“Just instinct.”
He gave me a long, slow look. “I don’t think so,” he said.
I shrugged.
He shifted his weight, rolled his shoulders slightly, like he was getting ready to try a standing takedown. But he didn’t say anything.
My move. “If
Then it was his turn to shrug. After a few seconds, a grin popped out on his face. “Jenn knows what she’s doing.”
“And
“Don’t go there,” he warned. “You’ve got your reasons. I’ve got mine. I’d like to protect Rose, but my own is where I draw the line, you with me?”
“Yeah.”
“Let’s be sure,” he said, softly. “I like Rose. I really do. But I’d cut her loose in a second if I thought she was going to cause harm to Jenn.”
“I get it.”
“And you,” he said, moving very close to me, “if I thought
I decided to go see if Hong was at the joint where he hung out. Maybe he knew something about Ann he hadn’t told me.
Gem had pointed out Hong’s car the first time we’d met: a candy-apple Acura, slammed, with big tires and checkerboard graphics along the flanks. It was sitting in the parking lot.
I went through the door, poked my nose around the corner, spotted him in his booth. A girl was with him. They were sitting close together, side by side. Gem.
“Thanks.”
“We must go away again. Soon.”
I knew she didn’t mean me. Gem, Flacco, and Gordo, they were professional border-crossers. I don’t know what they ran, but I know they were good at it. I met them through Mama. She didn’t know them personally, but an old friend, a Cambodian woman who ran a network similar to hers, had vouched heavy, her own rep on the line.
“All right,” is all I said.
“Before we leave, I will try to get you the information you want.”
“About Rosebud?” I asked her, surprised.
“No. But the . . . person who gave you the equipment to get into her father’s computer, he should have results for me soon.”
“Ah.”
“You do not sound enthusiastic, Burke.”
“It was a long shot.”
“What is not?” she said, sadness in her voice.
Inside, if you’re
I missed my own.
Ann’s whole ante was promises. Sure, she’d made the Borderland connect for me, but I would have stumbled across it anyway, sooner or later. Especially with . . .
Yeah, I had a lot more cards in my hand. Higher ones, too. Jennifer would help, now that her father had okayed it. She was the lifeline between Rosebud and Daisy, and the older sister wasn’t going to walk away from
I had other things working. Bobby Ray. Clipper and Big A. Maybe even Madison. To some extent, I think they all bought it that I wasn’t Rosebud’s enemy. If they crossed paths with her, I was pretty sure they’d at least tell her how to find me.
I had money working for me, too. Talked to a lot of people like Odom, made it clear there was a bounty. Any of
As I learned Portland, the town got smaller. Maybe I was years away from the web of contacts and connections Ann had put together, and maybe I’d never have the credibility her mission brought her, but all that added up to was . . . she
I totaled it up. Not worth the risk.
Clipper was giving me a rundown on the game when the phone in my jacket vibrated. I stepped off a few paces, opened it up, said, “Hazard.”
“It’s me.” Ann’s voice, some undercurrent to it I couldn’t catch.
I held back—no point telling her I wasn’t going for her deal if she was about to give me a locate. Said, “So?”
“Just tell me where you are now. I’ll come there.”
Not on the phone? Maybe she had . . . I told her the name of the poolroom. I was in the middle of giving her the address when the connection went dead.
“Hi, cutie,” she said to Big A, giving him a little kiss on the cheek. The kid’s face flamed from the effort of trying to be cool about it.
“Hey, Ann,” Clipper greeted her.
“Making any money?” she asked him.
“A little bit.”
She shot a hip, turned to look at me over her shoulder. “We have to talk,” she said.
“Talk’s fine,” I told her. “But I don’t hold press conferences.”
“Then let’s go,” she said, taking my arm.
I pushed the button on the key fob to unlock the Cadillac. I could have charged admission to watch her climb into the front seat.
“What’s this all about?” I asked her.
“Not here.”
“I’m not talking about whatever you’ve got to tell me. I mean the whole display.”