He nodded. I didn’t lower the weapon.
He swallowed. “White supremacists are in the military. That’s not new. You remember a guy named McVeigh in Oklahoma City. Now there’s more of them. We’ve spent more than a decade at war, and we’re sending home killing machines.” He sighed. “Anyway, the word is, that’s who took the Claymores. I don’t know if it was to sell or to use.”
“What about prostitutes? Are they involved in running high-end whores?
“That’s all I’ve heard, son,” he said. “Do what you please.”
He closed his eyes and in the terrible silence that followed he put his hand in his lap. I lowered the assault rifle.
Peralta said, “Give me that and wait for me at the truck.”
My blood was still up but I did as he asked.
Before I walked out, I heard Cartwright’s voice.
“You have an unusual name, kid. I read a book by somebody with that name once, about the Great Depression.”
“He wrote it,” Peralta said.
“It wasn’t bad,” he said. “But you should have written more about the effect on the tribes.”
He was right. I closed the door behind me.
Half an hour later, we hit solid pavement and Peralta spoke for the first time since he had returned to the pickup truck.
“There was a day when he would have killed you.”
I let my breathing return all the way to normal before speaking.
“Ed? As in Edward? America’s Finest Pimp thought I was the enforcer of some guy named Edward. He was afraid of Edward, and he didn’t strike me as the kind who was afraid of many people. The man he described as Edward’s muscle sounded a hell of a lot like Felix.”
“That’s not this Ed,” Peralta said.
“How do you know? Did you see the ‘tell’ when I told him about Felix? He was lying.”
“He had a loaded AK-47 being held by a crazy man, Mapstone. That’s not a ‘tell’ you can trust.”
“Maybe. His name is still Edward.”
“Ed was a decorated FBI agent before his end-of-the-world fetish got him in trouble and he was fired. Only that’s not the whole story. He’s quietly enjoying his FBI pension and an honorable retirement.”
“So tell me the whole story.”
“Being known as a disgraced, bitter former special agent gives him cred. He deals guns to skinheads and bikers, cartels, Mexican Mafia, whoever pays. Gives ‘em training, if they need it. And any takedowns happen so far down the line that nobody suspects crazy old Ed Cartwright.”
“I never heard of him.”
“You wouldn’t,” Peralta said. “He doesn’t work for the FBI, doesn’t work for Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. He reports to higher authorities. Maybe where your wife works, Mapstone. Nobody else in Phoenix law enforcement even knows about him, except as another reclusive old coot living out in Wittman with his guns. That’s the way it’s supposed to work.”
“Why would white supremacists deal with somebody who has brown skin?”
“They must dig the whole Apache noble savage thing.”
My breathing return to normal. It would have helped if Peralta had given me the whole story before we went visiting, to know what his play was. That kind of non-disclosure was like the old Peralta. It would have helped if Cartwright could have done a better job of connecting the Claymore to an apartment in San Diego, a young woman’s fall out of a condo tower, and her boyfriend’s violent death. Was he her boyfriend or husband? I didn’t even know. How nuts was that?
“We’ve got white supremacists in the armed forces,” I said. “I thought that was the least racist institution in America.”
“Not after you break the force in two long wars,” he said. “And drop recruiting standards. And have a black guy as commander in chief, which has brought out all the whackos. You remember the group they arrested in Georgia? Five soldiers were stockpiling weapons. They wanted to poison the apple crop, set off bombs, and overthrow the government? Thank God for stupid criminals.”