BLACK Is Back (6 page)

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Authors: Russell Blake

Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Hard-Boiled, #Private Investigators

BOOK: BLACK Is Back
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“Depends on what you mean by sexually, harassing, and again.”

“Is that some kind of veiled come-on?”

“Roxie. This is big. Really big.”

“Now I’m getting worried. First you start with the ‘I’m excited,’ and then you’re telling me how big ‘this’ is. I should sue.”

“Two-fifty an hour.”

“And now soliciting prostitution. What would your girlfriend say? Or do you pay her, too? Come to think of it, how do you define girlfriend?”

“Roxie. B-Side is going to pay us two-fifty an hour to take his case.”

Roxie sat back, apparently relieved. “Awesome. Where’s the check? I’ll go deposit it.”

“I haven’t actually gotten it yet.”

“So when you say you ‘snagged’ the client, what you mean is that you didn’t get any money. Is that about right?”

“I will. I see his manager today at five.”

“Cool. Then I won’t have to start looking for another job this week. That’s a load off my mind.”

Black spied the flyers and picked one up. On it a fuzzy photo of Mugsy glowered back at him, with the banner headline, “Lost Cat” across the top, Mugsy’s description under the photo, and then a host of tear-away tabs with the office number across the bottom. “Wow. You really did a nice job on these. I can’t imagine how much of your day went into them.”

“I need you to put them up all over the neighborhood. I was thinking you could start this evening.”

“You want me to put these up? Not you?”

“I’ve got a gig tonight. Sound check’s at six.”

“I see. Did it ever occur to you that I might have something planned this evening?”

“Come on. You can fit in a few hours. The most important thing
is to hit all the places around here.”

“I’m sensing a ‘no’ here. Yes, that’s definitely what I’m picking up. No. No, no, no.”

“So you’ll choose your own selfish desires over Mugsy? No wonder he hates you,” Roxie muttered.

“I thought you said he didn’t.”

“I just said that so you wouldn’t be so embittered about having to pay for his food and kitty litter.”

“I knew it.”

“Then again, I could be lying to get back at you for refusing to help.”

Black went into his office and removed his hat and jacket, then called out to Roxie. “Pull up everything you have on B-Side and send it over.”

“I can’t hear you. I’m listening to B-Side.”

“Yes, you can, or you wouldn’t know I said anything.”

“Sorry. I’m not making you out.”

“Roxie…”

“Check your email.”

Black did, and began sorting through the mountain of information she’d sent. The first batch of articles covered B-Side’s rise up the charts with his debut album,
Pimped Bitch
. The critics had been universally positive on the release, making flattering comparisons to Blunt for the album’s lyrical depth and hypnotic beats, and praising his flashy videos and stage show.

Next were a number of columns on feuds B-Side was involved in, the most heated one between himself and a young rapper named 2Bad, for whom B-Side had no love, having called him a chump, a bitch, fronting, and every other epithet in the rap lexicon. 2Bad apparently had the same lack of respect for B-Side, and the rhetoric had grown increasingly ugly over the past few months, made worse by a different feud between B-Side’s record label, run by Miles Ferris, and 2Bad’s, which was Blunt’s former label, Laughing Dead Productions. The head of the label was a notorious rap impresario named Maurice Quantrel, better known as Moet, who had discovered numerous talents, including Blunt, and was rumored to be entwined with the drug gangs that ruled the poorer areas of South Central.

Black’s head started to hurt just trying to keep all the rivalries straight, not to mention the monikers. Why the hell didn’t they have normal names, like REO Speedwagon or AC/DC? How could anyone differentiate between a Blunt, a 2Bad, and a B-Side? Especially as an ex-musician, the entire phenomenon escaped him, where the singers didn’t sing and nobody played an instrument…and that was the most popular form of music in the nation?

He realized as he was thinking it that he sounded like an old fogey, even to himself.
Those kids and their damn music! It’s not even music! All they’re doing is screaming over a drum machine!
Reality was that rap had been going strong for over twenty-five years, in the mainstream, and showed no sign of stopping. For better or worse, Black was an anachronism, a throwback to an earlier time when music had been entirely different from what someone like Roxie had grown up hearing. Even when Black’s band was breaking big, rappers of all shapes, sizes, and colors had been selling tens of millions of records, and the world had voted with its wallet, regardless of what the musician in Black thought.

