Lullaby Town (1992) (21 page)

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Authors: Robert - Elvis Cole 03 Crais

BOOK: Lullaby Town (1992)
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She said, "Make your deliveries, William, When you get back, he'll be gone and everything gonna be just like it was before. Please, William."

The older woman said, "You better listen to her, William. You do like she say, now." The older woman was still back behind the counter, looking scared and wringing the gray cloth and rocking.

William stared down at Angelette for a little longer, then the jailyard eyes softened and he turned and walked back behind the counter and through the little work area and out the back door.

Angelette watched him until he was gone, then took a deep breath and let it out, as if with his leaving some inner tension within her had been removed. "It hurts him that I had to do what I did while he was away. It shames him."

"He loves you very much."

"Maybe." She took another deep breath, then looked at me. "My name is not Angelette. Angelette a street name."

"Okay."

"My name is Sarah Lewis."

"Sarah. That's nice. Nicer than Angelette."

She crossed her arms and made a sharp little laugh that was somehow hard and pained. "Stop talkin' trash and tell me what you want."

"I think Charlie DeLuca's up to something that he doesn't want the rest of the family to know about. If I can find out what it is, I can make him let go of my friend."

"I ain't seen Charlie DeLuca since before William got out. That must be five, almost six months ago."

"How'd you meet him?"

"On the street. That's the way he likes to do it, with the street girls. He see somethin' he likes in a dirty movie, then him and his bodyguards come up here and he gets some of it."

"He always up here with the bodyguards?"

She laughed. "Man, he don't take a pee without them bodyguards. Got this one creepy guy, all tall and white and skinny, look like a goddamn vampire." Good old Ric.

"You hear the bodyguards say anything?"

She shook her head. "No. They stay down in the car while we up in the room. You know."

I said, "A guy named Richie might know something. I think he supplies Charlie with the movies."

She thought for a second, then shook her head. "I don't know no Richie."

"Did Charlie ever talk business with you?"

"Not the kind of business you talkin' about." The older woman was working with the flowers, carefully turned away.

"He ever complain about anything to you, like what a crummy day it was, like how a big deal went bad?"

"Look, I know what you want, but it wasn't like that. Charlie takes a liking to a girl, he comes around a lot and he spends big, but he don't stay around too long. He never stayed with a girl longer than three weeks. He likes to hurt and you complain one time too much and then he beats the hell out of you and moves on."

"He never said anything about what he does?"

"No."

I said, "You know any of his other ladies?"

"Just to see. You know, out on the street, walkin' around. We'd be on the corner, we'd talk about him."

She brushed at her mouth, past the big scar. "It's pretty easy to tell who he been with."

"You know who he's with, now?"

Her eyes flashed hot. "How I know that? You think we stay in touch? You think Mr. Charlie send me love letters?"

"It's important, Sarah. Could you find out?"

She crossed her arms again and stared at me, maybe thinking she'd had enough of this, but then maybe thinking she'd come this far. She uncrossed the arms and went behind the little counter and used the phone. While she spoke, the older woman sneaked glances at me between a spray of lilacs.

Sarah Lewis put down the phone, then came back and said, "He seeing some gal named Gloria Uribe. She lives over on 136th, up above a bar called Clyde's."

"Thanks, Sarah. I appreciate the help."

"Won't do no good, you talkin' with her, though. She'll be too scared to say anything, even if she knows more than me. Any girl with Charlie is that way." Sarah brushed at the lip again, as if it itched. It was a bad scar, the kind that comes from a deep cut. When Charlie hit her, he had hit her hard, and probably more than once.

I went to the door.

"You really think you gonna find a way to put the hurt on Charlie DeLuca?"

"Yeah," I said. "I do."

She squinted at me from the hurt eye, then made one of the nods to herself again and opened the door. "All right. You find a way to hurt him, you hurt him a little bit extra. You hurt him for Angelette Silver, you hear?"

