Last to Die (11 page)

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Authors: James Grippando

Tags: #Murder for hire, #Miami, #Miami (Fla.), #Florida, #Legal, #Fiction, #Suspense, #Legal Stories, #Lesbian

BOOK: Last to Die
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Through the holes in his shirt she saw scars across his back, and she wondered how long it had been since he'd laughed like this.

Come in here, she said. She took him into the other room - there were only two - and sat him on the examination table.

I want to listen to your heart, she said. She placed the stethoscope on his knee and listened.

I don't hear your heart, she said.

Finally, he laughed. That's not my heart, he said.

Oh, I'm sorry. She put it on his elbow.

He laughed again, and she laughed with him. But if he thought this routine was funny, he was probably younger than she'd guessed. She placed her stethoscope on his heart and listened.

Good strong heart, she said.

Yes. That's what Le Gros said. Le Gros - the Big Man.

Is that who you worked for?

Yes.

How long?

Six.

Months?

No. Harvests.

Rene had been around long enough to know that most cocoa farms had a main harvest lasting several months and a mid-crop harvest lasting several more. Six harvests meant that Kamun had been working almost three years straight.

It's not going to be easy to get this boy home.

What did you do there?

He didn't answer, which was to be expected. It generally took them a while to warm up.

May I take your shirt off?

He shook his head.

I noticed some marks on your back. I just want to take a look.

He folded his arms, refusing.

It's okay. We can do that later.

She paused, then prepared herself to ask the one question she always asked. She knew the answer she'd get, talking to a child who'd never known a home with milk and sugar in the cupboard. But she asked anyway, hoping the answer would help her see purpose in her work and strengthen her resolve, hoping that it wouldn't simply dampen her spirits and break her heart.

Kamun. Have you ever tasted chocolate?

Chocolate?

Yes, chocolate. Have you ever tasted it?

He shook his head. What is chocolate?

The main door opened, and a man and woman entered. Post they said with their usual cheery smiles.

Rene quietly assured Kamun that they were friends. It was Jim and Judy Roberts, nonmedical volunteers who ran the administrative side of Children First's operation. Rene had liked them from day one on the job, a couple of down-to-earth Oklahomans who didn't do charity just to get their mugs in the society pages and who'd found a meaningful way to spend their retirement together. They were back from their daily jaunt to the post office, Jim the former Iowa State football player having led the way. Rene stepped out of the examination room and asked, The usual?

No, said Mr. Roberts. There's actually something here for you today.

Really? Put it on the desk. I'm with a patient.

It's from a lawyer, he said.

That piqued her interest. She crossed the room and took a look. She didn't recognize the name.

Who's the boy? asked Mrs. Roberts.

Sorry? said Rene, still focused on the envelope.

The patient. Who is he?

His name is Kamun. I'll introduce you in a minute. This looks kind of important. Maybe I should open it.

Mr. Roberts handed her an opener. She quickly sliced the envelope from end to end, then removed the letter. It was one page long. Her eyes shifted from left to right as she read, then her lashes fluttered and her hand began to shake.

Mr. Roberts asked, Is everything okay, Rene?

Instinctively, she brought a hand to her mouth. It's my sister, she said.

She's okay, I hope.

Rene looked up from the letter and said, She's dead.

Mrs. Roberts came to her, put her arm around her. Oh no.

Rene lowered herself onto the edge of the desk, the quickest place to sit down. She was shot. A robbery or something. They don't know exactly. In Miami.

Mr. Roberts took her hand. I'm so sorry, honey.

Mrs. Roberts said, She was such a sweet girl. I mean, it seems like she was just here with us.

It's been over two years since she left.

Really? That long? Oh, time flies. But she was still so young. I think I'm going to cry.

Please, don't, said Rene.

Mr. Roberts glanced at his wife, as if telling her to be strong for Rene. She cleared her throat and quickly toughened her resolve.

Thank you, said Rene.

Mr. Roberts grimaced and said, She really was such a nice person.

Would you like a minute alone? asked Mrs. Roberts.

I'll be fine, really. But thank you both. It's kind of you to say such nice things.

Mrs. Roberts said, We can arrange for some time off, if you would like.

I don't expect I'll be going anywhere.

It's no problem, if you want to go home.

Sally was the only family I had left. Now she's gone. There's nothing to go back to.

The older woman smiled flatly, as if she were trying to understand. It's up to you, dear. Whatever you want to do.

Rene returned a sad smile, then started back to the examination room. She stopped in the doorway, then turned and looked at both of them. I don't want you or the organization to be at all worried about me. I'm not going anywhere.

Like we said, Rene. It's totally up to you.

With a final nod, she tried to convey that this would be the end of the matter. Then she stepped into the examination room and turned her attention back to Kamun.

Chapter
Twelve At noon on Thursday, Jack took Sally Fenning's ex-husband to lunch.

He'd spent the morning in court at the Criminal Justice Center, so they met just a few blocks down the Miami River at the Big Fish Restaurant, one of Jack's favorite lunch spots. For all its miles of breathtaking waterfront, Miami offered amazingly few places that actually allowed you to sit by the water and eat seafood. The Big Fish was right on the Miami River, nothing fancy, just a relaxing place to score fresh dolphin, tuna, or shrimp ceviche while soaking up a historic stretch of river where ninety-foot yachts bound for the West Indies shared the right of way with rusted old container ships filled with stolen SUVs destined for South America. It was a landmark of sorts, a piece of old Miami where mariners from houseboats at the west end of the river sidled up alongside bankers and lawyers from the office towers to the east, where the mouth of the five-and-a-half-mile river emptied into Biscayne Bay. Jack was sentimental about the place, too. It was over broiled grouper and french fries that, as a federal prosecutor, he'd talked his first mobster into testifying for the government.

