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Big Numbers (Austin Carr Mystery Book 1)

Page 14

by Jack Getze - BooksGoSocial Mystery

“No problem.”

  We spend the rest of the drive together in silence. I don’t

  mind. I’ve got a lot to think about. Sure, I’m pissed about

  losing the money. My plans of getting back my visiting rights have been returned to the dream category. I’ve just lied,

  cheated, and committed forgery for absolutely nothing—

  except for the thirty-six thousand dollar commission I earned on Kelly’s bonds. It’s a good start, but not enough.

  The redhead’s leaving town and I’ll be alone again, living

  in a camper, trying to sell stocks and bonds, Wacko Rags for a sales manager. Sneaking around oak trees and ionic columns to see my kids.

  That fifty-eight thousand would have changed my life.

  Maybe I should have pulled the trigger.

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  FORTY-THREE

  I make another turn Kelly points out and we go from

  dilapidated tin sheds and rusty warehouses into a slick new

  development near Newark Bay. Within sight of the Statue of

  Liberty, surrounded by abandoned New Jersey ship docks and

  broken,

  sinking

  cranes,

  some

  sharpie

  built

  luxury

  condominiums around a first-class boat marina.

  The one-acre parking lot is full of Mercedes, BMWs,

  Jaguars, and Audis. Riding in such automobiles, these condos are ten minutes from the Holland Tunnel and Manhattan,

  Newark-Liberty International Airport, and I-95, the New

  Jersey Turnpike. Water access to New York’s Upper Bay gives

  boat owners the Atlantic Ocean and, if your boat is big

  enough, the rest of the world.

  Can’t imagine what these units cost. With a boat slip,

  probably five to ten million for a bachelor.

  I yank down Kelly’s green suitcase and lock up the camper.

  I don’t want someone stealing my NY Giant helmet. Kelly’s

  looking for something in her purse, so I start off on my own, walking toward the condominium’s common area, a two-story glass lobby that connects two, ten-story towers. Half a dozen brass sculptures and a raised platform with two

  security guards dominate the open lobby.

  Kelly saying, “Not that way. Over there.” Pointing toward

  the marina.

  “Your friend lives on a boat?” I say.

  The redhead waits for me. “A friend of hers owns the

  condo and the slip. Wait until you see the guy’s boat. A fifty-foot Hatteras, I think she said.”

  She seems to be getting over our tiff.

  To my right, the sinking sun dips behind a bank of broken

  clouds, the sunset turning everything red and gold. A motor

  yacht hums back into the marina after a day of fishing. Poles line up like antennae in a rack near the yacht’s stern.

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  BIG NUMBERS

  Kelly leads me down a spiffy planked dock with brass

  fittings and rope hand rails, past expensive yacht after super-expensive yacht. Hatteras, Grand Banks, Chris-Craft. Some of these babies cost millions.

  The dock squeaks under my weight. The air tastes of salt

  and damp wood. Maybe a hint of rust.

  The boat Kelly’s friend occupies looks like a working

  fishing charter. It sports a flying bridge, a tuna tower above that, and a fighting chair bolted to a plate on the main deck. I don’t see any rods, but there’s plenty of racks to hold them upright.

  A black-headed seagull turns a circle above me. The same

  breeze the bird rides suddenly gusts hard off the water,

  cooling my face.

  Kelly shouts. “Betty? It’s us. Permission to come aboard?”

  The redhead and I are bumping hips on the dock, waiting

  for Betty. My arm’s sore from pulling Kelly’s damn suitcase

  around all afternoon, but I’m looking forward to sitting

  down, maybe having a drink.

  I’m also considering the offer Kelly made about staying

  with her one last night. Not to mention the fifty-eight grand proposal if I go with her tomorrow morning. I can’t ask

  again, of course, but I really do wonder how long I’d have to stay in Mexico. Would she really give up all that cash for a week’s stud service? She’s certainly got the loot now to give away, but I’m guessing a week wouldn’t qualify for the full

  fifty-eight thousand.

