your chest and Kick Me signs on your backside, scatter birdseed around you
for pay."
I grunted what I hoped he'd take as assent.
"Okay. I'm away from my computer now, so I don't have access to files, paperwork. Of course, being a little old-fashioned,
I do still manage to keep a thing or two in my head. What you want's not too complicated, I can probably help you."
"Thing I need most is to get in touch with the manager."
"There's not one. Assistant manager'd be the one you'd want Manager walked out over a year ago. People who own the place think,
Why pay someone to manage when this assistant's already doing it for scut wages."
"Guy with Woody Woodpecker hair?"
"Yeah, that's him all right. Keep expecting him to go Ha-ha-ha-fta-ha. Haiti worker, though. Boy was the damn store. He hired, rode herd, ran totals and made daily bank drops, did more than half the baking himself, cleaned
up when he could. I'm keeping him in mind, something comes up. Keith LeRoy."
"Then you have an address for him."
"Near's I know, no one does. Wouldn't give out an address, phone number. Boy plays it close to the chest."
Portrait of the middle-aged detective as Elmer Fudd running headlong into a wall. Staggering back arock on his heels.
"Well, is there anything—"
"I didn't say I couldn't help you, Griffin. You want his beeper, or E-mail?"
Beeper or E-mail. Guy's twenty years old, ran a donut shop for minimum wage, and he's got a beeper? E-mail? The world was
getting away from me at an alarming rate. Sometimes I forgot.
Gibbs gave me both and I thanked him. He said no problem. Anytime.
"Yo," a voice said on the phonefiveminutes after I beeped.
"Keith LeRoy?"
"What chu want wit'im?"
I told him briefly, reminded him that we'd met three days back at Tast-T Donut.
He interrupted me, gliding back from street talk to standard. "I remember. Big guy, black suit—looked like linen—gold silk
shirt. You still looking for Shon?"
"Yes." Four days in a row now, off and on. I was setting personal records for dogged persistence.
"Good to have some continuity in your life. Excuse me." I heard two voices speaking, one quarrelsome, the other flat and uninflected,
just out of range of intelligibility. Neither sounded like LeRoy's. Then he said something and the voices stopped. "Sorry.
I don't know what good this will do you, if any at all, but you're welcome to it."
"Whatever it is, it has to be better than what I have now."
"Yeah. Way we live, here in this great land. Okay. Last few times I saw him, Delany was hanging with a guy. Thought he was
a friend, I'm sure—Delany didn't have any others—but the guy had that look in his eye, throw you over for a dollar?"
"You ever get his name?"
"Never came up. He'd just show up, wait outside for Delany to get off. Leaning against a wall, sitting on a customer's car.
I asked Delany who he was once and he said that's my cousin. I told him tell his cousin to stay off the customers' cars from
now on."
"That it?"
"Warned you it was thin."
"Then I'll try fattening it up. You have my thanks."
"And you have my you're-welcomes. Damn ain't we a couple of well-bred, civilized types."
"Who would have thought it?"
"Not my mother, for sure. Later, Griffin."
I sat looking at the envelope Sam Delany had given me, at the phone numbers printed on it, on the back flap, in precise, squarish
figures. Nine times out of ten, the one thing they don't tell you is the very thing you need to know, the thing that would
have kept you from running around in circles, into walls, dead ends and, often as not, trouble.
I dialed the number for Delany's rentedroom, then, glancing up at the clock, his mother's. He'd said he took care of the family.
Maybe that included watching the younger kids after school.
"Baldwin-Delany residence." The eight-year-old, from the sound of it.
"Could I speak to Sam Delany?" I said.
"May I ask who's calling?"
I told her.
"I'll see if he's in."
He was, and was on
Cordwainer Smith, selected by Hank Davis