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
âDo much surveillance work?'
âSome. A while ago, me and this other guy, Jamey Scalise, was keepin' tabs on cars comin' and goin' at a place up near Frisco. Big fucking joint. Commingore.'
âCommingore Industries?' Mace asked.
âThat's the one. They make weapons. Guns, missiles and shit.'
âRight.'
âThe way things are going these days, not a bad business to be in,' Wylie said. âI figure Mr Lacotta's interested because he and the big boss, Mr Montdrago, got some deal cookin' with 'em.'
Mace didn't bother asking what the deal might be. Paulie sure as hell wouldn't have given Wylie that information. âSee anything interesting while you were clocking the place?'
Wylie shrugged. âAll we did was copy license plate numbers and turn 'em in. After a couple weeks, we got the word to come back home. My next surveillance job is this one.'
Mace wondered if there might not be a connection between the two gigs.
Wylie poured another shot into Mace's tumbler, then his own. âAnyway. I really need this job. I mean, if you told Mr Lacotta about the hooker . . .'
âForget about it,' Mace said. He downed the whiskey, cleared his throat and said, âGet some sleep. I'll roust you at four.'
Wylie nodded and moved to the bed. He dropped his pants, giving Mace another look at the ridiculous mosquito boxers. He sat on the bed, winced, and pulled a used rubber from under his thigh.
Mace leaned forward. âOh, lemme get rid of that for you,' he said.
Wylie held out the contraceptive.
Mace turned away from him, shaking his head sadly.
SEVEN
A
ngela Lowell was asleep, her blonde hair fanned out on the pillow. The thick art book she'd been reading lay nearly submerged in the bed's thick down duvet. Mace stood beside the bed, watching her. She was only partially covered by the duvet. He found her, in peaceful slumber, to be the most beautiful woman he had ever seen. Achingly beautiful.
Her right arm was raised high on the pillow. Her full right breast had freed itself from the beribboned neckline of her sheer nightgown.
Something â an intake of his breath, a slight shifting of air current â caused her to stir.
She opened her eyes. And looked directly at him.
She smiled at him. For some reason this did not surprise him in the least.
He bent toward her and she lifted her arms to welcome him, to enfold him. Playfully, she pulled him down on top of her.
The mere touching of their lips ignited her. Her fingers tightened on his back. She breathed heavily, drawing him toward her with an urgency he, too, was feeling. Her tongue, hot and hard and pointy-tipped, slipped into his mouth.
She began tearing the clothes from his body. First the white shirt, then the belt. Fingers fumbling.
He tried to help, but, almost angrily, she insisted on doing the job herself.
He lay down on the bed and watched her remove his clothes.
She seemed fascinated by his erection. Lovingly, she began to caress it.
He moaned. He had not been with a woman in such a long time . . .
He heard his name being called.
âNo,' Angela shouted, her lovely brow wrinkled in anger. âNot now.'
She rose up and straddled him, working frantically to place him inside her. He arched his pelvis, feeling the velvety softness yieldâ
âMace,' Wylie hissed in his ear. âYou gotta get up.'
Mace awoke from the dream to a room filled with sunlight. Just a few seconds more . . .
âWhat the hell's so fucking important?' he asked.
âMr Lacotta just crossed the courtyard,' Wylie said.
Mace swung his legs around. The nub of the carpet scratched his bare feet. He was still groggy from sleep. And the goddamned dream. âWhat time is it?'
âAlmost ten,' Wylie said, the statement punctuated by a knock at the door.
âWhy didn't you wake me earlier?'
âNo reason to. She . . . the subject don't look like she's goin' anywhere,' Wylie said on his way to the door.
Paulie Lacotta entered, giving Wylie a manly punch on the arm. âHow's the boy?'
âFine, Mr Lacotta.'
Lacotta turned to Mace, who was still sitting on the edge of the bed, yawning. âYou keeping banker's hours, Mace?'
âMace had the late watch, Mr Lacotta,' Wylie said. âJust hit the sheets a couple hours ago.'
âDrop by for breakfast, Paulie?' Mace asked. âWe're running a special on cigarettes and booze.'
Lacotta said to Wylie, âHe always this funny in the morning?'
Wylie didn't know what to say. âHe just woke up. He'sâ'
âWhat's on your mind, Paulie?' Mace asked.