Besides, wasn’t a little bit of the disdain just envy?
Sure, there was some truth to that, he acceded to the little voice in his head. Who wouldn’t want to live a lifestyle of being young, dumb, with hot and cold running hotties at your command, making millions for doing nothing but throwing attitude? It wasn’t fair…

Of course, nothing in life was. And if B-Side had managed to wire the game, more power to him. His was a young man’s world, a world as foreign to Black as one inhabited by two-headed lizard gods. The one redeeming quality he could see to it all was that, for whatever reason, it had intersected with Black’s banal reality and managed to lavish him with some ready cash. Which was always in short supply and heavy demand.

Black read with interest an article on B-Side’s life story: raised by a struggling single mother in one of the worst areas of New Orleans; relocation to L.A.; a troubled adolescence marked by dropping out of school in ninth grade and turning to dealing drugs, arrests, incarceration; and then salvation when Blunt had been discovered and B-Side had joined him on the climb to stardom. It read like an invented bio, but Black knew from his brief meeting that it was probably largely true, if a trifle heavy on the crime-related aspects of the rapper’s life.

All good, but no clues as to who might have it in for him.

After an hour of his reading and watching a few B-Side and Blunt videos on YouTube, Roxie materialized in the doorway.

“Since you don’t care whether we ever find Mugsy, I’m leaving early to put up flyers.”

“What do you think of B-Side?”

“Honestly? It’s not my thing. But if it was, I’d probably like him. He’s got something that comes through. Kind of a sexy swagger and attitude, you know? After listening to both Blunt and B-Side, Blunt was more authentic, but B-Side’s more of an entertainer. I don’t know how else to describe it, but the kid’s got some grooving raps.”

“That was my impression. B-Side’s more Vegas, Blunt was more Compton.”

“Right. Because you’re down with the hood. You know what it’s like there.”

“You know what I mean. More OG.”

“You got that from one of those articles, didn’t you?”

“I haven’t been living in a cave the last twenty years. I know what time it is.”

“They haven’t said that since I was in diapers,” Roxie said.

“Word. Peace out.”

“My douche alarm just went off. Excuse me. I need to try to rescue the cat.”

“I’m actually surprised the tubby bastard hasn’t shown back up to bum a meal.”

“Boy, I go all mushy inside when you sweet talk like that. No wonder the ladies melt when you speak.”

“I’m worried too, Roxie.”

“Uh huh. I’m out of here,” she said, and then spun and made for the entrance. He could tell she was annoyed that he hadn’t dropped everything to do her bidding on the Mugsy flyer distribution, but damn it, he was trying to run a company, keep the light bill paid, and so on. He heard the front door open and called out to her.

“I’ll take some flyers, too.”

But she was already gone.

 

Chapter 8

Sam Rothstein’s building was all marble and granite and cool, expensive chic, with well-groomed uniformed security guards in the lobby along with fashionably aloof counter staff who reminded Black of an expensive hotel’s. He gave his name to a haughty Asian woman who eyed him distrustfully before phoning upstairs and getting clearance for him to enter the inner sanctum. He was issued a visitor badge and advised to wear it at all times.

The elevator was sleek, silent, and new, and when he arrived at the twentieth floor he stepped out into a marble and glass foyer. Sam’s offices were directly in front. Black opened the door to find himself facing a fashion model receptionist with a million-dollar pout. He removed his hat and approached the woman, who looked ready to call security until he announced himself and told her that B-Side had arranged for a meeting with Sam. She tapped her headset to life and murmured into it while Black took in the stunning view through the floor-to-ceiling windows, and then directed him to a black leather and chrome sofa to await Sam’s assistant.

The rap business was better than Black had thought, obviously, although Sam no doubt represented more acts than just B-Side. He was considering how difficult it would be to hang out a shingle and rake in some of that easy money when a young man in a navy blue Canali suit approached with a flight attendant’s practiced phony politeness.

“Mr. Black? Would you follow me, please? Mr. Rothstein will see you now.”

Black dutifully accompanied him to an expansive corner office, and after a courtesy knock on the doorjamb, the assistant motioned for Black to enter. From behind a polished hardwood desk the size of Ireland, Sam studied Black with eyes that had all the warmth of a lamprey, and after taking his measure, gestured to one of the chairs.

“Black, huh? You can call me Sam. B-Side called, said Bobby sent you. I spoke to Bobby, and he gave you the nod. So what have we got to talk about?”

