And that message held appeal for a number that, though small, was growing. Darian Brown knew it would grow to a large movement in time of its own accord, but that would allow time for the white man to chisel away at the hard edge of their determination. Softening them. Convincing many that peaceful measures would work. No. No longer. Darian Brown, a thirty-five-year-old product of the Los Angeles ghettos who had tested the bounds of the white man’s law, knew that time was their enemy. “Now” was their friend. This movement needed a spark to ignite it into a blaze that nothing could stop. And it needed members, committed individuals, to make that happen.
But there were different types to serve the movement. There were workers, and there were soldiers. Darian needed soldiers now more than anything. The workers could lead boycotts, and harass businesses. The soldiers would serve a more vital role. One with risk, but one that would reap great benefits for the movement.
In any group he spoke to Darian always tried to pick who fit into which class. This night had been no different, except for the fact that he saw a potential soldier in the group. Young. Clean. Not one of the foolish gangsta types who stupidly thought the NALF was an avenue to legitimize their self-destructive behavior. And this one had an intensity to his face, as if the muscles were sculpted to a mask of stone. Rigid. Determined. A possibility. One worth approaching.
“What brings you here, brother?” Darian asked the young man as he drew a cup of coffee from the bottom spout of the tall metal pot.
Moises was surprised by the question, and more surprised by who was asking it. “Uh. I saw the poster down on—”
“I didn’t ask what directed you here,” Darian said. “I asked what brings you here. The ‘why,’ not the ‘how.’ “
It was so obvious as an internalized reason, but how to say it. How to explain it. Just say it. “I think it’s time to fight.”
“Go join the N-A-A-C-P,” Darian suggested, his intonation of the letters dripping with mockery. “They fight for rights. Don’t they?”
“Not mine,” Moises answered. “Not the way I want to. Not the way that will work.”
Darian nodded acceptance of the point, his lips pouting. “Well, we may have some common ground there. What’s your name, brother?”
“Moises Griggs.”
Darian looked behind and called over the other two who sat with him in the NALF hierarchy. “Brother Moises, this is Brother Mustafa.”
“Power, Brother Moises,” Mustafa Ali said, gripping Moises’ hand in a shake reminiscent of the hold shared by arm wrestlers locked in battle. He wore a brimless hat inspired by the African kinte style, but with the NALF logo of two clenched black fists on its front.
Moises nodded, not knowing if he should respond with the same salutation given him.
“And this is Brother Roger,” Darian said.
“Power, Brother Moises,” Roger Sanders said, exchanging the same raised handshake. Of the three NALF men surrounding Moises, he was the tallest, fully six inches taller than Darian’s five-five frame. That modest height, and some talent, had gotten him a college scholarship to UCLA, and nothing else. He was “valuable” to the white educational establishment when his physical attributes were functioning well, but when a bum knee reduced his ability it was good-bye Roger. Enjoy working at Mickey D’s. Just like the slaves America had kidnapped from their homeland, Roger realized he was valued only as a thing that could perform. His ancestors had bailed cotton and tobacco. He had thrown a ball through a hoop. Until Darian Brown showed him that there was a path to respect. A real path.
Moises sipped from his coffee after the greetings. He could see others leaving the building in ones and twos. No one else had gotten the attention he was receiving, but neither had they been excluded. He looked to the faces of the three men, wondering why they had taken an interest in him. Wondering, but not concerned that they had. Darian Brown’s words that night had made more sense to him than anything he’d heard in his life. More sense than the forgiveness crap that had weakened his people to the point that the whites could attack them with impunity, just like they had done to Tanya. Tanya.
“You know, I liked what you said...Brother Darian.”
Darian smiled at the young man. “Good. Maybe you’d like to hear more in a few days.” After we check you out, of course. That was a matter of prudence. The pigs had done lower things trying to infiltrate other movements.
“Yeah. I’d like that.” I’d like that a lot.
“Then you drop on by next Wednesday, Brother Moises,” Darian directed him.
“Sure.” Moises read a finality in the words, as if it was time to go. As if they wanted him to go. But why... Of course. They were being careful. He had just come in off the street, after all, and even an invitation to come back didn’t necessarily mean they trusted him. They wanted to make sure he was for real. That was it. And if they were being that careful, then they had to be for real. They had to. They were the real thing. Real fighters.
“Wednesday, then,” Darian said, reaching out for the cup in Moises’ hand. The young man handed it over and left the building, the last of those who had come going with him.
Mustafa closed and locked the glass door behind Moises, then pulled down the shades on all the front windows.
“Moises Griggs, huh?” Roger wondered aloud. “I heard that name somewhere.”
“I think he’s legit,” Mustafa said. “He’s too young to be a cop.”
“Check him out anyway,” Darian ordered. “Now what about the meet?”
“Sunday,” Mustafa answered. “Two in the afternoon.”
“Where?”
“The zoo.”
Darian considered the site briefly. “Good. Your choice?”
“Theirs.”
