Read Blues in the Night Online
Authors: Dick Lochte
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Organized Crime, #Los Angeles (Calif.), #Man-Woman Relationships, #Mystery & Detective, #Ex-Convicts, #Serial Murder Investigation, #Triangles (Interpersonal Relations), #Suspense, #Los Angeles, #Thrillers, #California, #Crime, #Suspense Fiction
He forgot the pain entirely.
He circled the black Caddy, wondering if Mace had gotten into a scrape where he'd had to jack the car. He tried the door. Locked. So much for the jack theory.
Inside the house a Limey announcer was doing rapid-fire color on a game while a crowd of spectators did a lot of screaming.
What the hell . . .
Paulie decided to call Jamey after all.
But before he could get out the smart phone, his front door opened. Drier was standing there. He gave Paulie a friendly grin and holstered the weapon. âWelcome home,' he said. âWe were worried you might be on a sleepover.'
Corrigan was in the living room, sitting on Paulie's leather couch, drinking one of his special hefeweizens and watching his big flat fifty-three inch monitor. âLeague One football all night long,' the weapons broker said with a grin. âAnd in high-def. You gotta love this country.'
âMake yourself comfortable, why don't ya?' Paulie said. âBeer OK?'
âActually, it tastes like crap. Drier couldn't find any imports.'
âYou're drinking an import. From Germany, where they know a little about making beer.'
âYeah? Well they can put this one back in the horse.' Corrigan placed the bottle on the carpet, grabbed a remote and clicked off the TV before turning to Paulie. âSit down, brother Lacotta. You and I need to chat a bit about brother Mason.'
Paulie took a stuffed leather chair near the couch. âWhat about him?' he asked.
âExactly what team is he playing for?'
âWhat are you talking about?' Paulie asked, the question making him uneasy.
âI . . . bumped into him a few hours ago at Jerry Monte's little shindig,' Corrigan said. âKnow why he was there?'
âSure,' Paulie lied. âBut I don't know why
you
were.'
Corrigan gave him a fake smile. âInterestin' guy, Jerry. We all may be doing some business, down the line.'
âHe got the coin?' Paulie asked, getting to the heart of the matter.
âRegrettably, no. But it's Mason I want to talk about. Why do you think he crashed the party?'
âLooking for the coin,' Paulie said.
âHmmm. There may be some truth to that, but it's not what he told me. He said he was there because he'd fallen under the spell of the lovely Miss Lowell.'
âHe conned you.'
âHe's conning somebody,' Corrigan said.
âThey looked pretty cozy at the party,' Drier said. âAnd when we left, we passed the dame in her car, waiting for somebody. I don't think it was that putz Monte.'
âLet me get this straight,' Paulie said. âYou guys rush right over here and bust into my home? Watch my fucking television? Drink my fucking beer? All this just to let me know my best pal is slipping it to my old girlfriend?'
âTake it down a notch, Lacotta,' Corrigan said. âThe point is, I think they've got the coin and they're selling us out.'
âAlways nice to hear what
you
think,' Paulie said. âHere's what
I
know. Maxil Brox is in town and he says he's gonna burn me alive if he doesn't get the coin by midnight tomorrow.'
Corrigan's hooded eyes opened wide. âBrox? Here? That's bullshit. He wouldn't risk it.'
âYou're batting zero, Corrigan. Not half an hour ago, I was this close to the son of a bitch.'
Corrigan shrugged. âWell, hell, all the more reason to reel in Mason and the broad right now, shake 'em upside down and see if the coin doesn't hit the carpet.'
âHow would that solve my problem?' Paulie asked. âEven if we get the coin, I'm not gonna turn it over to Brox. That still leaves me on the Russkie's list of things to light on fire.'
Corrigan opened his mouth to reply. But instead of speaking, he frowned. He turned toward Drier who drew his gun and started moving silently toward the kitchen area.
âWhat?' Paulie asked.
âYou didn't hear it? A creak,' Corrigan said. âProbably nothing, but, if not, Drier will handle it.'
Paulie saw the big man slip silently into the darkness of the hall leading to the kitchen. âGetting back to Brox,' Corrigan said, âyou let us worry about him. You just concentrate on getting the coin. Why not give brother Mason a call? See what he's up to?'
