Authors: Austin Camacho
Conversation stilled as they dined, and words seemed unnecessary toward the end of the meal. At some unspoken signal they reached for each other and held hands while they watched evening turn into night around them. They enjoyed the show as Downtown Washington lit up. Their view of the Lincoln Memorial was stunning, but not as moving as the perfect picture that shaped up in front of them as the Washington Monument and the lighted Capitol Dome slid into position to present a postcard come to life. The reflecting pool, stretched out between them and the monuments, appeared to have been placed there in anticipation that these two lovers would some day sit in this exact spot in the middle of the Potomac to see it.
The Kennedy Center and the oddly curved Watergate Hotel complex moved past before the canned music was replaced by live tinkling from the piano at the center of the deck and the sharp but sweet aroma of cinnamon-heavy apple pie drew Hannibal's senses back into the ship.
“I hope that pie is as good as this cheesecake,” Cindy said. Her dark eyes told him that she had drunk just enough wine with dinner to loosen her up a notch. Maybe he would try one more time. He emptied his glass, and took Cindy's other hand.
“Cindy, I talked to a girl today who wants my help with a problem, but I think she found it difficult to talk to me. You know, sometimes it's hard for people to discuss what's really important with someone face to face. You know what I mean?”
“Oh, yeah baby, it's the same in my business,” she said. “That's what makes the Internet so great. Like for this case I'm working right now. See, unlike an IPO certain DPOs let companies actively advertise and promote the sale of their
stock. The SEC even allows the electronic transfer of the company's prospectus to an investor. That way, the company execs don't have to be salesmen and talk to people, you know? Hey, name that tune!”
“What?” Hannibal had to think a minute. She had switched gears twice, and landed on a very old jazz tune coming from the piano.
“Isn't that
Deep Purple
?”
“Yeah, that's it. I want to dance. Don't you want to dance?” They rose together without their hands parting. As they arrived at their spot a few feet from the other two dancing couples, Cindy asked, “So what about that case? Are you going to take it?”
Hannibal clamped his eyes shut and stifled a sigh, accepting that this evening would simply not go in the direction he expected it to. Their night had become her night, and he would simply have to devise another opportunity to pop the question.
“Well, it looks like I'll have time for a case in the next few days. I guess I'll take it after all.”
For Hannibal it was the start of a typical workday, if there was such a thing. There was a limit to the kinds of trouble people got into, so there were only so many ways for Hannibal to earn his living. Some days, he provided physical protection for someone. Like his last case, that was mostly waiting for something to happen. Some days he delivered messages his client could not deliver themselves, usually backing the message up with violence. That kind of trouble most often ended quickly. Hannibal's time in the secret service had prepared him well for those assignments.
The rest of his workdays were what he called legwork days. That meant doing the drudgework he hated, pursuing leads to find something or someone. His days with the New York police department had prepared him for those days.
After a good long run to clear his head and a frozen waffle breakfast, he brewed a fresh pot of coffee and worked the telephone for a couple of hours. He didn't tell Anita, but she had actually given him a pretty good lead on Rod. The car he drove was a very special customization. Whoever did that work would remember it. And people who do that kind of thing know each other. One call to an auto customizer led to another, on a telephone trail that seemed to move farther and farther west, until he got the comment he was waiting for.
“Mister, only one man on the east coast could have pulled off a chop job like that one.”
Hannibal stepped out of his building just before eleven o'clock, pushing his sunglasses into place. A shout from up the block got his attention as he reached for his car door handle. Monte Washington was marching toward him. As always, Hannibal stifled his reaction to middle school fashion. Hannibal was sure Monte's jeans were below his narrow butt, and he wondered what kept them from falling off.
“Dude! I been wanting to talk to you,” Monte said. His hair was in tight cornrow braids these days, and his chocolate complexion darkened by the summer sun. “You gotta tell me what it was like, hanging with Huge Wilson. Did you meet Missy and Timberland? And I know he got all the fly honeys, but did he share?”
“I was working, Monte. I wasn't focused on the honeys,” Hannibal said. Was Timberland a person? Hannibal thought it was a brand of boots. “And I've been wanting to talk to you too, after the last time I spoke with your grandmother.” Monte was the first person in the neighborhood to speak to Hannibal when he first arrived. Much of his drive to keep drug dealers out of the area stemmed from his concern for this one young man and the grandmother who was raising him. For Hannibal, Monte symbolized the promise of the future.
“What's Grandma been telling you now?” Monte asked, sliding his portable CD player's headphones on.
“She told me about your final report card this year,” Hannibal said. “I'm not happy. We had a deal.”
“It wasn't all that bad, bro.”
“You can do better,” Hannibal said. “And I wonder if you've been reading this summer like you said you would.”
“You want me to waste my time with my head in a book?” Monte asked with a grin. “Maybe we need to hook up a new deal.”
Hannibal turned to lean back against his car. He had the feeling he had stepped into a well concealed bear trap. “What do you have in mind, you little hustler?”
“I know you didn't realize what a great opportunity you just passed up,” Monte said, padding around in what Hannibal thought were Timberlands. “But since you made the connection, well, you could introduce me to Huge.”
“I could.” Hannibal looked around his block, smelling the eternal heat of the city and feeling the summer slipping away like Monte's chances at success. Did he realize that he was in a race, and that some of his peers were already running? “But that's a tall order. I think a meeting like that, under positive circumstances, would be worth, let's say a book every two weeks, through the summer, and maybe the same deal after school starts.”
“What?” Monte back-pedaled. “You don't want me to have no life at all?”
