Выбрать главу

“Larry don’t like it that we did those boys,” said Nance.

“He likes money,” said Holley.

“What are we gonna do about that other thing?” said Nance. Holley had told him about Lucas when he’d poured them their drinks.

“What do you think we should do?” said Holley.

“Are you worried?”

“I’m not worried about him going to the police. He’s motivated by cash. But that don’t make him any less relentless. I don’t think he’s gonna stop comin.”

“If you want,” said Nance, “we’ll just take care of it.”

“Shit just got all complicated when we got into this marijuana thing,” said Mobley in his gravelly voice. “I told you, Ricardo-”

“I know you did.”

“Gun business just simpler. We should have stuck to it.”

“Still, we got a problem,” said Holley. “Hindsight ain’t gonna make it disappear.”

“It’s about to be Saturday night,” said Nance, fingering the wood crucifix hanging outside his shirt. “Young man like Lucas, you know he’s gonna step out.”

“You nominating yourself?” said Holley.

“Just me,” said Nance. “Bernard might scare him off, seein as how he’s a black dude with all that size.”

“And you with no size,” said White, amused. “He might not even notice your ass at all.”

“Why you gotta say that, Bernard?” said Nance.

“ ’Cause you a pimp-squeak.”

“It’s pipsqueak, dumbass.”

“See? You said it yourself.”

“I don’t want this getting back to Larry,” said Holley. “We might still need his services.”

“He won’t know shit,” said Nance. “I’ll do it subtle. I won’t even make any noise.”

“Bernard?” said Holley.

“Man’s got something to prove,” said White. “Let him prove it.”

The room went silent. Mobley glanced over at his partner, whose face showed no emotion.

“Well?” said Nance.

Ricardo Holley nodded. “Do what you do.”

BACK ACROSS the street, from the side of an electrical supply house, Lucas watched as the bay door opened and a black Chevy Tahoe emerged. Behind the Tahoe, two figures followed on foot from the darkness of the interior bays: Ricardo Holley and a short, muscular, middle-aged man wearing a cap. Through the windshield of the Tahoe, Lucas saw a big black man behind the wheel, all neck and shoulders, and a much smaller white man in the passenger bucket, his face barely clearing the dash. As they drove out of the lot, Lucas took photographs. He could only hope that the stills would capture the plates. He watched as the short man said a few words to the employees and gestured at the SUV they were working on. Obviously this was a man in charge. Perhaps it was Mobley himself.

Ricardo and the boss went back inside the building. Lucas picked up his bike, fitted his left foot into the toe clip, swung his right leg over the saddle, and took off.

As soon as Lucas got back to his apartment, he sat down at the kitchen table and studied the photographs on his phone. He spread his fingers on the screen to make the photos larger. He opened his notebook and with a pen he sketched the Mobley Detailing building from various vantage points. He did not know how this helped him exactly, but it was habit, and sometimes when he looked at sketches he found that he could “see” things he could not see in photographs. But this did not happen now.

He got up and paced the room. He was amped up. He wanted a woman. He went into his bedroom and lay down on a camping mat and stretched and did crunches until his abs ached. He did six sets of pushups on his rotating stands, twenty-five reps, three sets normal hand-width apart, three sets wide stance. He did pull-ups on the bar set high in the door frame. He took a shower and dressed in jeans and a fitted black T-shirt; he felt clean, strong, and relaxed. He went out to his living room and sat in his reading chair and looked out the window. Dusk had arrived.

What did he know? He realized that he knew little for certain, but he had some ideas.

Larry Holley was in with his father, Ricardo, and the others at the detailing shop. Larry was in the Narcotics squad and had probably been tapped by his father to identify persons of interest and shake them down. Tavon and Edwin, under suspicion because of their involvement with known marijuana dealer Anwan Hawkins, were perfect marks. Looked at rationally, it was actually a good business arrangement. Assuming Tavon and Edwin were allowed to keep a cut, they had a lookout and protection in the form of police. In turn, Larry, his father, and their crew made money for themselves. Which was what was bothering Lucas. If it was all good, why were Tavon and Edwin killed?

The one thing Lucas did know was that he had been identified. Because Larry Holley was police, he could easily bring up all kinds of information on him. Where he lived, where his family lived, phone numbers, and more. The Holleys and their minions could get to him. They could get to his brother and his mom. The defense against this, he felt, was not in passivity but rather in aggression.

He fell asleep in his chair.

He was riding shotgun beside his father in the old man’s truck, a two-tone Chevy Silverado. The Van Lucas he saw was around forty, big chested, a bit overweight, with a beard and a full head of curly hair. The windows of the truck were down, and from the dash tape deck the Stones were doing “Loving Cup,” Mick singing, “I’m the man that brings you roses, when you ain’t got none.” His father was smiling, and through the windshield Lucas could see the people they knew in their neighborhood, the auto body guys and the Wanderer and the Hispanic workers standing by their 4Runners and the African barbers, waving at them as they passed. He saw his mother, also twenty years younger, walking their dog, Shilo, the animal stopping to pee in a bed of wild mint, and Lucas thought, That’s nice, Shilo’s alive. His father turned to him and asked, “ Thoolevis, Spero?” the standard Greek man’s question for his son, and Lucas said, “Yeah, I’m workin.” When Lucas looked back through the windshield they were on Lincoln Road, Northeast, and with a sense of dread he realized where they were going and he said, “ No, Dad, not yet,” and his father pulled the truck over and kept it running. Nodding at the iron gate arched over the entrance to Glenwood Cemetery, he looked at his son and said, “Wanna come in?”

Lucas opened his eyes, startled. It was dark in the room and the streetlamps outside cast a pale yellow light on the darkened landscape. He sat in his chair, staring out the window, still hearing his father’s voice. He wiped tears off his face.

Lucas stood. He felt like having a beer, but he didn’t want to drink alone. The bar up on Georgia was as good as any. He brushed his teeth, washed his face, and came back out to the living room. He reached for the keys to his Jeep but picked up only his house key instead.

It was a nice night. He decided to walk.

Lucas walked north on the Piney Branch Road that was not the same thoroughfare known by commuters but more like the urban-alley version of a country lane. He could hear cars moving to the west of him on 16th Street, but it was quiet back here tonight. A big engine moved somewhere behind him, and he turned his head and saw a flash of black vehicle on a cross street, and he kept moving his feet. He crossed Gallatin, then Hamilton, and made a right on the wide and majestic Colorado Avenue and headed northeast. Then he was in the small commercial district at 14th and Colorado. He walked by the Gold Corner Grocery, where he often bought beer, Louis’ Barber Shop, Colorado Cafe, Florescence Beauty Salon, and the Ethiopian market called Mekides. He didn’t have to look to recognize the business names because he knew them by heart. Many people, mostly black and Hispanic, were out. He walked by the beautifully maintained Longfellow apartments with their center-screened porches and iron balconies, and a man who smelled of alcohol walked toward him and said, “Hola,” and Lucas said, “Hola, como estas,” which was nearly all the Spanish he knew. At 13th Street he walked due north and crossed at the Missouri Avenue light. He approached Quackenbos Street, where he cut right as he often did and began to walk across the dark weeded field of Fort Stevens Park.