by Max Austin
“Oh, I’m okay,” Diego said. “You could’ve just called me on the phone.”
“We like to see things for ourselves,” she said. “You have any new thoughts since we talked at the bank?”
“What do you mean?”
“Maybe you remembered something that you didn’t think to mention at the time.”
“No. Nothing new.”
“You sure?”
Dolores didn’t like this woman. “Are you accusing Diego of something? After all he’s been through?”
“Take it easy,” Aragon said, smiling at her. “We were just checking on him. Anything unusual after such a big crime gets our attention.”
“I’ll be back at work tomorrow,” Diego said. “I just felt a little, you know, under the weather.”
“Okay,” Aragon said. “Well, thanks for your time.”
Diego held the door while the agents departed. As he closed it, Dolores hissed at him: “See? What did I tell you?”
He shushed her and checked the peephole to make sure the agents went away.
“Don’t worry,” he said as he turned back to her. “Everything’s fine.”
Ooh. He made her so mad.
“I’d scratch your eyes out, but my nails are still wet.”
The phone rang.
Chapter 38
Johnny Muller waited anxiously for someone to answer. He’d gone outside to make the call, and he couldn’t wait around, redialing, without his boss noticing he wasn’t on the sales floor. On the fifth ring the phone was picked up and a man said, “Hello?”
“You told me to call,” Johnny said. “Then you let it ring five times?”
“What’s the matter?” Definitely the bank guard’s voice. “You nervous or somethin’?”
“Don’t worry about me.”
“Oh, but I was worried, amigo. Your time was almost up. I was getting ready to call the cops.”
“No, don’t do that. I’ve got what you want. Or, I will have it. By tonight.”
“What’s wrong with now?”
“I’m still at work. It’s better if we go to the money after dark.”
“You don’t want anyone to see your hiding place?”
“Something like that.”
“Or, maybe, you’ve got a trap planned for me. Maybe you’ll have friends hiding in the dark.”
“Nothing’s going to happen.” Johnny glanced over his shoulder to make sure he was still alone on the sidewalk. “I’m going to hand over the cash, and you’re going to go away. We’ll never see each other again.”
“That’s the plan, amigo. Don’t fuck it up.”
“Meet me tonight at nine o’clock at the parking lot in front of my store. I’ll take you to the money.”
“Okay. Nine o’clock. No tricks.”
Johnny folded his cell phone and slipped it into his pocket. He took a deep breath and glanced at the high clouds that streaked the sky. Then he hurried back into the store.
Chapter 39
Vincent Caro paused for a moment to let his eyes adjust to the gloom inside Silvio’s Bar. More patrons inside than he’d expected in mid-afternoon, but he supposed some were here to pay tribute to the slain bartender and cadge free drinks in his honor. Nearly all men in the place, and most turned to check him out. He was the only one wearing a suit.
The fat man behind the bar was dark and leathery, with gray hair combed straight back. He wore a black leather vest over a white shirt with the cuffs turned up. Four chunky silver and turquoise rings on his thick fingers.
Caro propped a hip against an empty stool. The bartender waddled over to him and gave him a squinting appraisal.
“You a cop?”
“No. I’m a customer. I’ll have a double scotch. Your best brand.”
Caro looked past the man at the racks of bottles on the wall but didn’t see any single malts. Not that kind of bar. Still, he’d been inside worse joints. At least the other customers seemed to be ignoring him now.
The bartender filled a shot glass with Dewar’s and set it on the bar.
“Six bucks,” he said. “It’s happy hour.”
“Doesn’t look very happy,” Caro said as he slipped his leather wallet from inside his charcoal-gray jacket.
“We’re a little down today. Everybody’s favorite bartender got killed last night.”
“I noticed the crime scene tape outside,” Caro said. “Sorry for your loss.”
The fat man gave him the appraising squint again, as if trying to determine whether Caro was kidding him.
“You sure you’re not a cop?”
“My name is Caro. I’m from out of town. Are you Silvio?”
“That’s right. I own this place, but I’m working the bar until I find a replacement I can trust.”
“Trust is important.”
Caro lifted the glass and took a sip. Managed not to wince at the taste.
“Your bartender. Somebody shot him?”
“Worse than that,” Silvio said. “Somebody busted him up. Broke his leg, his arm, most of his fingers. Then they shot him.”
“Jesus.” Caro made a face. “Why would someone do that?”
“Who knows? Maybe they were on drugs. Maybe they had a grudge against him.”
“ ‘They’? You think there was more than one?”
“Oh, hell, yeah,” Silvio said. “Harris was a big guy. A biker. It would take a couple of assholes, at least, to do that to him.”
Silvio shook his head as he moved away down the bar. He sold a couple of beers to old-timers at the far end, then drifted back to Caro, who patiently sipped the scotch.
“Want another?”
“Little early for me,” Caro said.
Silvio grunted but didn’t move away. Caro could tell he was curious about the out-of-towner who was asking questions.
“You know what it sounds like to me?” Caro said. “Sounds like somebody was trying to get information from your bartender.”
“Information?”
“Sure. One of them holds a gun on him while the other one works him over, trying to get him to talk.”
