street, as he had done when he parked his car on Hunt Place, just off 46th, a short walk down to Hayes. He seemed to be alone.

Nigel opened both toolboxes. From one he extracted a pair of latex gloves and fitted them on his hands. From the other he removed the two automatics and peeled away the oiled rags that protected them. He wiped down the guns with one of the rags. He checked the Glock's load and holstered the .9 under his shirt, behind the waistband of his jeans, at the small of his back. He then inspected the Colt. It was a Commander, the government model .45 with checkered grips. He was more familiar with this gun than he was with the Glock; he would lead with the Colt. He did not take the extra magazines. There were eight rounds in the Colt and ten in the Glock. Eighteen rounds to kill two men. It had to be enough.

He holstered the Colt under his shirt, barrel down, the grip resting against his hard belly. He wiped the toolboxes with a clean rag and closed the lid of the trunk.

Nigel went along Hunt and turned right on Hayes, studying the alley layout behind them. He headed toward the corner at 46th. Many of the street lamps were in disrepair. The neighborhood was quiet and very dark. He neared Miller's house, dimly lit behind bedsheets that hung in every window.

Nigel walked quietly, moving around the side of the house. The backyard was mostly dirt and weeds. A rotted wooden porch with ripped screens was situated at the rear of the house. Beside the porch sat a small set of steps leading to a landing and a back door. A sheet hung in the door's glass. Near the door was a small window, the size situated above a kitchen sink. It was covered by a sheet as well.

Nigel looked at the door. He could kick it in and go in hard or stand out here in the yard and wait. His palms were damp, and he wiped them dry on his jeans.

Some light bled out to the yard from behind the sheets. Nigel stepped back into the shadows, drew the Colt from his belt line, and held it by his side.

'It's hot,' said Melvin Lee.

'Ain't hot to me,' said Rico Miller.

'Hotter than a motherfucker in this piece,' said Lee. 'Don't you ever open no windows?'

'No. And we ain't gonna start now.'

'Thought we was leavin'.'

'Gonna wait till after midnight. Ain't no one on the road then. We can drive all night.'

'Where?'

'Don't worry about where. Just sit there and hold that gun. Anyone comes callin', we gonna be ready.'

The room stank of weed, perspiration, and cigarettes. A naked 150-watt bulb blew white light down into the space. Lee sat on the old couch near the folding table and chairs. He held Miller's .38 loosely between his legs. Lee didn't want the gun, but Miller had put it directly in his hand. Lee looked like a bug against the cream-colored couch. Sweat beaded on his forehead.

Beyond the folding table stood Rico Miller, his back against the wall. Miller held the cut-down shotgun barrel up, his fingers fitted in the pistol grip, the stock resting on his thigh. His eyes were pink from the hydro he'd smoked. His face held no emotion.

'I'm goin' out to have a smoke,' said Lee.

'Have it here.'

'Can't breathe in here. I'm going out.'

'Go out the back, then, you have to,' said Miller. 'Don't be long.'

Lee got up off the couch and stuck the revolver in his waistband. He did not look at Miller as he walked from the room.

Lee went down a hall and passed through the kitchen. At the rear of the kitchen he unchained the slide bolt from the door. He turned the dead bolt as well. He walked out onto the landing, pulling the door behind him but leaving it ajar. He went down the steps and stood in the residual light leaking from the kitchen. Listening to the crickets, looking out at the black of the yard, he reached into his back pocket for his cigarettes.

He shook a smoke out of the deck. He lit a match and bent his head down to touch tobacco to flame. Something leaped out of the darkness.

Nigel Johnson swung the Colt's barrel violently across Lee's face. Lee's nose shifted to one side; blood jumped up in the weak yellow light. He lost his legs and began to fall. Nigel clipped Lee's temple with the barrel as he went down. Lee fell to his back and lay still.

Nigel racked the Colt's slide and pulled back on its hammer. He stood over Lee, bent forward, and put the barrel of the gun to Lee's mouth. He raised his palm to shield the blowback. He thought better of it and stood straight.

Nigel walked up the steps to the back door of the house. He let his heart slow some, then pushed on the door and stepped inside.

Lorenzo Brown stared at Lawrence Graham, gauging the distance between them. Graham still held the gun with its barrel pointed at the floor. 'Don't think on it,' said Graham, reading Lorenzo's eyes. 'They say you were fast when you were young, but you ain't young no more. And you never were that fast.'

'You bein' kinda casual with that Taurus,' said Lorenzo. 'You givin' me ideas.'

'Try me, you got a mind to.'

Jasmine whined from back in the bedroom.

'I can't just sit here,' said Lorenzo.

'Do what you got to.'

'I'm gettin' up.'

'That's on you,' said Graham.

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