https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01I3X4NK8
CONCESSION
By
Al Lamanda
Copyright by Al
Lamanda
Chapter One
Westchester County rolled by my window. Behind the wheel, Helen concentrated on
her driving. Sixty-five minutes in the car and the only words spoken by her
were, “Give me ten for the bridge.” I gave her a twenty and after she paid the
toll, she tossed my change into her purse on the seat next to her. I kept my
mouth shut.
Helen is Helen
Ruiz-Dunn and when she has a mad on that emotion might as well be carved in
stone tablets as the eleventh commandment. Born to a Korean mother and Cuban
father, Helen has the complexion of California surfer without ever having to
tan, almond shaped, grey eyes the color of smoke and a figure most women spend
thousands of hours in the gym trying to achieve, but which Helen seems to take
for granted. She can be generous to a fault or mean as a snake depending upon
which side of the bed she wakes up on and when. Anything earlier than eight
thirty and she has the demeanor of a mother bear protecting her cubs.
For the last ten
years, the bed Helen wakes up on is mine or at least until recent events
dictated otherwise. For nearly a week, she has slept in the second bedroom of
the five-room apartment we share on Riverside Drive
in Manhattan’s Upper West
Side. The neighborhood, once home of the wealthy elite saw a twenty-year
downswing before the next generation of yuppie reinvented it as upscale posh. I
moved in thirteen years ago when the six-story building was still under rent
control, before the landlords put pressure on the city to decentralize rents,
which they did about ten years ago. The kick in the legislature, however, is
that rents could only be raised on new tenants moving in, not those
grandfathered in, such as me. So while most of the occupants of the building
pay between three and five thousand a month for their digs, we get away with
murder the first of the month when our accountant writes a check for eight
hundred.
Before I stray too
far off course, let me back up and return to Helen. I watched as she withdrew
the cigarette lighter from the dashboard and touched it to the seventh
cigarette smoked since we began to drive this morning. A chain smoker
extraordinaire, her cigarette of choice is Marlboro Red, but she will light
anything in a pinch except for menthol. She will smoke anywhere, anytime,
including elevators, police stations, restaurants and even in church.
We’ve been
together ten years and Helen is the absolute love of my life.
She is from The
Bronx. I hail from Brooklyn. We have nothing in common except for our chosen
profession. She has a huge family of around three hundred. I have three, consisting
of me, myself and I. We met in the Police
Academy where we
graduated top of the class. Six months into our probation, we called it quits
and applied for a Private Investigators license. She was assigned to the 42 in
The Bronx; I grabbed the prize at the 109. We hadn’t spoken since the academy
until the day we sat in an office and filled out the P.I. licensing paperwork.
I thought she was the most gorgeous woman on the planet. She thought I was a
pervert and told me to fuck off. It was love at first sight, at least on my
part. On her part, Helen thought I was a creep and told me so to my face. That,
of course, had the reverse effect and made me even more star-struck for her. The
topper came when she lit up while filling out the application and a uniformed
officer came in and told her smoking wasn’t allowed inside city property. She
told the uniform to fuck off and that was that, I was in way over my head.
After that, we
went our separate ways for about a year. Fate brought us together. I worked
mainly as a security guard while awaiting approval of my investigator’s
license. Helen’s license was approved almost immediately, due mostly to the
fact that he mother is a Police Captain in The Bronx and her father is the
Queens District Attorney. She worked mostly for big law firms scattered
throughout the city. A Park Avenue firm hired her to investigate an insurance
fraud claim. A man struck by a city contracted snowplow sued and won just over
a million dollars. The law firm, retained by the city smelled a rat and hired
Helen for a simple tail and photograph job. The rat had his cousin follow him
everywhere he went and the cousin made Helen. After dark, while the rat
strolled past a construction site on Ninth
Avenue near Hell’s kitchen, the cousin shoved
Helen through a hole in the fence. Caught off guard, Helen stood little chance
of escaping alive as rat and cousin decided a little rape was in order before
strangling her to death. That’s when the fate I spoke of came into play. I was
the security guard assigned to protect the construction site. Dully licensed
and armed with a .357 Smith and Wesson, I shot rat and cousin to death just as
they were tearing Helen’s clothing from her body.
At the hospital,
Helen’s mother professed her undying gratitude at saving the life of her
daughter. Helen’s father, a slightly built Cuban, cried in my arms and said if
there was ever anything he could do for me to let him know. I thought about it
and asked if they could pull some strings and expedite my license application.
They did and paid
the processing fee to boot.
I visited Helen in
the hospital. She remembered me as the creep who pestered her that day we
filled out applications. I told her she was welcome and she told me to fuck off,
but not before asking me if I had a smoke. I was still in way over my head.
