say.â
âWaitâplease. I want to finish what I started. Iâm already in with Tony Walkerâs operation, and it wonât be easy to get out now. I need the cops to stay away from me. I can still help you get evidence on Diamond Tony.â
âYou were Edâs CI, and whatever deal you had with him is over. The department thinks youâre involved in his murder. Even if they canât prove it, theyâre never going to work with you again.â
âI spent two years in juvie because of Tony Walker. Thatâs why I became a CI. Prescott understood. He said he had instinctsabout people. He knew right away he could trust me.â
âMaybe I donât have his instincts. Why should I trust you?â
âI called Prescott about nine oâclock last night to warn him that he could be in danger. The cops that picked me up said there were no messages on his cell phone. Maybe Prescott got the message and erased it. Thereâs got to be a way you can check it out.â
âIâll do my best. How can I reach you?â
âThis number. Itâs the secret cell phone Prescott gave me.â
âOkay.â She hung up.
I sat on my bed and said a little prayer for Kessler to clear my name. For all the good praying didâit had never helped me before.
THE BUZZ
A few minutes later, the intercom buzzed, making me jump.
âDarren!â Tasha called. âSome guy named Fry is downstairs!â
âTell him Iâll be right down,â I shouted back.
Fry. It was one of Vinnyâs many nicknames. It came from nonstick frying pans, because charges never stuck to him.
âWhoâs Fry?â Tasha asked when I came out of my bedroom.
âA kid from school whoâs supposed to give me his history notes. Charges twenty bucks, but I should ace the test.â At the mention of school, she lost interest and turned back to her manicure. I glanced at Kiki, who was still staring at the TV.
When I got downstairs, Vinny was waiting outside the building. For once, he wore a hoodie instead of his fur coat.
Vinny and I started to walk.
âWe heard,â he said. I figured we meant Diamond Tony and his executives. âHow hard they lean on you?â
I snorted. âSame old shit. They promised theyâd be watching us pretty good.â
âWhyâd they think they can lean on you ?â Vinny didnât pull any punches.
âThey saw me around and figured theyâd try to spook me. Donât worry, Vinny. I gave them nothing. You know me.â
âI do, soljah.â He clapped a hand down on my shoulder. âWhat they say about the cop murder case? They got any ideas about it?â
It was as good as an admission that Diamond Tony was behind it. Not that I needed confirmation.
âTheyâre saying it was a revenge murder. They think the cop who got killed pissed off DT. Sounded to me like they had nothing. But you know how it is. Theyâll be on us for a while. Point is, everybody needs to be careful.â
âWeâll be running a tight ship these next couple weeks until we can give the cops what they want.â
âHow you gonna do that?â
âSouth Side, Darren.â There was that sly grin, the one thathad freaked me out last night. âWe got peeps willing to testify that Andre made the call to kill the cop.â
I was stunned, but raised my eyebrows, trying to look impressed. âVery nice. Hope it works out.â
âIt will.â
âThatâll be good for our man DT.â
âGood for us all.â
LAYERS
H undreds of uniformed cops came out for Prescottâs funeral. A picture of his grieving wife and his twin baby girls took up half a page in the Star . I brought the paper home with me, tore out the page, and tucked it under my mattress. Iâd look at it in case I ever forgot what my mission was.
I spent every second of the next few days expecting the cops to make
Greg King, Penny Wilson
Caridad Piñeiro
Marc D. Brown
Becca van
Stephanie Wardrop
Ruth Cardello
Richard Bradford
Mark Billingham
Jeff Crook
David Lynn Golemon