by C. D. Reiss
“Keep making me angry.”
“I bet she tastes like soy sauce when she cries.”
My hand tightened to the point of no return. I pulled the trigger. Tight. Tighter, until the tension in the thing released, and the trigger bounced back.
Nothing happened.
Scott broke into hysteria.
Zo’s eyes went wide. He chanted “Holy shit holy mother of Jesus,” over and over.
I let the gun swing from the trigger loop, finger extended. Paulie looked both impressed and pensive as he held out his hand for it. We didn’t have a chance to exchange a word because the door opened with a creak.
Antonio stood in the rectangle of light. “Paulie.” The word was a statement with a serious undercurrent of darkness, violence, and unspoken threats. “What is she doing here?”
“Nice to see you, too. What took you so long?”
Antonio stepped inside, taking in everything, his hands, knuckles already bloodied and bruised, coiled for something. Zo shut up as if someone had stapled his mouth shut, and Scott, for once, was reduced to silence.
“You said you were in the trailer,” he said.
“I moved him.”
Antonio reached me and took the gun then put his other hand in mine. I realized that with everything we’d done together, we’d never held hands. Not until I was afraid to hurt him or get blood on my cuffs did I feel his fingers laced in mine.
“What the fuck are you doing, Paulie?” Antonio asked.
“Good luck with this one,” he said.
Antonio pulled me through the door, and I followed because I had no choice. Though the container had been lit, the afternoon sunlight made me squint. I held my hand up to block the sun as Antonio pulled me toward his Mas.
He opened the door for me. “Get in, and do not make me put you in.”
I got in. He came around the front of the car. We watched the open door of the red shipping container. No one came out. Antonio backed out of the parking lot in a spray of gravel.
“What the fuck—”
“He picked me up from work,” I said.
“What did he tell you?”
“Nothing. Then we went in there, and Scott looked like that. Did you do that to him?”
“I didn’t want you to see that. It was supposed to be that I finished getting his guys to understand my position, then we worked on Scott. Then you gave him his money back, and you were done.”
“Well, I did see it. You hurt him. One of his eyes was sealed shut.”
“I woulda done worse if Zo hadn’t pulled me off him.” Antonio drove in a rage, pulling onto the freeway as if he wanted the car to eat it. “He just wouldn’t stop fucking talking. This is what I was telling you. This is who I am. This is what you do to me. And Paulie? He doesn’t trust you. He showed you so you’d run away from me, right?”
“He wanted me to shoot Mabat in exchange for Katrina’s immunity.”
“And what happened when you wouldn’t?” he asked.
“I did.”
“You what?”
“I pulled the trigger.”
I saw that he was confused. He was probably thinking: Had Scott been quiet when he got there? Did he look dead? Who was the woman sitting next to him? Was there a whole new set of problems to solve?
“You think you’re the only one, Antonio. You think you’re the only one with a little murder in him,” I said. “A little temper? Well, I knew there were no bullets in the gun, because it was so light. I knew it would just click, but I was sorry it was empty. I wanted to spray his brains all over the wall. He’s a waste of a man.”
Antonio pulled the wheel hard right at eighty miles an hour and screeched to a stop at the shoulder. If that was what it was to be mercurial and impulsive, I understood the appeal. Every moment felt like living at the height of awareness, every sense sharpened to a fine edge.
“God help me,” he said. “I’ve ruined you.”
I touched his arm, but he pulled away.
thirty-six.
ntonio,” I said.
He didn’t answer, just kept his wrist on the top of the steering wheel.
“Capo.”
“Don’t call me that.”
My face got hot, and my loins tingled as if I’d been dropped off the first hill of a roller coaster. I wanted to look at him, but I couldn’t. I wanted to check his hands for bruises and accuse him of worse violence than I’d wanted to commit. I wanted to make excuses and demands. I looked at my own hands, free of blood or bruise, but they were shaking.
“Antonio, what’s wrong?”
