Greasing the Piñata

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Greasing the Piñata Page 16

by Tim Maleeny


  Cape took the chair directly across from Frank and spun it around, straddled it. He placed the gun on the table, out of Frank’s reach but well within his own grasp. Then he unbuttoned his shirt to the center of his chest and pulled the two sides apart.

  “No wire, Frank.”

  “Not much chest hair, either.”

  Cape rebuttoned his shirt. “Does Salinas know you have another supplier?”

  Frank coughed, spraying Cape with garlic-infused spittle. For a moment it looked like the Heimlich maneuver might be needed.

  “Skip that question for now,” said Cape. “Let’s talk about the Senator.”

  Frank drank some water, his face cooling from red to pink. He stared at Cape for a long moment before jabbing a fork into his garlic chicken.

  “Why am I talking to you?”

  “Oh, sorry.” Cape took a card from his pocket. It was the card Salinas had given him in Mexico, the one with the drug lord’s private number. Cape slid it across the table far enough for Frank to read. “Want me to ask that first question again?”

  “The Senator’s dead.”

  “That hasn’t hit the news yet, Frank.”

  “Word gets around.” Frank glanced toward André-Cyrano, who was still massaging his wrist. “Go wait in the car.” Frank turned toward Cape. “Unless you got a problem with that?”

  Cape made a gun out of his thumb and forefinger and pretended to shoot it at Cyrano, who gave him the middle finger in response. After he was gone, Cape turned his attention back to Frank.

  “How long did you own the Senator?”

  “You’re mighty well informed.” Frank took a bite of chicken and spoke with his mouth full. “Too bad you can’t prove anything.”

  “I don’t have to—I’m not a cop, or a Fed. I just need some answers for my client, then I go away and you never see me again.”

  “Somehow I doubt that—you’re like a bad penny.”

  “C’mon, Frank, neither one of us is getting any younger.”

  Frank dabbed his mouth with the napkin tucked under his chin. “You know that stadium project that made the Senator a local bigshot—guess who built the stadium?”

  “Construction is your bread and butter, isn’t it?”

  At the mention of bread and butter, Frank took another bite. “We underbid the job. Senator Dobbins didn’t realize that two major corporate contributors to his election campaign had ties to the—umm, to us.” Frank smiled at the memory. “So when we won the stadium job, we could make it look like maybe the Senator was playing favorites.”

  “He either goes on the payroll or you say something to the press. Goodbye political career.”

  “Hello jail.” Frank chuckled. “And no skin off my back, since the press would only have enough to claim alleged mob connections.”

  “The rumors would be enough to ruin him, so you owned his vote.”

  “Rented, is more like it.” Frank shifted his focus to the garlic mashed potatoes.

  “How often?”

  “We greased him on a regular basis—a few grand a month—but only called in favors once in a while.”

  “Because you had others on the payroll?”

  Frank leaned back, shifting his weight from side to side. “Attracts less attention if you spread the responsibility around. You do your homework, don’t you?”

  Cape tried to look modest and almost pulled it off.

  “I’m not saying I know anything about that.” Frank sounded like he was testifying in court. “Just like I’m not saying there is such a thing as organized crime—I’m just a businessman with diversified interests in construction, shipping, real estate.”

  “How about insurance?”

  “You bet.” Frank smiled and sucked on his teeth. “Some people buy insurance because they’re worried there might be a fire in their store—some dumbass spills lighter fluid or a stock boy gets careless with matches. But if the owner of that store buys insurance—”

  “—from you—”

  “—then no fire—they’re protected. Fire insurance, life insurance. Nowadays they got insurance for everything.”

  “Legislative insurance?” Cape reached out and spun the gun like a bottle. “Protection in case corporate taxes get raised. Real estate zoning changes, drives up costs. Maybe the right kind of insurance could pay for a team of bi-partisan lawmakers voting on your behalf.”

  “That’s quite an imagination you got there.” Frank rested his hands on his belly.

