"Who put it up?"
"Harris says the sister of one of the dead Mexicans. I gave the reward sheet to my C.I. and he got excited. But now he's got a couple of guys with him who say they're cops, but didn't know about the reward, they're just back from their vacations."
"They're not cops."
"That's what I told him."
"They let this kid tag along?"
"He says they're working together on it."
Val shook his head. "They're not cops."
Delsa said, "Here's the thing. Manny Reyes talked to a guy named Chino who runs the posse the three guys were in. The one dismembered Harris said you put back together?"
"Yeah, see if the parts matched."
"Manny warns Chino not to go after Orlando. Chino tells Manny it's being taken care of, sounding to Manny like he took out a contract on Orlando. Then Jerome tells me about these two guys looking for Orlando for the twenty grand."
Val said, "And you're on to two guys who shoot drug dealers."
"White guys. Jerome tells me about the guys he's with and I picture white guys."
"Yeah:?"
"But he never said they were white."
"Why don't you ask him?"
Delsa was nodding. "The next time he calls."
If he calls.
25
Lloyd looked through a rose-colored pane in the door, the broken one below it finally replaced, and saw two figures on the stoop, one behind the other, but no red truck in the driveway. The mutts back. But then got a surprise when he opened the door. Was only one of the mutts, Art, and a black kid taller than Art. Lloyd said, "Montez ain't here."
Didn't matter, they were coming in.
Art, not looking at Lloyd or saying a word, came in past him. The kid slouching into the foyer, his clothes hanging on him, a red-patterned do-rag that wasn't bad, the kid looking up at the high ceiling and the bannister along the second floor. Art was in the dining room now, about to shove through the swing door to the pantry. Like it was his house. The kid started after Art and Lloyd said, "Wait, I want to ask you something."
The kid looked around at him.
"What's your name?"
"Three-J."
"What's your real name?"
He hesitated before saying, "Jerome Jackson."
"That's only two J s."
"Jerome Juwan Jackson."
Lloyd said, "Jerome, what are you doing with this ofay motherfucker? Tell me what's going on here."
Lloyd was cool, the way he said it, and Jerome was cool behind his shades, but showed some surprise the way he hesitated and stared at Lloyd.
Jerome said, "Ask them, Uncle. They don't tell me shit."
"I'm not your uncle, I'm Lloyd. They tell you who they are?"
"They say they cops, but they ain't. They looking for Orlando same as me, for the reward."
"But why they here?"
"They need to hide out a while."
"From the police and they come here?"
Lloyd smiled, shaking his head, Jerome staring at him.
"Why you think that's funny?"
"You don't know who these mangy cats are, do you?"
"They contract hit men," Jerome said. "They mean and they cuckoo, they kill nine people and a dog. I was you I wouldn't fuck with them."
Lloyd said, "They killed a dog, huh?"
"Art did, I saw him. Man says, 'Don't shoot my dog,' and Art shoots it, a pit bull."
"That what you want to do, shoot dogs?"
"You think I like being with them? I want the reward's all. Man, twenty grand."
"What'd this Orlando do?"
"Kill three Mexicans and cut one up. Was a drug thing, a disagreement."
"Yeah, I read about it," Lloyd said. "Who's putting up the money?"
Jerome looked surprised.
"The cops."
"You think they gonna pay twenty-K for a tip?"
Jerome brought the reward notice from a pocket in his pants and handed it to Lloyd. Lloyd unfolded the sheet and read it.
"Must be some Mexican putting it up, some relative of one of the deceased." Lloyd handed the sheet back to Jerome and said, "Where's Carl? Hiding the truck?"
"Seeing can he put it in the garage."
"These guys strapped?"
"Each have a nine stuck in their pants."
"How about you?"
"I'm fixed."
"Where you keep it?"
"Here." Jerome patted his butt.
"Must be a weapon with size, it's pulling your pants off. You ever shoot anybody?"
"Not yet I haven't."
"You do any time?"
"Thirty months federal."
"Possession, huh? Boy, I did a hundred and eight months straight up, no time off for being good. Was for armed robbery, no pussy narcotics. It means I'm in charge here. Understand? You don't do nothing but what I tell you. Otherwise keep your mouth shut. Does that suit you?"
Jerome shrugged.
"Take off your glasses and look at me."
Jerome pulled off his shades and they stared at each other, Lloyd saying, "I asked does that suit you. I'm in charge in this house. That make sense to you?"
"Yeah, but you don't know who you fuckin with here."
"I know them better than you," Lloyd said. "I never saw 'em shoot a dog, but the other night I heard 'em shoot Mr. Paradise and his girlfriend. Right there in the living room, they watching TV."
Jerome said, "Wait now. And they come here to hide?"
"It's what I'm saying." Lloyd motioned to him. "Let's go see what they up to."
Carl put the Tahoe in the garage and came in with the carton of liquor from the open house. He said to Lloyd, "Art's checking Montez' place, see if he's hiding under the bed. That your Toyota in the garage?"
Lloyd said it was and asked, "How long you gonna be here?"
"That's up to Montez. You know where he's at?"
"He don't tell me and I don't ask."
Carl said, "This boy here's Jerome. He's helping us out." And said, "Listen, we'll use your car we go anywhere. That okay with you, Chief?"
Lloyd said, "Use it all you want."
Sounding helpful, and Jerome looked at him.
Art came in the back door.
He said to Lloyd, "Is Montez a faggot? He's got that place dolled up like a woman did it. No colors like you see on sports teams. You know what I mean? They're queer colors. Carl, like Connie-all those colors going on in your house." Looking at Lloyd again, "Where's Montez at, Chief?"
Lloyd said, "How'd you know I was called that?"
"All colored guys are, aren't they? Being polite?"
"You mean politically correct," Carl said.
"Yeah, being like equals."
"He don't know when he's coming back or where he is," Carl said. "You ready for a drink?" He turned to Lloyd. "Chief, why don't you have one with us?"
Jerome began sorting through all he'd just heard.
Avern sat looking across his clean desk at Montez in black leather today, the coat open enough to show his gold chains against his black T-shirt. He wore gold studs on his earlobes, something Anthony Paradiso never allowed, Anthony puzzled why any man would want to look like a girl.
"I've got some not so good news," Avern said, "that could turn into some news you're gonna like."
Montez said, "So you have to give me the not so good news first?"
"That's right," Avern said, his hands folded on his clean desk. "Carl Fontana called last night. Both of their houses, his and Krupa's, are under police surveillance, Detroit and Hamtramck."
Montez sat in his black leather and sunglasses staring at him, waiting, showing he was cool. Good.
"It doesn't surprise me," Avern said, "the cops are aware of them. But I'm sure it's not for Paradiso, and I'll tell you why. Every gun they used on a contract went in the river, and I witnessed it. I took a risk going with them, but it was that important to me. But, they stay busy. They've pulled a few home invasions between contracts, and they could've left prints, especially Art. I told Carl he and his buddy ought to split up, get out of the state for a while, go to Florida and take it easy."
Montez said, "What's the good news?"
"They go down for home invasion, you won't have to pay them. Of course you'd still owe me."