glow-in-the-dark Cherry Red lipstick, and I was ready to go.
Cicadas droned their early warning of another scorcher day, and the blacktop steamed with what was left of morning dew. I pulled out of the lot into the steady stream of traffic on St. James. I had the map spread out on the seat next to me, plus a steno pad I’d begun to use for phone numbers, addresses, and miscellaneous bits of information relating to the job.
Ramirez’s apartment building was set in the middle of the block, its identity lost in a crush of four-story walk- ups built cheek by jowl for the working poor. Most likely the building had originally held immigrant laborers—Irish, Italian, Polish hopefuls barged up the Delaware to work in Trenton’s factories. It was difficult to tell who lived here now. There were no old men loitering on front stoops, no children playing on the sidewalk. Two middle-aged Asian women stood waiting at a bus stop, their purses held tight against their chests, their faces expressionless. There were no vans in sight, and no place to hide one. No garages or alleys. If Morelli was keeping tabs on Ramirez, it would have to be from the rear or from an adjacent apartment.
I drove around the corner and found the single-lane service road that cut the block. There were no garages back here, either. An asphalt slab had been laid tight to the rear of Ramirez’s building. Diagonal parking for six cars had been lined off on the slab. Only four cars were parked. Three old clunkers and a Silver Porsche with a license plate holder that had “The Champ” printed on it in gold. None of the cars were occupied.
Across the service road were more tenement-type apartments. This would be a reasonable place for Morelli to watch or listen, I thought, but there was no sign of him.
I drove through the service road and circled the block, methodically enlarging the area until I’d covered all drivable streets for a nine-block square. The van didn’t turn up.
I headed for Stark Street and repeated the procedure, looking for the van. There were garages and alleys here, so I parked the Cherokee and set out on foot. By twelve-thirty I’d snooped in enough broken-down, smelly garages to last me a lifetime. If I crossed my eyes I could see my nose peeling, my hair was sticking to the back of my sweaty neck, and I had bursitis from carrying my hulking shoulder bag.
By the time I got back to the Cherokee, my feet felt like they were on fire. I leaned against the car and checked to make sure my soles weren’t melting. A block away I could see Lula and Jackie staking out their corner. I figured it wouldn’t hurt to talk to them again.
“Still looking for Morelli?” Lula asked.
I shoved my dark glasses to the top of my head. “Have you seen him?”
“Nope. Haven’t heard nothing about him, either. Man’s keeping a low profile.”
“How about his van?”
“Don’t know nothing about a van. Lately, Morelli’s been driving a red and gold Cherokee… like the one you’re driving.” Her eyes widened. “Sheee-it, that ain’t Morelli’s car, is it?”
“I sort of borrowed it.”
Lula’s face split in a grin. “Honey, you telling me you stole Morelli’s car? Girl, he gonna kick your skinny white butt.”
“Couple days ago I saw him driving a faded blue Econoline,” I said. “It had antennae sticking out all over the place. You see anything like that cruise by?”
“We didn’t see nothing,” Jackie said.
I turned to Lula. “How about you, Lula? You see a blue van?”
“Tell me the truth now? You really pregnant?” Lula asked.
“No, but I could have been.” Fourteen years ago.
“So what’s going on here. What you really want with Morelli?”
“I work for his bondsman. Morelli is FTA.”
“No shit? There any money in that?”
“Ten percent of the bond.”
“I could do that,” Lula said. “Maybe I should change my profession.”
“Maybe you should stop talking and look like you want to give some before your old man beats the crap out of you,” Jackie said.
I drove back to my apartment, ate some more Frosted Flakes, and called my mother.
“I made a nice big pot of stuffed cabbages,” she said. “You should come for supper.”
“Sounds good, but I have things to do.”
“Like what? What’s so important you can’t take time to eat some stuffed cabbages?”
“Work.”
“What kind of work? Are you still trying to find the Morelli boy?”
“Yeah.”
“You should get a different job. I saw a sign at Clara’s Beauty Salon they need a shampoo girl.”
I could hear my Grandma Mazur yelling something in the background.
“Oh yeah,” my mother said. “You had a phone call this morning from that boxer you went to see, Benito Ramirez. Your father was so excited. Such a nice young man. So polite.”
“What did Ramirez want?”
“He said he’d been trying to get in touch with you, but your phone had been disconnected. I told him it was