Two weeks later,
she knocked on my apartment door and invited herself in for coffee. She said
she had given it a great deal of thought and decided that she needed a partner.
Through her parent’s contacts, she said she had an overload of work and could
use the help if I was interested in being the junior partner.
I told her I was.
She told me this
was strictly professional and that there would be no sex between us, not then,
not ever.
In short, never,
never, never.
A decade later and
here we are.
The thing about
Helen, the thing I love most is she is completely free when it comes to
expressing her emotions. Not even a hit of inhabitation in her bones. When we
make love, it’s like lions mating and she’s the male. When we agree, it’s
absolute and the same can be said for when we disagree.
When we fight, I
rarely if ever win. Early in the relationship we argued about a client. I
thought he was a shiftless bum. Helen thought the opposite. The argument
escalated into shouting and I make the mistake of telling her she was acting
like a bitch. It was as if a switch had been thrown. Calmly, quietly, Helen
removed one of her high heels (the only time she doesn’t wear heels is when out
for her daily jog) and belted me in the mouth with the spiked end of the heel.
In addition to a painful split lip, the heel chipped two front teeth, which
hurt like hell and bled like a war wound. The argument ended when Helen told me
to man up and quit whining about a little blood.
In short, Helen is
a fuse in search of a flame.
“This is our
exit,” I said.
Helen bit her
lower lip as she blew cigarette smoke out of her nose and didn’t bother to
glance at me. “I know what exit we take.”
“I’m just saying,”
I said.
“Well, don’t just
saying.”
Helen skirted our
massive Town Car onto the exit lane and off the highway where we were met by a
stop sign.
“The instructions
say to …”
“Will you shut
up,” Helen said. “I read the directions same as you.”
We sat behind the
stop sign for thirty seconds until she said, “Left or right?”
“I thought you
said you read the …”
Left or right,
damn you,” Helen snapped.
“Right.”
“Thank you,” she
said in a tone as cold as ice water.
“Come on,” I said
as she feathered the gas and steered us into a right turn. “How long is this
going to go on?”
“It ends when you
admit what you did and you apologize for doing it,” Helen said. “And I mean a
sincere apology, not your usual ball-less bullshit.”
“Apologize for
what? I didn’t … left … turn left here … didn’t do anything I need apologize
for,” I said.
Helen made a left
turn and then looked at me with her almond shaped eyes narrowed to slits.
“Don’t you think I know my own man?” she said. “I know you better than you know
yourself, asshole.”
“Maybe so, but
what did I … end of the block a right turn … do to cause all this anger?” I
said.
“You don’t
remember?”
“I don’t seem to,”
I said.
“My cousin’s
wedding last week,” Helen said. “You don’t remember that?”
“The big …”
“Don’t you dare
say it.”
“The chunky girl
on the Cuban side, that wedding?”
“We’ve been to one
wedding this year, of course that wedding.”
“What about it?”
“You cheated on me
with my cousin, that what about it.”
I flipped through
the rolodex in my head and recalled no such incident. “You’re out of your
freaking mind I f… I think this is it … you think I’ve cheated on you with
anybody, much less your cousin.”
“This is it?”
“Yeah, I think
so.”
Helen brought the
Town Car to a gentle stop in the parking lot of the Hideaway Motel and killed
the engine. Then she faced me and slapped me a good one across the face. “With
my cousin Kim, you don’t remember that?”
I rubbed my cheek.
“The Korean or the Cuban side?”
“Don’t play cute
with me,” Helen said and got out of the car. “Only one of us is cute and it
isn’t you.”
I exited on my
side and we met at the trunk. “I’m not playing with anything,” I said. “That’s
the problem.”
“Asshole,” Helen
said and popped the trunk by remote.
“How could I have
cheated on you with your cousin when you never left my side the entire night,”
I said and opened the steel suitcase inside the trunk.
“Up here,” Helen
said and tapped her head with a finger. “That’s where sex exists, anyway.”
“Not for men,” I
said and tapped my zipper.
Despite her anger,
Helen grinned at me.
I reached into the
steel case. “You want the .44 or the Lady Smith?”
“Lady Smith.”
I handed Helen the
.357 Lady Smith revolver and a speed loader. She opened the wheel and fed it
six rounds off the speed loader, then slammed the wheel shut with a flick of
her wrist. Possessing the full power of a standard .357, the Lady Smith was
smaller and contoured to fit a woman’s hand. It also had a pretty a red rose
carved into the steel just above the grip.
I pulled a Browning
.45 pistol from the steel case, fed it a ten round magazine and shoved it into
the waste band of my jeans.
“You think we need
shotguns?” Helen asked as she slipped a bulletproof vest over her shirt.
“This guy sounds
pretty stupid,” I said. “I mean look at this place.”