“Well, at least they’re smart,” Darian observed. “It’d be easy to spot any cops. Okay. We do it.”
Roger looked to both his comrades. “I don’t like dealing with these guys.”
“Because they’re white, Brother Roger?” Mustafa asked.
“That, and that we don’t know shit about them.”
Darian had gone through this before. Roger, though bold in his thoughts, was timid in manner. Overly cautious once the worry had been put aside. “Listen, white don’t mean shit. We need money to get things off the ground. Do you think this place is rent-free? Do you think the shit we’ll need to really strike out comes cheap? It doesn’t, Brother Roger. If someone comes along and wants us to do a job for them then we have to consider it, especially when there’s as much in it for us as these guys are talking. Money from white people. Better from them than from us.”
“You saw the bread they flashed us,” Mustafa said. “And the guns they gave us. And there’s more where that came from.”
“That’s what they say,” Roger countered.
“That kind of money is worth a little risk,” Darian said.
“Why us?” Roger asked. “Why’d they pick us?”
Darian looked at his comrade for a very long moment, ignoring the questioning that was now beginning to bore him. “Are you going to be asking ‘why’ when whitey is putting the chains back on your legs? Brother, our time is now.”
“But we don’t even know what they want us to do,” Roger pointed out.
“I guess we find out Sunday,” Darian said. “If we want to do it for them, we do. If not, or if we’re not sure they’re not pigs, hey, we walk away. But I am not going to pass up a chance for the kind of money they’re talking about.”
“Yeah,” Roger said, nodding. “You’re right. Okay.”
“Good. Sunday then.” Darian switched the coffeepot off, remembering the staggering electric bill they had received the month before. Running a movement was expensive, he was learning. And things had hardly begun. “And don’t forget Griggs,” he reminded Mustafa. “He might be of use if everything works out.”
* * *
Frederick Stimson Allen was a known commodity, but it took almost sixteen hours to piece together a
biographical sketch of the mystery man who had died with him. And a bare sketch it was.
“Nick King,” Frankie said, reading from the top page of her notes. She lifted her dinner, a mass of meat, onions, and condiments barely held between a Kaiser roll, to her mouth and bit in.
Art’s source of nourishment was somewhat less exciting: a banana and a rice cake.
“You want some?” Frankie offered, her mouth full.
“No, I know how much fat is in that. Besides, Anne is making me something later.”
Frankie checked the time. Eight o’clock. “It doesn’t get much later for dinner, partner.”
“I know,” Art said, noticing the time himself. “But Lou said to wait.”
Lou Hidalgo, quite unexpectedly, had walked off the elevator just when the majority of folks were heading home for the day and told Art and Frankie to hang around until he talked to them. Then off to Jerry Donovan’s office one floor up he went. That was an hour ago, and in that span of time both agents had speculated to themselves as to why Hidalgo, after the tragedy that had befallen him just a little over a day earlier, would show up at the office. No one would have blinked if the A-SAC had just disappeared for a few days to deal with the loss of his son, but there he was, that look of determination so familiar, masking any pain he was feeling.
“What do you think it is?” Frankie wondered aloud.
“We’ll know soon enough, I figure,” Art said.
Frankie smiled and raised an eyebrow at her partner. “Are you going to be making A-SAC decisions soon?”
Art gave his partner a disapproving look.
“What?”
“You know what.” And so did he. The “what” was a job offer. More than that, really. The job was assistant special agent in charge of the Chicago field office, and the offer had come personally from the special agent in charge of that same office, Bob Lomax.
“Well...”
“Are you trying to get rid of me?”
Frankie looked to her cluttered desktop and scratched above her nose. “As a friend I just want you to consider it objectively.”
“I am,” Art assured her. “Now, back to now. King—what do we know?”
Frankie put the half-eaten burger back in its Styrofoam container and flipped through her notes. “Nick King. Mystery man. No driver’s license with that name matches the face according to DMV.”
“Did they do a visual match to rule it out?”
“For Nick King, Nicholas King, Nicky King, ad infinitum,” Frankie answered. “As for out-of-state...” She shrugged. That would take more time, and be labor-intensive. Three days at the earliest for that information, she knew.
“Well, there wasn’t any car in the garage,” Art said.
“No license, no car. Maybe he flew,” Frankie jokingly suggested.
“Or he was dependent on someone,” Art proposed.
“Allen?”
“God, I’d hate to have to depend on him for anything.” Art knew Allen better than most, having been on his case literally and figuratively for over a year. The thirty-year-old thug was a scumbag if ever there was one. Not only did he terrorize those weaker and different in skin tone from him, he had also left a trail of children from his home state of Georgia to California. Those innocent victims of his complete irresponsibility were left to be raised by young girls that Allen had charmed into the sack for a few months, weeks, or just for one night. Yes, Freddy Allen was Mr. Dependable in Art’s book. “Okay, what else?”
