The old man, Charlie, was always there, with Donna, and they were happy to see you no matter who you were. Leonard also liked the anonymity numbers afforded since Donna’s was always packed even in the wee hours of the morning. The best brass band music in the world is heard there nightly. New Orleans has no second team. For musicians, no minor leaguers need apply. There are no off-nights, no such thing as a slow season. Donna’s Bar amp; Grill was the place in the Quarter where the hornmen showed up after playing their regular gigs on Bourbon Street or the small joints over on Iberville or on Canal near the businessmen’s hotels, where the Quarter ends and New Orleans becomes just another city. One after another they’d wander in, instrument in hand. A few were instantly recognized by some in the crowd and applause greeted their entrance. Even if they were unknown, anyone carrying a horn case, especially a black man, caused an immediate stir among Donna’s patrons. No doubt, he came to play. As the hours passed the band got bigger or smaller as players arrived or called it a night. Sometimes there were as many as a dozen playing at the same time. Trombone and coronet players traded solos on “Tiger Rag” or “Bogalusa Strut” like boxers whipping their left jab into an opponent’s helpless face-snap, snap, snap. Then-it was always the same, a kind of ritual-they stopped and smiled, the crowd cheered, and another boxer, dancer, painter, or poet stepped forward to pick up the gauntlet, accept the challenge. A couple of hours, a few beers, and Leonard could walk back to the apartment, hoping for a dreamless sleep. He was in Donna’s every night for more than a week, until one night when Charlie greeted him with a friendly smile and a small nod of his head, acknowledging familiarity. Leonard could have none of that. He left immediately and never returned.

Wesley Pitts longed for the gym. His size and speed set him apart, even as a child. By the time he was ten or eleven his days of running free on the street or in the woods were over. Would-be and future coaches ushered him into the inner sanctum of high-tech body care. His birth certificate was altered to make him a year younger. That change delayed his entrance to high school by a year, allowing his high school football coach the luxury of playing him until Wes was almost twenty years old. During those years and the time to come in a bigtime college program and finally at the highest echelon of professional football, he had at his disposal the finest workout equipment and facilities in the world. Once he tasted steak it was unthinkable he would go back to macaroni and cheese. Now he found himself in the backwoods of Mississippi. The only exercise option around was running, so he ran twice each day. In the morning, before breakfast, he’d jog a mile and a half from his grandmother’s house to the intersection with one of the two red lights before you get to town. On one corner was a small grocery store, and diagonally across the street a feed-supply warehouse. At seven o’clock in the morning neither was open for business. He’d turn around at the light and this time run-sometimes sprinting-all the way back. He repeated this at about four- thirty each afternoon. The round trip took at most twenty to twenty-five minutes.

On the morning of January 15th, Wesley Pitts jogged to the red light. He bent over, his hands on his knees, catching his breath, and turned around, ready to begin his run back. He had excellent vision, a seldom mentioned yet key aspect to his success as a receiver. Some people could judge distance by car lengths, others by city blocks. Pitts had a keen sense of distance measured in yards, in football fields. As he looked up he saw something he figured to be about two hundred and fifty yards away. It looked like a man standing in the middle of the road. The man appeared to be wearing a cowboy hat. He held something up to his shoulder or chin with both hands. The instant it took for Wesley Pitts to realize the man was holding a rifle was his last. The bullet struck him in the center of his chest. Almost at the same time, two more hit him. None of the three mortal wounds were more than two inches apart.

St. John

The phone rang at a quarter to eight. Wesley Pitts’s blood still flowed hot on a Mississippi asphalt two-lane beneath a lonely traffic light. Walter reached over to the end table where he put his cell phone the night before. He rubbed the cobwebs from his eyes and tried not to wake Isobel.

He said, “Yeah?”

“Good morning, Mister Sherman.”

“Who’s this?” The voice was vaguely familiar. Walter sought to clear his mind, get his bearings.

