She sobbed.
“And I must go to church,” she added, “to confession.”
Paco and Salma Esteban exchanged glances.
Paco Esteban said, “Who’s the girl?”
His wife glared at him for asking such a question at such a delicate time.
He shrugged, in effect saying, What did I say?
Rosario buried her face in her knees and breasts. Then she looked up and between them.
She wailed, “I killed my cousin!”
Paco and Salma Esteban again exchanged glances, this time ones of deep shock.
TWO
The Roundhouse Eighth and Race Streets, Philadelphia Wednesday, September 9, 8:15 A.M.
Lieutenant Jason Washington was in his glass-walled office in the Homicide Unit. Minutes earlier, he had decided to deal with the matter of Detective Bari at a later time, if not date, and felt a twinge of guilt for having more or less brushed off Denny Coughlin’s question by saying the “administrative problem” had been taken care of.
Now he turned to reviewing the notes Tony Harris had taken so far in the Philly Inn job. He noticed the sound of voices growing louder in the outer office.
Washington looked up and saw Sergeant Matthew M. Payne being welcomed by a small crowd of detectives. They shook Payne’s hand and patted him on the back as he slowly but certainly moved through them and toward Washington’s office.
Washington heard Payne say, “I’d better check in with the boss.” A moment later, Payne rapped a knuckle on the edge of the doorway.
“Matthew,” Jason Washington said warmly. “I had heard a rumor that you were on your way back to the Roundhouse.”
“How are you, Jason?”
They shook hands.
“Very well, Matthew. Thank you for asking.”
“Mind if I ask where you came across this rumor? I was really afraid that the rumor circulating was the one that painted me as having turned in my gun and badge and gone off to take art classes in the south of France.”
Washington chuckled. He motioned with his hand, waving Payne into one of the two metal-framed chairs across from his desk.
“Oh, no,” Washington said, smiling. “That rumor-and it had you in Gay Paree, emphasis on the Gay-died a slow death weeks ago. This new one I got from far up the chain of command.”
Payne figured that one out-From my call to Hollaran-right when Washington confirmed it.
“I just enjoyed a visit to Commissioner Coughlin’s office,” Washington said.
Payne nodded but didn’t say anything, waiting for him to continue.
“The commissioner had brought me and my boss and his boss in,” Washington went on, “to discuss the situation of the Philly Inn.”
Payne nodded. “I was just out there at the scene.”
“So I understand.” He pointed at the notes on his desk. “I’ve been speaking with Tony.”
Payne nodded again. “Does that mean Tony’s got the job? And not Bari?”
Washington considered his reply for a long moment, then said, “It’s now Tony’s. The answer to the other part of your query is-how do I put this? — that it’s on the back burner for now.”