They went over to Taraval for dinner, as they did on most nights he saw her. She seldom left the house during daylight hours, but after being cooped up all day she preferred going out to eat to cooking at home. She didn’t say a word on the way, lost inside herself. As always when she was like this, he made no effort to intrude on her silence in the car or in the coffee shop where they habitually ate. The place was crowded, but the diners were all neighborhood regulars who knew Bryn; that was why she’d become one of them. The two things she hated most were pity, especially from strangers, and being stared at while eating because of the difficulty she had in feeding herself.
Tonight she hardly touched her food. Wine was what she wanted; the first glass went down quick, in little sips so none of it would dribble out, and the second more slowly. That one seemed to relax her, finally loosened some of her reticence about the weekend.
“Bobby was so distant,” she said. “He wouldn’t let me hug him or even touch him, wouldn’t make eye contact. Didn’t want to go out anywhere. He spent most of the time alone in his room watching TV and playing video games.”
“A kid phase. Or maybe he’s having some problems in school.”
“I hope that’s all it is.”
Runyon said, “You think his father might be trying to turn him against you?”
“I don’t know. I can’t believe Robert’s that vindictive, but . . . I don’t know him anymore. I guess I never did.”
“It’ll be better with Bobby next time.”
“Will it? Oh, God, I can’t stand the thought of losing him. If that happens . . .”
“The boy loves you. That’s not going to change.”
“It changed for you with your son.”
“Different situation. Joshua and I never had a chance together from the beginning. His mother saw to that.”
“Keep telling me I can’t lose Bobby the same way,” Bryn said. “If you say it often enough, maybe I’ll start believing it.”
Some nights when they were together, they went to a movie or took a drive somewhere. Not this one. Straight back to her house. But she didn’t want to be alone; she asked him in. “Just for a while,” she said. “I’d rather we didn’t go to bed tonight; I’m not in the mood for sex.”
“We don’t always have to end up an evening in bed. I don’t expect that.”
“I know you don’t. It’s not that I don’t want to be with you—I do. Just not tonight.”
“No need to explain. I understand.”
Inside, she poured herself another glass of wine. Drinking more than usual lately—not a good sign. But what could he say about it that wouldn’t sound preachy? If alcohol helped her cope, all right, as long as she stayed with wine and kept it under control. He’d seen firsthand what booze could do to a woman who didn’t have a self-governor. Andrea had let it control her, and it had destroyed their marriage, his relationship with Joshua, and finally herself.
They sat side by side in front of the gas-log fireplace, Bryn on his left as always so that the frozen side of her face was away from him. Close but not touching; she didn’t like to be touched except by mutual consent. She was fond of classical music, but tonight it was silence and noncontact closeness she craved, neither of them saying anything, aware of each other but tuned in to their own thoughts. In a way, their intimacy was greater at times like this than when they were in bed together.
They spoke only once, when he shifted his weight from one hip to the other. She turned then and looked at him, a kind of wondering, searching look. “You’re so good to me,” she said.
“Why do you say that?”
“We always do what I want to. Or don’t want to. Don’t you ever get tired of giving in to my moods?”
“I don’t see it as giving in.”
“How do you see it?”
He shrugged. “I like to make you happy.”
“Happy, Jake?”
“Comfortable, then. If you’re comfortable, I’m comfortable.”
Five-beat. Then, “You’re not only good to me, you’re good for me. You really are.”
“I feel the same about you.”
“You make me feel . . . safe. I need you right now, I don’t know what I’d do without you, but . . .”
“But?”
“I’m not sure I deserve you.”
“Come on, now. I’m nobody special.”
“Oh yes, you are. What I should have said is that I’m not sure you deserve me . . . someone like me. A woman with a boatload of problems and insecurities. You should be with somebody normal—”
“That’s enough of that,” he said. “You are normal. And I don’t want to be with anybody else.”
“Right now you don’t.”
“Right now is enough. One day at a time, Bryn.”
“Yes,” she said. “One day at a time.”
