“The cameras come later,” Jack said. “I’m what they call an advance man. I’m here to set up an interview with a kid named Jamal Thomas, lives on Sawyer Street. You know him?”
The kid stiffened. “Nah.”
That was it? Jack thought. No negotiation, no shakedown?
“You sure?” Jack pressed.
That seemed to trigger something in the kid.
“Man, why don’t you jus’ turn ’round and go back to where you from?”
“Why?” Jack asked. He spoke in a voice that was loud enough for the others to hear. “What are you scared of, Leon?”
The kid snapped forward like he was a shooting guard for the Warriors. He was in Jack’s face almost as fast as Jack’s hand was on the. 357. The move did not escape the kid’s notice. If he had a piece he wouldn’t be able to get it in time, and it was too dark here for the rest of the gang to see.
“How do you know me?” Leon asked.
“I saw you in the car the day of the explosion,” Jack said. “I was the guy talking to Officer Beckman.”
Leon nodded, drew back. “I ain’t scared,” he said defiantly.
“Not of me, no,” Jack said, offering him a bone. His hand moved from under his shirt. “What happened? Did someone do something to Jamal?”
“Like you don’t know.”
“I don’t,” Jack said. “Jesus, man, I’m trying to help him.”
“Right.”
“What else would I be doing here with just my associate in the middle of the goddamn night?”
Leon considered this.
“Tell me what happened. Please.”
The kid spat to the side to show the others that he was okay, that he was in charge and unafraid. “What happened? Jamal was outta the hospital for what, not even half an hour, when they came to see him.”
“Who did?”
“I don’t know who, ” he said. “They come off Bay Shore in a big black Escalade, poundin’ on the door and-”
He was cut off by the shriek of a siren as an ambulance blasted up the avenue and streaked past them, making a left turn on Sawyer. The kids whipped their heads in its direction then started piling into the muscle car.
One of them shouted, “Come on, man, let’s check this out.”
Leon glanced in the direction of the ambulance. The glow of a distant streetlight, one that wasn’t broken, showed he was wearing a funny expression, something between anger and concern. He ran to the car and jumped inside, its tires squealing as it tore out of the parking lot.
Jack waited until it was around the corner, then started out after it.
11
“My baby! They killed my baby!”
By the time Jack reached the muscle car it was parked out in front of one of the tenement houses. The ambulance sat in the middle of the street, its red strobe flickering, curious neighbors spilling from their homes to see what the commotion was.
The paramedics were already rolling a gurney out a doorway, the small body on it covered with a sheet.
Jack checked the address. It was Jamal Thomas’s apartment.
An emaciated but not unattractive woman in her early forties stood on the sidewalk, her arms stretched toward the gurney, her face twisted in agony as Leon held her back.
“My baby!” she cried, her high, shrill voice full of raw emotion. “Why did they kill my baby?”
She tried to wriggle away but Leon held tight, his own face slack with shock and grief as he stared at the gurney, tears running down his cheeks. The other kids stood around him, open-mouthed, looking much more like children than gangstas, their bravado overwhelmed by the tragedy of the moment.
Jack quickly assessed the scene, and as the paramedics reached the rear of the ambulance he approached the one nearest the doors and showed him his GNT credentials. “What happened here?”
The paramedic waved him away. “Stay clear.”
“Have the police been notified?”
“Soon as we got the call.”
“What’s the C-O-D? Was he shot?”
The guy hesitated, as though sizing Jack up; he seemed to decide it might not be a bad idea to keep a potential ally on hand.
The EMT shook his head. “Overdose.”
“Like hell!” Leon shouted, gently passing the crying woman into the arms of one of his friends. “I already told you, Jamal wasn’t no junkie!”
“Okay, man, take it easy,” the paramedic said.
“Yo, man, that’s not good enough,” Leon snarled. He drew a Glock from the back of his waistband and crossed the sidewalk. “You take it back! You apologize to my mother!”
“I’m sorry!” the young man said. “I take it back!”
The other EMT had stopped moving the gurney. He edged behind the ambulance. Jack positioned himself between Leon and the other paramedic.
“Leon, listen to me-put away the gun,” Jack said. “I want to find out who did this but we need to talk. ”
“The cops did this. That’s who killed my brother.”
“How do you know? Do you have any names, descriptions? Are there any witnesses?”
Jack couldn’t make a grab for the Glock. Leon’s finger was on the trigger, and though they were backing off, moving behind cars, there were too many people standing around to risk an accidental discharge. Instead, Jack ignored the gun. He’d had weapons pointed at him before, and they were never the threat. The man holding it was. If Jack stayed calm, chances were fifty-fifty he could talk Leon down. Or at least delay him until his mother realized what was happening.
Jack looked into Leon’s eyes and held them. They were bloodred in the flashing light of the ambulance, still clouded with tears.
“Talk to me, Leon,” he said calmly.
“The cops,” he said, sobbing but still pointing the gun. “They came in our house and put Jamal down like a dyin’ dog.”
“If we’re going to prove that, I need details,” Jack said.
“Man, you need to go away!” one of the kids shouted.
“Me, too?” came a voice from the middle of the street.
They all looked over as Maxine came walking from out of the darkness. If she wasn’t exactly an angel, she was the closest thing Jack had ever seen.
“This is my associate Maxine,” Jack said. “You saw her in the car. Remember?”
Leon kept the gun on Jack while he looked at Max. “Yeah.”
“Leon, if you want to show your brother respect, then let the paramedics do their job while we go inside and have a nice calm conversation,” she said. “Think you can manage that?”
Leon looked at her. Then, choking back a sob, he wiped tears from his eyes with the back of his gun hand. He nodded.
“Great,” she said.
The apartment was a cluttered, two-bedroom disaster in serious need of a handyman. Cracked ceiling. Dents and scuff marks on the walls. A battered oven in the small kitchenette with its door hanging lopsided, probably unused for months.
From the looks of things, Juanita Thomas wasn’t much of a housekeeper, and judging by the drug paraphernalia scattered across the worn coffee table, she wasn’t much of a mother, either.
Jack and Maxine exchanged looks the moment they entered the place. Max’s expression said, See, I warned you. Jack’s replied, Did I say I doubted you?
But he wasn’t here to judge anyone, just to get information. It took Max a little more persuasion to get Leon to sit down with them-minus his gang-but the kid finally came around. In fact, now that his rage had given way to sadness, now that he didn’t have to put on a tough-guy show for the gang, he seemed grateful to have someone to talk to.
As they entered, Leon escorted his mother into the bedroom and closed the door behind him. Jack and Max were silent as they waited, Jack feeling the walls of this depressing dump close in on him. He caught Max flash a look at the water stain on the ceiling, the dark, mildewed rot around it.
“You made it out,” Jack said in a voice barely above a whisper. “This isn’t your life anymore.”
“But it’s theirs,” she said sadly.
There was no disputing that. Jack was trying to imagine where Mrs. Thomas got Leon’s bail money. Either she had the cash on hand for drugs, got it from selling drugs, or went into hock with a pusher who would have her on her back till it was paid back with interest. Or maybe Leon would knock over a 7-Eleven. Roll some tourists on Market Street. There were all kinds of opportunities for people who had nothing to lose.