Paulie took out his phone, turned it on, then shook his head. âHe's a throwback. Doesn't use a phone. But if he's with Angie, we got a tracker on her car.'
âPerfâ' Corrigan began. Instead of completing the word, he paused to reach down and remove a small pistol from an ankle holster.
What happened next in the room was disturbing and potentially mind-blowing. Paulie saw Drier emerging from the shadowy hallway. But he wasn't using his legs. It was like this six-foot-two strongman was floating toward them, eyes closed, lifeless, his head twisted at a very unnatural angle, blood spilling over his lips on to his chin.
Then he was flying.
He collided against the couch, bouncing back against Corrigan just as the gray-haired man was starting to raise his gun.
The giant who had been carrying Drier, who had thrown him like a beach ball, stood in the middle of the living room, grinning at Paulie. Huge. Muscled. Wearing a Superman outfit complete with red cape. Looking like fucking Elvis Presley, pretending to be Superman.
Corrigan had lost the gun. With Drier's body pinning him, he moved his hand frantically trying to retrieve it. Before he could, a man wearing what Paulie thought to be a beautifully tailored Savile Row gray suit, almost danced across the room to pluck the gun from the carpet.
Paulie suddenly remembered the phone in his hand. As the giant advanced toward him, he turned and began walking away.
âThat one's leaving,' he heard the giant announce.
âStop him,' the other man ordered.
Paulie was blinking at the fucking phone, pressing the screen, trying to get it to start recording. It responded with a click, the loudest goddamn click he'd ever heard. He felt the big man getting closer. He saw that there wasn't much memory left, but anything was better than nothing. If he could find some place to putâ.
He didn't get the chance. A hand the size of a honey-cured ham closed around the back of his neck. He thought the giant's fingers and thumb were actually touching under his chin.
âDon't kill him, Timmie,' the thin Limey commanded.
âJesus, no. Don't,' Paulie croaked.
As the big man turned him around, Paulie let the phone slide down his leg to the carpet. He kicked it under a table before Timmie started dragging him to the center of the room.
But . . . what were the odds that it was recording? Or that Mace would show up? And find the phone? And be able to figure out how to operate it?
Still, a guy had to try.
The well-dressed Limey pointed Corrigan's gun at him as he grunted to his feet. âIf either of you gentlemen are in possession of the coin,' he said, ânow would be a propitious time to admit it.'
âMason's got it,' Corrigan said. He was looking at Drier's twisted body and Paulie was surprised to see that the guy was tearing up.
âAnd where might Mr Mason be at this moment?'
Corrigan forced himself to look away. He sniffed and said, âSomewhere with the dame.'
âAh,
cherchez la femme
.' The well-dressed Limey kept the gun trained on Corrigan as he said, âMr Lacotta, did I hear you mention something about a tracking device?'
THIRTY-NINE
I
t was a little before six a.m. in Bayou Royal, Mace realized; approximately the time he usually awoke, preconditioned by the past. His late father's workday had begun around then and he remembered opening his eyes to the murky pre-dawn light, listening to the old man putting his breakfast dishes on the kitchen sink directly beneath his bedroom. Then there'd be solid footsteps moving away to the front door. Then the front door slamming shut as James Duke Mason left for the cannery to prepare for the shrimper families, fathers and sons and even grandfathers, who'd be returning with their early catches.
But, thanks to pollution, the disappearing marshlands, the ruinous oil spill and cheaper imported shrimp from South America and South-East Asia, the business had fallen off. And the cannery had been sold and torn down and replaced by a seafood chain restaurant run by thugs. And his father was dead. And he was in Southern California, where it was nine minutes before four, still very dark outside and inside their motel room.
He lay in bed, staring at the cracked ceiling, listening to Angela's soft, steady breathing as she slept and the sound of surf mixing with the light but constant traffic along the coast highway. He'd assumed he was awake because of his body's natural alarm clock. But the headlights that momentarily swept across the ceiling made him wonder if some sixth sense hadn't put him on the alert.
He slipped from the bed and moved to the window.
The source of the light was a vehicle that had turned into the motel lot and was now parked behind the Mustang in a way that blocked it. It was the black Bentley that had followed him earlier.