8
TAMARA
Doctor Easy’s name was Hawkins, Eugene Z. Hawkins, D.C.M.
And he was a scumbag.
She ran him through six different databases and several linked sources, including the Chronicle and a couple of other Bay Area newspapers, and Felice ran him through the SFPD and NJIS files. Routine info at first. Age forty-two. Twice married, once divorced, no children. Doctor of Chiropractic Medicine for nearly twenty years, first in San Jose, then in Cupertino, then in S.F. for the last eleven. Shared offices with another chiropractor on Ocean Avenue. Lived with his second wife in a home in Monterey Heights, drove a Lexus, seemed to be well off financially.
The rest of his background record told a different story.
Arrested in San Jose in 1994 on a charge of soliciting a male vice cop for sex in a public restroom—an undercover sting like the one that’d caught the Idaho senator a while back. Protested his innocence, same as the senator, went to court, and walked on a technicality.
Accused by a woman patient in 1997 of inappropriate touching during soft-tissue therapy, whatever that was. Not arrested because she changed her mind, or had it changed for her, and dropped the charges. Nearly cost him his license to practice and was probably the reason for his move from Cupertino to S.F.
Arrested in Petaluma in 2000, in another sting operation—this one for Internet solicitation of sex with what he believed to be a sixteen-year-old male. Nabbed when he showed up for a prearranged date at a motel. Protested his innocence again, said it was all a misunderstanding, but this time he didn’t have any wiggle room. Convicted, fined, forced to register as a sex offender. That was when his first wife divorced him.
Accused by the California Franchise Tax Board in 2004 of failure to pay adequate state income tax over the previous five years. Found guilty and heavily fined.
Yeah, a scumbag.
Question was, what else was he? Just a bisexual member of the sports club? A scam victim of the phony Lucas? Or a scammer himself?
Decision time.
Doctor Easy was a solid lead, the only one she had, but she couldn’t risk bracing him herself. No way of knowing if the phony Lucas had told him about her, maybe even described her. Hawkins wouldn’t be likely to tell a woman anything anyway, especially not about the down-low club.
Like it or not, what she needed was a man—a good-looking male op who could pass for a successful, bisexual businessman.
And he had to be black.
That meant bringing in an outsider, a borrow from one of the other agencies in S.F. or the Bay Area. Trouble was, full-time field ops were usually kept as busy as she kept Jake Runyon; finding one who looked the part and had a hole in his caseload might not be easy. A part-timer was the best bet.
Well, she knew one possible—and he fit the profile. Deron Stewart. Part-timer for several different agencies, mainly Matt Bannerman’s. Good record—seven years with the California Highway Patrol, eight years with a big national outfit in their S.F. office before the economic crunch squeezed him out—but no luck so far in landing a staff job anywhere since. But did she want to work with him? The man was a pussy hound; one meet
ing with him and she’d known that from the way he talked, swaggered a little in her presence, and roamed his eyes over her body. Egotistical cocksman types turned her off. Sniff, sniff, sniff around every woman they met from eight to eighty, black, white, or yellow, crippled, blind, or crazy.
All right, then. Make some calls, see if she could borrow somebody else.
The calls produced zip. Either nobody employed the kind of man she was after or if they did, he wasn’t available on short notice. So it would have to be Deron Stewart . . . if she could get him. She called Matt Bannerman, and he said Stewart wasn’t doing any work for him right now, or for any other agency that he knew about. He gave her two phone numbers, cell and home. She picked the cell first.
“Deron Stewart here.”
She ID’d herself and the agency. “You interviewed with us for a field op position a couple of years ago.”
“And didn’t get it. I remember.”
“Not because you weren’t qualified.”
“You hired a white man instead.”
“Race had nothing to do with our decision.”
“Uh-huh. I’ve heard that before. What can I do for you, Ms. Corbin?”
“A job, if you’re interested. Short-term, one or two days probably, but it pays top wages.”
“What kind of job?”
“Fraud case. Involving African Americans.”
“Which is why you need me.”
