by R. J. Jagger
DOUBLE DIE
R.J. JAGGER
1
Day One
July 8
Tuesday Morning
Nick Teffinger, the 34-year-old head of Denver’s homicide unit, parked the Tundra in front of a hooker bar on south Broadway and crossed the street to Tokyo Jack’s. Inside, pre-lunch, the place was dark and the customers were few. A waitress pouring coffee at a booth spotted him, came over and put him in a full-length squeeze with the pot still in hand.
Her touch was as he remembered.
She led him to a red vinyl booth in a dim corner back near the restrooms and said, “It went down right here.”
“Okay, walk me through it.”
“It’s pretty simple. A guy came in, sat back here and ordered a cup of coffee,” she said. “This was last night about seven. There were hardly any customers at the time. It was about like it is now.”
“You were his waitress?”
“Right.”
“Describe the guy.”
“He was black, somewhere in his mid-thirties and dressed really nice, in a suit,” she said. “His hair was short but it was dyed blond. He had sort of a jet-set look to him, if you know what I mean. He had a tan leather briefcase that he kept on the table right in front of him.”
“Okay.”
“Nick, I haven’t taken any drugs in over a year.”
“I know.”
“I’d be dead if it wasn’t for you.”
“That’s not true. Tell me what happened next.”
She ran a finger down his chest.
“I never showed my gratitude. I get off at eight tonight. We could get a room or something.”
He squeezed her hand.
“Be careful or I’m going to call your bluff one of these days. What happened next?”
She focused and then said, “He was here for about ten minutes and then a blond woman came in and joined him. She was like a goddess, Nick, honest to God. You’ve seen all those models on the covers of those magazines? She blows them away.”
“So she was nice, huh?”
“Let me put it this way,” she said. “Don’t look her in the eyes, Nick. You’ll be ruined if you do.”
“Ruined? That’s a pretty strong word.”
“Yeah but that’s what you’ll be. She had a tattoo on her neck. It was some kind of Kanji thing. I have no idea what it meant. Anyway, she ordered coffee, which I got, and then I was over there in that area where I had two other tables going, sort of keeping an eye on them in the mirrors.”
“Show me.”
She took him across the room and showed him how a mirror by the bar angled into another one over by the restroom and reflected into the booth.
“I use the mirrors sometimes to keep track of things,” she said. “Anyway, the man opened the briefcase. It was pointed away from the main room but into the mirror behind him. It was filled with money and I mean a ton of the stuff. On top of it all was a picture of a woman.”
“Did you get a look at her?”
“No. I could tell it was a woman but that was it,” she said. “Anyway, to me it looked exactly like the kind of thing that someone would give to a hitman. My curiosity went through the roof. What I ended up doing was going through the kitchen and around to the restrooms the back way. I hugged the wall right around the corner. Let me show you where.”
She took him over.
Her position was five or six feet behind the table, out of line of sight.
“They talked about the woman taking the mark by Friday night at the latest. Mostly they used the term the mark but at one point the man said her name, which was Susan Smith.”
“Susan Smith.”
“Right.”
“She was the mark?”
“Right, Susan Smith. Anyway, ten minutes later the little goddess left with the briefcase. The man stayed for another five minutes, finished his coffee and left.”
Teffinger nodded.
“Did he leave you a tip?”
“Yes, five dollars. You want to put it towards that room?”
2
Day One
July 8
Tuesday Morning
Outside the July sun beat down with every ounce of scorch it had, intent of wringing the last living drop of juice out of every person and plant and dog and bug in the city.
It felt good for the first thirty steps.
By the time Teffinger got to the Tundra he’d had enough. He cranked over the engine, turned the AC on high and dialed Sydney Netherwood, the newbie. As it rang he pulled up an image of the woman’s taut African American body and her smooth mocha skin.
“That call this morning is legit,” he said. “The mark is someone named Susan Smith. Find everyone in the city who has that name and get me what you can on them.”
A beat.
“What’s in it for me?”
“Same as me. A paycheck at the end of the month.”
“I get that without dropping everything,” she said. “You want me to drop everything, right?”
“Right.”
“So, what’s my motivation?”
“How about saving someone’s life?”
“Susan Smith’s?”
“Exactly.”
“I don’t know the woman,” she said. “What else you got?”
He exhaled.
“Okay, lunch.”
“That’s better. See, you can get to the right answer if someone gives you enough time.”
He pulled into Broadway traffic, cut over to Santa Fe and swung north back into the guts of the city, punching the buttons in hopes of getting a Beatles or Beach Boys song only to find that Sydney had set all the presets to hip-hop.
50-Cent’s In Da Club came through.
He let it play.
The bass twisted into his brain.