The older woman had stopped pretending to worka nd was staring at me. I nodded at her, then looked back at Sarah Lewis.

"I was planning to."

The older woman smiled and turned away, and I left.

Lullaby Town<br/>TWENTY FOUR

Clyde's was a knothole of a bar in the bottom of a four-story building that was mostly fire escapes and clotheslines. Three or four women in tiny red dresses and rabbit coats sat listlessly at the bar while a couple of guys in long coats leaned against a Pontiac out front laughing about something. One of the guys had a gap in his teeth like Mike Tyson.

I put the Taurus across the street in a bus stop, then walked back. The two guys kept laughing but watched me come. There were no more white guys up here than there were down on 122nd Street. If I were them, I'd probably watch me, too.

I went into a little open stairwell next to Clyde's andf ound the apartment-house mailboxes. G. Uribe was on box 304.

The guy with Mike Tyson's teeth looked in at me and said, "Say, man, who you lookin' for?"

"Gloria Uribe. She around?"

"Naw, she workin'. She better be, she know what's good for her."

"You her business manager?"

"Naw, man, she Haitian or Cuban or somedamnthing like that. They got their own people to take care of'm. I got somethin' on the fourth floor just as good, though. No waitinV

"No, thanks," I said. "My heart belongs to Gloria."

He said, "Shee-it, you the poe-lice, all right." His buddy laughed and they knocked fists.

I gave him the okay-we-both-know-I'm-a-cop face. "What's your name, homeboy?"

"Luther."

"Luf sr, make a friend on the force. Gloria do a good business?"

"Fair to middlin'."

"White guys?"

Luther nodded and winked at his friend. "You sniffin' 'round 'bout that gangster with the big car. You from Organized Crime?"

"Maybe." Maybe. Did Eliot Ness say maybe? 'Tell me about the big car. He here often?"

"Two, three times a week."

"There any pattern to when he comes around?"

Luther gave me pained. "Man, all these questions grinding my brain, you know?"

"Unh-hunh."

I dug out a twenty and passed it to him. He didn't look impressed. "Tha's pretty thin pickin's."

"It's the budget crunch, Luther."

"I hear that." He made the twenty disappear. "He came around twice last week. On Tuesday, then again Friday. Usually a Friday." He looked at his friend and the friend nodded.

I said, "What do the bodyguards do while he's with Gloria?"

"Shee-it, he ain't had his posse around in three months."

I looked at him. "He's been seeing Gloria Uribe for three months?"

"Hell, he been coming around longer than that." Luther squinted at his friend again. "What, four, five months now?"

The friend nodded, unh-hunh.

Luther looked back at me.

I said, "He's been seeing Gloria Uribe for maybe five months, and when he comes, he comes alone?"

Luther frowned and gave me the heavy-eyelid treatment. "How many times I gotta say it, a lousy twenty bucks."

Luther's friend yawned and stared at something down the street.

I thought about it. In my business, you look for things that are out of the ordinary because out of the ordinary things usually mean clues. Sarah Lewis had said that Charlie DeLuca never stayed with a woman for longer than three weeks and that he never went anywhere without bodyguards. Of course, that was a long time ago and maybe Charlie had changed his ways. Maybe Charlie and Gloria were in love and all the getting together without bodyguards was to discuss wedding plans. Then again, maybe not.

I said, "Luther, Gloria just a streetwalker, or does she do outcall?"

"She walkin' when times are hard. Things lookingb etter, she be strictly outcall. You can tell when she outcall, 'cause her nose in the air."

Luther's friend laughed like hell.

A white Caddi" DeVille pulled to the curb and a slender, mocha-colored young woman in a tight dress and black-and-white cowboy boots got out. The Caddie's driver was an Asian guy in his fifties. She said something to him, then glanced at Luther and went into Clyde's. Luther frowned after her. "I got business to tend to."

"Thanks for the help, Luther. I appreciate it."

