The Last Detective
nightmare.”
    time missing: 18 hours, 05 minutes
    T he sun had risen like a mid-morning flare, so intense that it washed the color from the sky and made the palm trees glimmer. Gittamon had gone by the time I reached the street, but Richard was waiting by the black limo with Myers and the two men from the Marquis. They were probably his people from New Orleans.
    They stopped talking when I came around the birds-of-paradise, and Richard stepped in front of the others to meet me. He didn't bother hiding his feelings now; his face was angry and intent.
    “I've got something to say to you.”
    “Let me guess: You're not going to ask where I bought the shirt.”
    “This is your fault. It's only a matter of time before one of them gets killed because of you, and I'm not going to let that happen.”
    Myers drifted up and touched Richard's arm.
    “We don't have time for this.”
    Richard brushed away his hand.
    “I want to say it.”
    I said, “Take his advice, Richard. Please.”
    Debbie DeNice and Ray Fontenot moved to Richard's other side. DeNice was a large-boned man with gray eyes the color of soapy dishwater. Fontenot was an ex-NOPD detective like DeNice. He was tall and angular with a bad scar on his neck.
    DeNice said, “Take his advice or what?”
    It had been a long night. Pressure built in my head until my eyes felt hard. I answered him calmly.
    “It's still morning. We're going to see a lot of each other.”
    Richard said, “Not if I can help it. I don't like you, Cole. I don't trust you. You draw trouble like flies to puke, and I want you to stay away from my family.”
    I made myself breathe. Further up the street, a middle-aged woman walked a pug. It waddled as it looked for a place to pee. This man was Ben's father and Lucy's former husband. I told myself that if I said or did anything to this man it would hurt them. We didn't have time for this nonsense. We had to find Ben.
    “I'll see you up at the house.”
    I tried to go around them, but DeNice stepped sideways to block my path.
    “You don' know whut you dealin' with, podnuh.”
    Fontenot smiled softly.
    “Oh, yeah, you got that right.”
    Myers said, “Debbie. Ray.”
    Neither of them moved. Richard stared at Lucy's apartment and wet his lips again as he had upstairs. He seemed more confused than angry.
    “She was stupid and selfish to move to Los Angeles. She was stupid to be involved with someone like you, and selfish to take Ben away. I hope she comes to her senses before one of them dies.”
    DeNice was a wide man with a lurid face that made me think of a homicidal clown. He had small scars on the bridge of his nose. New Orleans was probably a tough beat, but he looked like the kind of man who enjoyed it tough. I could have tried again to step around him, but I didn't.
    “Get out of my way.”
    DeNice opened his sport coat to flash his gun, and I wondered if they were impressed with that down in the Ninth Ward.
    DeNice said, “You don't get the picture.”
    Something flickered at the edges of light; an arm roped with thick veins looped around DeNice's neck; a heavy blue .357 Colt Python appeared under his right arm, the sound as it cocked like breaking knuckles. DeNice floundered off balance as Joe Pike lifted him backwards, Pike's voice a soft hiss.
    “Picture this.”
    Fontenot clawed under his own jacket. Pike snapped the .357 across Fontenot's face. Fontenot staggered. The woman down the street glanced over, but all she saw were six men on the walk with one of them clutching his face.
    I said, “Richard, we don't have time for this. We have to find Ben.”
    Pike wore a sleeveless gray sweatshirt, jeans, and dark glasses that glittered in the sun. The muscles in his arm were bunched like cobblestones around DeNice's neck. The red arrow tattooed across his deltoid was stretched tight with inner tension.
    Myers watched Pike the way a lizard watches, not really seeing, more like he was waiting for something that would trigger his own

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