"We go back a few years. Don't you want to hear about the shooting? I might have gotten killed."
"We'll get to that. Does this business have to do with Reverend Dale Journey? Would Councilwoman Petale Venin figure into any of this?"
Rosario's eyes widened like he wanted to spill everything he knew through them. "You have no idea."
Chapter Forty-Four
"THEN TELL ME," I said.
Rosario cleared his throat. "Felix, have you ever been poor?"
"I know what it's like not to have a bed of my own. But I never saw that as an excuse to break the law or cheat people out of their money."
Rosario shook his head. "Then you weren't poor enough. You didn't see that the world doesn't give a damn when your old man is crushed under the heels of the wealthy. What did my dad get for his years of honest, hard work? Pink slips. Debt. The day we got kicked out of our house, my father dropped to his knees and cried."
"So life screwed your old man."
"You don't understand. Seeing my dad broken like that scarred me to the bone. I promised myself to learn how the game was rigged. Find an angle, work it, and get rich."
"And your angle?"
"Petale Venin," Rosario said.
Petale Venin. The name made me shrink into myself. My kundalini noir coiled, wary, suspicious, even a little afraid. I had barely escaped my one meeting with her and the next day a bomb killed Coyote and destroyed his home.
Sweat ran from Rosario's hairline and soaked his collar. I felt the heat as well.
Rosario said, "I had a little real estate business. One afternoon I showed a client some property up in Altadena. That client was Dale Journey, at the time some pissant preacher from Long Beach. He told me God wanted him to build something extraordinary. Better than what's his name down in Garden Grove and the Crystal Cathedral. Journey said the view from Loma Linda Drive
in Altadena was perfect. Problem was, there was a neighborhood of some two hundred homes already there. What to do?"
Rosario tapped his temple. "That's when I turned to Councilwoman Venin for help. I'd heard she was eager to make her mark as a visionary friend to big money interests."
"How long ago was this?" I asked.
"Eleven years."
That jibed with the newspaper clippings in Roxy's file, now all burned to ash.
"Clearing Loma Linda Drive
was going to be tricky." Rosario knit his brow to express the earnestness of the task. "Never mind the expense of giving those folks fair market value."
"Or doing the right thing," I said. "Maybe what your father would've done."
Rosario shook his head. "The last advice I got from him was screw the world before it screws you. The trick to Loma Linda was, how would Journey get that land? As a man of God and servant of the people, he couldn't very well shove all those families aside. So Venin and I brainstormed this idea for a development trust. We'd lobby the city to use eminent domain and condemn the homes in favor of a new commercial development."
"Who was in that trust?"
"The usual. Lawyers. Doctors. Friends of politicians. The trust was going to build a mall to rival the Galleria down in Glendale, at least that's what the public record says. After all, what is the value of an established neighborhood compared to the projected tax revenue from new business? You flash those dollars and the city administration drops its pants and starts stroking. Families? What families?"
I remembered the story. "Councilwoman Venin couldn't do that. I can imagine tons of ethical violations. Crimes, in other words."
"First rule of politics. It ain't a crime 'til you get caught. Who was going to rat her out? Me? Journey?"
"But the mall was never built," I said. "The development trust went bankrupt. Everyone lost a bundle."
"You kidding? Here's another rule. Never use your own money. The state of California paid for the demolition, using a grant for community development. Both our senators made sure the feds kicked in funds to 'maintain economic stability.' Even without laying one brick, we pocketed a nice profit."
"And the bankruptcy?"
"You ever hear of Hollywood accounting? We hired the same legal firm who does the numbers for a major studio. Ever ask, how can a film cost a hundred million, rake in half a billion, yet those waiting for net profit never see a dime? Those shysters did the same hocus-pocus on our P and L, emphasis on the L."
"So the land sat vacant," I said.
Rosario nodded. "Like a big goddamn scar on the hill. Journey comes in and swings a nice deal. It was the Christian thing to do. Everyone profits, except for the families who lost their neighborhood and the taxpayers who footed the bill."