Jack didn't think he'd ever duplicate the sense of symmetry that came from nailing Tony the Big Tuna Dilabio at a place called the Big Fish. But he still felt a rush of adrenaline as he shook hands with Sally's ex-husband.

Thanks for coming, said Jack.

No problem.

They took a small table by the window, which overlooked an old fishing pier that had been half-submerged in the river for as long as Jack had been coming here. Miguel was wearing a short-sleeved white shirt and blue, form-fitting bicycle pants. He'd joined the City of Miami Police Department near the tail-end of his marriage to Sally, and he was now part of the downtown bicycle brigade, a small team of officers who patrolled the parks and streets by pedal power on twelve-speeds.

Miguel's full name was Miguel Ortiz Rios, a first-generation Cuban-American. Jack's mother had actually been born in Cuba, but he didn't mention it to Miguel. She died just hours after his birth, so his Latin connection was purely genetic, and he came across about as Cuban as Yankee pot roast. He knew from experience that if he told Miguel he was half Cuban, Miguel would start speaking Spanish, Jack would do his best to respond in kind, and Miguel would quickly revert to English, surmising that Jack was a lying sack of shit gringo who was trying to forge an instant rapport by claiming to be Latino.

I assume you didn't invite me here to turn me on to the conch fritters, said Miguel.

Jack gave a little smile and said, That's true. Though the conch fritters are pretty good.

That's what I'm having, he told the waitress. Just water to drink.

I'll have the big tuna, said Jack.

It's all pretty much the same size, she said.

Jack caught his own Freudian slip. Sorry. I mean just the tuna. Seared, rare. And an iced tea.

The waitress took their menus and left them alone at the table. The lunch crowd was streaming in, and the conversations around them had merged into a single, steady rumble.

Jack said, Before we start, Mike -

It's Miguel. Only Sally called me Mike.

Sorry. I just wanted to remind you that you do have the right to have your lawyer here.

Forget it. Parker Aimes gets a big hit if I take home the forty-six million, but I still gotta pay him a reduced hourly fee if we lose. I'm using him as little as possible.

Interesting, thought Jack, that Miami's top probate lawyer didn't like the ex-husband's chances well enough to take a straight contingency fee arrangement. Jack said, I have a few things I want to ask about you and Sally, but let me start with the big question. What do you think Sally was up to here?

Like I said at the meeting. As far as I know, there isn't a single person on that list of beneficiaries who Sally loved. And a few of them, I know for a fact Sally hated them.

So she decided to leave forty-six million dollars to people she hates?

No, said Miguel. She left her enemies to fight over forty-six million dollars that they would probably never get their hands on.

You consider yourself one of her enemies?

That's a little complicated.

Give it a shot.

I never thought of Sally as the enemy. Never. Not even in the darkest times.

But you did hire yourself a pretty tough divorce lawyer.

I didn't really hire him. Gerry Colletti did it for me as a friend, freebie.

He still your friend?

I don't think of him as one.

Last To Die<br/>

What happened?

Nothing, really. I just finally came around to realize Sally was right about him. He is a scumbag.

You think that's one of the reasons Sally considered you the enemy? You used a scumbag divorce lawyer?

I can see where you might say that, but no. Truth is, I wouldn't let Gerry put the screws to her. I'll give you an example. Sally and me had this restaurant. In fact, we bought it from Gerry. It was a disaster, and we had to close it. All that debt went with me. Whatever assets we had went with Sally. The way I saw it, she was never going to recover psychologically if I put her in a financial hole.

That's pretty fair-minded.

After what happened to our daughter, the rules are a little different. You try to work things out.

Is that the way Sally saw it?

He gave Jack a sad smile, a slow shake of the head. Unfortunately, no. Sally was a sweet, loving person. But she changed.

What changed her?

His smile was gone. Our daughter was murdered in our house. That can change you, don't you think?

Jack lowered his eyes, a little embarrassed for having asked. It's the most terrible thing I can imagine. And I'm sorry that happened to you and Sally.

Thanks.

A party of six walked by on their way to another table. Jack waited for them to pass, then said, But even something as horrible as the death of a child doesn't always tear a marriage apart. Sometimes the parents turn to each other for strength.

You're talking about the ones who don't blame each other for what happened.

The waitress brought their drinks, then left as quickly as she'd come. Jack stirred a packet of sugar into his iced tea and asked, Is that what happened to you and Sally? The blame game?

I don't know what happened to us. We tried. I really tried to be there for her. But she just didn't want help. Not from me, anyway.

Did she blame you for what happened to your daughter?

No.

Did you blame her?

He paused, as if not sure how to answer. Finally, he said, She thought I did.

How did she get that impression?

I'm not sure, exactly.

What's your sense?

Again he paused, seeming to struggle. Sally had this job. I didn't really like it.

The Hooters gig?

He blinked twice, as if ashamed that Jack knew. Look, I don't want you to get the wrong idea about Sally. She was a terrific mother. It wasn't like she was going out dancing on tables or something. It's just that, we owned that lousy restaurant I was telling you about. We had a terrible flood, no insurance, and we lost everything. We were bad in debt, needed money like you wouldn't believe. We both had to work crappy jobs to get back on our feet. I just wish she could have found something better.

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