“Yes or no, Mr. Stewart?”
“What is it you want me to do? And how soon?”
“Right away,” Tamara said. “If you want the job, come on over and I’ll give you the details.”
“South Park offices now, right? Nice location. You must be doing pretty well.”
“Two ninety South Park. How soon can you be here?”
“Forty-five minutes,” he said. “Less, if the traffic cooperates.”
Deron Stewart may not have been working steadily, but he dressed as if he were. Charcoal pin-striped suit, pale blue shirt with gold cuff links, a yellow patterned tie. Big gold and onyx ring and a gold-banded wristwatch that looked expensive. Attractive enough, if you liked your men slick. Piercing eyes almost as black as his skin, with that hungry glint in them. One of those fat-toothed smiles that probably had some women reaching to unhook their bras when he turned it on them. Pure hound. Like Vonda had said once about a guy she knew, he’d screw a board fence if the knothole was in the right place.
He looked her over pretty good when he came in, not being obvious about it—cool and practiced, sizing up the goods and his chances of adding her to his scorecard. Tamara pretended not to notice. If he hit on her, and sooner or later he probably would, straight out or sly, she could handle him. Wasn’t any man after the phony Lucas who’d mess her up again. The way she felt right now, she didn’t care if she spent the rest of her life celibate as a nun.
She sat Stewart down in the client’s chair in her office, with her desk between them. Nobody else there but the two of them; Bill and Jake and Alex were all out and not likely to come back until late, if at all. Otherwise she’d’ve arranged to meet Stewart somewhere else.
He sat relaxed and attentive, one leg crossed over the other and those glinty eyes fixed on her face, as she sketched out the case details and what she wanted him to do. Told him pretty much everything except the personal angle. Working the case for a client, she said. He may have been a hound, but he was no-nonsense when it came to business. Let her do the talking, except to put in a question now and then when something wasn’t clear to him. Quick study, too. Took it all in, processed it, read it back to her after she was done.
She said, “Think you can play the part?”
“Sure. No problem.”
“Low-key. Don’t come on too strong.”
“Don’t worry; I can handle it. Long as you’re sure Hawkins and Zeller are on the down low and this sports fan club is for switch-hitters only.”
“Sure enough. One look at you in person, you’ll get an invitation. Guaranteed.”
Stewart’s smile bent downward a little. “Backhanded compliment. Do I look like a switch-hitter to you?”
“None of my business what you do in private.”
“One hundred percent hetero,” he said. “For the record.”
His horny eyes moved over her face like a caress. She ignored them. “Go ahead and make the call. I’ll listen in in my partner’s office. Get a take on Hawkins’s reaction.”
“Suppose he won’t talk to me.”
“Then you’ll have to get in to see him at his office. Or hang around and brace him when he leaves.”
Stewart made the call on her phone. Asked the woman who answered if he could speak to Dr. Hawkins on a personal matter. “My name’s Stewart, Deron Stewart. Tell him we met at the sports show at Moscone Center last month.”
Three minutes passed. Come on, Easy, Tamara thought, pick up, talk to the man. And there was a click and a reedy voice said, “This is Dr. Hawkins.”
“Deron Stewart, Doctor. You probably don’t remember me—”
“No, I’m sorry, I don’t. We met at the Moscone sports show, you said?”
“That’s right. I talked to a lot of people that day and I guess you did, too.”
“Yes. Very crowded event.”
“You said to call you Doctor Easy.”
“Did I? Well.”
“You were with a friend, a man named . . . Heller, was it?”
“Zeller. Yes.” Pause.
“What can I do for you, Mr. Stewart?”
“Well, I’ve been thinking about that club you mentioned.” Stewart cleared his throat. He was playing it just right. Softened his voice, put in a little nervousness but not too much. “The one you and Zeller belong to.”
Ten seconds of silence. Hawkins trying to remember. Then, “Yes?”
“Five members and there was room for another man. I said I didn’t think I’d be interested, but . . . I’ve changed my mind. If there’s still room.”
“There is. For the right man.”