  Kelly tugs on my arm. “Come on. I think we can subvert

  the convention. Betty must be taking a shower or something.”

  Kelly slips off her shoes and we climb a box step-up over

  the railing onto the main deck. The boat looked sharp from

  the dock, but on deck...wow. What a clean machine.

  Teakwood everywhere. Brass and chrome polished to a mirror

  shine. Inside the open flying bridge, I can see enough

  electronic equipment to monitor a strike on Iran.

  “Betty? We’re here,” the redhead says. She’s holding her

  shoes like you would a kitten, cradled against her bosom.

  Still no word from Betty.

  Kelly heads down a stairway under the main bridge. I

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  follow her down, carrying the suitcase now so I don’t scuff

  this puppy’s perfect polished staircase.

  At the foot of the stairs, in the main cabin, I’m struck

  again by the immaculate, hand-crafted nature of expensive

  yachts. Such detail. Like sticking your head inside one of

  those restored luxury automobiles at a car show. Only the

  highest quality materials. Perfectly clean and new.

  I follow Kelly between two lemon-colored sofas. They run

  length-wise down the cabin and obviously convert to bunks.

  At the front of the low-ceiling room, the bow of the ship, a narrow windshield, and a skylight let in the sun. A

  refrigerator, stove, and counter sit directly under the skylight.

  Between the mini-kitchen and the sofas is a round steel table covered with maps.

  Kelly walks all the way to the stove.

  I follow to the table, past a slim doorway at the foot of the bunks. A head, I assume.

  The hair on the back of my neck stands up as the slim door

  opens behind me. Must be Betty, but my heart’s beating like a flat tire as I spin to see.

  “Buenos tardes,” Luis says.

  The breath catches in my throat. My favorite bartender is

  standing between me and the exit. He’s not smiling, and

  neither is the large-bore, semiautomatic weapon in his right hand. Looks like an old government-issue Colt .45. The

  muzzle points directly at my chest.

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  FORTY-FOUR

  Kelly either can’t stand or can’t afford to witness

  whatever’s going to happen now. The lying little slut takes

  Rags’ .38 from my coat, hands it to Luis, then scoots past us, jogs up the stairs. Her stocking feet are the last I see of my redheaded Jezebel.

  My mind wants to run through various explanations—Luis

  is playing a joke, Luis is stealing the bonds, Luis and Kelly are lovers—but the black semiautomatic aimed at my chest

  restricts my creative thinking. Not to mention normal

  breathing rhythms. Nothing really makes sense. Just like at

  the funeral, there has to be some big goddamn joke

  everybody’s heard but me.

  “Luis. What’s going on?”

  He stares sadly at me, and I figure he’s probably going to

  shoot. Why else would he aim a weapon at me? I’ve seen

  Luis’s strength, his quickness. If my favorite bartender wanted me to sit, stand, bark, o
r roll over, all he has to do is ask.

  “Senor Burns’ bonds and the money are in the suitcase?”

  he says.

  Senor Burns’ bonds? Not the senora’s? Uh, oh. Slowly, the

  curtains begin to part. It’s not a big joke that everybody’s in on but me. It’s a big show.

  “The bonds are in the suitcase,” I say. “The cash I gave

  away.”

  Something clicks inside my slow-working rusty brain.

  Barely audible, like the last tumbler on a combination lock.

  That sign I noticed when I snuck inside Luis’s restaurant that night, the one I thought looked “vaguely familiar” while Luis was in the basement with Blackie? The sign by the staircase

  that said, “Maria’s?”

  “Luis’s Mexican Grill used to be called ‘Maria’s?’” I ask.

  He nods. Oh, what the hell is wrong with me? What a

  numb nuts. Too much drinking, I guess. Too many bumps on

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  Jack Getze

  the head inside my camper. How could I not remember that

  name before now? Sweet Jesus. “Maria’s” was listed as one of Gerry’s restaurants in that New Jersey state corporations file I checked out on the internet.

  “You work for Gerry Burns?” I say.

