Collar Robber: A Crime Story Featuring Jay Davidovich and Cynthia Jakubek

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Collar Robber: A Crime Story Featuring Jay Davidovich and Cynthia Jakubek Page 3

by Hillary Bell Locke


  Son of a bitch. Maybe Szulz really was being followed.

  Szulz turned onto Fifth behind me, as I’d expected. I guessed that he’d take Smithfield rather than Wood south from Fifth, but he crossed me up. After turning left on Smithfield I picked up a quick flash of him continuing west on Fifth instead of making the same turn I had.

  The only difference that made was that when I started following Szulz again it was from behind him instead of ahead. I’m not clairvoyant or anything, but if he was going home he had to be headed for the Fort/Pitt Bridge. A drive-time left turn at the major intersection of Liberty Avenue and Fifth figured to be a bitch, so the money play had to be to take a side-street south to Fort/Pitt Boulevard, head west, and then basically merge onto the bridge when he reached Liberty.

  That’s what Szulz did and that’s what I did—and that’s what the Corolla did. Driving west on Fort/Pitt Boulevard, I’d made it almost to Stanwick when Szulz tire-squealed onto Fort/Pitt from Wood, not quite a block behind me. I could have pulled out to stay in front of him but the Corolla must have spooked him because he was making tracks now. I decided to let him and the Corolla power past me and then slide elegantly and inconspicuously into their wake. I managed it. Before you knew it all three of us were making our way southwest over the gray, choppy Monongahela River.

  Strictly speaking, I already had what I wanted. I knew that someone really was following Szulz. I had the Corolla’s license number, I could tell that it was a Pennsylvania registration and wasn’t a rental, and I had a halfway decent description of the driver. Plus, it looked to me like the driver was either a rank amateur or he wanted to make damn good and sure Szulz knew he was being followed. I found both alternatives intriguing. No real reason I couldn’t just look for the first chance after the bridge to do a U-turn and retrace my steps.

  Except what if Willy Szulz ended up dead or with a concussion and someone had noticed a Ford Escape rented by Proxy and driven by me following him? Or what if Szulz and the Corolla driver were co-stars in a little community theater production ginned up to make us think there really was someone else interested in Szulz’s bill of sale, implying that our price should go up? I decided I might as well stay on the tail until Szulz got to his condo, and see what the Corolla did then.

  The Corolla mooted that question about thirty seconds after we reached the other side of the bridge. No sooner had we put the river behind us than the Corolla’s driver grabbed his mobile phone for a five-second conversation. The instant he put the phone down he swerved into the inside lane, looking to me like a guy very anxious to head back the way he had come. I stayed with him for the half-mile he needed to reach a gap in the parkway separating the southbound and northbound lanes, and followed the Corolla through it to head back toward the bridge. Two drivers sat on their horns, and I couldn’t blame them a bit.

  The Corolla slowed down, as if daring me to confirm that I was following by slowing down myself. No thanks. Headed northeast in heavy traffic, with Szulz moving at a decent clip in the opposite direction, there were only two places the Corolla could go. One was the William Penn Omni, and the other one wasn’t. I only cared about the first. I swept past the Corolla like it was standing still and set course for the hotel.

  I made a lot better time than the Corolla did, maybe because the driver was trying to hang back out of my sight. I’d already jumped out of the rental and traded the fob and two singles to the valet for a claim check when I spotted the Corolla waiting to make a left from Fifth onto William Penn Place.

  And because I was looking intently in that direction, I also spotted something else: the guy who’d panhandled Jakubek and me not quite two hours before. Instead of a ragged hoodie, he now wore a North Face three-in-one jacket—but he still had those shiny Air Jordan Six-Rings on his feet. More important, he was carrying a maroon leather attaché case that looked a lot like Proxy’s. He was hustling toward the corner, which is what I’d be doing if I wanted a pick-up from the Corolla.