He got off the freeway downtown. “It doesn’t matter.”
“I think it does.”
“We’ll still protect you.”
“What? Wait. I don’t understand. What happened to everything?”
“It’s just done, Theresa. Over.” He shook his head, eyes on the road and avoiding my gaze.
I blinked, and a tear fell. What had I done? How could I have done differently? How could he shut me out? “This was Paulie’s plan? That you’d hate me?”
He didn’t answer. He’d turned to stone right in front of me.
“Brilliant,” I muttered. “He’s a fucking genius.”
“Nice mouth.”
“Fuck, fuck, fuck!” I hit him on the arm.
He yanked the car over, screeching to the curb a few blocks from the loft. He drew his finger like a rod, rigid and forceful, as if he could kill me with it. “Do not hit me again.”
“What happened?”
“This is not what I want. I’m in the life. I’m damned, I know this. I cannot come home to a woman I’ll share hell with.” He slapped the car in park and turned away from me again, as if seeking answers in the half distance.
“You would have done the same to protect someone you cared about,” I said.
“I would have beaten him to death with the empty gun. That’s the point, isn’t it?”
“I’m not understanding the point.”
“Please just go. I don’t want to see you again.”
His words tightened in my gut, twisting my insides to jelly. “Antonio, please. Let’s talk—”
He sped the car forward and around a turn, barely stopping to drop me in front of my house. “Get out.”
I waited for him to change his mind. Maybe if I reached out to touch him, he would relent, but he seemed so radioactive that I couldn’t. I took the phone he’d given me from my bag and handed it to him.
“I don’t want it,” he said, still not looking at me. “Give it to the poor. Just go.”
I was a coward. I couldn’t fight for him. I didn’t know how. I got out, and though I didn’t look back, I didn’t hear him pull away until I was safely inside.
***
My house was empty. Every surface gleamed. The dishes were put away. The broken swans were gone.
I stepped out of my shoes and looked around for any sign of Katrina. She’d left a few old-style bobby pins, but everything else was gone. She’d always kept most of her stuff at her parents’, I reminded myself. I had a family. I could call any of them. And what would I say? They’d walked me through Daniel. Would they walk me through another man? One I couldn’t talk about?
I put the phone he’d given me by the charger, and it blooped with an auto update to the music library. Tapping and scrolling, I found he’d left me music ages ago, before I’d squeezed a trigger. Puccini, Verdi, Rossini. Antonio liked opera, and it didn’t matter that I liked it too.
I put on Ave Maria and shuffled the rest. Went to the refrigerator, didn’t open it. The sink, empty. Back around the kitchen.
I made a third and fourth circuit around the island, as if spooling my pain around it. Antonio, my beautiful, brutal capo. He wanted me to be clean, and I’d sullied myself, debased myself, not with sex but violence. I was supposed to be his escape, and I’d walked into a trap where I was empowered to commit murder. For all intents and purposes, I had.
And there were witne
sses. People who didn’t like or trust me. They’d pat him on the back and tell him to move on to a woman who knew her place. To get cunning and hard and live, or stay gentle and die. A woman who knew the rules. A woman from his world. He’d whisper amore mio in her cheek while he held her. He’d make her eggs and protect her innocence with his life.
All of his sweetness would go to her. All of his brutality would stay at the job.
thirty-seven.
y face hurt. I remembered the feeling from when I found Daniel’s texts. I iced my face, broke out a new toothbrush, and went the fuck to work. Shit, I’d done this before. I was an old hand. I wasn’t going to shake off Antonio that day, and maybe not that week. But I had to, didn’t I?
Despite my game face and strong words of self-reliance, Pam saw right through me.
“What happened?” she asked.
“Nothing.”
“Uh-huh.”
“Can you get me a meeting with Arnie?” I asked. “Fifteen minutes. Tell him it’s urgent.”
“Don’t forget your eleven thirty with Daniel Brower.”
