you leave the kid alone. This is not New Orleans, and this is not just some little punk you can rub out and make everything wonderful. This kid’s got baggage, lots of it. People are watching him. If you do something stupid, you’ll have a hundred fibbies all over your ass. You won’t be able to breathe, and you and Mr. Muldanno will rot in jail. Here, not New Orleans.”
“Yeah, yeah.” Gronke waved both hands at him in disgust and walked back to the window. “I want you boys to keep watching him. If they move him anywhere, I wanna know it immediately. If they take him to court, I wanna know it. Figure it out, Nance. This is your city. You know the streets and alleys. At least you’re supposed to. You’re gettin’ paid good money.”
“Yes sir,” Nance said loudly, then left the room.
The Client
23
-TOR TWO HOURS EVERY THURSDAY MORNING, REGGIE DIS-
appeared into the office of Dr. Elliot Levin, her longtime psychiatrist. Levin had been holding her hand for ten years. He was the architect who’d figured out the pieces and helped her put the puzzle back together. Their sessions were never disturbed.
Glint paced nervously in Levin’s reception area. Dianne had called twice already. She had read the summons and petition to him over the phone. He had called Judge Roosevelt, and the detention center, and Levin’s office, and now he waited impatiently for eleven o’clock. The receptionist tried to ignore him.
REGGIE WAS SMILING WHEN DR. LEVIN FINISHED WITH HER.
She pecked him on the cheek, and they walked hand in hand into his plush reception area, where Glint was waiting. She stopped smiling. “What’s the matter?” she asked, certain something terrible had happened.
“We need to go,” Glint said, taking her arm and
ushering her through the door. She nodded good-bye to Levin, who was watching with interest and concern.
They were on a sidewalk next to a small parking lot. “They’ve picked up Mark Sway. He’s in custody.”
“What! Who!”
“Cops. A petition was filed this morning alleging Mark to be a delinquent, and Roosevelt issued an order to take him into custody.” Glint was pointing. “Let’s take your car. I’ll drive.”
“Who filed the petition?”
“Foltrigg. Dianne called from the hospital, that’s where they got him. She had a big fight with the cops, and scared Ricky again. I’ve talked to her and assured her you’ll go get Mark.”
They opened and slammed doors to Reggie’s car, and sped from the parking lot. “Roosevelt’s scheduled a hearing for noon,” Glint explained.
“Noon! You must be kidding. That’s fifty-six minutes from now.”
“It’s an expedited hearing. I talked to him about an hour ago, and he wouldn’t comment on the petition. Had very little to say, really. Where are we going?”
She thought about this for a second. “He’s in the detention center, and I can’t get him out. Let’s go to Juvenile Court. I want to see the petition, and I want to see Harry Roosevelt. This is absurd, a hearing within hours of filing the petition. The law says between three and seven days, not three and seven hours.”
“But isn’t there a provision for expedited hear-ings?”
“Yeah, but only in extreme matters. They’ve fed Harry a bunch of crap. Delinquent! What’s the kid
done? This is crazy. They’re trying to force him to talk, Glint, that’s all.”
“So you didn’t expect this?”
“Of course not. Not here, not in Juvenile Court. I’ve thought about a grand jury summons for Mark from New Orleans, but not Juvenile Court. He’s committed no delinquent act. He doesn’t deserve to be taken in.”
“Well, they got him.”
JASON MCTHUNE ZIPPED HIS PANTS, AND HIT THE LEVER
three times before the antique urinal flushed. The bowl was stained with streaks of brown and the floor was wet, and he thanked God he worked in the Federal Building, where everything was polished and spiffy. He’d lay asphalt with a shovel before he’d work in Juvenile Court.
But he was here now, like it or not, wasting time on the Boyette case because K. O. Lewis wanted him here. And K.O. took orders’ from Mr. F. Denton Voyles, director of the FBI for forty-two years now. And in his ^orty-two years, no member of Congress and certainly no U.S. senator had been murdered. And the fact that the late Boyd Boyette had been hidden so neatly was galling. Mr. Voyles was quite upset, not about the killing itself but about the FBI’s inability to solve it completely.
McThune had a strong hunch Ms. Reggie Love would arrive shortly, since her client had been