some shit. Maybe second and a half. With me all the way.â
âAll the way from diapers,â Smokey says, smiling at him, rubbing a cufflink with his thumb and finger under his jacket sleeve. âAll the way from when you was only Lydell Junior.â Back before the âDâ in LyDell got capped. Lydell Senior never made that move. âHe got Nati Boi from what old Ms Willard round the cornerused to call him. And she used to call him that âcause he was one nasty boy. Full of nasty tricks, you was.â
Nati Boi laughs, treating it as a compliment.
âThatâs why Iâm here,â Smokey says, âplaying the dual roles of Mr Straight and Mr Narrow.â
Lydell Senior was gone early. âHe got messed up in some shit,â is all thatâs been said about that by his son, spraying it like smoke over the question as a means of escape. I read it in a print interview. The body language was all recorded, and as expected, drawbridge up. When his son was four, Lydell Seniorâs body was found in a dumpster with two bullets in it and his hands cable-tied. No one says thatâs a robbery, or someone ending up in the wrong place at the wrong time.
âIs it good, working with family?â I try to make it sound like conversation rather than a question.
âAlways,â he says. He smiles.
And thatâs it. I open a small door that might take us to the subject of his parents, his childhood, and he shuts it without drama.
He stands and hands the bag to Eloise. âIâll take it.â
âNo problem, sir.â
She folds the strap over carefully and carries the bag to the counter, where Andie has started scanning the clothes. She puts the bag down with its tag barcode up and starts folding the items Andieâs already processed and placing them in one of two Big Brown Bags.
The bill comes to11,700 for not much. Nati reaches into one of his pockets and brings his hand out like a poker player covering an ace. His credit card clicks against the glass when he sets it down on the counter.
Andie swipes it and watches the small screen on the machine. She presses a button and swipesagain. She takes a look at the magnetic strip on the card and rubs it before trying for a third time.
âThere seems to be a problem with this card,â she says, tentatively. âItâs reading okay, but Iâm not getting authorisation.â
âThe card is good,â Nati tells her. He shuts his mouth firmly and works his jaw muscles.
âIâm sure it is, sir.â She swipes again, then taps the card on the counter while she waits, her eyes fixed on the screen. She is wishing she could be anywhere else, home, on the subway.
Smokey steps across and places his hand over hers, extracting the card.
âIâll just put in a call,â he says quietly. âOr we could try splitting it and use one of my cards for some.â
âWeâre not using your cards, man,â Nati says. He swaps weight from one foot to the other and gives an exasperated sigh. His bodyâs still wired for all the young peopleâs gestures. âWeârenot doing that shit. This is my spree. This is Bloomingdaleâs.â
âI know it.â Smokey turns the card so that itâs face up and runs his eye over its details. âIâll put in a call.â
He takes his phone from an inside jacket pocket, scrolls and finds the number he wants.
âVoicemail,â he tells us once itâs connected.
Iâm close enough to make out the beep at the end of the outgoing message.
âHey Aaron,â he says. âWe got a minor credit card thing going down here, LyDellâs card. Weâre at Bloomingdaleâs and itâs declining eleven seven. Be good to get it fixed ASAP.â
He finishes the call and flicks to another screen. Nati watches him, focuses on him, pushing Bloomingdaleâs to his peripheral vision, blocking it, blocking this