central Northeast, where the cross-numbered streets were in the forties. Tavon must have been trying to give him the location of the house. That’s where the drop was: the 4000 block of Hayes.

He drove in that direction, crossing the Anacostia, and ten minutes later was on Hayes. But the address did not appear to be a good one for the scheme that Tavon and Edwin had cooked up. There was a house there, but it was not the kind of place that you would ship a package to and expect it to go unnoticed. There were folks around, standing by their vehicles, going in and out of their homes, sitting on their porches. It did not look like they were typically away or at work during the day. Tavon wasn’t stupid. He wouldn’t have chosen this spot to drop the weed.

Lucas continued up the block to the dead-end court that stopped at a thin tributary of creek and woods that was a part of Watts Branch. The Impala was gone. Except for a piece of yellow tape lying in the street there was no sign that a crime of extreme violence had occurred here. The mobile crime technicians had completed their investigation of the scene, and the next task was in the hands of the chief medical examiner’s office, where the autopsies of the young men would be performed.

Lucas knew that this area had been murder notorious at one time, but it was quiet now. Serene almost, with the water cutting through the trees. Had to be dark at night back here, but still. It did look cleaned up and relatively safe. Tavon and Edwin could not have known what was coming to them. And then the fear and panic, when they did know. Lucas only hoped it had been quick for them. Pain and confusion for sure, but not prolonged.

Darkness, he thought, seeing his father in a box. Lucas closed his eyes.

He had a fish sandwich with hot sauce from a carryout on Benning Road and headed into Northwest, where he found himself once again parked on 12th Street. He was facing north, looking in his side-view at the students walking from the school, the uniformed police ushering them along. Soon the Lindsay boy appeared, wearing a purple polo, his braids touching his shoulders, talking to himself, walking home.

“Hey, Lindsay,” said Lucas, from behind the wheel of his Jeep.

The young man recognized him but kept walking without reply.

“Lindsay!”

“It’s Ernest,” he said, without breaking stride, going up the concrete steps and disappearing behind the front door of his house.

At least I know your name, thought Lucas. Progress.

A few minutes later, he phoned his brother, who was no doubt still inside the school.

“Leo.”

“It is me.”

“Got a question for you, man.”

“Where you at?”

“On Twelfth. You could throw a rock and hit me if you had an arm.”

“You wearin your decoder ring?”

“Doing surveillance.”

“That’s awesome! Do you have that piss jug in the car?”

“And my porta-potty.”

“Thought you had a question.”

“You wouldn’t happen to have a student by the name of Ernest, would you? I been trying to get up with him.”

“I believe I got a couple of boys named Ernest. One goes by Ernie.”

“He called himself Ernest. Lindsay’s his last name.”

“He’s in my all-male class, in the morning.”

“What can you tell me about him?”

“He’s all right. Sensitive, on the intelligent side. You’re not gonna get him in any kind of trouble, are you?”

“I wouldn’t.”

“Well, why don’t you come meet him?”

“Huh?”

“I been asking you to talk to my class.”

“Oh, yeah.”

“Come past tomorrow.”

“For real?”

“Why not?”

“I need time to prepare.”

“No, you don’t. Just come in and be yourself. They don’t want to hear about, You can be anything you want to be, or any of that jive. Say what you been doing these last ten years. Be honest and real. That’s what the boys appreciate.”

“Okay.”

“Ten o’clock, Spero.”

“I’ll be there.”

He went home, showered and changed into street clothes, dropped some paperbacks off at Walter Reed for the soldiers and marines, and drove back toward Cardozo. At 13th and Clifton, where he was stopped at the red light, he saw people walking up the long hill, coming from the U Street Metro station in business attire, a mix of Hispanics, blacks, and many whites, all coming home from work. From a local’s perspective, it was startling to witness this neighborhood’s transformation.

He parked in shadow on 12th, on the east side of the street.

A half hour later, a woman walked down the sidewalk. She appeared to be in her early thirties, with long chestnut-colored hair, a prominent nose, high cheekbones, and dark eyes. She wore a gray business suit, a shirt- jacket-and-slacks arrangement that did not conceal her long-legged, thoroughbred build. She carried a briefcase and walked with good posture and confidence.

Lucas got out of his Jeep as she hit the steps leading to the house with the lime green trim. He jogged across the street and said, “Lisa Weitzman?”

She stopped and turned, cool and unafraid. “Yes?”

“Spero Lucas,” he said. “I’m an investigator.”

NINE

He sat on her porch, on a folding metal chair that was one of two situated around a small round metal table. Lucas had asked for ten minutes of her time. She had agreed and told him to wait outside. She went into her home and when she returned she had removed her jacket. Her white button-down shirt was fitted and served her well. She took a seat in the second chair. Dusk had come to the street.

“I’m afraid I can’t help you,” said Lisa Weitzman, after he had told her why he had sought her out. He had not been coy. He’d given her the straight information about the package and why it had been shipped to her house.

“You weren’t at home that day.”

“I don’t take time off. If I do go on vacation I leave town. But I’m at work every day, typically, out the door at seven thirty and usually not back here until six thirty, seven at night. So, no, I wasn’t aware that anyone had taken something off my porch. Certainly not a large amount of marijuana.”

“It was thirty pounds.”

“Was it shipped out from Boulder?” said Lisa.

“Huh?”

“ ‘Packed in coffee grounds and wrapped around in dryer sheets.’ ”

“ ‘Multitude of Casualties,’ ” said Lucas, with a slow, dawning smile. “The Hold Steady. You like them?”

“Oh, yeah.”

“I do, too. They burn it down live.”

Вы читаете The Cut
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×