Silent Prey
somewhere . . . . There are a couple of other guys checking secondary sources . . . .”
They stopped at a traffic light. On the sidewalk, a fruit vendor sat in a plastic lawn chair with a wet rag on his forehead and took a continuous long peel off a red apple, using a thin-bladed stiletto with a pearl handle. A slow-moving, ratty-furred tiger-striped cat walked past him, stopped to look at the dangling peel, then hopped down into the gutter, took a last look around at the daylight world, and dropped into the sewer. Anything to get out of the heat.
“ . . . some kind of heat inversion and the temperature never goes down at night, see. That’s when things get weird,” Fell said, gunning the car through the intersection. “I got a call once where this PR stuck his old lady’s head . . .”
“A what?”
“Puerto Rican. Where this Puerto Rican dude stuffed his old lady’s head in the toilet and she drowned, and he said he did it because it was so fuckin’ hot and she wouldn’t shut up . . . .”
They rolled past the Checks Cashed and the Mexican and Indian restaurants, past the delis and the stink of a dog-’n’-kraut stand, past people with red dots on theirforeheads and yarmulkes and witty T-shirts that said “No Farting,” past bums and sunglassed Mafia wannabes in nine-hundred-dollar loose-kneed suits with shiny lapels.
Past a large woman wearing a T-shirt with a silhouette of a .45 on the front. A newspaper-style map arrow pointed at the gun’s muzzle and said, “Official Map of New York City: You Are Here.”
“There’s Lonnie,” Fell said, easing the car to the curb. A taxi behind them honked, but Fell ignored it and got out.
“Hey, whaddafuck . . .”
Fell made a pistol of her thumb and index finger and pointed it at the cabby and pulled the trigger and continued on around the car. Lonnie was sitting on an upturned plastic bottle crate, a Walkman plugged into his ear, head bobbing to whatever sound he was getting. He was looking the other way when Fell walked up and tapped the crate with her toe. Lonnie reared back and looked up, then pulled the plug out of his ear.
“Hey . . .” Lucas turned in front of him, on the other side. Nowhere to run.
“You sold three hundred hypodermic syringes to Al Kunsler on Monday,” Fell said. “We want to know where you got them and what else you got. Medical stuff.”
“I don’t know nothing about that,” Lonnie said. He had scars around his eyebrows, and his nose didn’t quite line up with the center of his mouth.
“Come on, Lonnie. We know about it, and I don’t much give a shit,” Fell said impatiently. Her forehead was damp with the heat. “You fuck with us, we take you down. You tell us, we drive away. And believe me, this is something you don’t want to get involved in.”
“Yeah? What’s going on?” He looked like he was about to stand up, but Lucas put his hand on his shoulder, and he settled back on the crate.
“We’re looking for this fruitcake Bekker, okay? He’s getting medical gear. We’re looking for suppliers. You know at least one . . . .”
“I don’t know from this Bekker dude,” Lonnie said.
“So just tell us where you got them,” Lucas said.
Lonnie looked around, as if to see who was watching. “Atlantic City. From some guy in a motel.”
“Where’d he get them?” Lucas asked.
“How the fuck would I know? Maybe off the beach.”
“Lonnie, Lonnie . . .” said Fell.
“Look, I went to Atlantic City for a little straight action. You know you can’t get straight action around here anymore . . . .”
“Yeah, yeah . . .”
“ . . . And I meet this guy at the motel and he says he’s got some merchandise, and I say, ‘Whatcha got?’ And he says, ‘All sortsa shit.’ And he did. He had, like, a million sets of Snap-On tools and some computer TV things and leather flight bags and belts and suits and shit, and these needles.”
“What was he driving?” Lucas asked.
“Cadillac.”
“New?”
“Naw. Old. Great big fuckin’ green one, color of Key Lime pie, with the white roof.”
“Think he’s still there?”
Lonnie shrugged. “Could be. Looked like he’d been there awhile. I know there was some girls down the way, he was partying with them, they acted like they knew him . . . .”
• • •
They touched a half-dozen other fences, small-time hustlers. At half-hour intervals, Fell would find a pay phone and make a
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