The super exclaimed when he saw the looted trailer. Downey went inside with him. The super couldn’t believe the extent of the loss. Usually it was one or two small pieces, more on the order of petty pilfering. This had been done by professionals. On the other hand, the insurance company had been getting fed up with the incessant nibbling losses, so maybe the pricks had decided to go for a big score before more stringent security measures made it harder or impossible. A payloader tire had been taken. Mounted, one of those babies would set you back something like a thousand and a half. You couldn’t walk out with one in your back pocket.
When Downey attempted to get a little more-had they ever caught anyone taking, for example? — the man closed up. That would have to come from the office.
Never mind. Downey had already thought of somebody who was sure to know.
Soupy Simpson, a well-known street figure in Northwest Miami, was built like an ex-jockey who has stopped starving himself to make weight. His bones were as light as a chicken’s. In periods when the money was good and he didn’t have to choose between food and heroin (heroin won), he put on weight around the middle. He usually seemed cool and easy, even cheerful, as though nothing bad could possibly happen to him. Much already had. He led a hazardous life. He was a fence, a gifted middleman who was willing to peddle any kind of stolen property if the margin was right. Because of his high expenses, he also had to moonlight by selling news and gossip. For this merchandise, his customers were the police, an occasional newspaperman like Tim Rourke of the News. This didn’t pay much, but it often made the difference between a bad night and going to bed happy.
He slept in a bowling-alley shoe room. Turkey, who ran the place, was still at the front desk. Suddenly Turkey began coughing hard. He had a cigarette smoker’s cough anyway, but this was more and it meant they had visitors. Simpson swept his materials into a chamois bag. The top sash of his single window was down a few inches. Standing on the cot, he dislodged a taut elastic, hooked it into the bag, and let go. The bag left the room fast, coming to rest outside, high up under the eaves.
He was back on the cot taking off his socks when a city detective named Jack Downey walked in. At this time of night, Downey was bad news. Nevertheless Simpson’s face split open in a wide, friendly grin, and he put out his hand.
“Hey, Jack, I’m honored.”
Downey was one of those cops it is impossible to like. He was a Godfather expert, with charts all over the walls of his office. Simpson and the others in his stable of snitches kept him contented by screening him from anything that would contradict his ideas. When a loan shark named Eddie Maye turned up dead, for example, Simpson told Downey it was an episode in a power struggle between organized crime families, although everybody knew it was actually a kidnapping attempt that had gone bad.
Downey was in a rotten mood. Instead of taking Simpson’s hand, he put three glassine envelopes in it. Simpson looked down in surprise.
“I do hope this isn’t a bust,” he said gently.
“That remains to be seen.” His tone and manner were equally grating. Whatever his standing elsewhere, in this room he unquestionably had the power. “I want a few answers, and I don’t have time for the usual bullshit.”
He swung over a straight chair, the only one in the room, and sat down. Simpson managed to stay relaxed, but he didn’t like the visit. The time of night by itself made it important.
“Homestead,” Downey said. “Pilfering. The construction site on the Interstate. What do you know about that?”
Simpson was liking this less and less. Homestead was sheriff’s country, and the sheriff was touchy about Miami cops who didn’t stay in their own jurisdiction.
“Why are you interested, Jack? Homestead is out of your territory.”
“Larry Canada is my territory, I go where he takes me. Let’s hear a yes or a no. Can you help me?”
“Jack-maybe,” Simpson said, twisting. “I know it goes on.”
Downey lit a cigarette, forgetting to offer one to the man on the cot. “Who are they? How do they fence it?”
“I don’t know names and addresses, Jack. These are small guys by definition. They work for a living. It’s something they scoop on the side.”
“I told you I don’t have time for the bullshit. Don’t try to Jew me up.”
Simpson stopped smiling. He had had some unhappy experiences with Irishmen whose eyebrows came close to meeting over their nose. This could be a very mean man. He exaggerated his agitation slightly to give Downey a sense that the menace had been understood.
“You say Canada. He has a piece of everything out there, never mind that it’s small, because of the principle of the thing. And if it gets back to Larry that we were talking about him, I could be in serious trouble. You know I live from day to day.”
“I’m not asking about selling the stuff back later. That’s between Canada and his insurance. All I want to know is stage one and stage two. Small guys, I agree. Those kind of names are in the public domain.”
Simpson continued to twist, fingers laced in his lap, and Downey’s eyebrows approached each other and touched. “What are you trying to tell me? That I can’t bust you right now for possession?”
“No, no. If I knew off the top of my head, would be one thing. I’ll have to make a phone call, and they’ll remember it was Simpson was asking.”
Downey took out three more little envelopes and added them to the pile on Simpson’s knee. He really must want this information. Usually he paid cash out of the informers’ budget. So it couldn’t be regular police business. The police-informer tie is like a marriage. To work, it must go both ways. The cop needs to know what his snitch is up to, to keep him in line. And the reverse is true. For a really solid relationship, the snitch, too, needs a handle.
“Give me a couple of minutes, if I can locate the bastard. He sleeps different places.”
Downey’s expression continued to threaten, telling Soupy that if he tried to evaporate or come back without the information, he was not only going to get arrested, he was going to have the shit kicked out of him for resisting arrest. Part of the cop mystique is getting a chance to bloody your knuckles now and then.
Simpson went out to the office, where his friend was worrying about him.
“Give me a shot of booze,” he said urgently. Turkey got out the bottle and poured. “Heavy stuff in there. I’d like to know what he’s into.”
“I don’t like him coming around.”
“I love it myself.”
He folded himself in the phone booth and took the phone off the hook in case Downey looked out. After a certain amount of time, he went back and told Downey what he wanted to know. There were two regular thieves, Rusty Benjamin and a truck driver named Vaughan. His informant didn’t know if Vaughan was a first name or a last name. They lived in a big trailer park seven or eight miles south of the new interchange, near Leisure City. Apparently the set-up was this. They had their own camper there, and they rented a trailer from the park under a fake name. Whatever they brought back from work, they stuck in this second trailer. The whole point was not to take much at one time, so it didn’t pay a fence to keep in day-to-day touch. As soon as they accumulated a fair-sized load, they notified the buyer, who came with his own vehicle, hooked onto the trailer, and took it away, bringing it back empty the next morning. They got their money through the mail.
All this was true. The one fact Simpson suppressed was that he himself was the link between the guys and their buyer. Downey didn’t need to know that. Downey’s eyebrows moved a fraction of an inch further apart, which meant he was satisfied, even though for once Simpson hadn’t given him a Mafia connection.