"Interesting civics lesson." Nothing Rosario said contradicted anything I'd learned. Fact was, he shed light into a lot of dark cracks. But he hadn't yet mentioned anything about Roxy's death or the vampire—human collusion.
"Where was Cragnow Vissoom during all this?"
Rosario wiped the sweat collecting on his eyebrows. "Don't know. About four years ago he showed up on my radar screen. He was still a bit player in the skin trade but intended to move up, real estate-wise. Then Cragnow hit it big, pulling in the cash like he owned a casino. Thanks to Roxy."
"And Reverend Journey?" I asked.
"What do you mean?"
"Journey gets the land and then what?"
"He built his church on the hill."
"When does Mordecai Niphe show up?"
Rosario rubbed the sweat from his face with the kerchief. He smiled. "Where do you think the money for Journey's church came from?"
There it was. Niphe, the moneybags behind Journey and his ministry. I thought back to the photo of Rosario, Niphe, and Journey standing together. Rosario and Niphe shoulder to shoulder like army buddies, Journey off to one side, his hesitant smile saying, I'm only here because of the money.
"You had mentioned that party last night at Cragnow's. What did you talk about?"
"Journey's in financial trouble. Niphe wanted to discuss leveraging some of Cragnow's holdings to buy Journey's notes. I need to emphasize, notes that Niphe has an interest in."
The reverend going broke reflected what Andrew Tonic had shared. Journey goes down the tubes and he takes Niphe's money with him.
Rosario said, "Niphe insisted that we act fast before word of Journey's trouble got around. We put together a nice package, reconfigure the loans, and everyone makes out."
"And if Journey's trouble was made public?"
"The attention would make the property value sink like a rock. Add the scandal of anyone following the money trail and making the connection from Cragnow to Journey."
"What else did you discuss?" I asked.
"Cragnow talked about using the church as a base for his plans."
"What plans?"
"That weird crap about lifting humanity to a new partnership with the undead realm. Cragnow might as well be speaking in tongues."
Wow, vampire—human collusion disguised as an evangelical ministry. Could Cragnow and Venin have pulled that off?
"Now we get to the murder part," Rosario said. "Those dogs started barking and Cragnow's men went ape shit. They pulled guns—serious firepower, shotguns and M16s—and hustled outside."
"What did you see?"
"Cragnow wouldn't let us look. He kept us inside and commenced with his ranting. He was already well sauced, so he yelled like there was a fire in his asshole. He blamed us for the trouble."
"Us, who?" I asked.
"Everybody. Me. Niphe. The girls. His guards. Cragnow said he'd do anything to protect himself. That's when he admitted to killing Rebecca Dwelling and Fred Daniels. To shut them up."
"And Katz?"
"That's what bothered him the most," Rosario replied. "Katz was his property. Who had done her in? The same people who knocked off Roxy Bronze?"
"Cragnow worried about who had killed Katz?"
"And you don't know?"
I shook my head.
"Before Niphe
and I left, Cragnow let us in on some news," Rosario said. "He had another way to corner Journey into cooperating with us."
"Which was?"
Rosario paused and gave a grin. "You won't believe this. Journey's girlfriend was coming to see Cragnow. Some broad by the name of Lara Phillips."
That stunned me. "Journey's girlfriend? Are you sure?"
Rosario chuckled. "I couldn't make up something like that."
"Why would she see Cragnow?"
"Apparently she wants him to back off Journey."
"How is she going to do that?"
"Probably by sucking Cragnow's dick, for starters." Rosario laughed. The sweat dribbled over the rolls of his neck. "Of course Cragnow has no intention of easing up on Journey. In fact, he'll use Lara to humiliate the preacher. Take his money and his woman. What a naive bitch."
Naive didn't describe Lara. I saw her as guarded. Volatile, even. Lara had cruel words for Roxy and her life in porn. Lara had to have known Cragnow's part in Roxy's past.
"Do you know Lara?" I asked.
"Never met her."
How could Lara hope to reason with Cragnow? He was a vampire. She had no chance. Maybe she went with Journey's blessing to work a deal. Cragnow couldn't resist the irony of Roxy Bronze's sister kneeling before him.
