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The coffee was weak but the pecan muffin quite delicious. Savary had a second and was dozing on a fairly comfortable sofa when Bishop came back in with an Asian man in a gray lab coat.

“This is Special Agent Kent Yamasaki.” Bishop introduced Savary and eased behind the smallish Japanese-American, who said, “There is a ninety-seven percent probability that the man in the video is the man in the photograph. I am having a report prepared for you.”

“Ninety-seven percent is good, isn’t it?”

“We never go higher than ninety-eight. It’s as close as you can get, Detective.”

Savary called Jodie on his cell on the way back to headquarters.

“Who’s the duty judge?”

“Joe Sayzo.”

“Dammit.”

Sayzo was as anti-police as they came. Better known as “Lack of PC Sayzo,” the man rarely saw enough probable cause in officers testifying at preliminary hearings, forcing the DA to produce fact witnesses, who were hard enough to get to court for a trial, much less a hearing. Sayzo saw even less probable cause in most warrants.

“I don’t have enough for an arrest warrant,” Savary said. “I was thinking I have enough for a search warrant. I’ll go talk to the suspect, case he wants to cop out.”

“Yeah. Right.”

Neither had to mention the fact that Judge Marcus Summers was next up as duty judge. That would be tomorrow. A retired state trooper, Summers understood probable cause for what it was, “a reasonable belief that an individual committed a specific crime.” Far from the “beyond a reasonable doubt” necessary for conviction, PC was what every cop strived for. It was up to the DA to present a case “beyond a reasonable doubt.”

Damn attorneys. Shakespeare had it right. First, kill all the lawyers.

Two sheriff’s deputies brought Oris Lamont, who was young and thin, like the killer in the video, into the small, stuffy interview room at Orleans Parish Prison where Detective Joseph Savary sat behind the small table with a Miranda rights form. He’d filled out the pertinent details of name, address, date, and time.

Lamont sat in the chair across the table from Savary and reached for the mini digital tape recorder next to Savary’s hand.

“Don’t touch it,” Savary said. He introduced himself and asked, “You have a lawyer?”

“Not yet.”

Savary started reading Lamont his rights.

“I know them,” Lamont interrupted.

Savary continued until he reached the waiver portion and read, “I understand what my rights are. No pressure or coercion of any kind was used against me to waive my rights. At this time, I am willing to answer questions without a lawyer present.”

“What’s this about?”

“It’s not about any chicken-shit drug charge.”

Lamont’s dark brown eyes went wide. He leaned back in the folding chair. He tried smiling. Savary pulled a crime-scene photo from his briefcase, a photo of the exterior of Jeanfreau’s from the afternoon of the murder. Lamont looked at it but his eyes revealed nothing, not even recognition of a place he must have passed hundreds of times in his short life.

“I don’t know nothin’ ’bout no murder.”

“Who said anything about a murder? I could be a robbery detective for all you know.”

“You got a cigarette?”

“I don’t smoke.” Savary pushed the waiver forward. “You’ll have to sign the waiver to talk with me.”

Lamont folded his arms. Savary shrugged, picked up the waiver form, and said, “You can go back inside then. With your padnas.”

“I got no padnas.” Lamont reached for the form, signed it, said, “I want you to tell the judge I cooperated. Damn drug charge.”

“When was the last time you were in Jeanfreau’s?”

“Man, I don’t know. It’s been a while. A year or so.”

“Really? You know there’s video inside. You sure you didn’t drop in, get a cold drink?”

“Nope. I mean yeah. I ain’t been inside.”

“You remember Mr. Hudson, don’t you?”

“I ain’t talkin’ ’bout that old man or any charge he put against me.”

“I’m not here to talk about shoplifting.”

Savary tried different tacks. What had Lamont heard about the murder? Was he outside when it happened, maybe saw something? Oris Lamont insisted he hadn’t been at Jeanfreau’s for a year. Savary turned on the tape recorder, read Lamont his rights again, and recorded the young man’s statement, how he hadn’t been in Jeanfreau’s for a year. As he was ending the statement, Savary casually asked, “Old man Hudson”-that’s what Lamont called him-“what did he mean when he touched his chin?”

“Huh?”

“When he touched his chin. Was that a signal?”

Lamont laughed. “That’s no signal. Band-Aid on his chin kept comin’ off, the old fool.”

“When was this?”

“No time in particular. I just seen him do that.”

Lamont added nothing else of value. Didn’t seem overly concerned about the matter. Only added, “I need your name.”

Savary passed him a business card.

“I wanna give it to the judge on this cocaine case. Show him I cooperate with the police.”

Savary went to the morgue early the next morning, caught pathologist Dr. Jess Gomez before the man started on his first autopsy.

“Go back down to the record room,” Dr. Gomez said. “See the investigator. I usually put everything in my notes. Only put what’s pertinent in the autopsy report, but my notes are more detailed.” Savary found it an hour later. Jack Hudson had a clear Band-Aid on his chin on the day he was murdered.

“All this may be enough for an arrest warrant,” Jodie said as Savary typed out a search warrant on his computer. “It’ll sure be enough for a search warrant.”

The right honorable Judge Marcus Summer of Criminal District Court agreed and signed the search warrant for Oris Lamont’s shotgun single house, a block off Felicity Street at the corner of Magnolia and Melpomene. The house smelled of burned cabbage and creaked heavily as the detectives and uniformed officers came through the front door. The place seemed to rock beneath their weight.

Lamont’s mama wasn’t happy with all the police in her house and being forced to remain in the living room with her five-year-old daughter, who wore a pink dress and hugged a stuffed Sponge Bob doll.

Savary found a Milky Way wrapper under Oris’s bed, as well as two Baby Ruth wrappers and an Almond Joy wrapper. He also found a Ruger nine-millimeter with six rounds left in a ten-round magazine under a loose floorboard beneath Oris Lamont’s single bed. His mama never saw the gun before. He looked at the little girl and those big eyes stared at the semiautomatic.

“Is this your gun?” Savary asked the child.

“That Oris gun.”

Her mother pulled her away from the detective and glared at him.

“You’re violating our rights, questioning a baby.”

Savary gave the woman a cold smile.

A crowd had gathered outside, kept back by two Sixth District patrol officers. Savary spotted a familiar face and went over to Reverend Milton, who moved toward him.

“Let him through.”

The reverend looked Savary in the eye, but only for a moment. He shook his head. “I figured the longer you worked on the case, the more likely you’d figure it out.”

“You knew about Oris? That he had a gun. That he did it.”

“Everybody knew, ’cept y’all.” The reverend looked over at Oris’s mother, now standing on the front stoop with her little girl.

“Can I go talk with her?”

Savary nodded. “We’re leaving.”

Reverend Milton grabbed his elbow, looked him in the eye again. “I didn’t see it happen. I mean, I didn’t know for sure, ’cept everyone said it and Oris asked me not to talk to the police. He acted real casual-like. You know what I mean.”