Will watched them go into the building, then turned back to the boy. “Cedric?” he asked. “That’s your name, right?”
The boy nodded.
“Come with me.” He held out his hand but the child gave an ugly frown.
“I ain’t no kid, bitch.”
Will sighed. He leaned against the mailboxes, tried to make this go a little easier. “I just need to ask you some questions.”
Cedric echoed his sister. “I ain’t got nothing to say to you.” His lower lip went out in an exaggerated pout and he crossed his stick-thin arms over his chest in an imitation of a gangster. Will would have laughed but for the fact that the kid probably had more access to weapons than most cops did.
“Hey,” Will began, trying another tactic. “What did the number zero say to the number eight?”
Cedric shrugged, but Will could tell he was curious.
“ ‘Nice belt.’ ”
Cedric’s mouth went up in a smile before he caught himself. “That was lame, man.”
“I know,” Will admitted. “I’m just trying to get you to talk to me.”
“Nothin’ to talk about.”
“Did you know Aleesha?”
His bony shoulders went up in another shrug, but he was still a child and hadn’t yet mastered the ability to hide his emotions.
“Aleesha was a friend of yours?” Will guessed. “Maybe she looked out for you?”
Again, the shoulders went up.
“I asked around about her, you know? Asked some friends about her. Seemed to me that she was a really nice lady.”
Cedric stubbed his toe against the concrete. “Maybe.”
“Did she look out for you?”
“My granny told me to keep away because of what Leesha did.”
“Yeah,” Will said. “I guess Aleesha didn’t have a very good job. But she was nice to you, wasn’t she?”
This time, he nodded.
“It’s hard to lose a friend.”
“My cousin Ali died last year. Got shot in his bed.”
Will knelt down in front of the boy. “Did you see something that night, Cedric?”
His eyes were red with tears he obviously didn’t want to fall.
“You can tell me, Cedric. I’m not going to hurt you. I’m not going to get you into any trouble downtown. All I care about is finding out who killed Aleesha, because she was a good lady. You know she was a good lady. She looked out for you and now it’s time you looked out for her.”
“I can’t tell you nothing.”
Will parsed the sentence. “Can’t or won’t?” He thought of something. “Did somebody threaten you? Maybe Baby G?”
Cedric shook his head.
“I’m just trying to find out who hurt your friend.” Will tried, “You can trust me.”
The child’s gaze turned hard, and the gangster face came back. “Trust ain’t a word I know.”
Will hadn’t grown up in the Homes, but as a kid, he had confided in plenty of adults who wouldn’t—or couldn’t—help him. There was no telling who was good or bad. A shiny badge did not necessarily help point the way.
“You see this?” Will asked, putting his finger to the side of his face, touching the scar that twisted its way down his neck. “This is what I got once for telling on somebody. I wasn’t that much older than you.”
Cedric tilted his head, looked at the scar. “Did it hurt?”
“At first,” Will admitted. “But then I couldn’t feel it anymore, and when I woke up, I was in a hospital.”
“Were you sick?”
“I lost a lot of blood.”
“Were you going to die?”
Will had wanted to, but he had told the story to draw out Cedric, not confess his darkest secrets. “The doctors took care of me.”
The boy stared at the scar a moment longer before he nodded his approval. On the streets, a near-death experience was a badge of honor, especially if it came by dangerous means.
Will reached into his pocket and took out a business card. “This is my cell phone number, okay? You think of anything, or just need to talk, you call me. All right? It doesn’t even have to be about Aleesha.”
Cedric glanced at Will’s scar again, then quickly palmed the card in case anyone was watching. “Can I go now?”
“Yeah,” Will said. “But you call me, okay? Call me day or night.”
“Right.” He darted off, his hand trailing down the row of mailboxes as he headed for the street.
Will straightened, turning around to see Michael walking across the parking lot again, this time without Jasmine. As the other man got closer, Will saw that he had a scratch down the side of his face. Blood was trickling into his collar.
Will looked back at the building, then at Michael. “You okay?”
“She hit me. Can you believe that? What is she, twelve?” He shook his head, more shocked than angry. “I was following her up the stairs and before I knew it, she bolted. I went after her, grabbed her leg, and the little thing turned around and whapped me across the face with her fist.” He slung out his own fist to illustrate. “Good thing she punched me like a girl, huh?” Will had never understood that phrase. He’d only ever had one woman punch him, and Angie always put her shoulder into it.
Michael was staring back up at the building. A curtain twitched, and he said, “That’s her place. Third floor up.”
“Is her mother home?”
“Shit,” he said, his tone asking if Will was actually that stupid. Michael touched the gash on his cheek then looked at the blood on the tips of his fingers. “I guess her fingernail caught me or something. Does it look bad?”
“Not too bad,” Will lied. He took out his handkerchief and offered it to Michael. “Do you want to go get her or something?”
“What? Throw the cuffs on her and get my picture on the nightly news for roughing up a child? No thank you. Besides, she wouldn’t talk to us now if her hair was on fire.” He sat on the curb with a groan. Will didn’t know what else to do but join him.
Michael laughed again. “Christ, she got me.” He looked at the dots of blood on the handkerchief. “I should’ve let you handle her. Maybe she would have responded to a softer touch.” He realized what he’d said. “Hey, no offense—”
“Don’t worry about it.”
“Still,” Michael said, folding the handkerchief in two, then pressing it to his cheek again. He said, “I didn’t know people still carried these.”
“Old habit,” Will admitted. Ms. Flannery had made all the boys in the state home carry handkerchiefs in their pockets. Will had never questioned the practice, just assumed that it was something normal boys did.
Michael asked, “You get anything from her brother?”
“Cedric’s not talking.”
“You think he knows anything?”
Will did, but for some reason he felt the need to lie. “No. He doesn’t know anything.”
“You sure?”
“Positive,” Will said. “He’s got a big mouth. He would’ve talked.”
“You’re lucky he didn’t kick you in the balls or something.” Michael folded the handkerchief again and started to hand it back to Will. “Sorry,” he said, taking it back. “I’ll get my wife to clean this for you.”