  “Was Delta Energy one of the companies that benefited from your voting block?”

  “No comment.”

  “Off the record?”

  Frank glanced at the gun resting on the table. “By the time I order dessert, I want you gone.”

  Cape knew his threat to call Salinas must have an expiration date attached to it. Salinas would find out eventually, so Frank wanted to control the timing. That gave Cape some leverage but not enough, and there were some things Frank would never admit, even under duress.

  “Five more minutes, Frank. Then you can have your tiramisu.”

  “Gonna need a new waitress.”

  “Why did you hire the son?”

  “C’mon.”

  “Danny do something stupid?”

  “Besides working for me?” Frank grinned. “He was a mule, nothing more. And not a very good one. Just an overgrown kid looking for cheap thrills.”

  “You used him.”

  “Wouldn’t you?”

  “What went wrong, Frank?”

  “You’re the detective. I was hoping you could tell me.” Frank shook his head in dismay. “You think I killed him?”

  “It was one theory.”

  “Look, a man like me only wants three things out of life.” Frank ticked them off on the fingers of his right hand. “A wife that can cook, a girlfriend who swallows, and a steady stream of non-taxable income.”

  “Are those in order of priority?”

  “If you don’t mess with those three, I don’t give a fuck what you do. The Senator was my clean-up batter—my ace in the hole. You think I’d throw that away, you’re an idiot.”

  Cape felt like an idiot. He was running out of questions. “Maybe the Senator stopped cooperating. Had a change of heart.”

  “Nobody bats a thousand. Maybe he did start to feel the heat—if he wasn’t dead you could ask him yourself. But I had more than ten years invested in that douchebag.”

  Cape looked over at Sally standing placidly beside Tommy, who watched her warily but didn’t look stupid enough to try anything. Cape returned his gaze to Frank.

  “You trust your Mexican associates?”

  “About as much as they trust me.” Frank pulled the napkin from under his neck, revealing multiple chins. “I’m ready for dessert.”

  Cape nodded and reclaimed the card with Salinas’ number. Then he took the gun off the table and dropped it in his jacket pocket. “Souvenir.” He moved toward the door.

  Frank called after him. “How’s your client?”

  “Anonymous.”

  “Sure,” said Frank, smiling without warmth. “Tell her I said hi.”

  Chapter Forty-four

  Cape dropped off Sally in Chinatown before turning down the impossibly steep side of California Street.

  He pulled behind a bus claiming to be a zero emissions vehicle, twin antenna connecting it to overhead wires running the length of the street. The lights inside the bus flickered on and off every few blocks, illuminating the three passengers with an erratic strobe, making them appear and disappear.

  Cape had the top down and was grateful for the night air as he turned onto The Embarcadero. There was something to be said for driving a vintage convertible—the wind off the bay was almost strong enough to flush the smell of garlic from his clothes.

  At Townsend Street he parked, grabbed his jacket from the back seat, and walked across the sidewalk to the restaurant he knew so well. Town’s End was a favorite breakfast haunt that opened early, but they a
lso served dinner, and the tables were spaced far enough apart to have a private conversation.

  Rebecca stood when she saw him and waved. She was alone at a four top near the back. Cape walked past the open counter in front of the grill and said hello to the cooks, including Mary and David, the owners, all dressed in white chefs’ uniforms. Cape had never been in the restaurant without seeing at least one of them in the kitchen. He wondered when they slept.

  Rebecca hugged him and Cape didn’t object. She wore considerably more clothes than in the desert, but Cape was blessed with a good visual imagination.

  Nothing had happened between them at Burning Man, though there had been signals even before the candle flickered out. For starters, she had been naked and covered in mud, and he had no objection to getting his hands dirty. But they exchanged nothing but words—no bodily fluids, no moments of intimacy—though Cape sensed that something might have happened if he had taken the initiative. Sitting in the dimly lit restaurant, he wondered why he hadn’t.