  He nods again.

  At least Luis is being cooperative. And I’m very curious.

  Not that Luis’s semiautomatic doesn’t put a little edge on my mood, but maybe I’m getting used to guns and bad guys

  threatening me. And like I said, I’m curious.

  “I take it Gerry’s not really dead?”

  My answer comes from above.

  “Not by a long shot,” Gerry says.

  My Jersey-born Mexican cowboy hops down the stairs in a

  baby blue cowboy shirt, black jeans, and his Mexican silver

  and turquoise belt buckle, a picture of fat-boy health. Tanned, trimmer than I remember, and bright-eyed. “Surprised to see

  me?”

  I’m pretty much speechless.

  “Nothing to say?” Gerry says. “Ha. That’s a fucking

  first.”

  He lays a steady hand on Luis’s shoulder. A warm and

  friendly touch, an obvious by-product of many years working

  together. Friendship. Teamwork. Man, oh, man. I think the

  designation “my favorite bartender” must change.

  “We need to get this tub moving,” Gerry says to Luis.

  “Restrain our guest, then come up top and help me shove off.

  I’ll get the diesels running.”

  My monster scrambles up the stairway like a ten-year-old.

  Saying Gerry’s in good shape underestimates his nimbleness.

  The old man is spry as a big horn sheep. Oh, man, have I been had.

  “Lay down on this bunk,” Luis says. “On your stomach,

  please, with your hands placed behind.”

  As I obey his commands, Luis reaches for a new roll of

  silver duct tape from the map table and tears at the plastic wrapping. Deep below, mighty diesel engines fire to life. The vibrations rattle each disk in my spine. Cold sweat pops out 139

  BIG NUMBERS

  on my neck and shoulders. Some scaredy-cat’s heartbeat

  drums inside my ears.

  Austin Carr, you stupid, mother-humping, egotistical,

  brain-numb jerk.

  Here I am on this damn bunk, wrists and ankles wrapped

  tight in that silver tape. We’ve pulled away from the dock and the boat’s bow is beginning to rise and fall against the Upper New York Bay’s current.

  Left to its own entertainment, my mind addresses an

  imaginary audience: Good evening, folks. Allow me to

  introduce Austin Carr, this year’s winner of the Golden

  Dickhead Award. Presented, as always, to that individual

  making the biggest fool of himself by Thinking With His

  Penis.

  I really do deserve some kind of prize. How could I fall for that redheaded bitch’s bullshit? I can see her green eyes now, fondly gazing into mine, tearing up over Gerry’s faked death.

  Those trembling lips when she kissed me. Can you believe I

  honestly thought she’d fallen for the famous, full-boat Carr grin?

  A touch of irony there, right? A “full-boat” grin? I have a

  strong hunch this boat isn’t going to be full long. Soon as they get past the Statue of Liberty, I’ll probably get dumped over the side along with the rest of this ship’s in-marina waste.

  I can’t get over how I fell for that redhead’s crap. Not to

  mention Gerry’s. The FBI and the IRS after him. The son-of-a-bitch is probably one of America’s most wanted tax cheats.

  All those businesses. All those employees. Leaving the country like this, on a boat. No doubt the IRS’s accusations are

  entirely accurate. Gerry must have been skipping payroll taxes for years, putting all that money in his pocket.

  And what a job I did for him. Laundering that hundred

  thousand in cash. At least partially hiding two million from the IRS by switching the bonds into Kelly’s maiden name.

  Shit, they probably are married.

  Considering it was a Federal task force that burst into his

  house the other night, I bet Gerry’s list of crimes ranks badder 140

  Jack Getze

  than awesome. Maybe smuggling illegal aliens would attract

  the FBI’s involvement, but who knows. Kidnapping? Bank

  fraud? Hope murder isn’t on the list, although I have a feeling it soon will be.

  No way he can let me survive.

  141

  FORTY-FIVE

  Via con dios, dickhead.

  I’m trying to remember what I read once about the various

  stages humans go through when faced with impending death.