“Compatible, you mean. The club . . . all brothers?”
“That’s right. Businessmen, professional people like myself. What business are you in, Mr. Stewart?”
“Computers. Bayside Computer Sales and Service. One of our sidelines is providing computers to schools, mainly those in impoverished sections of the Bay Area.”
“I see. Admirable.”
“Married, two kids. But my wife and I . . . well, I won’t go into that.” Stewart cleared his throat again. “Anyhow, I think I might fit in. I’ve been a sports nut all my life, all kinds, especially football and basketball, I like talking sports to other knowledgeable guys, and I . . . well, I’m married, as I said, but I like to get out once in a while, have a good time with guys who feel the same. You know what I mean?”
“Perhaps.”
“So do you think I might fit in?”
“Perhaps,” Hawkins said again.
“Well . . . maybe we could get together, get to know each other, talk it over. Zeller, too, if he wants to join us.”
Four-beat. Then, “I think that might be arranged. Suppose you let me have your phone number, Mr. Stewart.”
“Deron. Call me Deron.”
“Let me have your number and I’ll get back to you.”
“How soon?”
“Soon.”
“Before the club meets again?”
“Yes. Before then.”
Hawkins provided his cell number and they ended the conversation. Tamara reslotted Bill’s phone, went back through the connecting door. Stewart grinned up at her from the client’s chair.
“How was I?” he asked.
Probably the same question he asked his conquests as soon as they finished doing the nasty. Self-centered types like him always cared more about their performance than anything or anybody else. And if he got any rating less than a rave, he’d blame the woman for being a lousy lay.
Tamara said, “Believable.” Why give him any
more satisfaction?
“Yeah, I thought he bought it. I’ll be hearing from him.”
“That company name you gave, Bayside Computer Sales and Service—”
“My brother-in-law’s company. I’ve used it before. He’ll know what to say if Hawkins checks up.”
Stewart’s attitude toward women was sexist lousy and his ego overinflated, but she had to admit he was good at his job. Some agency should’ve put him on full-time by now. Racism? She’d never come up against any of that crap in her dealings with other agencies, but that didn’t mean it wasn’t there under the surface.
He said, “I think Hawkins will agree to the get-together. You?”
“No reason why he shouldn’t.” Unless the phony Lucas or somebody else talked him out of it. “But I’m not so sure about Zeller.”
“I figure he’ll want to scope me out, too. Only problem I can see is that I’ll be a stranger to them. Might lead to questions, suspicions.”
“It’s been over a month since the sports show,” Tamara said, “and Moscone was packed that day. Not too likely they’ll remember everybody they talked to.”
“Not even a handsome guy like me?”
She let that pass. “You ought to be able to convince them.”
“Never been in a situation yet I couldn’t handle.”
“Okay. When you hear from Hawkins and you’ve got a time and place, let me know right away. My cell, day or night.”
“Will do,” Stewart said. “If Zeller does show up, you want me to follow him afterward, find out where he lives? Tail jobs are my specialty. He’ll never know I’m there.”
“Uh-uh. You leave Zeller to me. And take along a voice-activated recorder so there’s a record of everything that’s said.”
“Your client must really want this guy put away.”
“Oh yeah,” Tamara said. “Real bad.”
9
I didn’t feel like going to work on Wednesday morning. Neither Kerry nor I had gotten much sleep, and I was tired, depressed, cranky. My curmudgeon’s mode, she calls it. But she wasn’t in much better shape. This thing with Emily had both of us down and reeling.
The kid had stayed in her room all last evening, lying on her bed with Shameless beside her and her iPod headphones plugged into her ears. Music was her passion—she wanted to be a singer and she had the voice to make it happen; when she was upset, she retreated into music as completely as she withdrew into herself. Even if we’d taken the iPod away from her, we wouldn’t have been able to reach her. She wouldn’t eat, wouldn’t communicate. Kerry went in once and asked her point-blank if she was experimenting with sex. Emily said no, of course not, and looked hurt again, and that was the end of that.
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