braid salon in Southeast. I went in there lookin’ to date this girl, and I see Olivia, got some woman’s hand in her lap, paintin’ it. Y’all know how that is, when you get a look at a certain kind of woman and you say, uh-huh,
yeah
, that right there is gonna be
mine
.”
“You had a lot of girlfriends, Mario?”
“I ain’t gonna lie to you; I been a player my whole life,” said Durham. He smiled then, showing Quinn and Strange two long, protruding front teeth surrounded by space. “But this was different right here.”
“And then she left,” said Quinn.
“She just
up
and left, and I ain’t heard from her since.”
“You two have an argument, something like that?” said Strange.
“We was cool,” said Durham, “far as I know.”
“Where was she staying when she disappeared?”
“She had this apartment, stayed with her son, young boy. They stayed in this place they rented off Good Hope.”
“Her son’s name?”
“Mark.”
“Same last name? Elliot?”
“Uh-huh.”
“And he’s in school?”
“Elementary, down in that area they was stayin’ in, I guess, but I don’t know the name.”
“You try her mother, any other family?” said Strange.
“She never spoke of any kin,” said Durham. “Look, fellas, I’m worried about the girl.”
“Why hire private cops?” said Quinn.
“What my partner means is,” said Strange, “you suspect some kind of foul play, what you need to do is, you need to report it to the police.”
“Black girl goes missin’ in Southeast, police ain’t gonna do shit. But it ain’t like that, anyway. Olivia was the kind of girl, it was a cloudy day or somethin’, it would bust on her groove. She’d be, like, cryin’ her eyes out over somethin’ simple like the weather. I’m worried in the sense that she’s sad, or got the depression, sumshit like that. I just want to know where she is. And if we do have some kind of problem between us, then maybe we can work it out.”
“All right, then,” said Strange. “Give Terry here the details on what you just told us. Addresses, phone numbers, all that.”
Strange went out to the reception area while Quinn took the information. He phoned Raymond Ives, Granville Oliver’s attorney, and left a message on his machine informing him that he was making progress on the gathering of countertestimony against Phillip Wood. When Strange returned to his office, Mario Durham was standing out of his chair. He wasn’t but five and a half feet tall, and he couldn’t have weighed more than a hundred twenty-five pounds.
“We all set, then,” said Durham.
“Just give my office manager out there your deposit on your way out,” said Strange, “and we’ll get going on this right away.”
“Fifty, right?”
“A hundred, just like Janine told you when you spoke to her on the phone.”
“Damn, y’all about to bankrupt a man.”
“It’s a hundred. But this shouldn’t take too long. Our rate is thirty-five an hour, and if it comes out to be under the hundred, then you’re gonna get what we didn’t earn back.”
“Put a rush on it, hear? I can’t even afford the hundred, seein’ as I’m in between jobs right now. I’m just anxious to see my girl.”
Durham began to walk from the room. Greco got up and followed him, sniffing at the back of his Tommys as he walked. Greco growled some, and Durham quickened his step. Greco stopped walking as Durham passed through the doorway. Quinn shut the office door.
“Animal doesn’t like you,” said Strange, “must be a reason.”
“We don’t usually ask for one-hundred-dollar deposits, Derek.”
“I made an exception for him.”
“It’s because he’s black, right?”
“It’s because he’s a no-account knucklehead. That hundred’s the only money we’re ever gonna see out of him. He’s got no job, wouldn’t even give Janine a fixed address. Said if we needed to get him we could look up a friend of his called Donut in Valley Green.”
“Donut,