Nigel Johnson said something to the young man who had made the comment, and the young man's smile vanished. Nigel nodded at Lorenzo with an uptick of his chin. Even from this distance, Lorenzo could still see the boy in Nigel's eyes. He nodded back and went on his way.

Lorenzo left food and water for Jasmine, turned the stand-up fan so that it blew directly on her carpet bed, and exited the house. He got into his Pontiac and went down to Georgia, where he drove north, toward the office. There he would clock in, check his messages, and take one of the white trucks out for his calls.

Up around 9th and Upshur, in Petworth, he stopped to pay Rodel, the man who cut his hair in the shop set in that commercial strip that ran along the avenue. He'd been light at the time of his last shape-up, and Rodel had let him slide. Coming out of the barbershop, he saw a big man with a dog, a muscular tan boxer, out on the sidewalk. The man, broad of shoulder and back, his hair lightly salted with gray, was turning the key to his business, had that sign with the magnifying glass over its front window. That sign was always lit up at night. Man had been in business there Lorenzo's whole life. You'd be driving down Georgia at night, from a party or a club, or from laying up with a girl, and you'd see that sign? You knew you were close to home. Lorenzo had heard the man coached kids' football too, held practices on the field of Roosevelt High. Joe Carver's boy was in the program. Joe had told him this man was all right.

'Pretty animal,' said Lorenzo to the man's back as he passed.

'First time anyone called Greco pretty,' said the man, turning his head, checking out Lorenzo in his uniform. The man pushed on the door of his business. 'Well, let me get on in here and do some work.'

'I heard that,' said Lorenzo. 'I got to be off to work my own self.'

'Have a good one,' said the man, the boxer following him inside.

Off to work, thought Lorenzo as he got behind the wheel of his car. Feeling a kind of pride as he turned the key.

CHAPTER 2

By eleven-thirty, Rachel Lopez had already put in a fairly productive day. She'd gone into PG County for her first calls, one in Barnaby Heights and one off Addison Road, a couple of young offenders freshly out on drug-related incarcerations, the most typical cases in her files. Next she'd driven toward a men's shelter down off Central Avenue to check on one of her older offenders, a man named Dennis Coles, but on the way she'd been held up by crime scene vehicles that had converged on a strip shopping center up ahead. The traffic reporter on 1500 AM told her that a robbery-murder had occurred in the area and that a roadblock had been set up by police. She turned her Honda around and drove north to Cheverly. She parked in the lot of a garden apartment complex, where she found the unit of a young man named Rudolph Monroe.

Monroe's mother, Deanna, answered the door.

She was around thirty, heavy and unkempt. She  wore a family reunion T-shirt over jeans. Big gold hoops hung from her ears.

Rachel could hear the sound of a cartoon show blaring from a TV set somewhere back in the apartment. That would be Jermaine, Deanna's youngest, age four. Rachel made a point of learning, and remembering, the names of an offender's kin. Jermaine would be sitting in front of the set, Rachel guessed, drinking sugar-heavy soda, his hand in a bag of Doritos or potato chips.

'Hey, Miss Lopez,' said Deanna. Her eyes were welcoming, but she did not ask Rachel in.

'Hi, Deanna.'

'Rudy ain't here.'

'We had an appointment,' said Rachel. Not sounding annoyed, but stating a fact.

'I told him you was comin',' said the mother.

'Do you know where he is?'

'He went to talk to this manager.'

'What manager?'

'Up at the Popeyes.'

'On Landover Road?' said Rachel, hoping that was the one. She had spoken to the manager there before; he had two brothers who had been incarcerated and was not averse to hiring offenders.

'Yeah. I seen they had a position open there, had one of those signs up in the window. Rudy knew y'all had a meeting, but I told him, you need to jump on that opening quick. You understand?'

Rachel said that she did understand and that she was glad Rudolph was motivated in that way.

She wasn't angry at all when this kind of thing happened, because the time an offender spent actively pursuing employment was quality time, much more important than any meeting with her could be. That is, if Rudy really was out looking for a job.

'Tell him I came by,' said Rachel.

'I will.'

'Nice earrings,' said Rachel before she said goodbye.

'Thank you,' said Deanna with a smile.

Out in her car, Rachel checked her NA schedule, which she had printed off the Internet, then glanced at her watch. There was a meeting on East Capitol about to convene. If there wasn't much city-bound traffic, she could still catch the tail end of it, sit for a while, and relax. While she was resting, say a prayer.

The dog was a black rottweiler with tan socks and tan teardrop markings beneath its eyes. It stayed under a rusted rust-colored Cordoba, up on cinder blocks, parked in the paved backyard of a row house in the two hundred block of Randolph Street, west of North Capitol.

Lorenzo Brown had seen the dog before. He had left an Official Notification form on its owner's door back in July. The shelter violation had been reported by a neighbor. Next to chaining, it was the most common call.

Lorenzo sat in his work van, a Chevy Astra, idling in the alley behind the row house, looking through the lens of a digital camera. The dog had come out from under the Cordoba and listlessly barked one time. Now it was staring at Lorenzo curiously and without aggression, its tongue dangling out the side of its mouth. Lorenzo snapped off a shot and took note of the home address, which had been stenciled on a No Trespassing sign hung on a chain-link

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