The hitwoman—the goddess—was from out of town. Denver didn’t have the depth to support a hit person, not to mention that a woman that riveting would have come across Teffinger’s line of vision sooner or later. The caveman genes in the back of his skull would have made him focus at her. He would have memorized her every detail. He would have seen the tattoo.
No, she wasn’t from here.
She was from out of town staying at a hotel.
That’s where he’d find her, in one of the better ones.
Goddesses don’t live low.
He found her on the fourth try, registered at the 1,000-room Sheraton strategically located in the heart of the matter, mere steps from both the 16th Street Mall and the financial district. According to the guy working the reception desk—a college-looking kid with a Bob Baxter name tag—the woman’s name was Portia Montrachet. She was staying in 1215, booked through Saturday morning.
Teffinger pulled a fifty out of his wallet and pushed it across the counter.
“It’s important that she doesn’t know anyone was asking about her.”
Bob shoved the bill in his pocket.
Teffinger was halfway across the lobby when he had an idea and turned back.
“I wanted to ask you one more thing,” he said. “Is she with anyone?”
“No.”
“How about a black guy with blond hair?”
“No.”
“You haven’t seen a guy like that around?”
“No.”
“Okay, thanks.”
He headed across the lobby and out the revolving doors. Then he went back in.
“Bob, stop making me leave before I ask all my questions. Did she rent a car?”
“Let me check.” The man punched buttons on a computer screen and nodded
. “She rented a black Mustang. You want to the plate number?”
“Sure, why not?”
He wrote it down.
Then he walked away.
“Hey,” Bob said.
Teffinger turned.
“Aren’t you going to ask me the next question?”
“Don’t have one.”
“You will.”
“You’re probably right,” Teffinger said. “Don’t ever get as old as me. The mind stops working in a straight line.” He drummed his fingers, trying to remember what it was that he was supposed to remember. Then it came to him. “Is the room next to Ms. Montrachet’s available?”
“I told you you’d have another question. Let’s see; 1214 no, 1216 yes.”
Teffinger rented 1216 through Saturday morning under the name North Reynolds, not really having a plan for it yet but reasoning it couldn’t hurt.
Then he left.
Back at homicide Teffinger headed for the coffee and from there over to Sydney who had eight or ten fresh stacks of papers on her desk.
“So far I have eleven Susan Smiths,” she said.
“Eleven?”
She nodded.
Teffinger picked up the nearest pile.
On top was a printout of a driver’s license for one Susan Smith, a 32-year-old who lived west of Colorado Boulevard. Below that was her rap sheet, fairly clean except for a few minor alcohol-related infractions. Below that was her Facebook page, dated today, with a photo that matched the driver’s license.
The other piles were similar.
“Our hitwoman is someone named Portia Montrachet,” Teffinger said. “She’s staying at the downtown Sheraton, room 1215. Do me a favor and run that name to ground. I’m sure it’s a fake but I don’t want to find out later that it isn’t.”
Sydney gave him a look.
“When do I get that lunch?”
“Next week.”
“That’s what you always say.”
Teffinger shrugged.
“It’s not my fault that when next week comes, it’s now this week instead of next week.”
“So under your reasoning, next week never comes.”
He nodded.
“Precisely.”
“That’s pretty tricky reasoning.”
“It doesn’t come easy. I have to work at it.”
As Sydney worked the computer for Portia Montrachet, Teffinger told her about the black man with the bleached hair. “We’ll run him down,” he said, “but my guess is that he’s not the one who wants the mark hit. He’s an intermediary.”
“What makes you say that?”
“The system is built in layers,” he said. “No one who wants someone dead can just look in the phone book under hitmen. They have to leak their desire to someone, who knows someone else, who knows someone else. It’s all smoke and mirrors. The black man is a link in that chain but isn’t the start of that chain. Even if we find out who he is, working upwards from there will be difficult. He’ll be smart enough to cover his tracks.”
Sydney frowned.
“So far no one named Portia Montrachet exists,” she said. “She’s not in any of our databases and Google never heard of her. She must have used a credit card to register. Maybe we could get a lead from that.”
Teffinger didn’t answer.
One of the Susan Smith piles on the desk had his attention.
He picked it up and couldn’t believe what he saw.
3
Day One
July 8
Tuesday Morning
What he saw on the top of a Susan Smith pile was a face he recognized, intimately recognized to be precise. Looking into those eyes again for the first time in over two years, a memory flashed in his brain with such vividness that he might was well have been right there.
He was in Razzle.
It was Saturday night.
The bodies were sardine tight and every inch of the club dripped with smoke and perfume and sex and wild abandon and pounding bass. He was leaning against the bar with three Buds in his gut and a fourth in his hand, watching a pretty little thing gyrate on the dance floor and imagining what it would be like to slip his hand up between her thighs.
