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
Paulie was silent for a beat, then said, âYou're positive the fat man's dead?'
Mace closed his eyes and took a deep breath. âI'm positive.'
âDid it look like this guy Thomas had searched the place?'
âHe'd gone through Tiny's pockets, but I think I spooked him before he did much else.'
âI don't suppose
you
found . . . anything?' Paulie said.
âLike what?' Mace asked, reaching into his pocket, fingering the coin to be sure it was still there.
âNever mind. Just a dumb thought,' Paulie said.
Mace wrinkled his nose in annoyance. âYou sure you don't know the hitman, Thomas?'
âA Limey with a brain-dead brother who looks like Elvis? I think I might have remembered.'
âWhat's going on, Paulie?'
âI swear to God, I told you all I know.'
Mace doubted that. But he didn't think he could get much more over the phone. Face to face would be different.
âYou alone?' Mace asked.
âWhy?' Lacotta asked defensively.
âYou and Tiny weren't exactly close. You may need an alibi for the last hour or so.'
âGot that covered,' Lacotta said. âYou oughta see her, Mace. One of Abe's genuine specials.'
âShe right there, listening to this conversation?' Mace asked.
â'Course not. She's in the bedroom, watchin' a porno. What's the sitch with Angie?'
âTaking a Demerol nap,' Mace said. âI'm gonna drive her to the Florian in her car. Get somebody to pick up mine, a dark gray Camry Hybrid parked on Wilderness Road. I don't think it's close enough for the cops to get too curious about it, but let's not press our luck.'
âYou leave the electronic gizmo that starts the engine?'
âI've been a little busy. Christ, Paulie. Can't your guys handle a hot-wire job?'
Paulie was starting to babble about the new technology when Mace snapped the cellular shut. He returned to the Mustang. Before getting in, he remembered the gun he was carrying. A murdered man's gun. Something that could tie him to four homicides. He got out Tiny's hanky for the last time and used it to wipe the gun. Then he tossed both items into a trash bin resting inside a smooth cement shell that the mall's architect had created to make even the garbage look Malibu-pretty.
They were zooming past the Santa Monica beach club when Mace realized the atmosphere in the car had changed. He glanced at Angela Lowell. She was awake and staring at him. Not with warmth.
âWho the devil are you?' she demanded, slurring a little.
Instead of replying he returned his attention to the highway.
âDo you work for Tiny?' she asked.
âNobody works for Tiny anymore,' Mace said, steering them on to the Santa Monica Freeway. âNot even Tiny.'
âWhat do you mean? Why are you driving my car?'
âI'm getting you away from a bad situation,' he said. âWe left four dead men back there at Point Dume. Five, if you count Tiny as two.'
âMy God. Who . . . ?
You
killed them?'
He smiled at that. âNo, ma'am. I don't kill people. Unless I have to.'
âThen who . . . ?'
âA tall thin guy who's either British or affected. His first name is Thomas. I don't suppose you've heard of him?'
âOf course not. But you evidently have.'
âYes, ma'am.'
âDid you and he have a fight?'
âCome again?'
âYour clothes,' she said. âYou look like you've been fighting.'
âIt's been a rough day.'
âWho
are
you?'
âA guy who found a beautiful woman unconscious in a house full of dead men,' he said. âI thought it best to get you dressed and out of there before the cops showed.'
She looked down at her gown. If he expected her to blush, he was disappointed.
He reached into his coat pocket and pulled out her panties. âI think these are yours.'
She took them from him. Without hesitation, hiked up her skirt and slid them on.
She leaned back against the headrest and closed her eyes. âI . . . took something. To relax. I shouldn't drink when I do that, but . . .' She made a helpless shrug.
âYour timing couldn't have been better,' he said. âIt probably saved your life.'
She stared at him. âMy God!'
âTell me what went on at Tiny's earlier, before you faded.'
âWe were about to leave for dinner,' she said. âThen Tiny got one of his phone calls, and that meant dinner would be postponed for a few hours.'
âExplain.'
âI'm not sure why I should be talking to you about this,' she said.
âJust trying to make some sense out of what happened back there.'
