No need to come back. No need to stand at another parent’s graveside. Go about your business. This is over. You are excused.

He rubbed the face of his watch with his thumb.

“I don’t know where I fit in there, sir.”

Barlolome nodded.

“Let’s take a look. Trust-fund family. Deerfield Academy. Whatever the hell that is. Columbia BA. Stanford Ph.D. Doesn’t sound like someone in need of solid job prospects.”

He folded back another sheet of paper.

“And, well, you’re not shy about use of force, but you’ve got no complaints of merit in here. Good collection of busts, but nothing that smells like you enjoy snapping the bracelets on. Doesn’t read like a guy gets stiff from pushing people around.”

He rolled the paper into a tube and pointed it at Park.

“What this is, this is the account of an educated young white man with a genuine desire to do the right thing and serve his community.”

Park was twisting his wrist back and forth, letting the movement propel the self-winding mechanism inside the watch.

It had been his father’s, a 1970 Omega Seamaster, a gift from his wife, given in turn to Park the same day he was excused from future funerals. His father taking it from his own wrist, handing it to him with these words, It’s a good watch. When they start dropping the bombs in a couple years, it wont be knocked out by an electromagnetic pulse. Even in the apocalypse, someone should know the correct time, Parker.

He twisted his wrist a little more quickly.

“Is that an accusation, sir?”

Bartolome let the papers unroll in his hand, showed them to Park.

“No. It’s just what I need. An educated young white who can talk to other educated young whites. The kind of people who not only have enough money to buy drugs but enough to be able to afford to be discriminating about who they buy them from. People who don’t want to circle MacArthur park in their Mercedes. People who want to call a discreet phone number, place an order, and have it delivered. Like sushi. People like that, Officer Haas.”

He leaned close.

“Those are the only kind of people who can afford to buy Dreamer.”

Park stopped twisting his wrist.

“Sir.”

Bartolome put the roll of papers on his desk.

“Have you seen anyone with it yet? Close up. Someone you know?”

Park touched the watch without looking at it.

“My mother. But I didn’t see her. She died fast.”

“Good.”

Bartolome nodded twice.

“That’s good. One of my brothers got it early. Before the test. When they still thought it was a virus. Quarantine. Nonstop tissue samples. Experimental treatment. On top of the fucking thing itself. His last week, that was when they allowed the first human Dreamer trials. His number got drawn, but he was in the placebo group. I saw a woman who got the real thing. She slept. She dreamed. Woke up, she smiled, talked to her family. She’d been screaming nonstop for five days before that. Covered in lesions. Those went away, too.”

He looked at another picture on the wall: dress blues, the day he got his bars, between his two cop brothers, arms draped over one another’s shoulders.

He looked away.

“Afronzo-New Day Pharm has finally agreed to a federally brokered deal to lease the patent on Dreamer internationally. A-ND will have to settle for profiting just a little less obscenely on this deal than they would have. Man, they can nationalize the banks, car manufacturers, utilities, and telecom, but as long as Big Pharm is still in the black those cocksuckers in Congress will scream ‘free market’ like someone nominated Marx for President.”

He rubbed his nose and grunted.

“Anyway, no telling how long it will take for overseas production to ramp up, and even when it does, if it ever does, demand is going to stay way ahead of supply. But that’s over the borders and across the seas, and I don’t have the energy to give a shit. For the time being America has all there is and everyone wants it and we have to keep people from killing each other for it. To wit, FDA is going to take it off Schedule A and invent something called Schedule Z. Totally regulated. Distributed out of hospital pharmacies only. Administered directly by hospital personnel to admitted patients. One dose at a time. Rare exceptions will be possible for hospice and home care, limited scrips, signed by two doctors. Every box, every bottle has an RFID tag. Small batch produced, the pills in each batch will have three unique identifying features.”

He put both hands on top of his head, fingers knitted.

“Everyone at least knows someone who has someone close who’s had SLP. Pretty soon, everyone’s gonna have someone they know well. Someone they love. Trade in Dreamer, if it hits the street, that’ll cause a war. The stuff that’s already out there, the counterfeits, that low-grade Southeast Asian knockoff junk; we’d like to cut it off, but that’s not our mandate. We’ll be working DR33M3R, the real stuff. A bottle here or there, a few dozen pills, that’s gonna happen. But we can’t have this stuff hitting the street in quantity. Busts of scale, that’s what we’ll be after.”

Park crimped the bill of his cap.

“People have to know distribution is fair and equal and blind to money, class, and color. People can’t start thinking it’s only for the rich and the white.”

Bartolome eyeballed him.

“Haas, to hell with what people think. Eighties crack? You know anything about how bad that was? You don’t. You weren’t here. It was bad. This, Dreamer, this is the highest-profit-margin dope in history. What I’m concerned about is a drug war. If someone figures out how to intercept the distribution chain or manufacture a quality clone, we’ll go from the skirmishes out there straight to trench warfare in days. Some local cartel starts pulling down Dreamer money, they’ll be outfitting their people with Russian and Chinese military ordnance. We’ll need a flyover just to patrol Crenshaw.”

Park nodded.

“What kind of resources are they committing?”

Bartolome blew out his cheeks.

“At the Fed? Got me. LAPD?”

He unlaced his fingers and pointed at himself and then at Park.

“No expense spared.”

He put his hands back on top of his head.

“So, Officer Hass.”

He rocked back in his chair.

“Does this sound like the kind of duty you’re suited for?”

Park stood, fitted his cap onto his head, settled the weight of his weapon on his hip, and nodded.

“Yes, it does, sir.”

Bartolome closed his eyes.

“Welcome to Seven Y, Narcotics Special Units. Go back to Van Nuys and clear your shit out of your locker. Anyone asks, you got transferred to Venice. That’ll make them hate you even more.”

Park stayed where he was.

Bartolome opened one eye.

“Yeah?”

Park scratched the side of his neck.

“One thing.”

“Yeah?”

Park touched his badge.

“I’m not good at lying.”

Bartolome rolled his eye.

“It’ll come to you, Haas.”

Parker nodded, turned to the door.

“Haas.”

He stopped.

“Sir?”

“Hear your wife is pregnant.”

“Yes, sir.”

“A kid, that will make this kind of thing a lot harder.”

Park didn’t say anything.

Bartolome opened his other eye.

“You like that, don’t you?”

Park didn’t say anything.


Перейти на страницу:
Изменить размер шрифта: