“
“She still works there?”
“Owns the place now.”
“No kidding. I ought to drop by sometime. It’s funny how you forget about the old places.”
Sam parked beneath the Viaduct, but it offered little protection from the rain that swept sideways. He left the car running, and the windshield wipers struggled to keep up.
Steam rose from the Styrofoam cups and disappeared into the backseat with the air from the defroster. Behind his glasses
As the water dried from his face, his skin felt as though it were shrinking and pulling back from his eyes in weary lines. He accepted the weariness the same way he accepted the rain in the fall, and then the months of gray.
“Do you remember that time up on the hill when the two kids broke into the old lady’s house?”
“I remember,”
“The old lady was upstairs and called when she heard them breaking in,”
Sam laughed, too.
“We walked back slow, as I remember,”
Now the car was rocking from their combined laughter.
“God, was he glad to see us. Can you imagine? Glad to see us. He wanted us to get that old woman away from him. She was standing there panting but still mad as hell.
“I asked the old lady if she could identify the kid who got away. She couldn’t. We got the idea at the same time. It was perfect. So we ask if she’ll watch our kid a while longer while we go look some more for the other one. The old gal was getting her wind back, and she says she will ‘watch him good.’ Remember how she pounded the broom on the sidewalk?
“Oh god, that kid didn’t want us to leave. Just as we were walking away, he yells out the name of the other kid. ‘Luther Smith.’ Never forget it.
“But the best part was court. I thought that judge would die laughing. He denied all the defense motions and ruled that the admission was voluntary. Damn, that was great. Even the defense attorney was laughing. Those kids were the only people in the whole courtroom who kept a straight face. Damn, that was great. I’d still be on the street if there was stuff like that every day.”
“That’s the way it is,
“No. Those days are gone. You ought to get out of there, too, while you’re still standing.”
“Me? I’ve thought about it, but I just can’t see myself pushing paper all day. Bad enough on the streets. Too long a line of blue collars in my family, I guess. No, when I leave work, I want it to stay there. Leave it to the next shift. I don’t want stuff to drag on day after day.”
“Like this case with
“Yeah. Like that.”
All the humor was sucked out of the car, and they became silent as a different image filled the vacuum.
“So what do you have this time?”
“Some new information about our friend,
“What’s the Garden of Eden?”
“Peep show south of the Donut Shop.”
“So he makes a big loop to get back where he started from?”
“Just about where he started. You can’t get to that basement without going outside. The basement steps are on the south side of the building.”
“But he doesn’t have to go all the way around the block to get there.”
“That’s right. My informant saw kids coming and going, too. Another thing.
“War books?”
“He bought one with a cannon on the cover.”
“We’re getting more interesting people all the time,”
“You know, you might have been right about checking in with Narcotics,”
“Sure.” Then a strange, strangled look crossed
“Bald spot?”
“I can’t remember, but I know he was some kind of war buff.”
The rain seemed to be letting up.
Elliott
Bay
across
Alaskan Way
. Waves hit the piers hard at the ferry terminal and shot salt spray high into the air. He wondered, briefly, incongruously, how his kayak was faring farther down on the
“Maybe you could get me a picture of
“You need a couple pictures,”
“Sure.”
“I’ll get them to you before your shift ends.”
“Look,
“Let’s just see what your informant says about the pictures. Okay? Then we’ll think about that.”
Markowitz probably did not intend to sound angry. His voice was distorted by the sound of the wind outside. It was an angry wind that crossed Alaskan Way.
Outside, people seemed to blow past the windows on First Avenue. One man in a somber gray suit chased his hat past the Donut Shop window. Each time he was within reach, the hat took off again.
Sam came in at
This time Sam said nothing to Pierre or to her, but waited patiently while she brewed fresh coffee. She saw the scowl appear on
When
She wondered why the weather seemed to bother him so much. Business was bad, but it was never very good. What difference would one day make? Maybe his mood had something to do with the kids not coming that morning.
Bill came late again, but
First Avenue
against the rain and wind.
Bill went over to the stacks of doughnuts and stood, dumbly, looking at them. She got a carton of milk from the refrigerator and sat down at a front table without offering him a suggestion. When a young man, a customer, came through the door, she turned her back on the counter and watched the rain splash on the street and sidewalk.
It was almost
“We need some cups from the basement,” he told
Bill’s face, never expressive as far as she had seen, became more blank than normal. He didn’t acknowledge
“You go with him,”
“Where’s the basement?” she asked.
“It’s around back. He’ll show you.”
She was certain she didn’t want
“The coat isn’t necessary,”
“It’s raining again,” she said.
Big distinct drops splashed against the west windows. Soon the drops would become a flood that washed down the sidewalk. By taking her coat there was nothing left behind, and she could walk wherever she wanted. Maybe it would be with
The wind swept around First Avenue onto
Pike Street
and pushed her down the block past the neighboring bar and hotel lobby.