'Anyway,' said Joe, 'it just reminded me, seein' them out there, how it was for us.'
'Ain't nothin' changed.'
'Look around you. Why
'But if these kids knew how it has to end… I mean, if you could only tell 'em.'
'But you can't tell 'em shit. They ain't gonna listen to no old heads, that's for damn sure. Same way we didn't listen. We knew it all.' Joe chuckled. 'Now I got to pee in a bottle to remind myself of all the ways I failed.'
'You're doin' fine.'
'Tell it to my PO.'
'He on you?'
'Like a motherfucker,' said Joe. 'Yours?'
'Mine's on me too. She good, though.'
'Yeah?'
'Yeah,' said Lorenzo. 'She's good.'
Lorenzo and Joe finished their beers.
'Well,' said Joe, getting up laboriously out of his seat, 'let me get on inside. I got to be on that construction site at seven.'
'I'm on early shift myself.'
'It works if you work it.'
'No doubt.'
Lorenzo and Joe shook hands and patted each other's backs. Joe went inside the house, moving quietly so as not to wake his aunt, as Lorenzo leashed Jasmine and walked her down the steps. The two of them headed for their apartment, a short way down the dark street.
Morton Street at night, east of Georgia and back toward Park Morton, was alive with traffic. Touts, runners, fiends, drive-through customers with Virginia plates, and neighborhood residents walking to their row houses and apartments crowded the strip.
A couple of times every night, Fourth District cruisers would slowly make a pass down Morton and through the Section Eight apartment complex, their uniformed occupants shouting from the open windows of their Crown Vics, telling the dealers and users to move on. Less frequently, in the wake of a publicized fatality or a
DeEric Green drove the Escalade down Morton, Michael Butler by his side. They had just picked up the count from a boy named Ricky Young. Young had handed the money, stashed in a T-MAC 3 Adidas shoe box, to Green, who had in turn handed it to Butler. The money, in various denominations, now sat in the shoe box on the carpeted floor of the backseat. Green had put a Rare Essence PA mix, recorded on May 15 at the Tradewinds, into the CD player and was rocking it loud.
'Busy,' said Butler.
'Summertime,' said Green.
On a hot corner up ahead, they could see some of their people, all in street clothes. On another corner stood Deacon's, wearing long white T-shirts and loose-fitting jeans. A bandanna worn around the neck meant the seller had heroin. Around the leg, it meant coke. This type of coding, in variation, had become common in the East Coast urban trade. Deacon insisted his people use the bandanna system and made it mandatory that they wear the T- shirts. He liked the idea of them in uniform. Also, it differentiated them from the competition. Nigel let his soldiers wear whatever they pleased.
Butler hit a joint as they neared the end of Morton.
'Boy,' said Green, 'you actin' like you the only one in this car like to get high.'
'Here,' said Butler. He passed the weed, tamped into a White Owl wrapper, to Green.
The circle at the end of the block had been the gateway to the Park Morton complex until recently, when yellow concrete pillars had been erected, blocking the entrance to an asphalt road that ringed the apartments. The pillars kept dealers and killers from doing their dirt where mothers walked and children played, but they hampered the police from driving back there too. Now it was an avenue of escape for those who wanted to book out on foot. Nothing worked back here. No one was going to stop a thing.
Green swung the Cadillac around the circle and headed west, back toward Georgia.
'I got to pick up the count again, one more time, before the night's out,' said Green. 'You worked a full day. You want, I could take you home.'
Butler thought of what he would find at his apartment. If his mother wasn't hitting it, she was looking to. Wasn't unusual for him to come in and find her giving up her face to a strange man for the price of a high. She had no ass and few teeth, and her hair was never combed. If Butler stayed out late enough, she might be asleep. He wouldn't have to look at her when he got home.
'I'll hang with you,' said Butler, 'if that's all right.'
'Sure,' said Green, who was getting used to having the boy around. 'This hydro's got my hunger up, though.'
'Mine too.'
'Let's get us somethin',' said Green. He turned right on Georgia Avenue and headed north.
Rico Miller, idling in the convenience store lot on the corner, saw them through the windshield of his BMW. He