  He could tell himself it was because of professional ethics, but those had more to do with never quitting a case than not sleeping with clients. Another explanation might be the fresh wound from getting dumped by e-mail, but Sally had been right about that relationship—it had been over long before he got the message. Looking across the table, Cape realized his hesitation wasn’t from a lack of physical attraction but from a gnawing sense that he still didn’t completely trust his client or himself.

  Maybe he was pursuing this case out of pride, a refusal to admit failure. And perhaps Sally was right—Rebecca’s motivation had less to do with closure than revenge, and Cape was doing nothing more than helping her get blood on her hands.

  “Thanks for meeting me.” Rebecca’s smile was bright enough to cast a shadow on his suspicions. It was one thing to be neurotic, another to be paranoid.

  “You said you found something.”

  “This.” Rebecca took a manila envelope from her bag and laid it on the table. “My father left it for me.”

  Cape reached for the envelope. “What did he say?”

  “Not a damn thing.” Rebecca’s expression was bland, but the bitterness in her voice was palpable. “No note, just a bunch of papers.”

  Cape undid the clasp and started removing documents, spreading them out on the table. “Maybe he was in a hurry.”

  “Maybe he didn’t know what to say. Men suck at apologizing.”

  Cape had to admit the latter was more likely, but it prompted a thought that made his skin crawl.

  “Rebecca, were you abused as a child?”

  Her cheeks flushed but she didn’t hesitate. “No…never…why would you ask such a thing?”

  “You’re positive.”

  “I think I’d remember.”

  Cape didn’t answer right away. “Never mind…just thought I should ask.”

  “Why?” Rebecca’s expression was less angry than concerned.

  “You were the only daughter and got sent away at a young age. Sometimes that happens—the mother steps in and removes temptation. Tries to save the family by breaking it apart.”

  Rebecca shook her head. “That’s not my story. My father sent me away, and it killed my Mom.”

  “What did?”

  “His secrets—I think the stress of living with them ate her alive, one cancer cell at a time.”

  Cape nodded. “OK.”

  “It’s not OK, but that’s the way it is. I can’t change it now, but…” Her voice trailed off.

  Cape waited, sensing what she would say before she found the words.

  “I think the people who killed my brother—my father—I think they might as well have killed my Mom. I think it’s all one and the same.”

  Cape dropped his eyes to the table. The first thing he noticed was a page of letters and numbers reminiscent of the one Beau had given him. He wondered if this was a duplicate and if Sloth had made any progress cracking the code.

  Next were stock certificates for a bunch of companies Cape had never heard of before—LandMass Industries, Gaia-Tec Corporation, TerraMax Enterprises, Digest Fuel Corporation—almost a dozen companies, thousands of shares.

  Lastly there were three maps, one of the United States, one of Canada, and one of Mexico. Cape felt his pulse quicken when he saw Puerto Vallarta marked with a red dot. Similar dots appeared on all the maps. Places in Canada he had never been, as far north as the Yukon and Northwest Territories. In the U.S. there were dots in the southwest, one in Texas near Austin and one in San Francisco. Cape flipped through the stock certificates and found a company name he had seen before: Delta Energy.

  “Wait here.” Cape took the page of codes along with the stock certificates over to Mary, who was still working behind the counter. The restaurant took take-out orders by fax, and Cape didn’t want to lose any time. After a few minutes he had the pages headed to Sloth for analysis. When he returned to the table, Rebecca gave him a hopeful look.

  “What does it mean?”

  “It means your father wanted to tell you something.” Cape shrugged. “Maybe set the record straight.”

  “He could’ve written a note.”

  “Like you said, maybe he didn’t have the words.”

  “Maybe.”

  “Maybe he left in a hurry.”

  “Maybe.” Rebecca looked unconvinced.

  “Sorry.”

  “Not all men suck at apologizing.” Rebecca reached out and squeezed his hand, then let it go as she forced a smile. “None of this is your fault.”

  “I know.”

  “You’ll figure it out.” She said it as a simple truth, a statement of fact, but it still sounded like a question to Cape.

