"What doors?"
"On the car."
"They looked closed to me."
"Anything lying in the driveway there?"
"Nothing I could see. What do you mean? Like what?"
"Tricks," Hawes said.
"Tricks?" Pasquali said, and looked at Buono.
"They done a magic show this afternoon," Buono said. "For the kids."
"Oh. No, I didn't see no tricks out there."
"You didn't happen to wander by that driveway later on, did you? Around five-thirty? When they were loading the hellip;"
"Five-thirty I was home eating my dinner. I made a nice TV dinner for myself."
Hawes looked at Brown.
"Anything?" he asked.
Brown shook his head.
"Well, thanks a lot," Hawes said, and shoved back his chair.
"I'll let you out the building," Buono said.
The detectives followed him out of the office.
As soon as they were gone, Pasquali took out his handkerchief and mopped his brow.
At twenty minutes past ten, Larry's Bar was buzzing with activity.
Not a table empty. Not a stool unoccupied at the bar.
Eileen was sitting at one of the tables now, talking to a blonde hooker named Sheryl who was wearing a red skirt slit up one side, and a white silk blouse unbuttoned three buttons down. There was nothing under the blouse. Sheryl sat with her legs spread, her high heels hooked on the chair's top rung. Eileen could see track marks on her naked white thighs. She was telling Eileen how she'd come to this city from Baltimore, Maryland. Eileen was scanning the room, trying to figure out which one of these guys in here was her backup. Two waitresses, who could have passed for hookers themselves mdash;short black skirts, high heels, overflowing white peasant blouses mdash;were busily scooting back and forth between the tables and the bar, avoiding grabs at their asses.
"Got off the bus," the girl said, "first thing happens to me is this kindly old man asks can he help me with my valise. Had to be forty years old, am I right, a nice old man being friendly. Asks me have I got a place to stay, offers to get me a taxi to the Y, says 'I'll bet you're starving,' which I was, takes me to a hamburger joint, stuffs me with burgers and fries, tells me a nice young girl like me mdash;I was only seventeen mdash;had to be careful in the big, bad city, lots of people out there waiting to victimize me."
"Same old bullshit," Eileen said.
She figured there were only two men who could be Shanahan. Guy sitting there at one of the tables, talking up a hooker with frizzied brown hair, he had a hook nose that could've been a phony, black hair and blue eyes like Shanahan's, about his height and weight, wearing horn-rimmed eyeglasses. He could've been Shanahan.
"Well, sure, you know the story already," the girl said. "Mr. Nice turns out to be Big Daddy, takes me to his apartment, introduces me to two other girls living there, nice girls like me, he says, has me smoking pot that same night and shooting horse before the week is out. Turned me out two days later with a businessman from Ohio. Guy ast me to blow him, I didn't know what the fuck he meant. Man, that seems like ages ago."
"How old are you now?" Eileen asked.
"Twenty-two," Sheryl said. "I'm not with Lou no more hellip; that was his name, Lou hellip; I got me a new man, takes good care of me. Who you with?"
"Torpedo Holmes," Eileen said.
"Is he black, or what?"
"Black."
"Yeah, mine, too. Lou was white. I think the white ones are meaner, I really do. Lou used to beat the shit out of me. That first time, after the guy from Ohio, you know, where I didn't know what to do, Lou beat me so I couldn't walk. Had a dozen of his buddies come up the next morning, one after the other, twelve of them, teach the little hayseed from Baltimore how to suck a cock. Broke in my ass, too. That was when Ireally got turned out, believe me. The guy from Ohio was child's play. In fact, everything after that night with Lou's buddies was child's play."
"Yeah, they can be rotten when they want to," Eileen said.
Guy sitting there talking to Annie was the other possibility, though she doubted Shanahan would've made such obvious contact. Brown eyes, but those could be contacts if he was playing this real fancy. Wearing a plaid jacket that made him look wider than Shanahan. Sitting on a stool, so Eileen couldn't tell how tall he was. But he was a possibility.
"This guy I got now hellip; you know Ham Coleman?"
"I don't think so."
"Hamilton? Hamilton Coleman?"
"Yeah, maybe."
"Black as his name. Coal, you know. Coleman. Hung like a stallion, likes to parade around the pad with only a towel around him, dares the girls to snatch it off. Quick as a bullfighter. You snatch off the towel, he gives you a little treat. My poison is still hoss mdash;well, you know, that's what Lou hooked me on. But some of the girls mdash;there's six of us with him mdash;they dig the nose candy, and he gets them whatever they need, good stuff too, I think he has Colombian connections. It's like a game he plays with the towel, snatch it off, suck his big dick, he lays the dope on you. I mean, it's just a game, 'cause he keeps us supplied very nice, anyway. It's kind of cute, though, the way he struts around in that towel. He's really okay. Ham Coleman. You ever think of moving, you might want to come over. We don't have any redheads. That your real hair?"