you’re probably willing to spend three grand on your own compressor. We did check compressor shipments into the three-county area here and tracked them down. Nothing happening there.”
Bob: “Anything on the reward idea?”
Weaver shook his head: “Not yet.” He looked at his watch: “It takes a while to get to Miami. You guys should get going. I’ll get started on this female diver. If she’s local, she should be identifiable.”
CHAPTER
FIVE
Because they’d be on the street, Lucas and Bob traded their shorts for jeans but stayed with the guayabera shirts and the cross-training shoes, and headed south to Miami. The Northside Miami-Dade District’s police station had the South Florida look that was almost an architectural style, a boxy red-and-white concrete building with useless pillars out front and a clutch of flagpoles by the street.
They were taken to a conference room populated by eight plainclothes cops, a bunch of soda cans, and a couple of cups of coffee. The cops stopped talking when the marshals were shown in, and somebody said, “See, I told you: they’re not FBI.”
“You’re right, we’re not,” Lucas said, as he and Bob pulled out chairs and sat down. The narcs, Lucas thought, looked like a collection of postal clerks or shoe salesmen with added facial hair, as did narcs in most places. “We’re marshals. We’re looking for the guys who killed the Coast Guardsmen last summer. We’re new on the case and we work differently than the FBI guys.” Long pause. “Good as they are.”
There were a number of snorts and a little laughter, and a guy with a beard held up a hand and said, “I’m DEA and for official reporting purposes, I’m not laughing.”
“You looked like you were laughing,” somebody said.
The DEA agent ignored that and asked, “What do you want?”
“Names and locations of a few long-term dealers who might hear things and who might talk to cops if they’re put under enough pressure,” Bob said. “We’re hoping that one of them can point us at the specific organization that brought the heroin up the coast.”
“That could get you dinged up,” somebody said.
“We’ve been dinged up before and we’re still here,” Lucas said.
Another cop: “Yeah, we looked you up. You do have a few dings.”
Yet another one: “If we give you names, you’ll be fucking with our sources.”
“We lie a lot,” Lucas said. “They won’t know it comes from you. In fact, they may be calling you for help.”
“Exactly what are you going to do?” the DEA agent asked.
Lucas told them.
Some of the narcs were skeptical and walked; others gave them names.
Like Tobin Cain’s.
Tobin Cain was known on the street as Foot-Long, not because of any personal measurement, but because he dealt his dope out of a back booth at a Subway franchise near downtown Miami. The Subway was located on a hot, shabby, black-tar street with weeds growing up through the cracks. Cain’s business was basically okay with the franchisee, because nothing boosted traffic like dopers with the munchies.
Cain liked the place for the free refills and the Wi-Fi; a sloppy-fat black guy, he was sitting in a back booth, wearing an aqua-and-orange Miami Dolphins jersey and hat, the hat worn forward. He was poking at an iPad. The DEA agent, whose name was Ramon Herrera, and who smelled strongly of tobacco, pointed him out from behind the red-rock steps of a closed, life-battered Jesus the Savior Church, across the street from the Subway.
“Make sure you keep his hands where you can see them,” Herrera said. “He doesn’t carry a gun anymore, because of the felonies, but he still carries a screwdriver. Those can hurt, especially if he sticks it in your heart.”
“Will he have some dope on him?” Bob asked.
“He usually phones out to an assistant, but one reason I suggested Foot-Long is that he fired his guy last week. A kid named Dope.”
“Dope?”
“Sort of a giveaway, huh? He’d sit here on the church steps, where he could see Foot-Long. He kept the dope right here off the side of the steps, where we’re standing, in these weeds.” He kicked a weed, which ignored the attack. “Foot-Long would call him with the specs on what he wanted delivered. Heroin or meth or weed, and how much. Then, the way I heard it, Dope started clipping the meth and reselling it on his own.”
“That’s the kind of entrepreneurial enterprise that made this country great,” Bob said.
Herrera blinked, considered the comment, shrugged. “Anyway, the word is that Foot-Long fired Dope and since there’s nobody else