“Well, if it's not worth it to you,” Hannibal turned and pulled the handle of his car door.
“Okay, okay, but for that deal, I got to have five minutes alone with the brother, so I can get him to listen to some of my rhyming,” Monte said. “I could be his next big thing, you know?”
“Sure, Monte. Now listen, I got work to do. And you better get to the library and find something good because I'll hook you up with Huge before the end of next week.”
Before his conversation with Monte faded from his mind, Hannibal was cruising down I-295, watching for the exit to the Beltway that would point him toward Maryland. The nearest mechanic who would admit to being able to perform the kind of automotive surgery needed to create Rod's car lived across the Potomac in the Southern Maryland county of St. Mary's. It was the same man who had been identified by his peers during Hannibal's telephone investigation.
Hannibal still marveled at how abruptly his urban environment faded to a rural setting. The city feeling dropped away within twenty minutes of driving, when he turned onto Maryland's Route 5 and headed south toward Mechanicsville. He spent a lot of time alone with the Tornado, and he knew just where on the RPM scale she would settle into a smooth and steady cruise. This was the speed at which his Volvo was happiest, and once he hit it he liked to settle back and enjoy the scenery moving past him. At these times he enjoyed his favorite guilty pleasure, the classic rock music that always made him feel so good. None of his friends could really appreciate the Lynrd Skynrd album thumping in his CD player right then, but he was sure the people who lived on either side of the road he was cruising down would love it.
His head was still bobbing when he turned off the highway, and again onto an even smaller road. He slowed to a crawl to drive over the ruts and potholes, eventually moving onto a road barely wide enough to accommodate two cars passing. Willows lined the road, leaning far enough over to occasionally brush the Tornado's white roof. Just as he was beginning to doubt the accuracy of his directions, Hannibal saw four single-story buildings. One looked as if it might hold an office, while the others were clearly garages and work areas.
The pit bull snarling at him at the end of a short chain marked this as rural white territory. Sarge called these people SMIBs, an unflattering acronym for Southern Maryland In-Breds. Of course, Hannibal had been in Black-owned junkyards with a very similar look except that for some reason, the brothers always had rottweillers or Doberman pinschers chained to their gates.
Hannibal sat for a moment, parked in front of a row of vintage cars, and partial cars. He allowed himself those few seconds to decide on the best approach to get the information he needed. Despite the barking dog, no one came outside to meet him, so in his own time he opened his door and stepped out. The car's air-conditioned atmosphere puffed out with him and evaporated, allowing the heat of the day to wrap
around him like a soft blanket. The humidity fogged his Oakley's for a second. The smell of oil or transmission fluid was tainted with the odor that rises when someone who chews tobacco has spit in the same place too many times. He looked down to see dust rise from the hard packed dirt surface and settle on his previously glistening shoes. On an impulse, he pulled his gloves off, dropped them on the seat, shut the door and headed inside.
Ten steps later Hannibal opened the door of the first cinder block building. He knew right away why no one had stepped out. A loud compressor was keeping that room ice cold. He saw everything he expected to see there: a parts manual open on a wooden counter, vinyl chairs on the customer side, a Coke machine in the corner, barely clad models on the calendar on the opposite wall, and a hard-skinned, smiling white man standing behind the counter.
“Morning,” the man said. “What can I do you for today? You looking for a car, or you want some work done on that 850 GLT outside?”
Hannibal held his hand out for a shake, and got it. “I'm Hannibal Jones, and I'm betting you're Clarence Nash.” Nash was in his early fifties, with silver hair and a beard that had simply grown as far as it wanted to and stopped. He wore overalls, but his hands were clean and his shake was firm. Hannibal's research told him that this man was a mechanic, an artist and a salesman. He figured he could probably get away with a direct approach with the man, if he sprinkled it with a bit of flattery.
Nash took Hannibal in with one broad glance, and there seemed to be a great deal of activity going on behind his face. “I'm Nash, but folks here about generally call me Van. And I'm thinking maybe you ain't here about no car. Hardly anybody comes here in a suit, and you ain't no Marylander anyhow. You ain't with the IRS, is you?”
“No kind of law, although I do have some experience in that area,” Hannibal said. “I'm private now, just trying to help a client find an old friend. I don't have too many leads, but I think this guy was a customer of yours.”
Nash stared idly out the window toward the sound of a power sander being used in one of the garages out back. “Well, son, I've had a lot of customers in the last couple of years, and I don't keep real good records here.”
Hannibal leaned an elbow on the counter while he slid his hand into his pocket. “I understand sir. This is rather an odd request. But you must keep some sort of records and I have been authorized to pay you for your time checking them. Of course if my information is right, you'll remember this fellow. I'm told you're the only man alive who could have built his car. Corvette in front, Cadillac in back. Sound familiar?”
While he talked, Hannibal watched Nash's face move from suspicion to irritation to offense and finally to what looked like disgust. For a moment he feared he had miscalculated the best way to approach this man.
“Oh, that asshole,” Nash said, his eyes rolling skyward. “Well, if your client really is a friend of his, you ought to get a better class of client. But I'm betting the real reason you're trying to find him is because he welshed on a bet or screwed your client's old lady. Right?”
“Well, something like that,” Hannibal said. “He stole something from a lady and I'm trying to recover it.”
“Yeah, that figures,” Nash said, turning to rummage through a stack of thick binders. “Always talked about women like they was trash. I'll never forget that guy. One of them pretty-boy weightlifters with squinty little eyes and hands like a gorilla's paws. And the job, Jesus what a job.”