I noticed she didn’t call him a dickhead, and I raised an eyebrow. Pam stared at me, and I looked over her shoulder. I recognized the faces on her computer screen.
Two mug shots. Bruno Uvoli and Vito from the valet service. I leaned in. Vito’s mug shot was for an arrest for the sexual assault of an eleven-year-old girl. Bruno’s DNA had been found at the scene of his cousin’s death, ten years earlier. No charges.
They’d been shot down assassination style in an abandoned suburban house in Palmdale. They’d just been found, but it was assumed they’d been killed the previous afternoon.
Antonio. All I could think about was Antonio assassinating two men and finding out I’d almost done the same.
“Miss Drazen?” Pam sounded concerned.
“Did you get me Arnie?”
“Ten fifteen. Are you all right? You turned white as a sheet.”
“I’m going to go catch up on my email. Hold my calls.”
I didn’t check my emails at all. I wrote Arnie a short, concise letter of resignation. I was done wasting my life with anything I didn’t love.
***
Arnie kept me far longer than fifteen minutes, trying to work out consultancies and flexible hours, more pay, a promotion, a new title. He asked me where I was going. When I said, “Nowhere,” he believed me and wished me luck in the most sincere voice I’d ever heard him use.
I saw Daniel’s team before I saw him: a handful of men in suits huddled by the window and a woman I recognized. Short, slim, with a professional dark bob, and sensible shoes. Clarice. From her outfit, no one would ever guess she liked being called a filthy whore while sucking a taken man’s cock.
I felt absolutely nothing about her presence, and that was a relief in itself.
“Hi, everyone,” I said as I approached. “I’m ready. Who’s joining me?”
“Just me,” Daniel said. “It’s my only chance to get rid of these guys.”
Clarice grimaced in a valiant attempt at a smile. I led Daniel into the glass conference room where Antonio had threatened to kiss me in front of everyone. We sat at a corner of the desk, me at the head and him at the side.
“You rang?” I said.
“How are you?” he asked. “Besides in no mood for small talk.”
“I’m fine. I see you hired Clarice back.”
“She was the best speechwriter I ever had. I figured if you weren’t coming back to me…”
“Makes sense.” It did. It made all the sense in the world. “I’d prefer it if you didn’t tell her anything about what happened between us or about my relationships.”
“You said it was over with you and Spinelli.”
“So? She has a big mouth, and every thought she’s ever had is on her face.”
He sighed. “Yeah, I know. Honestly, there’s no pillow talk because there’s no pillow. I have no time right now for any of it. Did you see the latest polling?”
“Heard about it.”
“It’s partly Clarice,” he said. “She knows her job. But it’s also taking action against crime. Caution doesn’t play. That’s a fact.”
“I would have talked you out of it.”
“Yeah, well, there you have it.”
I didn’t realize I was still attached to my work on his campaign until that underhanded non-insult. “Ouch, Dan.”
“I’m sorry. I didn’t come here to give you a hard time.”
“Oh, good.”
He leaned forward, getting into his business posture. I saw that his fingernails were cleanly cut, and his hair didn’t flop, and his hands didn’t seek purchase on old habits or tics.
“You left some notes behind with Bill and Phyllis,” he said. “You had a lot of questions about a cluster of buildings in Mount Washington. They brought it to my attention a couple of days ago.”
I remembered how to tamp down my emotions and how to control my expression. “I didn’t find anything. That’s why I didn’t bring it up.”
“I know. But some of that property was managed by a law firm with one client who was killed by the current owner,” he said.
“You lost me on the killing part.”
“I’m going to let a judge decide that. In the meantime, I’m getting together a warrant. I wanted to let you know ahead of time. If you left a tube of lipstick there, or a tampon or whatever, you’d better go get it.”
I laughed a little to let him know what I thought of his warning.
“What?” he asked.
“You’re protecting me?”
“Yes, I am.”