The Hideaway Motel
is a sixteen room, railroad motel in serious need of repair and paint. The kind
of place that rents rooms by the hour to cheap hookers. In short, a dump.
Grab the money,”
Helen said.
I lifted a leather
briefcase from the trunk and closed it. “Room 16,” I said.
“Right,” Helen
said.
We crossed the
dark parking lot and walked toward Room 16. There were just two other cars in
the lot in front of Room 7 and Room 10. My guess is hookers used the place as a
revolving door sanctuary for Johns. Fifty bucks for the hooker and twenty for
the room, the sheets are changed but once a week at best.
We paused ten feet
in front of Room 16. “How sure are you about this?” Helen said and looked at
me.
“Are you asking me
if the little girl is still alive?”
“Yes.”
“Fifty-fifty,” I
said.
“If she’s dead,
I’m shooting him in the balls, then the face,” Helen said.
We walked to the
door and I knocked.
The kidnapper was
even a sorrier sack of shit than I imagined. Stoop shouldered with a balding
crown of long, stringy hair and a three-day growth of beard, he could have been
forty or he could have been sixty. He had the red, watery eyes of a drinker who
had been drinking. He looked at Helen, then he looked at me, then he looked at
the case in my hand. “That the money?” he said.
“Can we come in?”
I said. “Or do you want to count it in the parking lot?”
The kidnapper
stepped aside and we entered the motel room. Seedy is the word that comes to
mind to describe the furnishings and the smell.
“Put the case on
the bed,” the kidnapper said.
I set the case on
the sagging bed and opened it to reveal five hundred thousand dollars in used
twenty-dollar bills. The kidnapper grinned ear to ear. “The asshole can afford
it,” he said. “I never did like his movies, anyway.”
“About the kid?”
Helen said.
“I need to count
the money first,” the kidnapper said.
“It’s all there,”
I said.
The kidnapper
pulled a stack of twenty-dollar bills and loosened the strap. Helen pulled her
Lady Smith and smacked him on the back of the head. Not too hard, just enough
to send him to the rug. As he rolled over to stand up, Helen cocked the Lady
Smith and stuck it in his nose.
“You got something
to say?” Helen said.
Wide eyed, the
kidnapper stared down the barrel of the Lady Smith.
“Put it down,” I
told Helen.
She looked at me,
but didn’t lower her arm.
“We want the kid
alive,” I said. “You accidentally shoot this stupid fuck and then where will we
be? In a motel room that smells like stale piss with a case full of money and
no kid, that’s where.”
Helen lowered her
arm and the kidnapper jumped to the safety of the bed.
“What the hell is
this?” the kidnapper said. “This isn’t how it’s supposed to work.” He rubbed
the back of his head with his right hand.
I sat in the
stained chair opposite the bed. “I don’t know how you think it’s supposed to
work and I really don’t care,” I said. “You’re not giving the orders around
here.”
“I have the kid,”
the kidnapper said. “And I have backup.
“And we have you,”
I said. “More importantly, she has a .357 she’s just itching to shoot
somebody.”
“One in the balls
first,” Helen said.
“Do that and the
kid dies,” the kidnapper said. He looked at his K-Mart watch. “She has less
than ninety minutes of air left and is forty-five minutes away.”
I looked at Helen.
She nodded and backed off.
“My deal with Mr.
Movie Star was the money for the girl,” the kidnapper said. “I’m going to give
you the location and then I’m walking out of here with the money. You’re not
going to stop me because you don’t know if I’m telling you the truth about the
location. What I am telling the truth about is the ninety minutes of air.” He
glanced at his watch again. “Eighty nine minutes now.”
“Okay,” I said.
“We’ll have to go on trust here.”
The kidnapper
snapped the leather case closed and looked at me. “Smart move,” he said. “1717 Wentworth Drive
in Yonkers. Back yard. Bring a shovel. Then
never look for me again. I have some well connected friends.”
I stood up from
the chair and looked at Helen. “I’ll find it on GPS,” I said.
Helen nodded and I
sucker punched the kidnapper a good one to his jaw. He bounced backward on the
bed, then slunk to the rug like a drunken snake. “You want me to cuff him?” I
said. “In case he really does have a backup?”
“No,” Helen said.
“They’re more fun to watch when they’re not cuffed. Besides, if this idiot had
backup, they’d be all over us by now.”
“I’ll call you on
my cell phone,” I said. “If the girl is alive, don’t shoot him.”
“And if she
isn’t?”
I reached over to
peck Helen on the lips and she let me. I took that as a sign our relationship
was on the mend.
*****
I followed the GPS in the Town Car
and drove south through Westchester County until I reached the city of White Plains. My only thought was thank God
most criminals are stupid. My job would be much more complicated if they
weren’t, but there would be time enough later to laugh about the shortcomings
of this particular kidnapper. I knew what the odds were that the girl would be
alive and they weren’t good.
