for a few minutes, but I couldnât quite see what he was doing up there. It looked like he was fixing something. But the power was still off for the whole block. Maybe he was trying to fix it.
Maybe. But no one was trying to fix the power anywhere else. And I doubted that one little transformer was why it was down.
Mysteries never end. But you canât solve them all. Not in one day, at least.
Â
I drove toward the Magnolia Projects. The projects were closed. I didnât know if theyâd been closed before or after the stormâlike a lot of cities, New Orleans was shutting down its projects and sending people out into the world with Section 8 vouchers. Across the street was a blue shotgun house. The shotgun was missing its back wall. The side walls folded in where the back wall was missing.
On the porch was a young girl of maybe seventeen with a pretty face and black hair in a ponytail. Her legs dangled where stairs used to be. Next to her was a boy about twelve, just as pretty. The girl was smoking a cigarette, or a joint, passing it to the boy, who had a few drags before handing it back.
I parked the truck and got out and walked toward them. The girl watched me and the boy watched a tree on the street. The tree lay on its side, roots sticking out like arms. The girl smoked the cigarette. Up close I saw it was long and thin like a hand-rolled joint, but brown and wrinkled, as if it had been wet. Whatever they were smoking, it smelled sour. It wasnât pot. The girl handed it to the boy, ignoring me.
âAre you Lali?â I asked the girl.
She looked at me.
âLali?â I asked again.
She nodded.
I gave her my spiel of who I was and what I was doing and what I wanted. She looked down at the ground beneath the porch while I talked. She didnât seem to be listening. They passed the cigarette back and forth.
âI ainât feel good,â she said when I was done. âI think Iâm sick.â
Her accent was so thick I had to translate in my head as she spoke. She looked sick. She looked listless and her hair was dull and broken. If she was in Westchester sheâd be on thirty different meds and seeing three kinds of therapists. Here, she got a folding house.
I asked her if she remembered seeing Andray that night.
âI dunno,â she said. She didnât look at me. âAndray? Shit, Iainât seen him in, I donât know. Long time. During the storm? I see Terrell. Thatâs who I see during the storm. Terrell and Trey. And Peanut too. I seen him.â
I pulled myself up on the porch and sat down next to her.
âAndray might be in trouble,â I said. âYou might be his only alibi.â
She laughed. It sounded like nothing was funny and nothing ever had been.
â
Andray
,â she said. â
That
mothafucka.â
The boy reached into his pants and pulled out a .44 Magnum. I watched him. He didnât point the gun at me or Lali. He pointed it at the tree. Lali seemed not to notice.
âShit,â she said. âI ainât remember nothing. That was fucked up. I ainât remember seeing Andray nowhere.â
âIâm not a cop,â I said to her. âIâm trying to keep Andray out of jail, not put him in.â
I explained the situation to her again. She didnât listen. She took a big hit off her cigarette and exhaled toward my face. It smelled sour and acidic.
âWhat is that, anyway?â I asked.
The boy shot the tree.
Lali and I both jumped in place. When the shot hit the tree a bunch of living things rushed out of it: squirrels ran in a panic across the street, pigeons flew away in terror. The boy fell back from the blast and a quick smile flashed across his face.
I reached over and grabbed the gun from the boy.
âFuck,â he said. âI need that.â
He looked at me. He looked scared. I gave him back his gun.
âThem fuckers was laughing at me,â he said.
âThe
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