But I couldn't see Lara doing that. Nothing about this made sense.
Rosario blotted his forehead with the kerchief. "Isn't this some twisted shit?"
Chapter Forty-Five
ROSARIO HAD TOLD me plenty. But I needed more.
"When was Lara going—" I heard a noise, like the rattle of thunder. The reverberations grew louder and deeper, then turned into the baritone rumbles of two big-bore motorcycles roaring up Vermont Canyon Road
.
I didn't need a sixth sense to know this sounded like trouble.
The two motorcycles—custom Harleys—turned up the twisting road, moving fast. Sun glinted off the chrome. One rider was lean, the other heavyset and bearded. Neither wore sunglasses or goggles to hide their fierce gazes.
I whipped off my sunglasses. Orange auras burned around them. Vampires.
I kept my face averted to hide my eyes from Rosario. I pushed him toward his car. "Hurry. Don't hesitate to shoot. And put your sunglasses on."
"My sunglasses?"
"Trust me." One zap and these vampires would snag Rosario's corpulent ass.
Rosario grasped his .45 and let the newspaper fall away. He scrambled for his Porsche, like a fat horse accelerating into a gallop.
The motorcycle riders separated. They reached into the leather panniers and each pulled out an over-and-under sawed-off shotgun. If their goal was to get the drop on me, these loud bikes were a poor choice. A deaf man could have heard them approaching.
Unless.
My fingers buzzed another warning.
I glanced over my shoulder. Orange auras lurked in the underbrush of the hillside.
The motorcycles were a diversion. This was a trap, and Rosario was the bait.
I thumbed the safety on my pistol, whirled around, and popped four rounds into the shrubs.
A screech like that of a wounded beast echoed above the roar of the motorcycles. One aura behind a bush flattened to the ground and dimmed.
The skinny rider rolled past and panned me with his gun, the muzzle looking like a metal figure eight.
My nerves were raw and I sensed everything at super vampire speed. Fire blossomed out of the top barrel of the shotgun. A swarm of pellets whooshed out, the wadding peeling back. The silver pellets bounced against one another as they sailed toward me.
I dodged the volley and centered the sights of my pistol on the vampire.
His denim vest wrinkled where the three slugs tore into him.
He tumbled backward off the motorcycle. The Harley T-boned a parked Lexus. The vampire landed on the asphalt, squirmed, and quit moving. Smoke curled from around his sides. The alarm in the Lexus shrieked.
I reloaded my Colt automatic.
Rosario rushed for the driver's door of his Porsche. The hairy-faced rider swerved around the rear of the Porsche and leveled his shotgun.
Rosario dropped and crawled around the front bumper. The shotgun blast shattered the windows of the Cayenne.
A bullet whizzed past my nose. Another stabbed the ground by my shoes.
I dove to the right onto the grass.
More bullets hunted me.
My shooters were three vampires advancing down the hill. They carried Uzis. I fired a wild shot and they ducked for cover.
I sprang to my feet. More bullets peppered the dirt around me.
The three vampires crouched low to the grass, two males flanking a brunette. My arm panned right to left, my index finger squeezing the trigger with mechanical precision.
The first vampire took a shot in the forehead. His head snapped back and he collapsed.
The next vampire caught one in the sternum, as if the slug couldn't help but go between her boobs. She tumbled forward and the Uzi dropped from her hands.
My sights hovered over the face of the last vampire, a wily-looking bastard with the expression of a starving ferret. His gun jerked rhythmically, the spent casings whirling in the air.
A searing pain hacked my side and I sank to my knees.
My aim drifted off target and I centered the sights again. My bullet cleaved the shooter's nose. Blood sprayed across his cheeks like the pulp of a smashed tomato. He clutched his face and fell, howling in agony.
I struggled to get up. A silver bullet wormed inside of me, the poisonous metal burning flesh like a hot poker.
Rosario knelt by the front of his Porsche. He saw that I was wounded and scrambled toward me. Great, let's bunch up and make it easier for this vampire bastard. I waved that Rosario stay back.
Hairy-face gunned his bike forward and angled the muzzle of his shotgun at Rosario. The raging glow of the vampire's aura froze like a muscle tensing.
