the strippers. Shooting into a crowd of people on a porch didn’t count either. Moon had to see the bitch die with his own eyes or he didn’t claim the credit. Moon Williams, he told these girls, was a fearless, heartless, stone-cold killer.
Operatives of the Odessa Mafia, who followed him home on at least three occasions, twice without his knowledge and once to sell him drugs, determined that the stone-cold killer lived with his grandmother, a woman named Mildred Gertie Williams, who the killer called Maw-Maw.
Pike found the address in a weathered residential neighborhood in Willowbrook, just north of Compton, at the bottom of a freeway off-ramp. A small stucco house had probably sat on the property at one time, just like all the other houses lining the street, but at some point the original house had likely burned, and now a double-wide mobile home sat on blocks in its place, with four ancient Airstream trailers shoehorned behind it. Pike figured the no-doubt-illegal trailer park was how Mildred Williams paid her bills.
The trailers might have been nice at one time, but now they were faded and scabbed with freeway dust. The double-wide had a small porch set up with a sun awning and potted plants, but shriveled brown threads were all that remained of the plants, and the yard had gone over to sand, dirt, and litter blown down from the freeway. The litter hugged the inevitable chain-link fence as if trying to escape.
Pike turned around on the next block, then pulled to the curb. Three girls on bikes pedaled past, swung around hard in the middle of the street, and rode past again. Eyeing the white man. They probably thought he was a cop.
Pike watched the mobile homes for a few minutes, but saw no signs of activity. An ancient Buick Riviera was illegally parked alongside the fence, so wide it covered the sidewalk. Pike didn’t necessarily expect to find anyone home, but he wanted to confirm that Moon still lived here. If so, he would wait until Moon returned, then use him to reach Darko.
Pike took out his phone and called Jamal again. He got the computer once more. Jamal’s mailbox was still full.
The girls rode past again, slower, and this time Pike rolled down the window. The first girl wore a blue short-sleeved shirt, the second a baggy white T-shirt, and the third was wearing a red sweatshirt. Red, white, and blue. Pike wondered if they had planned it that way.
“Need some help, ladies. You live on this street, or you just passing through?”
The girl in blue turned in a slow, curious circle. The girl in white slowed, but the red kept going. She didn’t stop until she reached the corner.
The blue girl said, “Are you a policeman?”
“No. I’m a salesman.”
The girl laughed.
“You’re a plainclothes policeman. My Uncle Davis is a plainclothes officer, so I know. Also, you’re white. We don’t get many white people except for the police.”
Pike said, “Do you know Ms. Mildred Gertie Williams, up there in the trailers?”
The girl said, “You here for Moon?”
Just like that.
Pike said, “Yes.”
“I live right over there, that yellow house? Uncle Davis warned us about that Moon Williams. He said don’t never go over there and stay away from those boys. He said if that Moon ever makes a problem, we should call him right away.”
Pike tipped his head toward the other girls.
“Those your sisters?”
“No, sir. That’s Lureen and Jonelle. They’re my friends.”
“Which one of those trailers does Ms. Williams live in?”
“The one up front. That’s the big one.”
“Does Moon live with her?”
“He’s in the back trailer, the one with the dogs.”
Pike hadn’t seen dogs when he passed the yard.
“He has dogs?”
“Those pit bull dogs. Those dogs are mean. Uncle Davis told my mama if she ever saw those dogs running loose, she had to call him right away.”
“You know who lives in the other trailers?”
She screwed up her face, then shook her head.
“Was a lady in one and Jonelle’s cousin lived there for a while, but they moved out after Moon came home.”
Moon had brought a blight to the neighborhood.
“What’s your name, blue girl?”
“I’m not supposed to tell my name to strange adults.”
Uncle Davis again.
“You probably shouldn’t be talking to strangers, either.”
“I’m not stupid. You get out of that car, I’ll ride away as fast as I can. Lureen and Jonelle over there, they’ll call my Uncle Davis, then you’ll see.”
“One more thing. Have you seen Ms. Williams or Moon today?”
She circled a couple of times, thinking,