  “Hold on to these—my friend has copies.” Cape gathered the papers together and returned them to the envelope. It was late, and the restaurant was almost empty. He stood to leave and Rebecca did the same.

  “When will I see you again?”

  Cape had been wondering the same thing. “Dinner tomorrow night—tonight I dragged you to a restaurant and we didn’t even eat.”

  “Perfect.”

  Rebecca had parked a few cars in front of him. Cape got a goodbye hug that might have lasted longer than the one in the restaurant. Rebecca had her arms wrapped around him, her mouth close to his ear.

  “I want you to find the people who took my family from me.”

  Cape nodded as Rebecca started to pull away.

  “I want you to find them,” she said, “and I want you to kill them.”

  Her voice was barely a whisper, and Cape thought he’d misheard her. When their eyes met she smiled with warmth that belied her words, and he wondered if he’d imagined it. Before he could ask, Rebecca had slipped into her car and pulled away from the curb.

  He watched her drive away as he walked to his car, concluding that the goodbye hug definitely lasted a good four seconds longer, wondering what he should read into that.

  Cape started his car and decided he really was a lost cause. He caught the light and made a U-turn onto The Embarcadero, accelerating along the water toward the abandoned piers on the right.

  He glanced in his rearview mirror and thought he recognized the late-model Mercedes half a block behind him. An image of a car parked outside The Stinking Rose flashed into his brain, but then the car dropped back and Cape switched his eyes forward.

  He picked up speed and caught the next light, then tapped the brakes where the road curved back toward the city.

  He tapped the brakes again and felt pedal give way, his foot hitting the floor.

  Cape spun the wheel but the car fishtailed and he over-compensated, sending it barreling over the curb. His right leg kicked against the brake pedal, hoping to find some resistance, but the car careened across ten feet of sidewalk into the chain link fence that blocked the wreckage of the pier. The fence flew apart, a stray pole breaking the windshield, as Cape felt his tires skid across the pier and sink into the decaying wood.

  He had just e
nough time to regret wearing his seatbelt as the boards gave way one by one, explosions of splinters and rusted nails that sounded like gunshots. Cape groped for the belt release as his world turned upside down.

  He jammed his thumb against the button and felt gravity take him, then his head hit the steering wheel and everything turned black. As black and unforgiving as the water of the bay.

  Chapter Forty-five

  Sally kept her eyes open as she slipped under water.

  The bath was long and deep, almost as wide as a jacuzzi and set into the floor of her loft. Some women took baths to wash away their stress in a miasma of bubbles, but Sally preferred to drown her sorrows by not breathing.

  There is a legend in China about a drowning man that sees his future instead of his past. So instead of having his life flash before his eyes, he sees his life as it might have been—if only he had not fallen in the water. If only he had made different choices in life. But like so many Chinese fables, it ends tragically when the man realizes he is dying and will never have the future that the water reveals. There is a moral to the story but no happy ending.

  Sally almost drowned when she was barely eight years old. Her school in Hong Kong had a series of interconnected pools that were used to train the girls to swim. Sally’s instructor camouflaged one of the tunnels between the pools and she almost lost consciousness before she found an opening.

  At that moment, when there was no more air left in her lungs, Sally had seen her parents as if they were still alive. Smiling as if they had never been murdered by the yakuza. As if they were still a part of her life. Whenever Sally took a bath she would submerge until she saw spots, sometimes until she had visions. Occasionally she saw her parents, but often she saw only bubbles straining toward the water’s surface.

  Tonight she lay at the bottom of the tub, her eyes open as she slowly let the air out of her lungs. The water was calm but her hair had come loose, flowing sinuously around her as she stared at the surface of the water. She blinked and focused her energy, slowing her heartbeat as the last bubble escaped her lips.

  Sally blinked again as the spots appeared around the edges of her vision. She kept her body still but the water was lapping against the edges of the bath as if a tide was pulling on her. It almost felt as if she had fallen into the sea.

 

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