The Rosary Girls
Birthday .”
“Actually, it looked something like Happy Sparkplug .”
“It did?”
“Yeah.”
“Shit.” Jimmy looked at his hands, as if it were their fault. He tried the
    hand shapes again, faring no better.
    Byrne fluffed Jimmy’s pillows, then sat down, arranging his weight on the chair. There followed a long comfortable silence only attainable between old friends.
    Byrne left it to Jimmy to get down to business.
“So, I hear you got a virgin to sacrifice.” Jimmy’s voice was raspy and weak. This visit had already taken a lot out of him. The nurses at the cardiac desk had told Byrne he could stay five minutes, no longer.
    “Yeah,” Byrne replied. Jimmy was talking about Byrne’s new partner being a first-day Homicide.
“How bad?”
“Actually, not bad at all,” Byrne said. “She’s got good instincts.”
“She?”
Uh-oh, Byrne thought. Jimmy Purify was as old school as you could get. In fact, according to Jimmy, his first badge was in Roman numerals. If it were up to Jimmy Purify, the only women on the force would be meter maids. “Yeah.”
“She a young-old detective?”
“I don’t think so,” Byrne replied. Jimmy was referring to the hotshot types who hit the unit running, dragging in suspects, bullying witnesses, trying to get on the clear sheet. Old detectives—like Byrne and Jimmy—pick their shots. There’s a lot less untangling. It was something you either learned, or you didn’t.
“She good-lookin’?”
Byrne didn’t have to think about this one at all. “Yeah. She is.”
“Bring her around sometime.”
“Jesus.You get a dick transplant, too?”
Jimmy smiled. “Yeah. Big one, too. I figured, what the fuck. I’m here, might as well go for a whopper.”
“Actually, she’s Vincent Balzano’s wife.”
The name took a moment to register. “That fuckin’ hothead from Central?”
“Yeah. The same.”
“Forget I said anything.”
Byrne saw a shadow near the door. A nurse poked her head in, smiled. Time to go. He stood, stretched, glanced at his watch. He had fifteen minutes until he had to meet Jessica in North Philly. “I’ve got to roll. We caught a case this morning.”
Jimmy frowned, making Byrne feel like shit. He should’ve kept his mouth shut. Telling Jimmy Purify there was a new case on which he would not be working was like showing a retired thoroughbred a picture of Churchill Downs.
“Details, Riff.”
Byrne wondered how much he should say. He decided to just spill. “Seventeen-year-old girl,” he said. “Found in one of the abandoned row houses near Eighth and Jefferson.”
The look on Jimmy’s face needed no translation. Part of it said how he wished he were back in harness. The other part related how much he knew that these cases got to Kevin Byrne. If you killed a young girl on his watch, there was no rock big enough to hide under.
“Druggie?”
“I don’t think so,” Byrne said.
“She was dumped?”
Byrne nodded.
“What do we have?” Jimmy asked.
We, Byrne thought. This was hurting a lot more than he’d thought it was going to. “Not much.”
“Keep me in the loop, eh?”
You got it, Clutch, Byrne thought. He grabbed Jimmy’s hand, gave it a slight squeeze. “Need anything?”
“Slab of baby back ribs would be nice. Side of scrapple.”
“And a Diet Sprite, right?”
Jimmy smiled, his lids drooping. He was tired. Byrne walked to the door, hoping he could reach the cool green sanctity of the hallway before he heard it, wishing that he was at Mercy to interview a witness, wishing that Jimmy was right behind him, smelling like Marlboros and Old Spice.
He didn’t make it.
“I’m not coming back, am I?” Jimmy asked.
Byrne closed his eyes, then opened them, hoping his face was fashioned into something resembling faith. He turned. “Sure you are, Jimmy.”
“For a cop, you’re a terrible fuckin’ liar, you know that? I’m amazed we ever made case one.”
“You just get strong.You’ll be back on the street by Memorial Day. You’ll see.

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