I tired to shout a warning but the words came out as a groan. My reactions were sluggish from the pain. By the time I brought my pistol up to fire it was too late.
The vampire's shotgun barked once. Blood spurted from Rosario's back. His arms splayed forward and he fell prone on the ground.
I fired at Hairy-face. He had no problem ducking at vampire speed.
Hairy-face looked at me. His gaze focused on my wound, and he smiled. Long fangs spanned the gap between his mustache and beard. His red eyes glared a message. Go ahead and waste your ammunition.
With a jerk of his arm the shotgun broke open and ejected the two empty shells. He snatched fresh shells from a vest pocket and reloaded.
A pistol shot rang out. Hairy-face's aura lit up from the shock of sudden pain. He grabbed his side and jerked his head to the right at Rosario.
Rosario pushed off the grass. His aura burned with defiance. Blood ran from his shirtsleeves and over both of his wrists and hands. He tore the sunglasses from his face. His hand left bloody streaks on his cheeks. He kept his .45 trained on Hairy-face and fired. The big slug ripped the vampire's shoulder.
My turn. I shot again and hit Hairy-face in the center of his chest.
He dropped his shotgun and doubled over. The part in his hair pointed to a bald spot that drew my aim like the bull's-eye of a target.
My bullet punched through his skull. Blood geysered out. The red spew turned into rust-colored flakes. Hairy-face slumped against his handlebars, and the Harley toppled over.
Rosario staggered and fell. He wheezed and clawed at the grass. His aura began to lose its glow.
I cupped my hand over the wound in my side. Blood and smoke oozed past my fingers. I struggled to get upright, the bullet in me heavy as a sack of foul toxin. Once on my feet, I moved in a painful shuffle to stand over Rosario.
He rolled onto his back and stared at the sky. I stood over him to block the sun, but of course, there was no shadow. His eyes wouldn't focus. He held up his .45. "Told you I put it together right."
/> "So you did." He was a breath away from dying, so I couldn't do anything except say, "I'm sorry, Rosario."
"What for?" His arm dropped and the pistol clattered against the ground. "At least I won't die broke like my old man."
Police sirens closed upon us. I glanced to the road, and when I looked back at Rosario, his aura was gone. Blood snaked through the grass around him.
Shattered windows and bullet holes decorated the cars in the parking lot. Spent shell casings littered the grass and asphalt. Rosario lay dead. The corpses of the vampires smoldered as the sun ate their flesh. What a mess.
The slide of my pistol was locked back, signaling that the gun was empty. I inserted my last magazine and released the catch. The slide snapped forward.
The police sirens echoed louder. I had to hurry.
Chapter Forty-Six
HUMANS POPPED UP like prairie dogs. Red auras ballooned around them. They gaped at the carnage and at me.
I unfolded my sunglasses and put them on, to hide my eyes. I walked stiffly toward my motorcycle and, despite the agony, moved faster as the sirens approached.
My Yamaha waited between two mock orange shrubs. I bent over and plucked my overnight bag from under the leaves.
I lay across my bike and levered one leg over the seat until I could sit upright. I slipped the bag's straps over my shoulders and inserted the ignition key. I left my helmet clipped to the rear of the seat.
The Yamaha started right away. When I clicked the foot shifter into first, pain jolted through my leg and up my side.
One, two, three police cars swerved into the parking lot.
I released the clutch handle, rolled the throttle grip, and the Yamaha jumped forward. I steered out of the grass and toward the pavement.
Cops sprang from their cars. I zigzagged around them. Another police car swerved in front of me and blocked my way.
I fishtailed off the pavement and back on the grass. I shot between the shrubs along the base of the hill. Spiny leaves and branches smacked my arms and face. My body was a blur of reflexive motion that obeyed one simple command. Get away.
I punished the V-Max, relying little on my riding finesse and more on the brute force of the Yamaha's engine to bash through the vegetation. Every bump jolted me with excruciating pain. Branches pummeled the motorcycle and me, tearing my clothes and ripping off both mirrors.
X-Rated Blood Suckers Page 24