“Twelve-twelve Riverside is a rental property owned by a bunch of old ladies in a real estate trust,” Frankie continued. She was acting as the source in the familiar routine. Hashing the evidence, laying out what was known to be discussed, theorized on, challenged, and, if necessary, discarded. Her partner was playing the wall, against which the information was to be thrown to see if it would stick.
“When did King rent it?”
“Over a year ago.” Frankie scanned for other information relating to the residence. “The property manager from the real estate trust said King always paid his rent on time, with a cashier’s check. That was drawn from a bank in Palmdale.”
“An account?”
Frankie shook her head. “King paid cash for the check. He was not an account holder.”
“There or anywhere else,” Art said, his brow furrowing as he thought. “No bank account that we can find. No identification. No social security number. Would you rent to someone like that?”
“Nope.”
“Then why did they?”
“The property manager said she wasn’t with the trust when King moved in,” Frankie answered.
“That’s one thing we need to find out,” Art said.
“Inconsistency number nine million to check on,” Frankie commented with mild humor attached. “Also, no employer that we know of.”
“But he had money,” Art observed.
“Someone supporting him?”
“The more appropriate word might be bankrolling,” Art said.
Frankie moved further through her notes. “Okay, Nick King the person.” For two hours Frankie had talked to the only neighbor of King’s, probing, peeling away whatever might conceal some bit of information. “A nice man. Kept to himself.”
“So he could be a serial killer,” Art said, frowning.
“The neighbor only talked to him a few times. She said he spoke with a heavy accent.”
Art perked up at that. He had been talking to the sheriffs commander on-scene while Frankie was interviewing the neighbor at a nearby motel, and he hadn’t caught that bit of information when scanning his partner’s notes earlier. “What kind of accent?”
“German, Polish, Russian,” Frankie recounted dubiously. “You name the country, she thought he sounded like he was from there.”
“Guttural European?”
“That narrows it down to a continent,” Frankie confirmed.
“King, huh?” Art wondered. “That doesn’t sound awful European.”
“He could have Americanized his real name,” Frankie said. “Maybe he immigrated and wanted to fit in. A lot of folks coming in have done that.”
“Could be,” Art half-agreed. “But everything so far points to this King fellow maintaining a fairly cryptic existence.”
“You think the name is an alias?” Frankie asked.
“It would fit.”
“But why?” Frankie saw Art waiting for her to propose the reasons. “What little we know points to King isolating himself. Financially, residence, identification. Protection?”
“How so?”
“Well, either King was trying to protect himself, probably from incrimination, or he was trying to protect someone else,” Frankie proposed.
Art followed her line of thinking and joined in. “Add Allen to it.”
“Freddy.” Frankie thought for a moment. “If he was going to do King in, then that would point to someone wanting to be insulated from what he was doing.”
“Use King, then get rid of him,” Art said.
“The twelve grand in cash, the remote house,” Frankie recounted. “Bankrolling does fit into this quite well now. So someone who Freddy Allen is associated with gets King to make some nerve gas—”
“Nerve agent,” Art corrected.
“Nerve agent—for whatever reason, Allen goes to get it with the intention of removing King from the picture after the pickup, but King gets wise and decides if he’s going to die, then someone else is, too.”
Art nodded slowly. It felt right. There was no other way to describe the gut instinct a veteran street agent got when the pieces slid together seamlessly. He had no absolute proof yet that the scenario his partner had just laid out was anything but a theory, but he’d lay money on it being damn close to reality.
“So,” Frankie said. “King and Allen. Who was King and how did he get involved in this, and who was Allen working with?”
“We have the center of the puzzle,” Art said. “Now we have to find the edg
es.”
Frankie flipped the pages of her notepad closed and tossed it on her desk. She looked to the clock, then to the empty coffeepot on the small credenza to her side. “I’m gonna need some caffeine if this drags on too much longer.”
Art, who had his own small coffeemaker on his side of their workspace, might have agreed with her had he not sworn off caffeine. Five hours of sleep after leaving the site of the incident as the sun came up, followed by nine hours of poring through what little they knew about the entire affair at this early stage, left neither agent wanting to make this evening another long one that would stretch into the wee hours of the morning. Art knew they needed sleep, at least one good night of it, in order to start putting the final pieces of what led to the incident at 1212 Riverside together to form a coherent picture. From that picture they might then be able to identify those who had almost succeeded in obtaining what the internationally inclined politicians called a weapon of mass destruction, though Art knew that had any of Freddy Allen’s kind gotten their hands on it it would be a weapon of mass murder. Whoever those folks were, they deserved the cuffs for their intentions, and the gas chamber for causing the deaths of Luis Hidalgo, Jr., and the others. Art could supply the cuffs. The other would be decided once those were on.
The sound of the elevator door sliding open and two sets of footsteps drew the agents’ attention. Art stood and turned to see who...
“Orwell?”
Frankie joined her partner as Captain Orwell, dressed down in blue jeans and a leather jacket, approached with Lou Hidalgo.
Capitol Punishment (An Art Jefferson Thriller Book 3) Page 7