  I went tearing after him just as the Corolla turned the corner. When he glanced over his shoulder I could tell he wasn’t happy to see me. I had closed to within about ten feet by the time the Corolla completed the turn. Three more seconds and I’d have him. No way the Corolla could get there by then, and the ex-hoodie wasn’t going to outrun me unless those Air Jordans had jetpacks

  He did the only thing he could have done to keep me from tackling him. He stopped, turned, and faced me with angry indignation scrawled across his face. I pulled up just in time to avoid a collision.

  “What you doing?” I picked up a faint Middle Eastern accent that I hadn’t noticed when he was begging. “Why you trying to mug me? Leave me alone!”

  I probably should have just carried my charge through and knocked him over without any conversation. That really would have looked like a mugging, though, and if there were any cops in the neighborhood I could have wound up in handcuffs while Junior here took Proxy’s case for a ride. So I stopped nimbly (for me), maybe three feet from him.

  “I’m looking for my colleague’s attaché case, which suddenly went missing not long ago. If you’re taking it to lost-and-found, you’re going in the wrong direction.”

  By now the Corolla had screeched to a stop beside us. Its front passenger door swung open.

  “You’re crazy! This is mine!”

  I’d already pulled out my mobile phone. Now I punched the speed-dial for Proxy’s number. Two seconds later the first three bars of A Little Night Music sounded from inside the attaché case. Proxy’s ringtone.

  The guy only looked non-plussed for half a second or so, because that’s all the time I needed to park a decent left jab in the neighborhood of his right temple. Without letting go of the case in his right hand, he grunted as he planted a solid left on my sternum. An inch lower and it might have done some real damage, but it landed where it landed and all it did was hurt.

  Out of the corner of my eye I glimpsed the Corolla’s driver clambering across the front seats and levering himself out of the passenger side. I put my right elbow right between his eyes with some authority behind it. This discouraged him, at least for the moment. Unfortunately, the distraction gave the other guy a chance to start scampering around the back of the car. I slid across the trunk lid in a head-first horizontal dive, with designs on grabbing his pricey jacket somewhere. He managed to elude me by swiveling away from the car, but the evasion cost him a precious second or two. Landing hard on the street, I popped up from the pavement with skinned knees and plenty of time to reach the driver-side door before he could.

  All at once, from maybe three feet away, he brought the attaché case up with his right hand, more or less horizontally over his left shoulder. He swung it at me sideways. It caught me right in the puss. The top edge smashed the bridge of my nose, and the lower edge split my upper lip. By sheer reflex I got a grip on the case with both hands as it creamed me. My fanny smacked the pavement hard, but the case came with me. The momentum of my tumble tore the handle out his grasp.

  I was blinded for just an instant. My vision cleared in time for me to see him hesitating between the open car door and the top of the chassis, wondering if he could grab the case back. My blood was up and I kind of hoped he’d try.

  He didn’t. He had the sense to duck into the car and concede the attaché case to me. You keep the case and let us get away. Last, best, and final offer. I took it.

  Chapter Seven

  Jay Davidovich

  Maybe I could have stopped him if I’d dropped the case, but I had two more important things to worry about. The attaché case was only the second. I climbed gingerly to my feet with it firmly in hand as the car roared away.

  The afternoon’s events fell into a clear pattern in my throbbing head. The two dudes I’d just scrimmaged with had no way of knowing that Proxy would check in while Szulz was headed home with the Corolla on his tail. When she got to the hotel the phony panh
andler had grabbed her attaché case after urgently summoning the Corolla to scurry back and pick him up. Proxy hadn’t been in the vicinity when I’d spotted him, which meant he hadn’t just pulled a snatch-and-grab. He must have done something to incapacitate her. That made finding her Job-one.

  Blood streaming from my nose and oozing from my lip, I hustled toward the Omni’s main entrance. The parking valet seemed to be bracing himself behind his little portable counter to the right of the front door as he put down a phone.

  “I need to talk to hotel security, fast!”

  “I think you can count on it, buddy.”

  He nodded toward the door, where a black guy almost as tall as I am and with similar musculature was coming out in a hurry. His left hand held a two-way radio, and his right was parked underneath his gray sport coat.