She studied him, obviously wondering if she should trust him. That done, she said, âWell, with Tiny business always comes . . . came first. The caller said he had something to discuss and Tiny suggested he come to the beach house. He told us we could eat later. That's when I poured myself a glass of wine even though I'd taken a pill and knew better.'
âWho was the caller?' Mace asked.
She shook her head. âTiny didn't say and I didn't ask. He said I should go to my room, that Carlos would come tell me when the meeting was over and we could go to dinner.'
âWhen you were . . . sleeping, you didn't hear anything? Gunshots? Shouts? Anything?'
âNo,' she said.
âDid Tiny have a giant . . . have any animals? Pets?'
She shook her head. âThe beach house is full of very valuable art. Not a place for pets.'
She was silent for a minute or two, then asked, âYou sure they're both dead? Tiny and Carlos?'
âCarlos a pretty boy who only uses a razor on odd days?'
She nodded.
âDead,' Mace said, flatly.
âHe . . . worked for Tiny.'
âIf he was a bodyguard, he was a piss-poor one.'
Mace moved the Mustang around a creeper hogging the fast lane.
âYou live at the beach house?' he asked, as if he didn't know the answer.
âI have my own apartment. But I . . . go there sometimes because the art makes me happy. It helps me to . . . unwind. That guest room is rarely used, except by me.'
âWhat was he to you? Lover? Friend?'
âTiny is . . . was gay. He was a client. My profession is appraising works of art. I helped Tiny with his collection. He was also a friend. A very sweet man. Always concerned about me. Like an uncle.
âWhat about you?' she asked. âWere you a friend of Tiny's?'
âDo I look like a friend of Tiny's?' Mace asked.
She shrugged.
âWe used to work together.'
âIn investments?'
He smiled. âYes. Investments.'
She was staring at him. âIs that why you were at the beach house tonight?
âYou got it,' he said. âWhere are we headed, by the way?'
She hesitated, then said, âI live at the Florian. Above Sunset. You know the place?'
âI've driven by it,' he said.
FIFTEEN
A
s he remembered the nighttime Sunset Strip of the Nineties, it had not been a particularly wholesome venue. But that had been like Disneyland compared to the present streetscape. Garish. Ugly. Young Latinos bouncing up and down in their hot paint low-riders.
Paused at a red light, Mace watched male and female hookers hungrily work their way through the stalled traffic. The light changed and he started forward, almost hitting a huge man on Rollerblades. He was wearing a pink Mohawk, matching pink short shorts and tube top, gliding across the boulevard with a boom box under one heavily-muscled arm and a pink poodle under the other.
âWhat do you think?' Mace asked. âToo much?'
She smiled. A first for the night.
Passing Honest Abe's Coffee Empourium, he indicated the crowd waiting to get in. âPopular place, huh?'
âI suppose.'
âEver been there?'
She gave him a curious look. âI don't like coffee,' she said.
He turned left and headed up to the Florian, nosing the car on to the circular drive. âWhere do I put this?'
She directed him to the parking area she'd been assigned.
âWhat now?' Angela asked when he turned off the ignition and handed her the key.
âYou go inside and get on with your life and I walk down to Sunset to catch a cab.'
He got out of the car and circled it, intending to open her door. She didn't wait, her expression indicating she considered such courtesy to be old fashioned and foolish.
Or maybe she was just eager to be free of him.
He stood near the car, letting her initiate the goodbye.
âWhy don't I give you a lift to wherever you're headed?' she said.
âBetter for you to go inside and get some sleep,' he said, leading her to the Florian's front door. âThe police will be calling on you sooner or later. You want to be fresh for that.'
âWhat do I tell them?' she asked.
âYou've visited Tiny's often, but you weren't anywhere near there tonight.'
âWhere was I?'
Mace smiled. âI'll leave that up to you.'
At the door, he said, âBe sure to lock yourself in.'
âWhy not come up?' she said. âWait there for a cab. If that's what you want.'
A cab was not at all what he wanted. He was tempted, but he said, âRain check.'
He tried to read her reaction. Surprise. Disappointment. Maybe a hint of pique.
âThis is it, then?' she said.
