'Why argue with Motley? I think he pissed his brains out his pecker on beer and hookers a long time ago.'
'What are you saying?'
'
Come on, Dave. Have you ever seen a hit done with a silenced twenty-two that wasn't a mob contract? It's their trademark—one round in the back of the head, one through the temples, one in the mouth.'
'They use pros, not guys like this Pelley character.'
'It's Pelley that convinces me even more that I'm right. Think about it. Where's a brain-fried hype like that going to come up with a silenced Ruger, one with burned serial numbers?'
'You're thinking about Lonighan?'
'Maybe. Or maybe Lonighan and the greaseballs. Look, Dave, you stomped the shit out of Max Calucci in front of his chippies. Max is a special kind of guy. When he was up at Angola he found out his punk was getting it on with another con. The kid begged all over the joint to go into lockdown. Nobody'd listen to him. A couple of days later somebody broke off a shank made from window glass in his throat.'
'They don't hit cops, Clete.'
'But what if it's not a regular contract? What if Max and Bobo Calucci just pointed the meltdown in your direction and gave him the Ruger, or had somebody give it to him? Nobody's going to make it for a greaseball hit, right? Motley didn't.'
'You've got more reason to worry about the Caluccis than I do.'
We drove out of the tunnel of oaks on St. Charles into Lee Circle. Clete took off his porkpie hat and readjusted it on his brow.
'You're wrong there, noble mon,' he said. 'I was never big on rules. They know that.'
I looked at him.
'But you are. They know that, too,' he said. 'They feel a whole lot safer when they go up against guys who play by the rules.'
'Stay away from them, Clete.'
'You've been out of New Orleans too long, Dave. All the old understandings are gone. It's an open city, like Miami, anybody's fuck. There's only one way to operate in New Orleans today—you keep reminding the other side they're one breath away from being grease spots in the cement.'
It was raining much harder now, and people were turning on their car lights. I looked at Clete's hulking profile in silhouette against the rain. His face was cheerless, his green eyes staring straight ahead, his mouth a tight seam.
After I dropped him at his office, I made one final stop in New Orleans—at Hippo Bimstine's house, down by the Mississippi levee. The rain had almost quit, and he was in his backyard, dipping leaves out of his swimming pool with a long pole. He wore wraparound black sunglasses, plaid Bermuda shorts, and a Hawaiian shirt printed with brown-skinned girls dancing in grass skirts. The fatty rings in his neck were bright with sweat.
'Yeah, that colored cop Motley told me all about it,' he said. 'This tattooed guy sounds like some kind of zomboid, though. I don't think we're talking the first team here.'
'I had to learn a hard lesson a long time ago, Hippo. The guy who blows out your candle is the one who's at your throat before you ever expect it.'
'A guy with a sword tattooed on his head, shooting dope in his crotch with an eyedropper? Dave, give me a break. I got serious enemies. I don't lose sleep over guys who get arrested in filling station rest rooms.'
'You have a very copacetic attitude, Hippo.'
'You're trying to insult me? That's what we're doing here?'
'I don't think you want me asking you hard questions.'
He set down the pole on a stone bench, removed his sunglasses, and wiped his face on his sleeve. The air was hot and muggy, and raindrops dripped from the trees into the pool.
'I got no secrets. Everybody in New Orleans knows my politics,' he said.
'What's the Jewish Defense Organization?'
'It's the network I belong to. There's no mystery here. We got a project called Operation Klan Kick. We find out who these cocksuckers are, where they work, and we make some phone calls. You got a problem with that, Dave?'
'Do you know why this guy Pelley might talk about "a gift" or a group called The Sword?'