âWhy don't you wash your face and comb your hair, Mace. We'll go for a little sunshine.'
âConsidering it's you,' Mace said, âI'll even brush my teeth.'
EIGHT
â
N
ow this is beauty,' Lacotta said as he and Mace strolled through Griffith Park. It was green and tranquil, bathed in midday sunlight. âNothing like your friggin' hurricane-crazy Louisiana.'
âNothing like.'
As they passed a field, a softball landed at Lacotta's oddly tiny feet. He picked it up and tossed it back into the game. Immediately, he began rubbing his shoulder. âWhat do you do with yourself back there?'
âRebuild. Hunt. Fish. Read books. Listen to the news, mainly the weather. Every now and then I wrestle an alligator, just to keep fit.'
âNo jobs?' Lacotta asked.
âNot the way you mean it.'
âGuess you're doing OK since you sold your old man's cannery.'
âCost of living's a little lower in Bayou Royal than here.'
âThose seven years at Pel Bay â guys go bad in there,' Lacotta said.
âGuys go bad out here in your sunshine,' Mace said, annoyed. âWhat's on your mind, Paulie?'
Lacotta looked at him, squinting, maybe from the sun. âYou've changed. Maybe it was Pel Bay. Maybe fighting Mother Nature in the bayou. You're not the Mace I knew.'
âI'm older.'
âThirties turned you curious, huh?'
âI get it. You've been talking to Abe. Honest Abe.'
âSince when did you get so chummy with pimps?' Lacotta asked, continuing his stroll.
âHe owns a coffeehouse now,' Mace said. âMakes movies.'
Lacotta snorted. âMaybe. But he's still a pimp. And you put my friggin' business on the street.'
âNot much I could tell him, considering I don't know anything,' Mace said.
âWhy can't you just do like I ask and not worry about it?'
âYou know goddamn well I've never done business in the dark,' Mace said. âSecrets make me nervous. There's enough going on in this city to confuse me as it is. I feel like fucking Rip Van Winkle without his glasses.'
âCulture shock,' Lacotta said. âI read an article about it once, in
Vanity Fair
.' He gestured toward an empty park bench. âOne of the old Bush Must Go issues.'
When they were seated, looking out at the softball game, he said, âI suppose I been playin' it a little too close. When I told you this was a personal matter between me and Angie, I wasn't being straight up. I guess you figured that, huh?'
âIt did occur to me that you might not be paying me a couple grand a day to eyeball Angela Lowell just because she dumped you.'
âI guess I never was the jealous type,' Lacotta said. âNot that I'm Joe-Don't-Care, exactly. Remember the Irish broad who worked at On the Rox? All that red hair and a body thatâ'
âLet's take it one romance at a time,' Mace said.
Lacotta smiled at him. âYou know what used to piss me off about you, Mace? You always knew what I was thinking before I did.'
âNot always,' Mace said.
âYeah, well, spilled milk. Look, the deal with me and Angie, some of it's personal and some of it isn't.'
âTell me about the “isn't,”' Mace said.
Lacotta shifted on the bench as if the subject matter was adding to his physical discomfort. âAngie and me, we were getting along just fine until right around the time the trouble started.'
âYou want me to ask what trouble?' Mace said. âOK. What trouble?'
âI had this deal in place. A little out of my league, but with the potential of moving me into the bigs. I swear, the payday was gonna impress even my prick uncle, Sal.'
âWhat happened?'
âIt turned to shit and the next I know, Angie is suddenly unavailable. About the third “sorry, but I'm busy that night”, I went a little nuts, like I do. Getting her back in my bed was the only thing on my mind. I even asked her to marry . . . Hell, I tried everything short of kidnapping her ass.'
âWhy stop there?'
âIt's too much like rape, which is sick. Oh, I get it. That was a joke.'
âNot much of one, I guess,' Mace said.
âAnyway, I gave it my best shot, but she was no longer interested. Once I finally calmed down and accepted defeat, I went back to being my usual cynical rat-bastard self. I mean, nobody with an ounce of smarts believes in coincidence where money is concerned.'
âYou figure she helped the deal go south,' Mace said. âOnly you don't have any proof. Is there anything particular that you hope we catch her doing?'
