The father put his hand on Andre’s hand to reassure him, to protect him.

The kid looked down at his father’s hand. He seemed to realize there was not much the old man could do for him now.

‘Andre,’ I said, ‘are you sure about everything you just told us?’

‘Yeah.’

‘And you’d be willing to tell it to the grand jury? And at a trial?’

‘If I got to.’

In the hallway outside, I asked Gittens, ‘Will that kid really show up to testify?’

‘Let me tell you something about Andre. I have to hold him back. He’s always after me to do more, more, more. We can’t even use him in the Flats anymore because everyone knows he’s cooperating. They call him Five-O. No one will even talk to him, never mind sell to him. So now he’s all hot to do more buys in other neighborhoods, Roxbury, Dorchester. He can’t get enough. Believe me, Andre will show up.’

‘I feel bad for him,’ I said. ‘Braxton’ll kill him.’

‘Well,’ Gittens replied philosophically, ‘he made his own bed. We’re just offering him a way out.’

‘A first-offense simple possession? Wouldn’t they just dismiss it anyway?’

‘Maybe.’ Gittens shrugged. ‘But look, we got to do what we got to do. It’s no fun for me either, jamming up a kid like that. Andre’s a good kid. But the alternative is to let Braxton walk and then maybe he kills someone else. Besides, I didn’t make Andre a witness. He happens to live there. Somebody has to live there.’

Kelly folded his arms, apparently satisfied with this explanation. It was a rough game Andre had chosen to play. It would get a lot rougher when Braxton heard about his testimony.

‘You mind if I talk with him, alone?’ I asked Gittens.

‘Be my guest. Caroline Kelly’s on her way down, though. She won’t like it if we take too many statements. It creates inconsistencies.’

In the interview room, Andre and his father both had their hands on the table with fingers laced, as if they were praying.

‘Sir,’ I said to the father, ‘do you mind if I talk to Andre alone?’

‘No, of course not.’ He stood up slowly, reluctant to leave his son. Mr James stood there with his spectacles and narrow shoulders, hovering over the boy, impotent, and I projected onto him all the Everyman virtues of the nine-to-fiver: humility, dignity, decency, discipline, generosity. I saw him getting up before dawn to catch a bus. I saw him reading quietly at night. I saw him bragging on his son who was going to go to college. I wanted to tell him, Take your kid and get out of here. Run. Disappear. Don’t be so damn virtuous. For once, don’t tell the truth. Stay out of this.

Instead I told him, ‘It’s okay. I just want to ask him a few more questions.’

When the man had left, I said, ‘Andre, the thing that bothers me is, how come you waited so long to tell anybody this?’

‘I was scared.’

‘But you’re not scared now.’

‘I talked to Detective Gittens. He told me it was the right thing.’

‘It is the right thing, Andre. I just want to be sure. I know Gittens is letting you work off that drug charge. I just want to be sure this is the truth.’

‘It is the truth, straight up.’

‘And if I told you I could have that drug case dismissed myself and you wouldn’t have that hanging over your head anymore — you wouldn’t owe Gittens or the DA or anyone else — would it still be the truth?’

He smiled to let me know he understood the question, he spotted the trick. ‘The truth is the truth.’

And so it is.

By the time Kurth and Caroline arrived, we were beginning to realize what the Homicide detectives already knew: The case had been broken. The evidence against Braxton had reached critical mass, and by some mysterious fission a very complex case had suddenly become very simple. Harold Braxton had murdered Danziger. There were loose ends to tie up, of course. We had not recovered a weapon or any other physical evidence. And the motive was still shadowy. (Even there, we were already down to a few likely candidates, though. Choose your favorite motive: (a) to protect a gang lieutenant, Gerald McNeese, whom Danziger was preparing to prosecute, (b) to protect Braxton himself by ensuring that G-Mac would not cut a deal with Danziger to avoid prosecution by squealing, or — the most credible — (c) because Braxton had acted viscerally, lashing out at a tormentor just as he would on the street.) There was still work to be done. But the anxious, baffling initial phase of the investigation was over. We were no longer asking Who done it? We’d moved on to the lesser mystery of How to prove it? All the agita I’d been feeling since the day I found Danziger’s body in the cabin — flop sweat and confusion, guilt and mother loss, and the hysteria of being accused myself — all of it was lifted and a tipsy sense of relief set in. I grinned and, looking around the room, saw the same dumb grin on any number of cops.

Even Kurth was swept up in the euphoria, in his reptile way. He tried to apologize for blowing up earlier at the courthouse, which may sound like a perfunctory thing but for Kurth was like gnawing off his own right arm at the shoulder. ‘I’m sorry about… what happened… Caroline… you know, this morning… what I said…’

Needless to say, Caroline ran her sword hilt-deep into him. ‘Well thank you, Boo Radley, that was very articulate.’

Our group laughed loudly, Gittens loudest of all. I doubt Gittens knew who Boo Radley was, but he had the sense of it and anyway he was the hero of the moment.

Caroline gave Kurth a blithe hug and even Kurth smiled. At least his mouth twitched a little.

Caroline hugged me too. A tight, unembarrassed hug. She whispered, ‘I’m very, very happy for you. I’m so sorry you had to go through this.’ As condolences go, it was a pale thing. But at the time it felt profound.

We made our way to Kurth’s office to assemble the evidence for an arrest warrant. Gittens recounted what Andre James had overheard: ‘I put a cap in that DA, then I jelled up and I took off.’ Kelly and I then related how Braxton had been seen in Acadia County in a white Lexus. The Lexus was registered not to Braxton, but to an ophthalmologist — I-DOC, the license plate read — in suburban Brookline. I called the car a loaner, which, it turned out, was the wrong term.

‘It’s a half-G car,’ Gittens corrected. ‘Dealers borrow them from these rich junkies from the suburbs. They take the car for a few hours instead of taking cash for the drugs. That way they get a clean ride. For a few hours the cops don’t recognize them and don’t bother them. And the junkie gets a free score before he goes back to Weston or Wellesley. We’ll need a warrant for that car too.’

‘Nice car,’ I said. ‘Lexus coupe.’

‘Yeah, well Harold had a long ride all the way to Maine. These kids love the Benzes, but Lexus is a nice ride too. Nobody buys American anymore. It’s a shame.’

Caroline was anxious to bring Gittens down a peg.

‘Detective,’ she said, ‘if you can fit your head through the door, it would help if we knew where to find Braxton.’

‘Ben and I will find him,’ he announced.

I grinned, delighted to be back among them, accepted. ‘How are we going to do that?’ I asked.

‘It’s garbage day,’ Gittens said. He checked his watch. It was just after two-thirty. ‘Come on, Cinderella, while there’s still time.’

On the way out, Gittens and I passed the interview room where Andre and his father sat waiting stoically. That was the only qualification of our mood at that moment, the only blemish on our sense of triumph — a reminder that somebody was going to pay a price for all this happiness.

39

We don’t think about our garbage much. We may have a cloudy notion of it streaming into dumps or landfills or furnaces somewhere, but for all practical purposes it just vanishes. Maybe that is why, come garbage day, we take all our most intimate secrets, mix them in with a few chicken bones and tuna-fish cans, and leave them out on the street corner for anyone to see. Block after block of plump plastic bags in white and olive drab. A policeman —

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