He grabbed his pants and put them on while shaking the bed, waking Angela.
âHuh?' she asked, blinking at him in the darkness.
âVisitors,' he said. âWe have to go.'
âWhat visitors?' she asked, getting out of bed.
âI don't know,' he said, forcing himself to stop watching her as she slipped on her shoes and searched the floor for her clothes.
The driver had turned off the Bentley's lights, but Mace could still see puffs of exhaust reflecting the blue of the neon motel sign. The passenger door opened and a large masculine figure separated from the machine. Stepping into the sign's neon glow, the blue-tinged man looked big and powerful and mean.
He stood there, apparently trying to select a likely cabin to invade. Mace was relieved they'd left the Mustang by the motel's entrance, but, as the big man trudged toward the manager's office, he was sorry about exposing the elderly Wally to their trouble.
Angela was nearly dressed. âGive me your phone,' he whispered.
âIt's in the car.'
âOf course it is. You ready?'
âFor what? What's your plan?'
His plan. He moved quietly across the cabin to a screened window that looked out on a canyon road. It didn't matter where the road lead, as long as it was away from the motel.
Removing the screen from the window was about as difficult as zipping his fly, which Mace remembered to do just after helping Angela from the cabin.
There was a distance of about forty feet separating cabins seven and eight where they would be exposed as they headed toward the canyon road. Mace raised a hand, suggesting that Angela stay hidden while he checked the open area to make sure the Bentley and the searcher hadn't changed positions.
He doubted anyone in the sedan would be able to observe their departure. And even if poor Wally had been awake and fully toothed, with their location on his lips, he didn't think the searcher could have gotten a fix on their cabin so quickly. Still, he wanted to check.
He saw no movement in the semicircle in front of the cabins. Satisfied that they had a better than even chance of getting away up the canyon, he took a few steps backward until he was behind the cabin. He heard Angela emit an odd âahh' and was starting to turn when something very hard connected with his skull.
The surprise lasted only a bright and painful few seconds.
âWake opp, you mees-ar-ab-al bastard,' a gruff voice ordered. Mace thought it sounded a little like the former governor of California. He could feel the man's breath and smell its chippino-and-cigar odor. He didn't want to open his eyes. Even though he'd enjoyed several of the ex-governor's movies, he really didn't care to see that lantern-jawed face glaring at him from just a few inches away.
âSlap him awake, Gulik,' another accented voice said.
âHe is awake, Klebek, but I slap him anyway.'
Mace tried to raise his hands, to protect himself. When that didn't work, he tensed for the blow. It was not much of a slap, more like a pat. He opened his eyes.
The face in front of his was far from lantern-jawed. It was small for the attached massive body, and round, and featured a patchy black beard, bloodshot eyes topped by brows that were hairier and thicker than anything on his shaved but gray-stubbled head. Several of his teeth were gold. They glinted in the light of the cabin.
Mace's wrists had been tied to the rear legs of his chair by curtain pulls. His ankles had been tied to the chair's front legs. The bindings placed him in a difficult position in which his limbs were kept immobile by his own weight.
Gulik backed away, allowing Mace to see more of the room. Another big man, whom Gulik had called Klebek and who could have been his uglier brother, sat on the bed where, only a short time ago, he and Angela . . .
Gulik said, âYour pussy in the car with Reiko. Reiko almost as handsome as me. Manhood like baby's arm. Maybe he fucking her. Maybe she sucking him. Either way, she now know what a real man is. Too bad for you.'
Mace surprised them all, including himself, by grinning.
âYou think this funny?' Gulik asked.
âI just had a Popeye moment,' Mace said.
âWhat that mean?'
âPopeye, being threatened by Bluto. Olive Oil in danger.'
âThis guy is moron,' Klebek said.
âWe want coin,' Gulik said.
Mace looked down to see that his right pocket had been ripped from his pants, leaving the pants torn halfway down the leg. âI'm guessing you know I don't have it.'
âYou get coin for us, we give you back your pussy.'
âWhy would I want her, after she's been doing all that stuff with Reiko?'
Gulik scowled. âYou foking with me?'
âI wouldn't fok with you. I leave that to Reiko and his baby's arm.'