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“Is this why you came without your cop?” Brian asked him as they walked one of the meaner streets.

“One of the reasons.” Absently, Roarke fingered the mini-blaster in his pocket. “We have different methods of interviewing a witness.”

Brian patted his own pocket, and the leather sap inside. “I recall getting my face busted a time or two by the cops.”

“She can bust faces herself, but she tends to let the other throw the first punch. Her way’s effective, believe me, but it takes longer, and I want this done.”

He worried the wedding ring on his finger as he walked along a street his cop would have recognized. She couldn’t have read the graffiti as most of it was in the Gaelic that had come into fashion with street toughs when he’d been a boy. But she’d have understood the meaning where it smeared the pocked sides of buildings, and have understood the faces of the men who loitered in doorways.

Here a child would learn how to pinch a wallet from an unguarded pocket before he learned to read. And that child would be put to bed at night more often with a backhand rather than a kiss.

He knew this street, too. It had spawned him.

“She’s irritated with me,” Roarke said at length. “Hell, she’s right pissed, and I deserve it. But I couldn’t have her with me for this, Bri. I’ll kill him if it comes to it. I couldn’t have her in the middle of that.”

“Well now, how could you? No place for a wife or a cop, is it?”

It wasn’t. No, it wasn’t. But if he dealt death today, he’d have to tell her of it. And he wasn’t sure what it would do to what they’d become. He wasn’t sure if she would ever look at him the same way again.

They went inside one of the ugly concrete boxes on the hard edge of the district. The stink of urine took him back to his own childhood. The sharp sting of it, the softer stench of vomit. It was the kind of place where rats didn’t wait until dark to come hunting, and where violence was so thick it clogged the corners like greased grime.

Roarke looked toward the stairs. There were twenty units in the building, he knew, twelve of them officially occupied, with squatters in some of the rest. Few who lived in such a place worked by day, so there was likely forty or fifty people at home or within earshot of a shout.

He doubted any would interfere. In such circumstances, people minded their own, unless it was to their advantage to do otherwise.

He had money in his pocket along with the blaster, and would use whichever came most easily into play to convince anyone who needed convincing that he was conducting private business.

“Ground floor for Grogin,” Roarke said. “Easy in and out.”

“You want me to go outside, round to the window in case he gets past you?”

“He won’t get past me.” Roarke knocked, then stepped to the side so Brian was in view of the Judas hole.

“What the fucking hell do you want?”

“A moment of your time, if you will, Mr. Grogin. I have a business opportunity I believe could be mutually profitable for both of us.”

“Is that so?” There was a snorting laugh. “Well then, come right into my office.”

He opened the door, and Roarke stepped through.

The man looked old. Not so old as O’Leary, but much more used. His face hung in sags at the jaw, and his cheeks were an explosion of broken blood vessels. But his reflexes remained sharp. A knife appeared in his hand, a hand that moved as quick and smooth as a magician’s. But even as he started to sneer his eyes widened on Roarke’s face.

“You’re dead. Saw you myself. How’d you climb out of hell, Paddy?”

“Wrong Roarke.” Roarke bared his teeth. And rammed his fist into Grogin’s face.

He had the knife in his own hand now, and crouching, held it to Grogin’s throat before Brian could finish shutting the door.

Not a soul had stirred into the hallway beyond.

“Still as quick as ever you were,” Brian said.

“What’s this about? What the fucking hell is this about?”

“Remember me, Mr. Grogin, sir?” Roarke spoke softly, a voice smooth as satin as he let Grogin feel the point of the blade. “You used to backhand me for sport.”

“Paddy’s boy.” He licked his lips. “Now, come, you’re not holding a grudge all these years, are ya? A boy n

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