Jason Pinter - The Darkness

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Cocaine. Ecstasy. Weed. Pills. Things Morgan didn’t recognize in the slightest.

And then, in the back corner, he saw something that piqued his curiosity.

Bags filled with what looked like small pieces of black gravel. Rocks so small and so insignificant that they looked like they could have been taken from his grandmother’s driveway.

“What’s that?” Morgan said.

“That,” replied Leonard, “is going to revolutionize our business.”

Morgan stared at it. Theo’s eyes were wide open.

“We call it ‘the Darkness.’ And in one week’s time,”

Leonard said, “you’ll be so busy selling those bags you won’t have time to spend all the money you make.” Then

Leonard smiled. “But I imagine you’ll find the time.”

27

“Nobody knows anything.”

Even though I was holding a telephone to my ear, I wanted to wrap my hands around the piece of plastic and choke the life out of it.

“You can’t be serious,” I said.

“I’m telling you, Henry,” Curt said. “Nobody here knows a damn thing about Paulina Cole’s article. Nobody knows who gave her those quotes, nobody knows where she got her information, and if it makes you feel any better nobody here has even heard of this so-called magic drug, Darkness or whatever. It’s like she pulled the whole thing out of thin air.”

My head hurt. Both from the chewing out by Wallace, the frustration in having been scooped by Paulina Cole, and the feeling that Curt was telling the truth. Curt had his finger pretty well placed on the pulse of the NYPD, and whenever a bombshell was about to drop, even if he didn’t clue me in ahead of time he was rarely surprised.

Right now, though, he spoke as if he was as pissed off as

I was. It sounded like Curt felt he’d been scooped by

Paulina as well.

“This whole thing doesn’t make any sense,” I said.

“And the details about the rocks inside the balloon-you didn’t mention that.”

“I didn’t even know about that until I saw the article,”

Curt said, frustration growing in his voice. “Listen,

Henry. I know the rank and file. I know the guys who work narcotics detail, the guys sweeping the street corners for dealers, the ones who confiscate this crap, and even the ones who log it in to evidence. None of them, let me repeat, none of them, have any idea what the hell she’s talking about or where she got the info from.”

“Either she pulled enough information from her ass to make her walk funny for a month, somebody in your department has loose lips, or something is being kept a pretty big secret from all of us.”

“I don’t know about you, but I think her article is half bull.”

“And the other half?”

Curt was silent for a moment. I could feel my heart pounding in my chest. I knew his answer before he said it.

Bull or not, there was a lining of truth in Paulina’s article.

“The other half,” he said, “I’m just praying she’s wrong about. I grew up in this city in the eighties,

Henry. I had a cousin who got hooked on junk. He stole two twenties from some junkie’s wallet because he needed money to cook more of that poison on a spoon.

He ended up taking eight bullets. From a six-shooter.

Which meant the junkie who killed him reloaded and then shot him two more times. I know what crack did to this city. I saw it, man. I’m not comparing apples to oranges, belts to syringes. I’m just saying that if there is any truth to Cole’s story, and this stuff is already in the marketplace, it’s a faucet that’s gonna be real tough to shut off.”

“If this thing is as big as Paulina claims it is,” I said,

“won’t it be easy to track down?”

“You’d think so, but I know a dozen narco officers who have eyes and ears and informants up the yin yang with access to all kinds of dope. They know everyone from the absolute bottom of the totem pole to the people at the top. And not one of them has heard a single peep about Darkness.”

“I just don’t see Paulina making this up. I mean, she presses every button there is, but she’s not an all-out liar. Even when she torpedoed Jack, everything she said was true. It was a pretty despicable takedown, but she wasn’t lying.”

“Listen, Henry, I hear you, but this isn’t my beat. I can only go by what the guys in Narcotics are telling me.

And if I hear anything I’ll let you know. But right now there’s nothing.”

“Thanks, Curt. Good luck out there. For your sake, I hope Paulina had a sudden case of the truthful yips.”

“Truthful yips. Sounds like a good name for a band.”

“Yeah. I’ll let you know when I form it. You can play bass?”

“Always saw myself as more of a saxophone man. You know, Charlie Parker. Sure you don’t have a black uncle?”

“Hey, man, you know how my father plays hide-andseek with the truth. It wouldn’t shock me. But as far as I know I don’t.”

“Gotcha. Take it easy, Henry.”

“Later, Curt.”

I hung up the phone. I noticed Jack had come over, and was standing next to my desk.

“Was that your buddy Sheffield?”

I nodded, leaned back in my chair and stretched.

“I don’t get it. Curt knows this stuff, and he said nobody in the department has heard one word about this new drug.”

“Is it possible his ear is just a little too far from the juice?”

“It’s possible, but Curt’s been pretty reliable when it comes to big stories.”

“Well, until we hear otherwise, we have to assume that the Wicked Witch of the West Side scooped us fair and square.”

“I don’t think that’s going to make Wallace like us any more.”

“No. He’ll bitch and moan for a day or two, until we break something big and Ted Allen at the Dispatch has to eat a nice big turd sandwich.”

“He has to deal with Paulina every day. That’s gotta be enough punishment for one man.”

Jack laughed. It felt strange, though, as though he was laughing more to gauge my reaction than out of actual emotion. Then he stayed silent for a minute, just thinking.

“So where are we at?” he said. “It seems like our number one lead got himself a one-way ticket to the big adios.”

“Well, my gut says for certain that Kaiser knew exactly what I was talking about when I asked him about

718 Enterprises. Of course he was killed before I could get any deeper.”

“So think about this, sport,” Jack said. “I’m guessing

Kaiser’s demise was not due to a leak in his gas stove.

He was killed. So who benefits from Kaiser being out of the picture? And why kill him now?”

“It was probably no secret that we were looking at him, so whoever killed him was worried he would talk.”

“Did he seem like a talker to you?”

“Are you kidding? If he’d given me another thirty seconds he would have told me what his wife was like in bed.”

“So someone ices him before he can talk. Who?”

“I’m pretty sure it’s this blond guy the doorman saw coming at odd hours. He clearly had business with Kaiser that couldn’t take place during the light of day.”

“Didn’t you say his wife left when he came over?”

“Yeah,” I said. “Mrs. Kaiser left and went to a coffee shop on the corner. She let this guy and Brett do their thing, then she’d just come back like she’d gone to the beauty salon. Nothing strange about her attitude, according to the doorman.”

“So you know who we have to talk to now?” Jack said.

“Victoria Kaiser. Wonderful. Nothing I need more than bothering a grieving widow.”

“You’re too mushy, Parker. If I was a grieving widow…”

“You’d be a pretty widow,” I said. Jack ignored me.

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