“No time to find out,” I said.

“That scar on your face,” she said, “you get that shaving?”

Testing now. Even more interesting.

“You have five seconds,” I said.

Leticia stepped around her desk and walked past me. Sam opened the door for her, and she never once looked at him.

“Tough girl,” Sam said.

“Let’s hope she’s not stupid,” I said.

We walked down the hall toward Father Eduardo’s office. There was a conference room on the right, followed by three offices along the left-hand side of the corridor before you reached Father Eduardo’s office at the end. I stuck my head in the first office and saw a young man of maybe twenty-five holding a Bible in his lap talking to a boy of no more than sixteen. The young man was dressed in a crisp white shirt with a tie. The name on the slider outside the office said CLIFFORD TURNER on it. Up the hall, I saw Sam enter another office and introduce himself as Chazz Finley, as we’d planned.

“Excuse me,” I said, and Clifford looked up at me.

“Help you with something?” he said. He didn’t seem annoyed, but clearly he was in the middle of a conversation and wanted to get back to it.

“Mike Michaels from the mayor’s office,” I said. I gave him the toothy smile every city employee with an ounce of desire to be a state employee can employ at a moment’s notice.

“Okay,” he said.

“I’m going to need you to clear out of your office for the next hour,” I said. “The mayor is coming in for a meeting with Father Eduardo, and we’re going to need your office to set up the media.”

“What?” he said. “I’m in the middle of a counseling session here.”

“I see that. I see that,” I said, “but it’s been a change of plans. Leticia just found out, the sweetheart, and so she’s busy trying to find us some space elsewhere. But when the mayor says jump, you know how that is.”

Clifford looked at his young charge. It would be imprudent to fly off the handle in front of the kid, particularly since the kid had a monitoring bracelet around his ankle.

“This is unusual,” Clifford said. “But what are we as humans if we cannot adapt, right, Milo?”

The kid didn’t say anything. He just stood up when Clifford did and made his way to the door with him.

“Real sorry about this,” I said.

“I didn’t vote for the mayor,” Clifford said. “Don’t expect my vote next year, either.”

“Noted,” I said.

Down the hall, another young man and kid with an ankle bracelet came shuffling out of the office Sam had entered. They didn’t look happy, either, so when they passed me I said, “The mayor thanks you.”

“The mayor will be hearing from me,” the young man said.

“All letters are appreciated,” I said.

Sam opened up the third office door and then stepped back abruptly.

“Problem?” I said.

“Mike, this isn’t good,” he said. I peered into the office. It was filled with bookshelves. On each of the shelves were approximately twenty Bibles. “That’s a lot of judgment right there, Mikey.”

“You’re on the right side of the law,” I said. “Generally.”

“We’ll keep this door closed,” Sam said. “I don’t want Fiona to walk by and burst into flames.”

“Good call,” I said.

When we reached Father Eduardo’s office, I rapped lightly on the door and he opened it and, yet again, surprised me. Instead of the shirt and tie I’d grown accustomed to, Father Eduardo was dressed as the priest he was, collar and all.

“Jesus,” Sam said.

“That’s the idea,” Father Eduardo said.

It was nice he still had a sense of humor. Even still, it was going to be hard to hit a man in a collar, which Father Eduardo had likely banked on. I’d done worse, and I had a feeling that Father Eduardo, at some point in his life, had done so, too.

Once we were in the office I said, “I emptied out the floor. What’s above us?”

“Nothing until tonight,” he said. “What did you do with Leticia?”

“Gave her a choice,” I said. “We’ll see how that works out.”

Sam peered out the window. “Company’s coming,” he said. “Should we get out the nice china?”

I walked up behind him and looked out, too. Junior Gonzalez: his eyes were covered by black wraparound sunglasses, but his tattoos and scars and muscles, however, were on full display. He’d given up the pretense of pleasant businessman so well cultivated in his suburban home that I had to wonder how silly he felt changing into a wife beater, Dickies and white shoes. The lieutenant walking with him was a massive hulk of a man. Maybe six foot five. Close to three bills. He had on shorts and white socks pulled to his knees, and wore a button-down shirt opened up to reveal a plain white T-shirt. It always surprised me how these guys had such white shirts. Didn’t they ever spill a Coke on themselves, like regular people?

“When was the last time you saw your brother?” I asked Father Eduardo.

“Nine months,” he said. “Maybe a year. Maybe longer.”

“You ready to see him again?”

“I am,” he said.

Out on the street, a Miami police cruiser came to a stop at the corner. I called Fiona. “You see that cop?” I said.

“Hard not to,” she said.

“Get his plates. He gets out of the car and starts heading toward the office before you make your move? Shoot him.”

“Really?”

“Really,” I said.

There was a pause. “You mean with the paintball gun?”

“Yes,” I said. “How’s Barry doing?”

“He’s sweating through his pants,” she said. “He’s agreed to get my car cleaned so we won’t have a problem.”

“That’s just great,” I said. “Let me know if you hear anything important when Junior and Killa walk up.”

“That’s Killa?”

“Doesn’t look the part?”

“I guess I imagined he’d be smaller,” she said, and hung up.

Out the window, Junior and Killa were making slow progress across the grounds. Every person who walked by got stared at. “Not trying to be too inconspicuous,” I said.

“Not Junior’s way,” Father Eduardo said.

“Open up your office door and stand there,” I said. “Let your brother see you and let Junior see you.”

“Should I look worried?”

“Are you?”

“No,” he said. “I have faith.”

“That’s good,” I said. I lifted up my shirt and showed him my paintball gun. “I have this.”

“I told you,” he said, but I put my hand up.

“It’s a toy,” I said, and handed it to him.

He hefted it a bit and then gripped it completely in his hand. “This feels comfortable,” he said.

“It’s perfectly legal,” I said.

Father Eduardo looked down the barrel. “What is it loaded with?”

“That one is loaded with paintballs filled with a fun, flesh-eating acid. The one on my ankle has pepper spray. In case I’m mugged.”

“Mikey,” Sam said from the window, “they’re getting close. Better have the padre move to the door.”

Father Eduardo gave me back my paintball gun and then walked over to his double doors and opened both wide. His frame filled up the open space impressively. He might have been religious, but he was still hell to look

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