"Just don't say nuthin' "round that wop gangster. I don't wanna wind up on no pizza."

"Sure, Luther. Count on it."

Luther and his buddy disappeared into Clyde's.

I walked up the two flights to the third floor and down a short hall to 304 and knocked. No answer. Somewhere at the other end of the hall a baby was crying, and somewhere else a rapper was banging out a gangster line. Ice-T. Drama. No sounds came from within Gloria Uribe's apartment. I knocked again, then took out the wires I keep in my wallet and let myself in.

Gloria Uribe had a one-bedroom with a bath and a tiny kitchenette. The walls were discolored and paint was peeling from the ceiling, but it wasn't an unclean place. A tattersall sofa with a beaded slipcover sat opposite a Victorian china cabinet that had been polished a deep, purple mahogany. The kitchenette and the bath were neat and clean, and the bedroom was a spotless vision in pink: pink satin comforter, pink Princess telephone, pink lace pillows, pink walls and ceiling. She had even found a pink clock-radio, which sat next to the bed on a nightstand. The nightstand was brown.

I wanted to find her trick book. Streetwalkers don't keep them because they don't have regular customers, but call girls do. They use the book to keep track oft heir appointments and such details of their trade as client preference and past fees. If I found Gloria's trick book, I would know when Charlie DeLuca was with her and when he wasn't and what they did when they were together. I might even learn what was going on.

I started with the nightstand, then looked behind and beneath the bed and between the mattress and the box springs. I found two boxes of Softique tissues, one open, the other not, and a box of Trojan prophylactics, ribbed. I went through her vanity and a small chest of drawers with a forest of little knickknacks on top. Bottom drawer of the chest, there were a black snakeskin whip, a black vinyl body harness, two pairs of police-issue handcuffs, and a black rubber mask with a couple of little holes that I guess you were supposed to breathe through. Nice.

I looked through the rest of her bedroom and her closet and then I went into her bathroom. The trick book was wrapped in a freezer-strength Baggie and taped to the underside of her lavatory, along with a little vial of crack cocaine. It had taken me exactly eight minutes and forty seconds to find it. Cops probably do it in less.

I took the book out into the living room, sat on the couch, and looked through it. There were entries dating back ten months to the beginning of the year, and sure enough, exactly five months and one week ago, there was the first mention of Charlie DeLuca. He had seen Gloria on three consecutive days the first week they had met, then five times the following week. The notes were mostly abbreviations, but the abbreviations were obvious. I read them and tried to feel detached and professional, but all I managed was smarmy and embarrassed. None of the notes related to Charlie's business or to anything Charlie might've said about his business.

I looked through every day of every week up until the present and noticed that starting in the fifth week, whenever Charlie's name appeared, another name appeared, too. Santiago.

Hmm.

I flipped back to the beginning of the book again and this time went through looking for Santiago. His first mention was during that fifth week, with Charlie. Maybe Charlie had brought him along. I kept looking. Sometimes Gloria wrote the full name, sometimes she just wrote S. For the next few weeks, every time there was an S, there was also Charlie's name, but after that sometimes there was just the S. Luther had said that Charlie had been around last Tuesday and Friday, but there was no mention of him on those days in the book, just Santiago. Maybe Charlie didn't come around to see Gloria anymore and maybe that's why she didn''tlist him. Maybe he came to see Santiago.

Hmm, again.

Santiago was penciled in for tomorrow at four-thirty in the afternoon. A Friday. Hmm. Charlie wasn't scheduled, but that was okay. Neither was I.

I closed the trick book, put it back in its plastic bag, then retaped it beneath the lavatory in Gloria Uribe's bathroom and let myself out. When I got down to the street, Luther and his friend were back leaning against the Pontiac. Luther grinned when he saw me, flashing more of the Mike Tyson teeth. I said, "Luther, you know a guy named Santiago, comes around here sometime?"

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