key. The window and broken glass were just for show. It was a pointed, if unsophisticated, sleight of hand, and more effort than he imagined the average two-bit crook, looking for tools or jewelry or cash for drugs, would bother with. It suggested that Jay had walked in on something he didnât as yet understand.
The phone on Eddie Maeâs desk rang.
The sound so startled Jay that the dustpan dropped from his hand.
It fell straight to the floor, the metal edge cutting into the soft pine, leaving a small dent in the wooden board beneath Jayâs tennis shoes. As he reached across her desk for the telephone, he knocked over a picture frame and Eddie Maeâs dish of butterscotch candy. On the other end of the line, he heard a light cough, and then a familiar voice. âEverything all right down there, Counselor?â
It was Rolly Snow.
He was calling from the alley behind the Hyatt Regency, where Town Cars two, four, and six of his fleet of Lincolns wereparked, waiting to pick up any stragglers from Sandy Wolcottâs victory party, which was still raging, her supporters reveling in the nightâs surprising turn of events. Axel Hathorne had been favored to win by a wide margin, with more than 50 percent of the vote, to become the Bayou Cityâs first black mayor. But the race had quickly tightened when Wolcott entered, late and hot on the fuel of her newfound fame. Sheâd beaten Charlie Luckman, arguably the best defense attorney in the state, in a high-profile murder trial last year, one that brought her national attention and a spot on Court TV offering hours of analysis during the O.J. trial. She got a six-figure book deal. She went on Oprah . And it didnât take long for somebody to see in her rising star a shot at city hall. Wolcott quickly got her name on the ballot, stealing Axel Hathorneâs law-and-order platform right out from under him, and now the two of them were heading into a runoff in thirty days. The party at the Hyatt showed no signs of slowing. If Rolly was lucky, some drunk potentate or campaign official would forget which car heâd arrived in and slide into the back of one of Rollyâs Rolling Elegance Town Cars instead. In a black suit and his Stacy Adams, a black braid tucked beneath the starched collar of his shirt, he had been catching a smoke with two of his drivers, sharing a plate of shrimp theyâd paid a busboy twenty bucks to hand-deliver, when ADT called. Rollyâs was the second name on the alarm companyâs contact sheet. He called Jayâs house first. It was Ellie whoâd told him her dad wasnât home.
âSheâs still up?â
âWas when I called.â
Jay sighed. Heâd told that girl to get off the phone.
It was the last thing heâd said before he walked out the door. She had a trigonometry test in the morning, and heâd told her in no uncertain terms to hang up the phone and go to bed. This was almost becoming a nightly thing with them, this tug-of-warover the telephone. It wasnât boys yet, that he knew of. Just a couple of girlfriends, Lori King being the closest, who had a near cannibalistic attraction to each other, gobbling up every word, every breath swirling between them, as they talked and talked for hours on endâthe same girls who looked at Jay blankly if he asked them so much as what they had for lunch that day, the classes they were taking this fall, or even the names of their siblings. They were a species of which he had no field knowledge, sly and chameleonlike. In the presence of an adult, and especially one who was asking too many questions, they went as stiff and dull as tree bark. Tonight was the first time heâd let Ellie stay alone with Ben. There was no way to get a sitter this late, and Rolly, he knew, was working, and uninterested, frankly, in meeting two cops at Jayâs office. Heâd had no choice but to leave, to lock the front door and promise heâd be