“Talk about what? He’s a fucking bartender. What could he tell them?”
Caro gestured him closer. Silvio leaned in, and Caro spoke just above a whisper.
“That big bank robbery in town? You heard about it?”
“Just what I saw on TV.”
“Somebody told me there’s a connection between that robbery and your bar.”
Silvio’s eyes widened. “What kinda connection?”
“I don’t know.” Caro gave a little shrug. “Maybe nothing. Maybe it’s bullshit. But maybe your man Harris knew something about that holdup.”
“No, no, no. He wouldn’t get mixed up in anything like that. He was completely straight. He did a stretch years ago, and swore he’d never do it again. That was one of the reasons I hired him.”
Caro looked around the bar. A couple of the customers looked interested in their whispered conversation, but nobody was close enough to hear.
“I’m not saying he was involved directly. But maybe he heard something, you know? Some of these guys in here, they look like they could be bank robbers.”
Silvio looked around, too, then his dark face split into a bright smile.
“They do, don’t they? Motherfuckers. That’s why I don’t come down here much anymore. You get to be my age, everybody looks like a fuckin’ criminal.”
Caro returned the smile. “Even me?”
“Especially you.”
They had a good laugh together. Caro fished out his wallet again and took out a hundred dollar bill. He showed it to Silvio and added a cream-colored business card.
“Keep this handy,” he said to the old man. “You hear anything about that bank, give me a call. I’ll make it worth your while.”
Silvio shook his head, still chuckling, but he slipped the money and the card into his shirt pocket.
Chapter 40
Mick Wyman was on the move. He could
n’t simply sit in his motel room, waiting for night to come. Instead, he drove around town, swinging by Felix’s Real Mexican Food occasionally to make sure Johnny wasn’t there, trying to double-cross them. Mick knew he wasn’t accomplishing anything, knew not to mistake movement for action, but it was better than sitting still.
He slowed as he drove past his apartment building on Truman Street, checking for police vans or any other sign of trouble. He went to the end of the block and turned around, checking every parked car and every window for the silhouettes of surveillance men. If anyone was watching the apartment, they were doing a damned good job of hiding it.
Mick was so busy looking for cops, he almost missed that the door to number 6 stood open a couple of inches.
He parked the Charger at the curb and sat there a few minutes, the engine running. No sign of movement inside his apartment. Just that tantalizing gap at the door. He’d locked the place up tight when he left, so someone clearly had been inside since. Were they still in there?
Finally, he couldn’t stand it anymore. It might be an ambush, but he had to check for himself.
Mick kept the Colt .45 close to his thigh as he crossed the street to the apartment building. He ducked past his living room window and stood beside the door, his back against the stucco wall. He gave the door a push. It swung inward silently.
Nothing.
Mick peeked around the doorjamb, then jerked his head back. Gave himself a second to process what he’d seen. Nobody in the living room, but the place was wrecked, furniture slashed and lamps smashed. Another peek told him nothing more, but he did get a whiff of urine.
“Son of a bitch.”
He wheeled into the doorway, gun first. He crossed the living room, saw the mess in the kitchen. Checked the bedroom and the bathroom.
Nobody. The bedroom window was broken. Everything cut open and searched.
What had they been looking for?
He’d been careful not to leave behind any clues to his whereabouts. He had his keys, his IDs, and his weapons either in his pockets or in the car. But someone knew his name and knew where he’d been living. They’d killed Harris to get that information, and now they were making use of it, hunting for him.
They hadn’t needed to slash his bed to conduct their search, and they sure as hell hadn’t needed to piss all over his living room furniture. Were they trying to scare him? They’d have to do better than that. But if they were trying to make him angry, they were succeeding. He was mad as hell.
Chapter 41
Diego Ramirez and Dolores Delgado pulled into the parking lot of a convenience store across the street from Big Blast Audio. The car stereo store was closed for the night, a metal screen down over the front windows, security lights glaring.
“He could’ve chosen a darker spot to meet,” Diego said. “He must want to look us over.”
“I’ll give him something to see,” Dolores said, brandishing the little pearl-handled semiautomatic she kept in her purse.
“Put that away,” Diego hissed.
He looked around the brightly lit lot. This wasn’t the best place to park. Too much coming and going.
“Wait here,” he said. “I’m going to take a look around.”
“At what?” Dolores said. “You can see the whole place from here.”
“I want to check the alley. Make sure it’s not a trap.”
“If there’s a trap, it won’t be here. It’ll be wherever he takes us next.”
“I want to check.”
“Leave me the keys. I’ll listen to the radio.”
She slipped her .22-caliber pistol back into her leather handbag and checked to make sure she hadn’t chipped her nail polish. The glittery green nails looked like dragon claws, not that Diego would ever say such a thing out loud.
He got out of the car as Dolores punched buttons on his expensive stereo.
Diego wore a dark denim coat that came down to his hips. It had hand-warmer pockets big enough to hold his .32-caliber pistol. He would’ve preferred to carry something with some stopping power, like the .38-caliber revolver the robbers had taken at the bank, but this was the only other gun he owned. It would have to do.
