where he was actually parked, as opposed to where he said he was parked.”

“He couldn’t have seen deep into the alley from there.”

“He could only have seen the head of it, and a small piece of it at that. The report says the Denali was found at the back edge of that salmon-colored building. So, from that perspective, there’s no way Jackson could have observed David and Duron get out of that SUV.”

“Can anyone testify that Jackson was parked in front of the market?”

From his back pocket Lucas produced his notebook and opened it. “The owner. His name is Odin Nolasco.” Lucas spelled it and Petersen wrote it down. Lucas said, “It’s pronounced Oh-deen. I don’t think he’d willingly discredit a police officer’s official report. You’re going to have to subpoena him. When you get him on the stand you might have to treat him as hostile.”

“Thank you for the legal advice, counselor.”

“I’m sayin.”

“The visual ID, the link of the boys to the SUV, that’s the prosecution’s case right there.”

“Weren’t the boys’ prints on the Denali?”

“Their prints were all over it. But that’s less significant than what we have here. I was weighing a plea, but now I want this to go to trial. You put it into a D.C. jury’s head that a police officer gave false testimony to make a case against a juvenile, nine times out of ten that jury’s going to acquit, even in the face of damning evidence.”

“Well, there’s your ammunition.” Lucas held up the notebook. “I’ve got street maps I drew, right in here, if you need them.”

“The Book of Luke.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Good work, man.”

“Thank you.”

Lucas began to walk from the office, and Petersen stopped him. “Spero?”

“Yeah.”

“Don’t bother Constance. She’s a nice girl.”

“I like nice girls,” said Lucas. He meant it, too.

IT WENT the way Petersen said it would. A month later, he phoned Lucas and got him on his cell.

“David Hawkins was acquitted,” said Petersen.

“Duron?” said Lucas.

“Duron will walk, too.”

“Do I get a bonus, somethin?”

“In a way. But not from me.”

“That would be out of character.”

“David’s father, Anwan Hawkins, would like to meet you. I think he has something like an extra envelope in mind.”

“Anwan Hawkins the dealer?”

“Yeah. Up on trafficking charges at the moment, unfortunately. He’s currently in the D.C. Jail.”

“He wants me to come there?”

“Uh-huh.”

“Visitation days are set by the first letter in the last names, right?”

“That’s for social visits; the prison makes audio recordings of those conversations. You should go in as one of my official investigators. Those conversations are confidential.”

“Got it.”

“I’ll put a letter in to the DOC. It takes twenty-four hours to clear.”

“You know what Hawkins wants?”

“I believe Anwan is going to make you some sort of a proposal. But I can’t have you taking on any side work for a week or so. You’ve got those interviews to do for me on that Southeast thing. I’m defending Reginald Brooks, the shooter. Remember?”

“I do.”

“So what should I tell Anwan?” Petersen got no comment from Lucas. “Spero?”

“I’ll meet with him,” said Lucas. “See what he has to say.”

Which is how Spero Lucas met Anwan Hawkins, and the truck began to roll downhill.

TWO

Lucas hit “end” on his iPhone and placed the device on the nightstand beside his bed. The stand held a digital alarm clock, a lamp with a pillowcase thrown over its shade, his Bible, and a couple of other books. Lucas kept two, a fiction and a nonfiction, going at a time. He rolled over and got up on one elbow. Constance Kelly was beside him, naked in the bed.

“That was your boss,” said Lucas.

“Yours, too.”

“I don’t have a boss.”

“Neither do I, technically. I’m an intern, remember? At least you get paid.”

“Fifteen an hour.”

“It’s folding money.”

“Don’t forget about the meal plan. Horace and Dickies, Litteri’s…”

“Tom does like to feed his troops.”

Lucas leaned into her. They kissed.

“Why’d he call you on a Monday night?” said Constance.

“He had something for me.”

“A case?”

Lucas shook his head. He ran his hand down her neckline, her breast, her ribcage. The inside of her thigh and between her legs.

“I’m not on the stand,” said Lucas.

“You do side work,” said Constance. “Isn’t that right?” In the low light of his bedroom lamp she looked very young.

“Something like that.”

“That’s how you have all this.” She meant his spacious apartment. His bicycle, his car, the kayak hung on hooks on the back porch. In terms of Washington, it really wasn’t much at all. But from her perspective, living on a tight budget, it looked like a lot.

“All this,” said Lucas, finding a spot she liked.

She gasped a little and arched her back. She sucked at his lip and he pulled away, looking down at her, admiring her.

“I guess you think you’re pretty smart,” said Lucas.

“Just observant.”

“And lovely.”

Her chest blushed pink and he laughed.

“Stop it,” she said.

“Stop what?”

“Talking.”

“What’s the rush?”

“I mean it,” she said, her eyes slightly gone.

She tugged at him and he fitted himself between her, lifting one of her legs. It was slow at first. They searched for it and then they found it and soon it became something else, and the bed moved across the floor. Constance’s hand twisted the sheets, her pupils dilated, her hair fanned out about her face. She was the quiet type,

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