Hells Kitchen
just grin and tell you his life story on camera?”
Pellam shrugged, nonchalant—though an image of hacksaws had neatly replaced the image of making love in a snow-swept Winnebago.
Carol shook her head. “Pellam, the Kitchen isn’t Bed-Sty. It isn’t the South Bronx or East New York. . . . There, everybody knows it’s dangerous. You just stay away. Or you know you’re going to get dissed and you can see trouble coming. Here, it’s all turned ’round. You got yuppie lofts, you got nice restaurants, you got murderers, whores, corporate execs, psychos, priests, gay hookers, actors . . . You’re walking past a little garden at noon in front of a tenement, thinking, Hey, those’re pretty flowers, and the next thing you know you’re on the ground and there’s a bullet in your leg or an ice pick in your back. Or maybe you’re singing Irish songs in a bar and the guy next to you, somebody walks up and shoots his brains out. You never know who did it and you never know why.”
“Oh, hell,” Pellam said, “I know that Jimmy Corcoran spits poison and walks through walls. That’s not news.”
Carol laughed and lowered her head to Pellam’s arm. He felt another sizzle from the contact, hot enough to melt January snow. She said, “Okay, sorry about the preachin’. It’s in my job description. Don’t say I didn’t warn you. You want Jimmy, I’ll give you Jimmy. The Four Eighty-eight. It’s a bar on the corner of Tenth and Forty-fifth. You can probably find him there three or four days a week. But if you go, go during the day. And—” She laid a firm grip upon Pellam’s arm. “—I’d recommend you take a friend.”
“Yo!” Ismail jumped onto the stairs next to them. “I be his friend.”
“I’m sure that’ll have Corcoran quaking in his shoes.”
“Fuck, yeah!”
Ismail ran off to find more earth-moving equipment. Carol kept her eyes on Pellam for a long moment. Pellam looked away first and Carol stood up. “Back to the salt mines,” she said. Laughing, taking the glasses off.
As they walked back to the Youth Outreach Center she said, “You know, you’re not the first creative sort I’ve run across. One of our Youth Outreach graduates was an author.”
“Really?”
“Wrote a best-seller—about a murderer. The bad news is it was an autobiography. Call me sometime, Pellam. Here’s my card.”
* * *
Dannette Johnson was standing on Tenth Avenue.
This was a broad street. The buildings lining it were low and it seemed even wider because of that. The sun, sinking over New Jersey, was still very bright and hot. She stood in one of the few shaded places for blocks around, under the awning of an abandoned late night club, a relic from the eighties.
She thought: Nosir, not that one. Examining drivers who slowed and looked at her in a particular way.
Nope. Not that asshole.
Nope, not him neither.
She stood in the shade not because of the heat—she was wearing no more than eight ounces of clothing on her extravagant body—but because teenage acne had dimpled her face and she believed she was ugly.
Another car drove past, slowed almost to stopping.Like most of them here it had New Jersey plates; this was an approach to the Lincoln Tunnel, a main route for commuters who lived in the Garden State.
It was also a very easy place for a girl to make five, six hundred a night.
But not from this fellow, not today. She looked away and he drove on.
Dannette had been working the street for eight years, since she’d turned nineteen. To her, the profession was absolutely no different from any other job. Most of the johns were decent guys, who had a job they didn’t really care for, bosses who didn’t particularly like them, wives or girlfriends who’d stopped giving them head after the first baby.
She provided a necessary service. Like the stenographer her mother had dreamt she’d be.
A red Iroc-Z turned onto Tenth and cruised slowly toward her, the exhaust bubbling sexily. Behind the wheel was a pudgy Italian boy in an expensive, monogrammed white shirt. His moustache was trimmed carefully and he wore a gold Rolex on his left wrist. He looked like a salesman at one of the car dealerships on the West Side. “Wanna fuck?”
She smiled, leaned forward, said in a sexy voice, “Kiss my black ass. Git outa here.”
As Dannette retreated to the shade again the car vanished.
A few minutes later a Toyota cruised by. Inside was a thin white man wearing a baseball cap.
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