âI hope not.'
She started to say something, thought better of it. She nodded, turned and entered the Florian.
Mace didn't think she'd look back, but he waited to make sure. Then he circled the building.
SIXTEEN
W
hat the fuck happened to you?' Wylie asked as Mace let himself into the apartment. He'd been sitting at the window, chair leaning back, feet up on the table. He swung his legs to the floor and popped the electronic buds from his ears.
âI went for a drive in the country,' Mace said, removing his torn and muddied jacket.
âThe cu . . . the subject's been gone the whole . . . Shit. Somebody work you over?' He was pointing at Mace's shirt which was ripped and crusted with dirt.
Mace took off the shirt, balled it up and threw it into the wastebasket near his bed. He moved to the bathroom, Wylie following.
âYour neck's scratched,' Wylie said. âWhat the fuck?'
âGive me a few minutes, OK?' Mace said, and turned on the washbasin faucet.
Reluctantly, Wylie obeyed the request, fading into the bedroom.
Mace washed his hands, then his face. He dried off and opened a leather kit that was resting on a shelf over the toilet. He removed a bandage strip that he placed on a dry corner of the basin. He examined the inch-long scratch on his neck that he hadn't even noticed before. It seemed to be strictly surface, but he'd seen tiny wounds blossom into problems.
âPut a couple shots of Jack in a glass for me,' he called out to Wylie, who responded eagerly.
Mace drank two-thirds of the whiskey, then poured the rest on a rolled-up ball of toilet paper that he used to sterilize the cut.
âUgly bruise starting on your shoulder,' Wylie said.
âI got kicked by Elvis,' Mace said.
âHuh?'
âDon't mind me,' Mace said, applying the adhesive strip to the scratch. âWhat's Lacotta been up to lately?'
The question clearly discomforted Wylie. âI . . . who knows? I don't get invited to the fucking board meetings.'
Mace zipped the leather bag, clicked off the bathroom light and went past Wylie into the bedroom, carrying the whiskey glass.
âA smart guy like you picks things up,' he said. âThis would be something a little different from the daily routine.'
Wylie was flattered but still wary. âMr Lacotta took a couple trips for this deal that didn't happen. That what you mean?'
âMaybe,' Mace said, pouring a drink for himself and one for Wylie. He handed Wylie the tumbler.
âMuch as I know, it was some kind of thing with the government.'
Mace sipped the bourbon. âWhen was this?'
âMaybe a month and a half ago, Mr Lacotta flew to Frisco. Day or two later, he took off for DC. Came back totally stoked, said he'd been wining and dining with a bunch of the big dogs at the White House. He was soaring. Never saw him so up. But that mood sure didn't last long. I think the whole thing tanked.'
Mace moved to the windows and picked up one of the binoculars. He looked out at Angela Lowell's apartment. The drapes were drawn, but a light was on in her living room. A shadow flitted across the drapes.
âNo hint what the deal involved?' he asked.
âHell, nobody tells me about the deals that go through, much less the ones that don't.'
Mace traded the binoculars for the booze bottle, poured Wylie another shot. He wondered how close that DC visit was to Lacotta sending Wylie to clock the visitors to Commingore Industries. But he couldn't bring up Commingore again at that moment. If there was a time link, he didn't want Wylie to be thinking about it.
âSpeaking of people who don't tell me stuff,' Wylie said, âif it was followin' the bi-atch got you bounced around, don't you owe me a fill-in? I follow her, too.'
So Wylie was not a total asshole after all and maybe he did deserve a heads-up.
âI was on the job, parked, waiting for Lowell to emerge from . . . a building when this oddball crew surprised me,' Mace said. âThomas has a little moustache, dresses like David Niven used to. Suit. Ascot. He's a shooter.'
âWhat kinda weapon?'
âI'm not exactly sure, but I'm guessing a Spitfire. Because it's British. He's very handy with it. His younger brother Timmie had his brain fried when he was a baby. Acts like a five year old. Looks a hell of a lot like Elvis, blown up to about six-five or -six. Got wrists as big as my thighs. He likes to dress up. He was wearing a cowboy outfit today.'