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“Cancer?”

Ray nodded. “In his colon.”

LaGrange looked down at his cup, quiet for a few seconds. “When the indictments came out and you guys got arrested, I was sick to my stomach, too. I mean really sick, vomiting every thirty minutes. But what was I supposed to do, turn myself in? Go tell the feds, hey you forgot about me?”

“We’ve all got to live with our choices, Jimmy.”

Neither one said anything for a while. LaGrange took a bite of his muffin to fill the silence. When he finished chewing, he said, “Everything about this case is getting pushed through really fast: follow-up reports, lab results, IBIS-”

“What’s IBIS,” Ray asked, pronouncing it Eye-Bis, like LaGrange had.

LaGrange exhaled sharply. “You have been away a long time.”

“I was in prison.” Ray said. “Which is exactly where you would have been if you hadn’t punched that drunk in the back of the head on Bourbon Street.”

For Detective Jimmy LaGrange, it must have been like winning the lottery, only better. Through pure dumb luck, he broke his hand at just the right time and was out on a sixty-day injury leave when the FBI started up their wiretap. The only guy in the six-man Vice Squad who didn’t go to prison.

LaGrange said, “Ray, if there was anything I could’ve done… anything. I even talked to a lawyer, told him I wanted to help, but he said there was nothing I could do.” LaGrange took a sip of his espresso. “I waited, expecting any second they were going to come for me. Hardest thing I ever had to go through in my life was seeing you, Sergeant Landry, and the other guys walking out of the federal building in chains, on your way to prison.”

Ray remembered that day, too. He remembered it like it was yesterday. He pulled a Lucky Strike from his pocket and lit it with his Zippo.

LaGrange glanced around the coffee shop as a panicked look crossed his face. Then he pointed to Ray’s cigarette. “You can’t do that.”

Ray took a deep drag, held it for a second, then blew the smoke across the table into LaGrange’s face. “Can’t do what?”

“Smoke,” LaGrange said as he coughed. “You can’t smoke in here.”

Ray looked around. “It’s a coffee shop, right?”

Their waitress stomped over to the table. Not so perky anymore. “Sir, you can’t smoke in here.”

Ray looked up at her. “Why not?”

She propped her hands on her hips. “This is a smoke-free environment.” Saying it like Ray was an idiot for not knowing that already.

He waved her away. “Go get me an ashtray.”

She stuck her chin out. “We don’t have ashtrays, sir. We don’t allow smoking.”

“Come on, Ray, put it out,” LaGrange said. “Quit giving her a hard time.”

The not-so-perky waitress folded her arms across her chest. “If you don’t put that out, I’m going to have to call the manager.”

“You better find me an ashtray, or when I get done I’ll just stub it out on your floor.”

The waitress spun on her heel and marched off.

Ray took another drag on his cigarette. “So what’s IBIS, some kind of new fingerprint machine?”

LaGrange looked nervous as his eyes followed the waitress across the coffee shop. Finally, he looked back at Ray. “No, not fingerprints, bullet prints. I-B-I-S stands for…” He glanced at the ceiling like he was looking for the name to be written up there, but evidently he didn’t find it because after a couple of seconds he said, “I can’t remember exactly, but it’s the something-ballistic-identification system.”

“What does it do?”

“It’s a computer database we got from ATF.”

“And?”

“It’s at the new crime lab on Tulane. On every homicide involving a firearm, in fact, on every shooting, the lab takes the bullets and the casings and puts them into this machine.”

Ray pictured some lab guy in a white coat dumping hundreds of shell casings into a big machine.

LaGrange must have read his mind. “I don’t mean the bullets and cases themselves. The lab photographs them and converts the pictures into some sort of digital code that the computer can understand.”

Ray was getting impatient. “How does that help me?”

LaGrange held up his hand. “I’m getting to that. The machine runs comparisons on bullets and casings from every shooting. It can tell you which ones were done with the same gun.” He slapped his palm down on the tabletop. “But here’s the really good part. In addition to every shooting, the department enters a test-fired round from every confiscated firearm. The computer runs the comparisons automatically, so when a gun comes in, we get an automatic hit if it’s been used in a shooting.”

Ray was impressed. He thought about the gun used to blow Pete Messina’s face off. “What about shotguns?”

LaGrange shook his head. “They say the next generation of IBIS will do shotguns, but for right now it just works with pistols and rifles.”

“So why are you telling me about IBIS? They used a shotgun in the House.”

LaGrange shook his head. “That’s not all they used.”

“I was there.”

LaGrange reached under the table and pulled a black leather attache case onto his lap. From inside he slid out a stack of paper, at least twenty or thirty pages, held together by a clamp.

“What’s that?” Ray asked.

LaGrange laid the stack of paper on the table. He flipped through the first couple of pages. “This is the initial report and a few of the follow-ups.” He stopped flipping and stared at one page for a second, then pointed to something about halfway down. “Right here’s where you got lucky.”

“That’s the second time you said that. I don’t feel lucky, so why don’t you just tell me what you found.”

LaGrange tapped his finger on the page. “Crime Scene dug a forty-caliber slug out of the floor.”

Ray shook his head. “Nobody fired a pistol in-” Then an image flashed through his mind.

The dancer up on stage, a hole in her leg, blood pouring out after a shotgun blast. Seconds later, another blast. Then something else, a pop, barely audible after the big explosion from the shotgun. Feeling the heat searing the back of his head.

Ray looked at LaGrange and rubbed a hand across the back of his neck. “Where’d they find it?”

The former Vice cop flipped through more pages, skimming each for a few seconds before he found what he was looking for. He turned the stack around so Ray could read it. Ray saw a copy of a neatly drawn diagram he recognized as the first floor of the Rising Sun.

LaGrange’s finger pointed to a small handwritten “15” between the bottom of the stairs and the front door. “Item fifteen is the bullet,” he said. “They found it buried in the wooden floor, twenty-five feet from the door.”

Goose bumps broke out on Ray’s arms. “That motherfucker tried to shoot me in the head.”

“I’ve told you before, you’ve got the luck of the Irish.”

Ray pictured the skull mask, the pair of eyes, and the bad teeth, but most vivid was the image of the tattoo, the spiderweb wrapped around the back of the hand, reaching all the way to the base of the thumb. Somewhere-he wasn’t sure where-he had seen that tattoo before.

“What good does it do me that Crime Scene found that slug in the floor,” Ray said, “if they don’t have a gun to match it to?”

LaGrange pulled a second stack of papers from his attache case. “Your friend Landry has already run an IBIS check on the bullet and it came back positive.”

“Positive for what?”

LaGrange hefted the second report in his hand. “Turns out the same gun was used in a shooting six months ago. They dug the bullet out of a body on Frenchman Street.”

“Any arrests?”

The detective nodded. “Two weeks later, Homicide picked up a guy named Cleo Harris, goes by the nickname Winky.”

“They obviously didn’t find the gun he used, not if the shithead with the skull mask tried to kill me with it.”

LaGrange nodded. “They got the shooter but not the gun.” “Even if I could get into lockup to talk to the guy, what’s his name, Harris, there’s no way he’s going to tell me what he did with that gun.”