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I gave a low whistle, looked at Joe, and shook my head. “I knew we were low-class scum, but I didn’t realize we were that bad.”

“Get out of my office,” Hubbard said.

“You ever hear of a guy named Dainius Belov?” I asked.

His head canted sharply, and then he took a breath and smoothed his tie, frowning as if he were surprised and disappointed by his reaction, like maybe my question had tugged on a part of his brain he’d been determined to leave unresponsive during this conversation.

“If you have any further questions, I will refer you to my attorney, Mr. Richard Douglass,” he said in a monotone.

“Dicky D.,” I said. “How’s the old boy doing these days?”

“Leave,” Hubbard said emphatically.

“Dicky D.?” Joe asked me.

“I was trying not to look too intimidated,” I said in a theatrical whisper. “Did it work?”

“No.”

We got to our feet, and Joe turned back to him. “I’m going to leave you our number,” he said. “Just in case you change your mind.”

“That won’t happen,” Hubbard said.

“Nevertheless,” Joe said, “I’d feel better knowing that you have it. Do you have a piece of paper I can write it on?”

“I have our business card with me,” I offered.

Joe shook his head and looked annoyed. “I want to leave Mr. Hubbard my home phone number. He’s important.”

“I asked you to leave,” Hubbard said. “Must I call security?”

“Sir, if you just give me a piece of paper so I can write my number on it, we’ll be on our way,” Joe said, stepping over to the desk and helping himself to a blank sheet, which he folded and tore in half. He wrote his name and number down quickly, then handed it to Hubbard. “In case you reconsider.”

“Get out,” Hubbard commanded.

We left. As I stepped into the hall, Hubbard yelled at me to shut his door. I left it open and followed Joe into the lobby. The good-looking secretary smiled at us.

“That was pretty quick,” she said.

“We’ve got important business matters to attend to,” I said. “We really can’t afford to let Hubbard waste more of our time.”

I was halfway through the door when Joe stopped short, and I almost ran into his back. He turned back to the secretary.

“Excuse me,” he said. “Do you know what Mr. Hubbard’s middle name is?”

“Elisha,” she answered.

“Jeremiah Elisha,” he said, closing the door behind us. “Catchy.”

When we were back in the elevator I said, “Shrewd question, detective. I’d say Hubbard wrote the thank-you note, eh?”

Joe handed me a half-scrap of paper. It was the remains of the piece he’d written his number on before tearing it in two. It was also a perfect match to the stationery we’d found in Weston’s house.

“Nice,” I said. “Good eyes.”

“Would be nice if it meant anything. Too bad it doesn’t. The note doesn’t say shit, and we’d already assumed it was from Hubbard.”

We were halfway to the truck before we spoke again. I think we’d both half expected Hubbard to send security guards to cuff us and drag us back upstairs so I would shut his door.

“Friendly guy,” Joe said. “I was expecting him to be a little standoffish, what with all that money, you know? But he’s quite down-to-earth.”

“Down-to-earth,” I agreed. “Of course, we’re down in the dirt, reveling in our filthy work.”

Joe laughed. “That was a nice spiel. All the stuff about how we disgust him, how we make him sick? Priceless.”

“We appeared to generate a lot of passion from him. Seems strange for a man who’s got nothing to hide to get so passionate about our conversation.”

“Almost as strange as offering us twenty grand to back off.”

“Twenty grand’s a lot of money,” I said, using the keyless entry device to unlock the truck door for Joe. “Probably foolish of us not to take it. As a matter of fact, I have to say I resent you making that call without even pausing to discuss it.”

“Very rude of me,” Joe said, dropping into his seat as I started the engine and began to back out. “I don’t know where I get off making such decisions single-handedly. But, if it makes you feel any better, we probably run a much higher risk of getting shot if we keep pushing on this case.”

“That does help,” I said. “I mean, sure, twenty grand would be nice, but it can’t match the adrenaline rush you get from gun battles with the Russian mob. Shall we look them up next?”

“We’ll look for them. I don’t think we need any dialogue exchange with them just yet.”

“Sounds good, grandpa. Don’t want to rush you.”

I spent the next five minutes maneuvering the truck out of the parking space. It was a small space to begin with, and by the time we returned a van had parked behind me, making it even tighter. I’d back up about ten inches, cut the wheel, pull forward, cut the wheel again, and throw it in reverse to gain another ten inches. Joe groaned.

“We live in the city,” he said. “You’ve always lived in the city. So why do you feel the need to have this monstrosity? You have some sort of cowboy identity crisis? You want I should buy you some boots and a hat, maybe some spurs? Start calling you ‘podnuh’?”

“Joe,” I said, “you drive a Taurus. So shut the hell up, stick your head out the window, and let me know if I’ve got a few inches to spare on that side.”

CHAPTER 8

VLADIMIR RAKIC and Alexei Krashakov, it turned out, lived in what was basically my old neighborhood. I’d grown up on a narrow street off Clark Avenue, and Rakic and Krashakov shared a two-decker about twelve blocks south. I’d never known anyone who lived in that house, but I’d passed it almost daily as a kid. Somehow, knowing they now inhabited my childhood territory made me like them even less.

Joe and I cruised the block a few times before a parking spot offering a good vantage point opened up. The sun was still out, and we had to park facing into it, squinting against the light, but it was the best we could do. Joe had insisted we take his Taurus; he claimed my truck would stand out as unfamiliar to the neighbors. I tried to argue that no car screamed “undercover cop” quite like a Taurus, but he ignored me.

We parked and settled in for the wait. There hadn’t been any cars in the driveway when we drove past, and none were parked at the curb in front of the home, so it appeared the Russians were out on the town. The two-decker was painted a light blue that was turning gray from weathering, but it was in better shape than most on the block. The house was the same style as many others in the neighborhood, and I recalled from past visits to such homes that on each level there were two bedrooms, a small kitchen, a dining room, one tiny bathroom, and a living room. There would probably also be a dank cellar and an attic with low ceilings.

Joe looked around sourly. “This neighborhood’s gone to hell. When I was a rookie, this actually wasn’t a bad street. Nobody cares about their own home anymore.”

“I grew up around here,” I said.

He stopped drumming his fingers on the steering wheel and pointed at me. “That’s right. I’d forgotten that. You know any of the neighbors? Someone who could give us some good dirt on the Russians, maybe?”

I shook my head. “Not this far south.”