âRemember Tiny Daniels?' Lacotta said.
âHard to forget anything that big that wasn't floating in some parade. He still angling for your job?'
âNot any more. He's been on his own for a while.'
âAnd here I thought
I
was special, getting out with my head still attached.'
âEven more amazing, the fat fuck was cutting all these deals on the side while he was still working for us. With the Russkies. The Colombians. The Chinese. For all I know, the terrorist crowd. No morality whatsoever. Sal nearly had a fucking coronary when he found out. But he just let Tiny stroll.'
âSal Montdrago suddenly get religion? Mace asked.
âThe Mighty M gets religion about the time the Holy Ghost gets his own talk show. What happens, Tiny says he has some heavy insurance in place that can bring down the corporation and make Uncle Sal do the Gotti. Maybe it's a bluff, but it's keepin' the fat man alive and wheezing in his own little six-mill tear-down out by Point Dume.'
âAnd how does this relate to Angela Lowell?'
Lacotta squirmed again on the rough bench. âI get word Angie's keeping company with Tiny. So you see my position?'
âStarting to.'
âDid she have anything to do with the deal fuck-up? Has Tiny taken over the project? I got to know the answers before my uncle gets back in town and starts asking me the questions. That's why I need you, Mace. Somebody I can trust.'
âWhat's the project?'
Lacotta frowned. âYou're better off not knowing.'
âHow much does Wylie know?'
âBupkis. He doesn't even think about what he doesn't know, 'cause he's my man. He reports to me. We got a rigid line of communications at Mount Olympus now. Very streamlined. Very smooth.'
âIt doesn't sound that way,' Mace said. Feeling suddenly restless, he rose from the bench. Reluctantly, Lacotta followed. âSuppose Angela Lowell is cozying up to the fat man, what happens then?'
âWhadyamean?'
âIs it the last we see of Angela?'
âNo way,' Lacotta said. âThis is just an information thing. Once I know what's what, I'll know how to get my tit out of the wringer.'
That didn't make sense to Mace. There was more to the story. He was about to press for it when a tall black man in a long black coat, apparently one of the homeless army, staggered toward them.
âYou gen'mens got a dollah you kin spare?' he asked.
Lacotta gave the man a hard, get-the-fuck-away glare.
Mace put his hand in his pocket and Lacotta said âDon't do that.'
Mace got out his wallet and removed a dollar. He handed it to the black man who accepted it with a grin. âThank you, suh.'
He held the bill out to Lacotta. âHeah. This fo' you.'
âI don't want your friggin' money,' Lacotta said.
âIt's fo' you. A dolla' to blow me.'
âWhat?' Lacotta couldn't believe his ears.
âMan say you a dollah blow job. Heah's the dollah.' He tucked the bill into Lacotta's coat pocket, crushing the white display handkerchief.
Furious, Lacotta grabbed the black man's coat collar. âWhat man said that?' he yelled.
Grinning, the black man slipped a hand into the pocket of his long coat and brought hand and coat and maybe something else up near Lacotta's mid-section. âThe fat man. He say, “Bye-bye, asshole”.'
With amazing speed, Mace kicked the black man's ankle causing him to stumble away from Lacotta just as the gun in his pocket went off.
Lacotta yelled and stepped back. Mace moved closer to the black man, his hand controlling the gun in the pocket, holding it aside as he head-butted the man.
Blood gushed from the black man's broken nose. He tried to pull free, but Mace held the hand trapped in the coat. âLemme . . . LEMME,' the man wailed as Mace spun him around, forcing the trapped hand into a position where the wrist could do nothing but break.
When it did, Mace yanked the freed weapon from the overcoat pocket.
He swatted the man's head with it, sending him to ground. There, it was easier to use his shoe. He was kicking the man in the head when he felt someone grab his arm.
He spun around, fist cocked for the punch, and saw it was Lacotta. Even then, he almost let loose.
Lacotta backed away, a bit unnerved. âLet's get outta here,' he said.
Mace blinked.
The park was in silence. The ballplayers, the dog walkers, the strollers were all frozen in place, staring at them. The only thing in motion, as far as Mace could see, was the black man staggering away, cradling his broken wrist and spitting and snorting to clear the blood from his nose and mouth.