mustache going gray and gold-rimmed glasses. He sat in a booth with three other cops. Two more huddled over coffee cups in the next booth down.
“I thought you guys could use some guidance, so I drove right over,” Lucas said. A circular bar sat at the center of the restaurant floor, surrounded by swivel stools, with booths along the wall. Lucas took one of the stools and turned it to face the cops in the booth.
“We appreciate your concern,” said the cop with the mustache. Three of the four men in the booth were middle-aged and burly; the fourth was in his twenties, slender, and had tight blue eyes with prominent pink corners. The three older cops were drinking coffee. The younger one was eating French toast with sausage.
“This guy a cop?” the youngest one asked, a fork poised halfway to his mouth with a chunk of sausage. He was staring at Lucas’ jacket. “He’s carrying . . . .”
“Thank you, Sherlock,” an older cop said. He tipped his head at Lucas and said, “Lucas Davenport, he’s a detective lieutenant with Minneapolis.”
“He drives a Porsche about sixty miles an hour down Cretin Avenue at rush hour,” said another of the cops, grinning at Lucas over his coffee cup.
“Bullshit. I observe all St. Paul traffic ordinances,” Lucas said.
“Pardon me while I fart in disgust,” said the speed-trap cop. “It must’ve been somebody else’s Porsche I got a picture of on my radar about five-thirty Friday.”
Lucas grinned. “You must’ve startled me.”
“Right . . . You workin’ or what?”
“I’m looking for Poppy White,” Lucas said.
“Poppy?” The three older cops looked at each other, and one of them said, “I saw his car outside of Broobeck’s last night and a couple of nights last week. Red Olds, last year’s. If he’s not there, Broobeck might know where he is.”
Lucas stayed to talk for a few minutes, then hopped off the stool. “Thanks for the word on Poppy,” he said.
“Hey, Davenport, if you’re gonna shoot the sonofabitch, could you wait until after the shift change . . . ?”
A red Olds was parked under the neon bowling pin at Broobeck’s. Lucas stepped inside, looked down toward the lanes. Only two were being used, by a group of young couples. Three people sat at the bar, but none of them was Poppy. The bartender wore a paper hat and chewed a toothpick. He nodded when Lucas walked up.
“I’m looking for Poppy.”
“He’s here somewhere, maybe back in the can.”
Lucas went to the men’s restroom, stuck his head inside. He could see a pair of Wellington boots under one of the stall doors and called, “Poppy?”
“Yeah?”
“Lucas Davenport. I’ll wait at the bar.”
“Get a booth.”
Lucas got a booth and a beer, and a minute later Poppy appeared, holding wet hands away from his chest.
“You need some towels back there,” he complained to the bartender. The man pushed him a stack of napkins. Poppy dried his hands, got a beer and came over to Lucas. He was too heavy, in his middle fifties, wearing jeans and a black T-shirt under a leather jacket. His iron-gray hair was cut in a Korean War flattop. A good man with a saw and a torch, he could chop a stolen Porsche into spare parts in an hour.
“What’s going on?” he asked, as he slid into the booth.
“You need a starter motor?”
“No. I’m looking for somebody with new money. Somebody who might of hit a woman over in Minneapolis the other day.”
Poppy shook his head. “I know what you’re talkin’ about and I ain’t heard even a tinkle. The dopers are sweatin’ it, because the papers are saying a doper done it and they figure somebody’s got to fall.”
“But not a thing?”
“Not a thing, man. If somebody got paid, it wasn’t over on this side of town. You sure it was a white guy? I don’t know about the coloreds anymore.”
He was looking for a white guy. That’s the way it went: whites hired whites, blacks hired blacks. Equal-opportunity