The Reformed

The Reformed by Tod Goldberg Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: The Reformed by Tod Goldberg Read Free Book Online
Authors: Tod Goldberg
Tags: Fiction, General, Suspense, Thrillers, Mystery & Detective, Crime
yours?” he asked.
    “Yes,” I said.
    “Nineteen seventy-three?” he asked.
    “Nineteen seventy-four,” I said.
    “Original interior?”
    “It’s had a few accidents,” I said, though I opted not to tell him the number of times I’d fixed bullet holes in the leather ... or the scrubbing that goes into getting scorch marks out ... or, well, the periodic exercise involved with removing blood. “But yes, the original interior.”
    “The body looks good. You should lower it,” he said.
    “Not my style,” I said.
    The kid considered this. “Then at least you should buff out the bullet marks on the passenger’s side.”
    “I’m going to get on that,” I said.
    “You pull it to the auto shop around back. I’ll do it free of charge. Good practice, homes. Know what I’m saying?”
    Unfortunately, I did.
    I looked at Sam. “You got twenty minutes?” I said.

4
     
    Dealing with a source or a confidential informant is always a dicey proposition, but Sam Axe had made it into a kind of performance art. The way he figured it, people wanted to tell you their deepest and darkest secrets, because what fun is it knowing something salacious if you can’t revel in the knowledge with a friend? And maybe over a couple of beers? And maybe, in some cases, earn some cash for what you know?
    The issues were always the same with people in the know, however: The more you used them for important information, the more power they began to accrue, and thus the more demands they’d start to make for the privilege of giving you what you needed. So Sam tried not to use the same sources more than one or two times. And at all times, Sam tried to keep his sources feeling like what they were sharing was an act of friendship. What better way to show that you like someone than to give up information on a third party? It was a lesson the FBI would have been smart to pick up on—back when they had Sam informing on Michael’s whereabouts, it was never even posed as an issue of friendship. It was always under a veil of threats: Do this or lose your retirement package, lose your health benefits, get audited for the rest of your life.
    So when Sam called K-Dog Dorsey to see if he might want to meet up for drinks, he didn’t bother to let him know that he intended to pump him for information. The last thing any ex-con wants is to be questioned. The best way to get information out of someone like K-Dog is to perform a subtle form of conversational manipulation that involves, well, making him talk about things that would make him sound like a tough guy.
    Problem was, Sam had to drink K-Dog’s pruno in the process of this conversation, which meant there was a high likelihood he’d forget salient details in the process. So he did what any good operative would do: He wired himself. He also took a cab to K-Dog’s, since there was an even higher likelihood he’d be far past the legal limit to drive just by breathing the air in K-Dog’s house. He was pretty sure K-Dog brewed his concoction in a more sterile environment than the prison toilet he learned his trade with, but, nevertheless, Sam also brought some antibiotics to the party, too.
    Of all his preparations, the antibiotics seemed like the smartest move to Sam after only a few minutes in K-Dog’s home. It was the sheer amount of animal hair in the place that got Sam spooked. It floated in the air. It was stuck to the walls. It covered the sofa Sam sat on. How could a person live with that much dog hair? At some point, wouldn’t it get into the food supply? Sam didn’t like to cast aspersions on how other people lived, but in this case he felt like maybe K-Dog needed an intervention from someone who really cared about him. Unfortunately, Sam didn’t really care about him that deeply, so he was in something of a pickle.
    K-Dog walked into the living room, holding a pitcher of pruno in one hand and two glasses in the other. At least all three of those things looked clean, though all would

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