderson said and smiled, grateful for something to do. ‘But they won’t come in with anything before morning, will they?’

‘I tagged urgent on it and I got a flash back. They’re gonna pull the package for me tonight, if there’s anything to pull.’

‘Okay,’ Anderson said. His curiosity was aroused, but before he could pursue the subject further, The Nosh said, ‘If you should run out of the house for anything, you might swing by Grady morgue. Twigs has a tape over there for me.’

The coroner had called a few minutes earlier to report that he had completed the autopsy on Domino. But, he had added, there was little in the post mortem that would help the Machine.

‘I’ll just go on over now,’ Anderson said. ‘I need a little air.’ And he left.

The Nosh slipped the earphones back on and was immediately lost in his electronic fantasy world. Somewhere in that Chinese orgy, he thought, there’s a word or two, something, that’ll make sense to somebody. All he had to do was lift them out, get rid of the background noise. Eagerly he returned to his dials.

Sharky was stamping his feet in a phone booth near the Peachtree-Battle shopping centre when the phone rang. He lunged for it.

‘That you, Sharky’?’ Ben Colter asked.

‘Right.’

‘I got lucky.’

‘Good! Give it to me.’

‘There’s a pusher named Gerald Lofton, a regular in the place. I got enough shit on this guy to bury him. But I can’t move on him yet. There’s a lot more where that came from. Anyway, right after you called, Lofton came in and we had a drink together and I moved the subject around to speed. I mentioned a friend of mine in Chicago told me something about red devils and was he hip to them and Lofton’s eyes lit up like a church steeple and he tells me red devils are dynamite but expensive. ‘Then he tells me a friend of his just moved — are you leaning on something?’

‘I’m leaning on something.’

‘Fifty pills. At ten bucks a jolt!’

‘Ten bucks!’

‘I say this buyer must work for the mint and Lofton tells me he don’t know who the big score was, but during the conversation he dropped the name of the connection.’

‘And...’

‘The pusher’s a first-class asshole who uses the name Shoes.’

‘Shoes? Like on your feet?’

‘Right. Shoes. Anyway this Shoes, you gotta watch him. What he does, he plays the redneck joints out near Inman Park on payday. Does some heavy over-the-counter trade in pills and even some nickel bags.’

‘The red-devil buy was made in Inman Park?’

‘No. He also has some select clientele out this way.’

‘What’s he look like?’

‘Hell, you won’t have any trouble there. Tall, all bones. Has long white hair, almost like a high yellow, only he’s white. Dresses like a cowboy. Also he never holds. He usually pays a teenager or some wino to carry the shit for him. He makes the deal, goes out in an alley, puts the stuff in a paper bag, and then the customer picks it up from the decoy. By that time Shoes is half a block away.’

‘Neat.’

‘Tonight’s a good night to dump him. It’s payday.’

‘Good.’

‘What’s comin’ down, anyway? I thought you got dumped off the dope squad?’

‘I did. This is something else. In fact you can do me a favour and forget we even talked.’

‘That’s cool. One more thing about this Shoes. He was dropped twice in New York state, both felonies. The last time he did a nickel-dime and went thirty-three months before parole. He’d put his own mother on ice to stay out of the slams. But Oglesby doesn’t want him busted right now. He’s hoping the son of a bitch’ll lead us upstairs.’

‘Thanks, Ben.’

‘Anytime, Shark. Everybody on the squad owes you one. You took a bad rap. Anyone of us woulda done the same thing in your boots. I guess we’re all just glad i1 wasn’t us The Bat dumped on.’

‘See you in the lineup, Ben.’

Sharky returned to the car.

‘We scored,’ he said to Livingston. ‘You know a pusher does the country-music scene name of Shoes?’

‘Nope.’

‘Tall. Beanpole. Mulatto-white hair. Dresses like a rodeo rider.’

‘Sounds like we could make him in the dark.’

‘He just dumped fifty red devils on somebody at ten bucks a hit.’

‘Holy slit!’

‘Yeah.’

‘Well, you wanna take him first or visit my friend Zipper?’ Livingston had struck out on the first two bookies. He was obviously losing faith in his hunch. Sharky decided he deserved to run his string out first.

‘Let’s do your guy first. Mine’ll be around till they turn the streetlights off.’