laughed. “Honey, them pills, they ain’t even in this building no more. They sold an’ gone. Mebbe we see what we can find, us girls. Something help you. Bet it hurts like the devil’s own dick.”
Ettie almost said that she had some money and couldpay. But she knew instinctively to keep the money secret for the time being. She said, “Thank you.”
“You lie back. Get some rest. We look out for you.”
Ettie closed her eyes and thought of Elizabeth. Then she thought of her husband Billy Doyle and she thought of, finally, John Pellam. But he was in her thoughts for no more than five seconds before she fell asleep.
“Well?”
Hatake Imaham returned to the cluster of women on the far end of the cell.
“That bitch, she the one done it. She guilty as death.” Hatake didn’t claim to be a real mambo but it was well known in the Kitchen that she did possess an extra sense. And while she hadn’t had much success laying on hands to cure illness everyone knew that she could touch someone and find out their deepest secrets. She could tell that the hot vibrations radiating off Ettie Washington’s brow were feelings of guilt.
“Shit,” one woman spat out. “She burn that boy up, she burn up that little boy.”
“The boy?” another asked in an incredulous whisper. “She set that fire in the basement, girl—didn’t you read that? On Thirty-sixth Street. She coulda killed the whole everybody in that building.”
“That bitch call herself a mother,” a skinny woman with deep-set eyes growled. “Fuck that bitch. I say—”
“Shhhh,” Hatake waved a hand.
“Do her now! Do the bitch now.”
Hatake’s face tightened into a glare. “Quiet! Damballah! We gonna do this th’way I say. You hear me, girl? I ain’t kill her. Damballah don’t ask more than what she done.”
“Okay, sister,” the girl said, her voice hushed and frightened. “Okay. That’s cool. Whatcha saying we do?”
“Shhhhh,” Hatake hissed again and glanced out the bars, where a lethargic guard lounged out of earshot. “Who gonna see the man today?”
A couple of the girls lifted their arms. The prostitutes. Criminal Term batched those arraignments and disposed of them early, Hatake knew. It was like the city wanted them back on the street with a minimum of lost time. Hatake looked at the oldest one. “You Dannette, right?”
The woman nodded, her pocked face remained peaceful.
“I’ma ask you do something for me. How ’bout that, girl?”
“Whatchu want me to do?”
“You talk to yo man when you get into the courtroom.”
“Yeah, yeah, sister.”
“Tell him we make it worth his while. After you get out, I wan’ you to come back.”
Dannette frowned. “You want . . . You want what?”
“Listen to me. I want you to get back in here. Tomorrow.”
Dannette had never stopped nodding but she didn’t understand this. Hatake continued, “I want you to get something, bring it in here to me. You know how, right? You know where you hide it? In the back hole, not the front. In a Baggie.”
“Sure.” Dannette nodded as if she hid things there every day.
She looked around at the other women. Whatever she was being asked to do was being seconded by everybody.
“I’ll pay you for this, for coming back again.”
“You get me rock?” the girl asked eagerly.
Hatake scowled. It was well-known that she hated drugs, dealers and users. “You a cluckhead, girl?”
The pocked face went still. “You get me rock?”
“I give you money,” the huge woman spat out. “You buy whatever you want with it, girl. Fuck up your life, you want. That your business.”
Dannette said, “What it is you want me to bring you back?”
“Shhh,” whispered Hatake Imaham. A guard was wandering past the door.
SIX
“Hell of a visiting room.”
“Oh, John, am I in the soup?”
Pellam told Ettie, “Not exactly. But you’re walking around the edge of the bowl, looks like.”
“It’s good to see you.” They sat across from
Warren Murphy
Jamie Canosa
Corinne Davies
Jude Deveraux
Todd-Michael St. Pierre
Robert Whitlow
Tracie Peterson
David Eddings
Sherri Wilson Johnson
Anne Conley