they were strictly against the evils of heroin. Sure. Poppy production dropped like a safe off a building. Only thing was, the street price of H didn’t trampoline in response like you’d expect—it stayed as steady as a sociopath’s polygraph needles.

You didn’t need a degree in higher mathematics to figure out what was going on. The Taliban banned poppy farming because they already had huge stocks on hand. Same way OPEC gets together and reduces oil production —to keep the barrel price high…and stable.

Colombia doesn’t have one gang ruling the country, so there’s no price-fixing. Both the pseudo-liberation guerrillas and the right-wing death squads run on money, so they were all madly pumping product, widening the pipeline. How could I know that? Because the street price for coke—grams to kilos—was even lower than it had been years ago.

The only war on drugs the sanctimonious swine are winning is the one to keep old folks on fixed incomes from filling their scrips in Canada or Mexico. And Ray Charles could see who was making out on that deal.

Why was I even bothering with the damn newspaper? It was a chump play to keep looking for Beryl. I wished I could just walk away. That job Charlie Jones had brought me was turning out to be the worst kind, the kind where you end up spending money instead of making it. No choice, though: I had to pay whatever it cost to make sure Charlie hadn’t been the one who put the man in the camel’s-hair coat on the spot. Because that might mean the shooting team knew about me, too.

The dead man wasn’t going to pay me to find the woman he knew as Peta Bellingham anymore. And even if she really had all the money showing on that CD, that didn’t necessarily add up to a dime for me.

I don’t like looking for my money on the come, but that’s where I was stuck now.

I sipped some more of Mama’s brew while I thought it through again. All that money didn’t mean anything by itself. Her father had been a rich man—maybe it was from an inheritance.

But what would have made her disappear? If the dead man had been stalking her, there would have been other ways to deal with that problem. For a woman as rich as she was, anyway.

I used to do a lot of that kind of work, about the same time I was looking for missing kids. I didn’t have much finesse back then.

And even less self-control. But I learned.

I got schooled good the time a soft-spoken man in an undertaker’s suit came to my office. I didn’t know him, but he had a message from a guy I’d done time with. A solid, stand-up guy who wasn’t ever coming home. The soft-spoken man told me this guy had a little sister. And the little sister had a husband.

The husband turned out to be a big man, with a bad drinking habit and a worse temper. That made it easy.

The celluloid crunch of his boozer’s nose brought both his hands up to cover his face. I hooked to his liver with the sap gloves, and he was on his knees in the alley, vomiting, bleeding, and crying at the same time. I leaned down quick, before he passed out, said, “Next time you beat on your wife, we’ll snap your fucking spine.”

When the soft-spoken man came back with the other half of my money, he was shaking his head apologetically.

“What?” I said.

“We’ve got a problem.”

“We?”

“The girl. Our…friend’s sister. She saw her husband in the hospital and she just went off. Started screaming.”

“So?”

“So she’s the problem.”

I didn’t say anything.

“Your…friend, there’s nothing anyone can do to him, okay? But your friend, he’s our friend, too, understand?”

“No,” I said, lying.

“Then let me spell it out for you,” the man said. “The sister, she knows more than she should. Instead of… appreciating what her brother wanted to do for her, she’s decided that her husband is this innocent victim. So she made a phone call.”

“To the cops?”

“To my boss. But her next call will be to the cops, unless things get made right.”

“Which means…?”

“An apology. And some money.”

“So apologize. And pay her the money.”

“It’s not her,” he said. “Him. He wants ten large to forget the whole thing.”

“Why tell me all this?”

“Because you didn’t do the job right.”

“I did what I got paid to do.”

“You got paid to fix it so he stops using the girl for a punching bag, not to bring heat down on my boss.”

“It’s not me who’s doing that.”

“Exactly,” the man said, soft-speaking the threat.

I lit a cigarette. Watched the smoke drift toward the low ceiling. Pansy shifted position in her corner, the movement so slight it might have been the play of light on shadow. The soft-spoken man was trapped. But nowhere near as bad as I was.

“She’s my only sister,” the man on the other side of the bulletproof glass said to me through the phone.

“I’m sorry about that,” I told him. “But I didn’t pick the people you sent to me, you did. And it’s me they’re putting in a cross.”

“I can talk to them,” he said.

“You already did that,” I told him, guessing, but real sure of the guess. “It’s her you have to talk to.”

“She missed her last two visits,” he said. “And she didn’t answer my letter, either.”

“Call her.”

“I did. She wouldn’t accept the charges. She never did that before.”

“You understand what they asked me to do?”

“I can figure it out,” he said.

“I’m not doing it,” I told him. “But there’s plenty who would.”

“What if…?”

“If she went as far as she already did behind what happened, what do you think she does if something heavier goes down?”

“Yeah.”

“So?”

“I only wanted to help her,” he said, shaking his head sadly.

I thought I had more time, but I was wrong. While I was visiting the prison, the soft-spoken man’s boss was making a phone call. To Wesley.

Husband and wife went together. Two surgical kills the papers called “execution-style.” The apartment had been ransacked. That made it “drug-related.”

I was sad about everything. But I learned from it.

Just because I’m good at waiting doesn’t mean I like to do it. I’d been good at doing time, too.

It took me another three full spins through the CD before I snapped that, for all the info this “financial planner” had put together on his target, he had nothing from her past. If he didn’t know her birth name, he didn’t know where she had grown up.

I’d met Beryl when she was a runaway. Now, maybe, she had run back home.

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