  “Sir, may I see some—?”

  “Jay Davidovich, Transoxana Insurance.” I slapped a business card and my old military ID on the counter and held up the attaché case. “That weasel slapping me around on the street just now stole this from my colleague, Proxy Shifcos. Must’ve jumped her while she was going into her room after checking in. We need to find her pronto. If he conked her head, we don’t have any time to waste.”

  He glanced at my ID and then, mouth slightly open, turned dark brown eyes with gold rims around the irises toward me.

  “You said her name is what, now?”

  I bit back frustrated epithets and fought the urge to yell at him.

  “Shifcos, Proxeine Violet.” I spelled Shifcos for him. “Probably checked in within the last half-hour.”’

  Raising the radio to his lips, he nodded slightly to me while he spoke into it. He had to go back and forth twice with whoever was on the other end, but he finally got something that apparently verified Proxy’s check-in. Lowering the radio, he turned his steady gaze on the valet parker.

  “Call Mr. Blue in Guest Relations and give him a status report.”

  “Roger that,” the valet said, as if he’d just joined Seal Team Six.

  “All right.” The security guy’s head turned back toward me. “Let’s go.”

  He opened the door for me because no way was he letting me get behind him. I followed his discreetly whispered directions to the middle bank of elevators by a route that wouldn’t show my bloody face to too many conventioneers and visiting software salesmen. He took it from there, getting us onto a car and pushing the button for the eighth floor. Once we got there he picked up the pace. We were downright sprinting by the time we reached Room 821.

  No one home was the first thing I thought after the security guy used his master-key and pushed the door open. Just to the right of the door I saw Proxy’s electric-blue roller suitcase knocked over on its side with its handle still fully extended—but no Proxy. Then I heard an urgent and indignant “UHMPF! UMPH!” from between the twin beds.

  I got there in two good strides, tossing the attaché case on the bed as I went so that she’d know I’d recovered it. I saw Proxy, gagged with a white gym sock knotted crudely behind her head and hog-tied with thin electrical cord. “Hog-tied” as in trussed like a stoat on the first stage of his way to a goyim breakfast. Lying on her stomach, she had her hands and arms pulled behind her back and the lower half of her legs up and pulled as far toward her waist as they’d go. The electrical cord tied her wrists and ankles together and to each other. The guy who’d tied her up wasn’t any sailor, that’s for sure. The knots he’d managed were ugly blobs without a trace of rope-craft to them.

  As Proxy twisted her head over her shoulder at my approach, I read blind fury in her eyes. She’d been humiliated, degraded, and (worst of all in her eyes) deprived of control over her situation. The way she looked at things, my coming across her like this was way worse than surprising her stark naked. She figured to be one pissed-off lady.

  “Knife!” I barked at the security guy.

  He produced a folding Buck knife at least four inches long and slapped it into my palm. I pulled the blade out and felt it lock into place, but before I went to work on the restraints I began loosening the gag between Proxy’s teeth as gently as I could. I really wanted to hear the first words out of her mouth. Proxy doesn’t do spontaneous cussing. She might let loose with an occasional, carefully calculated “bullshit” during a meeting when it will get maximum attention, but I’ve never heard her use off-color language in an angry outburst. If it was ever going to happen, I thought, today would be the day.

  “Steady, soldier,” I told her soothingly as I unknotted the sock and began tugging it from between her teeth. “Police are already on their way.” I figured that the security guard’s “Mr. Blue” instruction to the parking valet was code for, “Call the cops.” I pulled the sock out without taking any of her dental work along with it and braced myself for her reaction to being mugged and left tied up like a bondage freak. Her face contorted in barely controlled wrath and the words came.

  “Davidovich! You’re hurt!”

  Chapter Eight

  Jay Davidovich

  “My name is Proxeine Violet Shifcos, I’m at the Omni Hotel in Pittsburgh, and about half an hour ago I got mugged in my own room.”

