And that would be soon: Casares had given up most of his contacts, including Carlos Lehder, and they were planning swoops on the major players. After that would begin the long process of bringing the 'guilty' to trial, but Joe would be out of the picture way before then, possibly as soon as August. And he hated August in Miami the most. It was always way too hot, people went way too crazy and hurricanes were always one wrong breath away.
'You been goin' to church?' she asked.
He shook his head.
'You should.'
'What in the hell would God say to me about what I'm doin'?'Joe asked bitterly. 'I'm schemin' to betray my partner and best friend, the guy who's had my back and been nothin'
but loyal to me ever since we hooked up. It was only 'cause o' him I made Detective.'
'You're doing what's right for you, Joe. And sometimes doing the right thing is the hardest thing of all.' She spoke
tenderly but firmly, like he imagined her doing to one of the kids she taught. 'Sooner or later MTF will get exposed. Bad will always out. And you don't want to be there when that storm breaks, because it always rains on the little people the hardest'
'Yeah, right.' Joe looked in the distance, but saw only the framed, fully autographed Born to Run sleeve on his wall.
'The buck's gotta stop somewhere, Joe. Those people you two put away might not have been upstanding citizens, they might even have been monsters, but you, Mingus, Sixdeep and MTF had no right to do what you did. You all broke the law.'
'So whatchu' doin with me then?' Joe asked, searching her eyes.
'Because I believe you can change. And I believe you want to change. And I believe the good in you is sick of all this bad stuff you've done.' She took his hand as she spoke. You've got integrity, decency and self-respect, Joe Liston.'
'You think so?' Joe sneered with self-disgust. You wanna know why I went along with this shit, Lina? Huh? You wanna know? 'Cause I wasn't meant to make Detective. I was just a simple doughnuts and coffee Patrol cop, roustin'
hookers and pushers ten to twelve hours a day. I was the guy old ladies called out to get their cats off the roof. I was the guy kept the crowds back at homicide scenes. I was a uniform, not a brain.
'See, it didn't matter that I saw things the dicks missed.
Didn't matter that I talked to witnesses they didn't bother with. Didn't matter that a lotta the time I had a good idea who the perps were. 'Cause in the Miami PD it don't matter how clever you are, or how good you are, or what good you could do if only someone gave you the chance, opened that door up a little to let you in. No, sir! It's down to the colour of your skin. Sure, they just love to say they employ plenty
35ť of black folk, but what they don't tell you is what they employ them as: Dispatch, Records, Patrol, Front Desk, Lock-up. That's all we ever get. Sure, you'll find one or two black Detectives, but it's a damn small number. So, when I got that shield, it felt good hell, felt good. Proud of myself. I'd achieved somethin'.
'And it was all thanks to Max. He didn't owe me squat.
He was the golden boy with the predestined future. I was supposed to show him the ropes, help him up his street IQ then fade away. He didn't let it happen. He took me with him. He damn well refused to work with anyone else. You hear that, Lina? He refused. He told Sixdeep he'd rather stay in Patrol than work with some cracker who was gonna cut corners on a case so he could go watch a ballgame or ball some hooker. You talk about integrity and decency, that motherfucker's got it in spades!
'You say it's about doin' what's right for me?' he continued as the song ended and the needle left the vinyl and went back to its cradle. 'But it ain't just about that. See, every day in Miami innocent black folks get pulled over by a white or Latino cop. Sometimes it's for a genuine reason, sometimes it's because the cops just want someone they can fuck with. Black man starts to protest, they arrest him for assaulting a police officer, resisting arrest and disturbing the peace. He gets hauled up before a judge, and all the jury see is the colour of his skin. If they're lucky they go to jail. If they're not they end up like McDuffie. And you know what?
I hadn'a been a cop, that could've been me takin' that shit, just because of havin' the misfortune of being' born the wrong colour in this so-called civilized society of ours. Sixdeep, MTF, the way they do things ne do things they're all part of the problem, and a big part of the problem. And yeah, you're right, Lina, I'm sick of it. Sick to my stomach.
And they gotta be stopped. Simple as that. And that's what I'm gonna do. But Max is gonna go down with 'em.'
'Because he's part of the same problem you've been talking about,' she said.
'I suppose so,' Joe answered and finished his wine.
'I want to meet him,' Lina said.
'Who? Max?
'Yeah, Max. Your partner.'
'Why?'
'I want to put a face to him. I want to look him in the eye. I want to see what kind of person he is.'
'I've told you.'
You have. But I want to know for myself.'
'I don't think that's a great idea,'Joe said. 'I'm gonna fuck this guy's life up, and you wanna make nice?
'It's about being sure. Because I'm going to go through this with you too.'
'I'll think about it,' Joe said. And right then a big part of him saw a chance that somehow he could find a way of accepting his well-paid desk job and paper over the humiliation with the material comforts a bigger salary would bring; that he wouldn't have to take the hard option, that he could let it all pass. Lina might like Max as much as he did. Lina might talk him out of it for Max's sake. But then, what about their case? He felt they were getting closer to cracking it every day. It wouldn't be long now before the truth started to show itself.
PART FIVE
JuneJuly 1981 46
'Guess you're gonna have to go get yourself some whole new voodoo, Solomon, 'cause there ain't no cops investigatin'
you,' Eldon said without turning around, but keeping his eyes on the dark outline in his rearview mirror.
Solomon didn't answer.
It was after 10.00 p.m., and Eldon was parked in a side road facing his house. The lights were on. He was beat.
He'd had a long old day. He needed a hot bath and his bed.
Instead he had this: Boukman doing his pop-up act in the back of his car for one of their talks. Eldon hated their 'talks' because talking wasn't one of the nigra's strengths.
He had this thing for silence, for saying nothing, for being Ia conversational black hole. It pissed Eldon off and also made him ill at ease.
Boukman was unique in that way. A lot of the people Eldon had done business with in the past had been talkative as hell. Some you just couldn't shut up. The spies and guineas were the worst offenders; talked the whole fucken'