  I mean like if a doctor tells you the biopsies revealed cancer in all six organs. I think the stages were denial, rage,

  hopelessness, and finally acceptance and peace. Well, I’m

  pissed as hell, but it sure doesn’t feel halfway to serene. In fact, I’d like to take a paring knife and slice parallel racing stripes down Gerry’s back, rip his flesh off in long, thin strips.

  Hang them out to dry in the sun and the wind, sell them to

  the general public as Gerry’s Special Beef Jerky.

  Or maybe pork.

  Whew. I need to calm down. I need to remember I’m lucky

  to be alive. We all are, of course. Every day we should thank God or the Great Spirit or some Higher Power for being

  above ground instead of under it. But goddamnit to hell, I am so angry at Gerry Motherfucking Burns, I am capable of

  unspeakable acts, including wasting whatever’s left of my time and energy with thoughts of gruesome revenge.

  Totally absurd, of course. I need to lose emotion if I’m to

  have any chance of survival. Logic and reason must prevail.

  Felt good to vent there, but I need to carefully consider my situation. When will they kill me? And how will they do it?

  I suppose the second part’s easy enough. I doubt Gerry’s

  going to get fancy, risk leaving blood stains on the boat when there’s cleaner options. He’ll probably just toss me overboard.

  No Austin, no evidence.

  No, when is the key. I need to figure the timing so I can

  draft and shape potential escape plans within that framework.

  For instance, there’s absolutely no use working on Kelly’s

  head—he’s going to kill you, too, honey—if Gerry plans to

  dump me as soon as we leave the harbor. I won’t have enough

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  Jack Getze

  time to discover and penetrate the gray matter under that

  gorgeous red hair.

  And by the same thought pr
ocess, I don’t see any

  advantage in attempting some desperate, improbable physical

  action right now if I have a day or two to observe and plan.

  Think logically, Austin, but think fast.

  Okay, if I was Gerry, I’d dump me soon as we pass the tip

  of Sandy Hook, enter open water. No one knew where I was

  going. No one knows I’m here. One of those security guards

  might have seen me walk across the marina’s parking lot, but it’s not likely. So why wouldn’t Gerry get rid of me ASAP?

  What possible freaking reason could he have for keeping me

  alive longer than he has to?

  None that I can think of. He might wait until dark, but

  that’s it then. I’ve got less than one or two hours before I feed the fish. Hmm. Seems to me that presents only one possibility.

  I must attempt physical assault as soon as they hoist me on

  deck. Wait for Luis to look away, then hit him, kick him,

  drive him overboard with a head butt. Sweet Jesus, talk about long shots. How do I know they’ll even let me stand up again?

  And even if they untie me, Luis is Luis. Plus he’s got that

  semiautomatic. I’m me, and all I’ll ever have is the famous, disarming full-boat Carr grin, a few bad jokes, perhaps a

  small element of surprise.

  The ever-present baritone rattle of the boat’s diesel engines rises in pitch to a junk-car whine, and the bow lifts as we

  accelerate. We’re moving out into the open water of New

  York harbor now, headed south for the Verrizano Bridge and

  eventually the tip of Sandy Hook. After that, there’s nothing but wide open Atlantic.

  The odds whirl around in my head like the pictures of

  brightly colored fruit on a spinning slot machine. Ching,

  ching, ching. When all the little windows stop, and my

  internal bookies and odds-makers calculate my survival at one million to one, my stomach and throat issues a noise I don’t know how to describe. Half groan. Half wail. Maybe a

  humble and guttural plea to that Great Spirit.

  “Crying for help down there?” Gerry says.

  I can’t see the rotten bastard, but Gerry’s familiar voice

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  BIG NUMBERS

  places my monster at the top of the stairway, up and to my

  right.

  “Or just crying? Ha. Ha.”

  Can’t think of anything clever to say, and even if I did, I

  don’t trust my throat and mouth to bring forth the proper

  tones. There’s some mysterious muscle spasm going on down

 

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