The parking lot had streetlights at two corners. A budding elm tree threw a ragged inkblot onto the pavement, and Diego waited in the shadow a full minute, watching, listening. All he heard was the whoosh of passing traffic and the bounce of ranchera music, coming from his own car. He sighed. Dolores and her south-of-the-border tunes.
Diego walked between Big Blast Audio and the neighboring jewelry store, which was also closed for the night. Behind the stores, the alley was empty. He checked the delivery doors. Locked. He opened the Dumpster that the stores shared and peered inside. A few cardboard boxes and a couple of trash bags, but no gunmen. He walked around the stereo store and emerged on the other side.
Dolores was probably right. This wasn’t the place for a trap. It would be at the next stop, wherever the blond kid took them. That’s where the danger would lie.
Diego got into his big purple car and turned down the blaring stereo. Dolores gave him a look.
“It’s all good?” she asked.
“It’s fine. There’s nobody.”
“So what do we do now?”
“We wait. In a little while I’ll move the car across the street.”
“What about the police?”
“What about them?”
“They see a lowrider parked in front of a stereo store, they’ll think we’re burglars.”
“We won’t be there long. Soon as our guy gets there, we’ll take off.”
“With him in our car?”
“In the backseat,” Diego said. “You can keep your gun pointed at him while I do the driving.”
That made her smile. “He tries anything, I’ll shoot him.”
“Let’s get the money first,” Diego said. “Then you can shoot him all you want.”
Chapter 42
Johnny Muller was so busy thinking about the rendezvous, he nearly crashed his Jeep on the way there. He was driving south on San Mateo, in light traffic, and didn’t realize the cars in front of him were stopping for a red light until he was right on top of them. He stood on the brakes, tires shrieking.
“Jesus,” he muttered. “Snap out of it.”
Too much on his mind. He felt strung-out, taut. The bank heist had gone well, but hardly anything had gone right since. And he still hadn’t received a dime of the loot.
Now here he was, on his way to meet the bank guard, unarmed and afraid, with no idea what was about to happen. Mick had said on the phone that he and Bud would have a surprise waiting, but what could it be? Would they jump the guard? Kill him? Johnny didn’t want to be a part of that.
But better to kill than to die. Better to kill than to go to prison.
Johnny stopped for a red light. A yellow Mustang pulled up beside him, a young guy behind the wheel, his head bobbing to a thumping beat. Johnny wondered whether he’d sold that kid his stereo. His dream of opening his own stereo shop seemed far away. He was thinking short-term now, like surviving the night.
He drove another mile along the busy four-lane, then turned on his blinker. Big Blast Audio was on the right up ahead. He swung into the lot, his headlights raking the purple Cadillac parked in front of the store.
Two people inside the car. The passenger was the guard’s tattooed girlfriend.
Johnny parked next to the driver’s side of the Cadillac and rolled down his window. The guard did the same, and said, “Get out. Nice and slow.”
“What’s she doing here?” Johnny asked.
“Just get out of the fuckin’ car.”
His heart thumping, Johnny slid out from behind the wheel and closed the car door. He pocketed his keys, resisting the urge to run away.
“Lift up your shirt,” the guard said. “Turn all the way around.”
Johnny was wearing a black polo shirt with jeans, and he pulled up the tails of the shirt and did as co
mmanded, glad that he hadn’t tried to bring a weapon.
“Okay,” the guard said. “Get in the backseat.”
Johnny pulled down his shirt and opened the back door of the Cadillac. As he slid into the seat, he saw that the girlfriend was turned around, watching him. She had a little gun in her hand, resting on the back of the front seat, the hole in the barrel an unblinking black eye.
“No need for guns,” he said, a quaver in his voice. “Nobody’s trying to cheat you or anything.”
“Damned right,” she snarled. “Nobody cheats us.”
Her lips were thickly coated with red lipstick, and her eyes were elaborately decorated under thick brows. She wore a red blouse that shimmered under the interior light. Her fingernails were green.
Jesus, these people. Dressed up like they were out on a date, in their fucking purple lowrider. About as subtle as a neon sign.
The guard was watching Johnny in the rearview. When their eyes met in the mirror, he said, “Where are your partners?”
“You think I’d tell them about this meet? They’d blow my brains out if they knew. This is strictly between you and me.”
“All right,” the guard said. “Where we going?”
“To a place over on Juan Tabo,” Johnny said. “An old restaurant.”
“That’s where my money is?”
“That’s right.”
“Why couldn’t you just give it to me here?”
“Because I don’t have it. We stashed the money after the holdup.”
Following Johnny’s directions, the guard drove halfway across town to the boarded-up restaurant. He slowed almost to a stop before turning into the driveway, not wanting to drag the Cadillac’s low rear bumper on the concrete.
“I remember this place,” the woman said. “We ate here a couple of times. The food was okay, but it went out of business years ago.”
The guard grunted, busy checking out the parking lot. Johnny looked around, too, wondering where Mick and Bud were hiding.
“Go around back.”
No vehicles in the lot, which was illuminated by a single security light on a pole. The few shaggy shrubs that clung to life around the perimeter were all too small to hide behind.