“They’re not going to forget Catholic Charities. The press might have brushed it off as an interesting photo op of nothing, but if my stuff is on that property, dots get connected. How would it look if it comes out that you sat on your hands for almost a month while a war started? It’s going to look like you swept it under the rug because I was involved.”
He set his face in a look he’d never given me before. It lacked any compassion or grace. It was the look that scared witnesses. “I want to be clear, so I’m only saying this once. This is the last time I will speak to you as an insider. This is your last concession. If I need to subpoena you, I will. If you have a shred of DNA over there, remove it, because once I walk out of here, I won’t hesitate to drag you down with him.”
I stood and held out my hand. “Thank you for your consideration, Mister Brower.”
Instead of shaking it, he held my face and kissed my right cheek then my left. Though Daniel was as American as apple pie, it felt like a final good-bye.
thirty-eight.
id I have hours? Days? Was the time between now and Daniel’s warrant measured in minutes? And what did I want to do about it?
I put the top down on my dented car as I drove home, as if the extra smog intake would clear my head. But the 10 freeway at rush hour was no place to get my head together.
Antonio had dumped me in no uncertain terms. I owed him nothing. If he got dragged into a black and white tomorrow, it would have nothing at all to do with me. But that image of him in cuffs, for anything, made me pull off onto Crenshaw.
I still had his phone. I swallowed my pride and dialed, heart pounding from the first ring, then the second, then the voicemail announcement. I hung up. I didn’t know if I was being ignored or if some smaller insult was being hurled, and I didn’t want to think about it.
I plugged the phone into my stereo and listened to Puccini. Could I call East Side Motors? Should I just go? It was about five fifteen. The drive would take me a good forty minutes.
I headed east. When I passed downtown, I’d decide.
***
I saw smoke on the horizon as I went east on the 10. Wildfires were a fact of Southern California life, especially at points north and east of Los Angeles, so I thought nothing of it. Then the traffic on Figueroa was diverted to Marmion, and I heard sirens and saw flashing lights on the flats, not the woode
d hills. I parked and walked a block south and two east, smoke choking me. A crowd had gathered at the curb, and the police were hard-pressed to keep them safe from their own curiosity.
“There are underground gas tanks,” one cop said to a guy who wanted to cross the street. “They blow, and you’re gonna be grease. So get back.”
The man got back, and I stepped in his place for half a second to confirm what I knew to be true. East Side Motors was up in flames.
I walked to my car. I knew where Antonio’s house was, more or less, but it was very close to the shop, and the fire trucks had blocked off that street. He wasn’t getting out without being seen, and neither was I.
I scrolled through my phone, the one without Puccini and Verdi. Did I have Paulie’s number? Zo’s? Would any of them listen to me or would they just be relieved I was gone? I needed someone I could trust. Someone who had an emotional enough connection to Antonio that I could count on their loyalty.
I felt fit to burst. I needed to tell Antonio what Daniel had told me. I didn’t need to make sure I didn’t have any tissues at his house. I didn’t need to clear myself of malfeasance. I needed to make sure I’d done everything to get him out of Daniel's way.
It occurred to me late, almost too late. Too late for me to claim innocence.
I was bait. I was doing exactly what I was supposed to do: going to Antonio and leading the authorities right to him.
“Daniel, you fucking bastard.”
I’d never felt so used, so whored in my life. I drove away as fast as I could with the top down, west on Marmion. Was my phone tracked? Who knew what Daniel had done while we were together. If he felt no compunction in tracking my credit card purchases, why wouldn’t he track my phone?
At a red light, I wrote down a number from my call history then tossed the thing in a bus stop garbage can. It smacked against the back of the wire mesh and dropped onto a pile of ketchup-covered fast food bags.
I unplugged Antonio’s phone and called the number at the next light. If his phone wasn’t secure, I didn’t know what would be.
“Hello?”
“Marina? This is Theresa Drazen. I’d like to meet with you.”