post-trial motions as ready as they could be for now. But there was one thing left.
Ernesto Ramirez.
One of those things, not slipping through the cracks exactly but never making the cut as the top priority. He’d told me to go scratch my ass when I’d visited him at the YMCA—what was that, three months ago now? I told him I’d keep his information anonymous, and he’d had a ready answer: They’ll know.
Right. It was the night Emily was born. I’d driven straight home from the Y and taken Talia to Mercy General, where she spent eleven hours in labor before our little gift showed up, red-faced and fussy.
I was feeling a surge of momentum. Things had gone perfectly today. If I could just pull this one last rabbit out of the hat—
I meandered to the corner of the conference room and dialed him on my cell phone. The phone rang twice before he answered.
“Hello?”
“Ernesto? Jason Kolarich. The lawyer who—”
“Yes, Jason.” Curt and hostile.
“I’m out of time here, so I’ll be blunt—”
“I don’t have anything to say to you. You understand? Nothing.”
“Wait. Just—hang on. I can protect you. I can have the government protect you as a material wit—”
“The government. Yeah, the government. Man, you don’t get it.”
“Then help me get—”
“Listen to me. Listen. Don’t ever call me again. I got nothing to say.”
A loud click followed. I sighed and closed up the phone. I turned to find Riley, Lightner, and Hector Almundo staring at me.
“Ernesto Ramirez,” I explained.
“Ernesto—oh, Jesus, kid.” Lightner chuckled. “Dead . . . end.” Hector looked up from his plate of chicken and rice that we’d catered in. He was looking better today than he had for a while. We’d taken blow after blow in the prosecution’s case-in-chief, but things had gone well today, and his expression seemed to reflect the turn of events. Hector generally liked to keep up a brave front. He was a stubbornly proud man who did not like to show weakness; it made our relationship with him difficult at times. He was quick to anger and seemed to hold grudges, which probably made him an effective politician. It also explained, in my mind, the reason for his divorce almost eight years ago, though Joel Lightner had favored another theory—that Hector’s true tastes didn’t run toward the female gender.
He had a good politician’s story. He’d grown up on mean streets and dropped out of high school but eventually returned and got a college and legal education to boot. He started at the bottom of city government but worked his way up quickly, having thrown in a few extracurricular hours on the mayor’s political campaign to win a few chits. He got fairly close to the mayor—as close as he could, probably more an alliance than friendship—and ultimately took a shot at the senate seat and won. He was a street fighter. He went after his opponents ferociously. He’d put Joey Espinoza’s head on a stick if he could. And yes, we figured he probably did engineer this extortion scheme with the Columbus Street Cannibals, though we thought the murder of Adalbert Wozniak was beyond even Hector’s capacity.
“Who’s Ernesto Ramirez?” Hector asked.
“Guy we met during the canvas,” said Lightner. “He runs a nonprofit called La Otra Familia or something. He was a mentor to Eddie Vargas. We asked him for information and he said he didn’t know nuthin-bout-nuthin. Like a hundred other people said. But this guy Ramirez, he must have scratched his cheek or averted his eyes or something when he answered, so young Jason here is convinced he holds information that could break the entire case wide open.”
Paul smirked. Lightner and Riley liked to point out my youthful vigor—read näiveté—from time to time.
But I had built up some additional credibility after today. Hector looked at me quizzically.
“The guy’s a former Latin Lord and he’s still close to them,” I explained. “Whatever it