“You may remember me as Michael Del-”

“Leonard Martin.”

“Yes, I thought you knew back when-”

“What do you want?”

“Well, good morning to you too. It’s time for us to talk.”

Walter was struggling now, fighting what he knew was his stupid, damaged, ego-driven reaction. He tried to tell himself-quickly-that Leonard Martin had fooled him with his Michael DelGrazo act out of a sense of survival. What could he have expected in New Mexico? Did he ever really think Leonard Martin would welcome him with open arms, buy him a cup of coffee, tell him his life story? What would he have done in the same situation? “Oh, fuck it,” he thought.

“I’m glad you called,” he said. “I am.”

Leonard said, “Good. Let’s get together tomorrow, in the afternoon. How does that work for you?”

“Where do you want me to meet you?”

“No need. I’ll meet you. I like St. John. If Ms. Gitlin is there, I hope to see her too. Save me a trip.”

“Let me give you directions,” Walter said without skipping a beat. “Finding my house is not always the easiest thing. It can be confusing.” How did he know about Isobel? How did he know Isobel was here? What did he know about Isobel? Does he know…?

“I’ll find it okay. See you tomorrow,” Leonard said. And the phone went dead.

Leonard Martin was on a plane from Jackson to Atlanta before noon. While waiting to change planes there, he made one more phone call to Carter Lawrence. “Go ahead,” he told him, “tell Nick to get started. Have him make the call.” He landed on St. Thomas in the midst of the Caribbean afternoon’s slow and glorious multicolored fade to evening. He took the first ferry for St. John. He meant to rent a car and had made an Internet reservation with the island’s biggest rent-a-car agency, an enterprise owned and operated by one of Ike’s sons. Ike’s grandson Roosevelt met Leonard Martin at the dock. He held a sign in front of his chest with his customer’s name in bold, capital letters. He did not make Leonard for a tourist, but Leonard saw him.

“Mister DelGrazo?”

“Yes,” said Leonard.

Roosevelt introduced himself with a smile, a warm and friendly handshake, and a small apology. “I’m very sorry, sir, but can you bare with me a minute? I need to give a message to my grandfather. He’s just over there across the square.” He pointed to Ike, who was sitting at his regular table on the other side of the small square. “It will only take a moment, then we can be off to the paperwork and your vehicle. Then you can begin what I’m sure will be a wonderful stay for you here on our lovely island of St. John.”

“Quite alright,” said Leonard. “No apology needed. I’ve been sitting all day. I’d like a little stroll.” Roosevelt grinned broadly and the two were off on the short walk to the open-air bar called Billy’s. Not wishing to intrude on the young man’s words with his grandfather, Leonard stood at a respectful distance. Only a moment later he tensed up. His heart rate increased and in his fear he considered that he might have made a big mistake coming here-here to this tiny island, here to a place where there was only one way out and it was behind him. He was a man on the run. Only a few hours ago he’d killed someone. Was he now trapped? Although he was a complete stranger, newly arrived, Leonard had an uncomfortable feeling he was being watched.

Someone was indeed staring at him. At the far end of the bar he saw Isobel Gitlin looking right at him. A sense of shock rolled over him. He was riveted to the ground, undone by the dread he felt that his carefully constructed cocoon of privacy and safety had been pierced. Did she recognize him? How could she recognize him? She was blindfolded all the time. She hadn’t seen him, or had she? Then, next to her, he saw Walter Sherman. He was drinking from a bottle that appeared to be a Coke. Of course, Leonard realized with a comforting sense of relief, she had his description from him. There could be no other way. Unlike Isobel, Walter had not yet noticed him. Leonard chuckled. He tapped Roosevelt gently on the shoulder and told him to bring the rental car here, to Billy’s.

“I’m sorry. I can’t do that, sir,” said Roosevelt, confused and a little worried he’d somehow offended a customer, perhaps by stopping to talk with his grandfather. “There’s the paperwork, and I have to-”

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