“I came by to get a check. My retainer. Ten grand against two-fifty per hour. Plus expenses.”

“Wow. Do I get a BJ for that?” Sam raised his hands like he was being robbed. “Kidding. But isn’t that a little high? You’re a PI, not a neurosurgeon.”

“That’s my rate. B-Side said no problem. Is there a problem?”

“No, no, I’m just checking. But before I start cutting the loot free, let me lay down the ground rules. You work for me. The money comes from me. B-Side’s to be kept out of this to the extent possible. And you can’t talk to the press about anything you see while you’re part of the team. That’s not negotiable.”

“My practice is to not talk to the press, period. Ever.”

Sam offered a wan smile. “Then we’re going to get along just fine. Last thing I need is to try to manage another potential leak. The kid’s the hottest thing in the country right now, and everybody wants a piece of him. I have to be careful who I let into the inner circle, that’s all I’m saying.”

“I understand.”

“So what’s your plan, Mr. Two-hundred-and-change Black?”

“You pay me, I figure out who’s trying to kill your client.”

“Sounds simple.”

“It usually is. To do that, I have to research everyone connected to him, and anyone he might have pissed off who could hold a grudge big enough to drive him or her to murder.”

“That makes sense. But I’ll tell you what. I can give you a good place to start.”

Black raised an eyebrow. “Really?”

“Yeah, really. The number one rat who wants to eat B-Side’s cheese is a first-class thug named Maurice Quantrel. Goes by the nickname Moet. Runs Laughing Dead – competitor to B-Side’s label. He’s still pissed that B-Side didn’t sign with him. He thought it would be a given, since Blunt had been on Laughing Dead. But I have to choose what’s best for my artists’ careers, and Miles made us a better offer. Moet hasn’t forgiven B-Side – or me. It wouldn’t surprise me a bit if he’s behind this. He’s a bully and an animal.”

“I’ve heard the name.”

“You hear that he’s rumored to have negotiated record deals with some of his artists with a loaded gun on the desk? In plain sight? That’s just one of his little stunts. He’s a gangster, all right, which is what he likes to play up; but unlike many in this business, he’s the real thing. Gang-affiliated, rumors of his seed money coming from drugs, the Feds nosing around for years over suspicions of laundering and racketeering…a real piece of work.”

“I gather he’s not on your Christmas list.”

“Good guess. After Blunt got killed, I was relieved to be done with his label. And when B-Side opted to go with a more reputable company, it was the best thing that ever happened to both of us. There’s no love lost between me and Moet. In fact, I wouldn’t put it past him to have had a hand in Blunt’s murder.”

Black leaned forward. “Maybe I’m missing something. Why would he want to kill his number one act?”

“Blunt wasn’t happy with the results he was seeing. He was convinced that Moet was faking the sales data, skimming cash. He’d started agitating for an audit. You don’t question Moet’s integrity the way he did. When I heard the news that he’d been gunned down, it didn’t surprise me.”

“But didn’t Moet lose a fortune when Blunt died?”

“What, are you kidding me? The record wound up selling three times as many copies after he died. Which wouldn’t have happened if Blunt had been alive. More importantly, it’s going to continue selling for years as the mystique around Blunt’s life and death grows. It’s free money for Moet. No tours to support, no artist to deal with. Just an endless stream of money.”

“But he still has to pay the estate royalties, right?”

“Sure. Blunt’s mama gets them. But she’s not exactly a numbers person, so Moet can pretty much do whatever he wants.”

“Not if you’re still in the mix.”

“I’m not. Blunt’s mom and I parted ways. It’s not my concern anymore. I’m on to bigger and better things. Don’t get me wrong, I still get my check every quarter, but I’m not going to make waves now. My future’s with B-Side, not haggling with Moet and hoping I don’t wake up with a Glock in my mouth.”

“Isn’t that a little dramatic?”

“You don’t know the man. You’re an investigator. Do some investigating. You’ll see.”

“Tell me about Blunt and B-Side. Did they part on good terms?”

“Not really. In fact, that was a big deal. B-Side quit the crew to pursue his own career, but it hurt Blunt’s feelings – he believed he’d done B-Side nothing but right, and basically launched him, given him the opportunity to make it. Then instead of being grateful, he left, and they began bad-mouthing each other. It’s pretty typical in this business, but even for that kind of feud, it got heated. Then, Blunt got killed in Jamaica and the rest is history.”

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