“I’m just happy it wasn’t worse,” one man said in an article in the
Wells had walked the neighborhood every night since Shafer had put him here, and he was certain the surveillance ended there — no walkers, no truly undercover cars, no snipers or peepers. He was almost offended. They didn’t seem to know or care how easily he could lose them. At a little convenience store on A Street, he bought himself a Coke, then walked home, the Fords trailing. Almost ten o’clock. Wells settled on his stoop and waited for the right cab. Capitol Hill hadn’t completely gentrified this far east; he saw the occasional dog walker, but the street was mostly quiet. Televisions glowed their eerie blue in the windows across the street. Wells sipped his Coke and smiled at the surveillance team in the Ford, fighting the urge to wave. He felt like a kid about to go off the high dive for the first time all summer.
a c a b w i t h tinted windows rolled up. Perfect. Wells flagged it.
“Okay if I sit in front?”
The driver, a black man in his fifties, sized him up. On the radio an Orioles — Red Sox game had just gone into the eleventh inning.
“Sure. Watch my hat.” A brown fedora lay on the seat. Wells slid in.
“Where to?”
“East Cap. Benning Road.”
“Get out.” East Cap, two miles east on the other side of the Ana costia River, was one of D.C.’s poorest neighborhoods, nearly all public housing. Cabbies didn’t like going there even during the day. Wells handed the guy a twenty. “There’ll be more.”
The guy eyed him suspiciously. “Looking for rock?”
“No.”
“’Cause I won’t help you.”
“No drugs, I swear.”
“Pussy?”
“No pussy.”
They rolled off.
“What’s your name?” Wells said.
“Walter.”
Wells laughed involuntarily, a short sharp bark.
“My name funny?”
“I just met another Walter. He didn’t trust me either.”
“You strange, you know that?”
On the radio an Oriole batter doubled. “You like the Orioles over the Nationals?” Wells said.
“Been rooting for that team too long to change now. Yourself?”
“Gotta tell you I’m a Red Sox fan. But I love extra innings, any game.”
“Better than the Yankees.”
They swung past RFK Stadium onto the viaduct that crossed the Anacostia and 295, a busy commuter highway that paralleled the river. The Fords followed. The Friday-night traffic on East Cap was heavy in both directions, Wells saw happily.
“You know somebody’s following us?”
Wells handed Walter another twenty. “Two of ’em. They’re friends. We’re playing a game.”
“Game.” Walter looked at Wells.
“It’s called lose the man.”
“I want no part of this shit.”
“How ’bout for another hundred?”
Walter flopped open his jacket to show Wells a battered revolver.
“You starting to piss me off.”
Wells shook his head. “What about two hundred? That’s all I got.”
They came off the viaduct and up a hill. Walter looked hard at Wells. “Man. you get in my cab. ” Walter shook his head.
“You not a cop.”
“I’ll get out now if you want.”
Walter pursed his lips. He seemed to be flipping a coin in his mind. Then he nodded. “A hundred’s fine. What next?”
“How well you know East Cap?”
“Better ’n you, I suspect. I grew up here.”
They cruised down toward the light where Benning and East Capitol intersected. Beyond that another hill led up to the city’s worst projects. To their right an overgrown park, really an urban forest, loomed over the road like a bad dream. Here there be dragons.
“Okay. Stay on East Cap. Come out of the light fast. When we get up the hill, find a break in traffic they can’t make.
“You gonna roll out.”
“I’ll be fine.”