‘Just a little.’
‘Just a little shmeck every now and then, right?’
‘Right.’
‘Who supplied you?’
‘Shit, man, you can score on any street corner in this city, don’t you know that? I mean, you’re cops, you don’t know that?’
‘Nobody in particular? No favorite dealer?’
‘Nobody I’d remember.’
‘Would you know if she kept on using? After you split?’
‘I haven’t seen her in ten years.’
‘So you wouldn’t know if she was still “dabbling”?’
‘ “Experimenting” ?’
‘How would I know?’
‘But
‘I don’t know what she…”
“… you wouldn’t know who might have been supplying her nowadays.’
‘I wouldn’t know anything about her. I just told you, I haven’t seen her in ten years.’
‘Wouldn’t know if she owed some dealer money, for example?’
‘Is there a problem with the sound in here? What is it you don’t understand? I haven’t
‘How do you know she was selling beauty products?’
‘Huh?’
‘If you haven’t seen her in ten years, how do you happen to know that?’
‘I heard around.’
‘From who?’
‘I forget who told me. She was selling nail polish and shit. Was what I heard. She was like a sales rep, is what they call it. Look, if you got any more questions, make it fast, okay? I gotta get back on the stand.’
‘Where were you last Friday night at eight o’clock?’
‘Right here. On Fridays I play here from eight at night to two in the morning.’
He looked Parker dead in the eye.
‘Anything else?’ he asked.
Parker took that to mean Good-bye.
* * * *
The two detectives from Narcotics thought dope was what made the world go round. They were convinced that 9/11 was all about dope. So was the Iraq War. Everything had to do with dope. If we really wanted to end the war on terrorism, if in fact we wanted to end all wars, for all time, then all we had to do was win the war on dope. Dope was evil. Dope dealers were evil. Even people who
‘She had it coming,’ Brancusi said.
He was the bigger of the two Narcotics dicks. You would not want to struggle with this man over a dime bag of shit.
‘You know what Angel Dust is?’ his partner said.
As tall as Brancusi, but not as broad in the shoulders or thick in the middle. Irishman named Mickey Connors. Meyer and Carella sensed a bit of condescension here; they both knew what Angel Dust was.
‘Angel Dust is phencyclidine,’ Connors explained.
‘PCP,’ Brancusi further elucidated.
‘It’s also called crystal, hog, or tic’
‘You forgot zoot,’ Meyer said.
‘Are we wasting our time with these guys?’ Connors asked his partner.
‘No, go ahead, enlighten us,’ Meyer said.
‘Go to hell,’ Connors said. ‘Let’s go, Benny.’
‘Stick around,’ Carella advised. ‘We’re talking a pair of homicides here.’
‘What is that supposed to do, the word “homicide”?’ Brancusi asked. ‘Make us wet our pants? You know how many drug-related murders we see every day of the week?’
‘That’s why we’re here,’ Carella said.
‘Yeah, why
‘Drug-related. Two of our vics may have been users. And one of them was killed outside the club where you guys caught a sixteen-year-old who overdosed on the peace pill.’
‘Her own hard luck,’ Connors said.
‘Also, the manager of Ninotchka took a fall for dealing ten years ago. So we’ve got a dead duster and now another vic outside the same club, who may or may not have been using, and the manager once dealt dope, so maybe there’s a connection, hmm? So we want to know all about this girl.’
‘Naomi Maines,’ Brancusi said.
‘She walked out of a club up the street, disassociating, that’s for sure, maybe hallucinating, too…”
‘Then La Paglia was giving us the straight goods.’
‘Who’s La Paglia?’ Brancusi asked.
‘Manager of Ninotchka. The ex-con.’
‘Oh yeah, him,’ Brancusi said, remembering. ‘A scumbag.’
‘Told us the girl just wandered by Ninotchka. We think she may have walked over from the other club,’ Meyer said.
‘Yeah, that checks out,’ Connors said. ‘Her sister and a girlfriend told us she dropped two tabs of dust inside there.’
‘That’ll do it, all right,’ Brancusi said.
‘Must’ve started convulsing as she came up the alley, dropped dead outside Ninotchka, the garbage cans out back there.’
‘Just stopped breathing,’ Brancusi said.
‘What’s this other club called?’ Meyer asked.
‘Grandma’s Bloomers.’
‘Cute.’
‘Clean, too. Naomi didn’t buy the stuff in there, that’s for sure.’
* * * *
There was a time not too long ago - five years? ten years? - when this stretch of turf was lined with rave clubs. These nocturnal dance clubs were characterized by pulsating, deafening, techno (or so-called ‘house’) music, blinking strobes, dazzling laser lights, and… oh yes… club drugs like Ecstasy, ephedrine, ketamine, GHB, methcathinone, LSD, magic mushrooms, methamphetamine, and - well, you name it, we’ve got it. A crusading mayor padlocked these rave joints all over the city, and the party scene today was a lot milder than it was back then: new mayor, new definition of what was bad for the health; as for example, smoking.
On Austin Street today, only two clubs remained: Ninotchka, dedicated to geriatric lovers of violin music, and Grandma’s Bloomers, a 30,000-square-foot space that used to be called The Black Pit when it attracted thirteen- to twenty-year-old ravers, lo, those many years ago. The manager of GB’s, as it was familiarly called, was a man named Alex Coombes. Pronounced it ‘combs,’ like what you use in your hair. He was in his forties, looked like the kind of father you’d want if you were about to ask for the use of the family car. Gentle brown eyes. Pleasant features. Nice smile. All-around good guy. But a sixteen-year-old had dropped two tabs of Angel Dust in his club six months ago.
‘I don’t even know how she got