  Holding a blue coldpack against the top-back of her head, Proxy said this to the hotel’s staff nurse. Along with the coldpack, the nurse had just given her an Advil and the standard verbal concussion test: tell me who you are, where you are, and what’s happening. I’d gotten that oral exam a couple of times during high school basketball games. The next step is to tell you to count backwards from a hundred by threes. When the trainer had tried that one on me, one of my teammates had said, “Oh come on! He couldn’t do that before the game started!” The nurse here didn’t bother with the backward-counting stuff.

  “Nasty bump,” she told Proxy instead. “I recommend going to the hospital for an EEG and observation.”

  “Noted—but I’d rather have a comp upgrade.”

  Proxy accompanied that remark with a mini-smile. The security guard picked up the crack but not the smile.

  “Working on it,” he said solemnly. “Cops are headed up, by the way.”

  A brief frown creased Proxy’s face. She wanted a copy of a police report on the incident, because heaven forbid any manila folder in her file on Pitt MCM Potential Claim should stay empty. At the same time, chatting up a cop right now had to be way down her priority list. I handed her the piece of hotel stationery where I’d written down descriptions of the Corolla and the two guys I’d scrapped with, along with the car’s license number.

  “He’ll talk to you before he talks to me,” I said. “Maybe you can get him to call in the license number right away.”

  “Check.” All business again—good sign. “Meanwhile, call what’shername, the lawyer, and tell her what happened.”

  It was pushing seven by now, so I figured I’d end up leaving a two-minute voice-message. Wrong. Still beavering away diligently at her desk, the shysterette answered on the first ring.

  “Jakubek.”

  “Jay Davidovich from Transoxana.”

  “You have a counteroffer for me?”

  “No. Transoxana counteroffers don’t come from muscle. Your client was right: someone in a Corolla was following him, just like he said.”

  “Not a complete surprise. He called me not long ago and said he’d for sure spotted the guy tailing him again on his way home tonight.”

  “He nailed it. Now I’ll up the ante. That panhandler you and I ran into this afternoon tried to steal my colleague’s attaché case.”

  “Holy shit.” Alarm and interest now colored Jakubek’s voice. “Was there any dope about Willy in that case?”

  “Doesn’t matter. The thief stumbled over some muscle and left the attaché case behind while making his getaway—which he did in the Corolla that had been following your client.”

  I was kind of expecting a
“thank you” right about then. I got one, but Jakubek didn’t exactly linger over it.

  “Thanks. You got my attention with that ‘stumbled over some muscle’ line. Are we talking physical violence here?”

  “Yep.”

  “Weapons?”

  “Only if the attaché case counts.”

  “Hmm.” I imagined Jakubek drumming her pen on her desk blotter during the six seconds or so that followed this syllable. “Okay. This really helps. But it sheds some new light on that one-week delay, doesn’t it?”

  “You saying you want to back out of that?”

  “Nope. A deal’s a deal. You bought a week and you’ve got a week. The sooner the better, though—from both our standpoints.”

  “I expect Proxy will see it the same way.”

  “Good. Thanks again. Anything else?”

  Not that I could think of. We exchanged goodbyes and hung up.

  The cop was still talking to Proxy, so I busied myself with getting her some bottled water over ice. She thanked me with a flash of perfect teeth without missing a syllable in her cop-chat. By the time I’d checked my Droid, the cop and Proxy were wrapping up. He made me part of the wrap-up.

  “How sure are you about that license number?”

  “Hundred percent.”

  “The plate is assigned to a 2012 VW.”

  “So it’s stolen.”

  “Stolen,” he said, nodding gravely, “or you were wrong.”

  “Stolen.” My turn to nod. “Any chance of spotting the Corolla just based on the description of the car?”

  “Long shot. Probably in a chop-shop by now.”

  “So we’re dealing with real pros,” I said.

  “Well,” Proxy said after sipping some water, “you’ve dealt with pros before. And at least you won the first round.”

  “And I’m kind of looking forward to the second one.”

  “I don’t want a second round,” she said. “I’m going to push the folks in Hartford for a quick response to Szulz’s offer. ‘Quick’ as in ‘yesterday.’”

 

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