It was then that something happened.
A woman appeared from out of nowhere, her face suddenly in front of his, close, dangerously close, so close that he could feel the warmth of her breath. She rubbed her stomach on his and gyrated to the beat, letting her long raven-black hair swing from side to side.
She said nothing.
Her eyes said it all.
Her hips said it all.
Ten seconds, that’s how long it took before Teffinger was addicted. Her face was dark and mysterious and filled with lust.
Her eyes came close.
Her tongue licked his lips.
“Nick, are you okay?”
The words came from Sydney.
The memory flashed off.
He tapped the pile and said, “I know this woman. Her name’s Del Ray Rain. She’s a flight attendant.”
Sydney’s face washed in confusion.
“Her driver’s license says Susan Smith. Her website says she’s a lawyer. What’s going on?”
Teffinger shuffled through the pile.
In it was a printout of the front page of a website for Susan A. Smith, Attorney-At-Law. The photo of the attorney unquestionably belonged to Del Rey Rain, the flight attendant. He rolled the papers up, tapped them on the desk and said, “I’ll be back.”
“Where you going?”
“To talk to the mark.”
“You think she’s the one?”
“I’m positive of it.”
“How?”
“I don’t know. I just do.”
The woman’s office turned out to be an old but still-standing brick structure on the less-trendy edge of Wazee, three or four blocks from Coors Field in LoDo. It probably started life as a store or small manufacturing facility of some sorts before decades of abuse dragged it to near-death. Now, like more buildings than not, it was patched, upgraded, converted and reinvented. Burnt-orange designer awnings framed a weathered oak door. What the address lacked in prestige was balanced out with sunlight, parking and reasonably priced eateries.
Some day the area might be trendy.
That day wasn’t quite here yet.
Fire shot through Teffinger’s veins as he walked to the front door.
The woman’s eyes were dangerous.
They could shift his world.
They could make him be stupid.
They could make him do things.
They could make him feel things.
Screwed into the front door was a tasteful brass plaque:
Law Office of
Susan A. Smith, Esq.
The brass was darkened with age. It had been there for years, including the period two years ago when the woman was busy telling Teffinger she was a flight attendant.
He turned the knob and stepped inside.
What he expected was cramped dark wood, half-dead ferns and saggy bookshelves. What he got was a vaulted foyer, sunlight streaming from a skylight and rich Delano oil paintings on textured vanilla walls.
A contemporary receptionist desk was unoccupied.
Fresh tulips poked out of a crystal vase.
“Anyone home?”
No one answered.
He eventually found her in the upper attic storage area, sitting on the carpet with her back against the wall and her legs stretched out. A large storage box was at her side, pulled off a shelf of more of the same. The top was opened and several files were out. A band of sunlight sprayed through an open window, striking her thighs. She had her skirt hiked up to catch the rays.
She was shuffling through papers in a manila folder.
“So, you’re a lawyer,” Teffinger said.
The woman looked up.
Her eyes locked on his, first hard, then like a watercolor.
“Nick.”
“Not
that it matters much anymore,” he said, “but why’d you keep it from me? The fact that you’re a lawyer?”
She set the file down.
“I’m sorry about the way things ended,” she said.
“Don’t worry about it.”
Her eyes darted.
“Do you hate me?”
He thought about it.
The answer surprised him.
“Sometimes,” he said. “But only in the middle of the night.”
“I almost called you a hundred different times,” she said.
“Why didn’t you?”
“Do you want the truth?”
He smiled.
“The truth in a lawyer’s office? Is that physically possible?”
She stood up, hesitated, and took a step to him. She put her arms around his waist and buried her face in his neck. She smelled like an oasis and the pressure of her thighs against his shot fire through his veins.
“Not calling you was the hardest thing I’ve ever done.”
“Then why didn’t you?”
“Because you scared me, Nick.”
“Bullshit.”
“I don’t mean in a mean way,” she said. “I’m talking about the opposite.”
4
Day One
July 8
Tuesday Morning
Teffinger sat down on the floor, leaned back against the wall and said, “Technically I’m here on business. We have credible reasons to believe that a hitman—a hitwoman, actually—is in town to kill a target by the name of Susan Smith. We know of eleven women in town by that name and there are probably more. What I want to know from you is whether you’re the one she’s here for and, if so, why.”
The woman smiled, waiting for the punch line, then got somber.
“Are you serious?”
Yes.
He was.
“No,” she said.
“You’re not the one?”
She shook her head.
“If someone wants you dead, that’s the kind of thing you can feel.”
Teffinger shrugged.
“Maybe yes, maybe no,” he said. “Maybe it’s a brother or a girlfriend of someone you didn’t get off.”
“You mean revenge?”
“Sure, why not?”