The GPS took me to
Route 100 South and mapped out a thirty-minute drive to 1717 Wentworth Drive in Yonkers.
Forty-five minutes to get there, forty-five minutes to dig the girl up. After
that, it was out of my hands. I opened the rolodex in my head.
Two days ago, Chad
West, the biggest movie star in the world if you believe the gossip rags on
sale at the supermarkets, called his New York
attorney with an emergency. The attorney, Martin Myers of Myers, Andrews and
Gurney, responded by rushing to West’s twenty room apartment at the Dakota
Apartment House on West Seventy-Second
Street across from Central
Park. If you’re old enough, you might remember what the Dakota is
famous for. It’s where John Lennon lived and where he was shot to death as he
walked to the front gate. It’s where Yoko still lives today. Before that it was
home to the film Rosemary’s Baby.
I’ve done work for
Myers, Andrews and Gurney before. Old stuffed shirts with too much corporate
money, they handle civil cases, wills, endowments and other such matters for
the beautiful rich. In doing so, they have become members of the beautiful
rich, just with much flabbier skin and no tans. They also represent the city
and private corporations, often sending investigative work our way.
Myers called me at
home and requested my presence at the apartment on one Chad West. Myers said it
was a matter of utmost importance. I asked Helen if she wanted to tag along and
she told me to go to hell until I mentioned Chad West. To Helen, West is a God.
With his chiseled good looks, blond, wispy hair and shaved chest, West is the
number one screen idol in the world. His movies rake in hundreds of millions
worldwide and it seems never a day passes where he and his live in girlfriend
Monica Spinks aren’t in the news. They travel to Africa
and adopt babies, speak at the UN about genocide, global warming and AIDS and
you get the picture.
The doorman at the
Dakota was expecting me. Even so, he didn’t hesitate to eye frisk me as he led
me to the secretly guarded, guest’s elevator. It was the first time I’d ever
been inside the Dakota and it was just as depressing as it appeared from the
street. Ominous is the word that came to mind. What else can you say about a
building that featured gargoyles on the roof as guardians of its tenants?
I heard or read
that West paid twenty four million for his eight bedrooms, twenty-room
apartment on the fifth floor. What the man needed with four thousand square
feet of Manhattan living space is anybody’s
guess. Maybe it was for the hoard of children he and Monica were planning to
adopt. Maybe the guy just had too much Goddamn money. Who knows and who cares?
I was there on
business and the business was ugly.
Myers did the
introductions. At least sixty now, Myers had a full head of snow colored hair,
deep penetrating eyes behind rimless glasses and a no nonsense way about him. A
lifetime of preparing wills for elites such as West will suck the humor out of
anybody, but away from the office Myers had a dry humor about him.
“Mr. West, may I
present Helen Ruiz and Travis Dunn, private investigators that I trust
implacably,” Myers said. “Helen, Travis, Mr. Chad West.”
I shook West’s
hand and so did Helen. If the circumstances surrounding the introduction
weren’t so dire, I’m sure Helen would have wet her panties.
“I hate to say
this and make a bad first impression, but I need a drink,” West said.
We were in a room
that I took for a study or den. It was a good thirty by thirty, all leather and
books, huge cherry wood desk with reading lamps. It would have been right at
home as an office at Myers, Andrews and Gurney.
West poured two
ounces of whiskey from a crystal decanter into a matching crystal glass and sat
behind his desk. Helen and I declined the offer to join him. Ten Am was a bit
early to be tossing back shots.
Instead, we sat in
leather chairs and faced West. The chairs were custom jobs that probably set
West back five grand apiece, but they weren’t as comfy as they appeared. My
guess is that they were designed that way to encourage whoever was seated in
them to not overstay their welcome.
I looked my
question at Myers.
Myers cleared his
throat before speaking. “You are aware that Mr. West and Miss Spinks have
adopted four children from various countries around the world?”
Who wasn’t? As I
said, not a day goes by that something West or Spinks does isn’t reported on
the news or in print. They fly around the world, scoop up starving children and
make them their own. They speak at the UN and before Congress and what irks me
is that they listen to these movie stars as if they carried word from the
mount.
West swallowed
half his drink and lit a cigarette. Helen took that as permission and lit one
of her own.
Myers said, “Miss
Spinks is in Spain
working on her latest film. She has three of the children with her. Their
newest child, a young girl from the province
of Djibouti stayed behind with Mr.
West to allow her to become acclimated to America.”
I remembered the
stories. West and Sinks in Africa with their enlarging brood, bring the young
girl home to New York or wherever it was they
called home that particular day. West owns homes in Hollywood,
Utah, New York
and New Orleans,
although I doubt he ever stayed there a day in his life.
“I’ll take it from
here,” West said.
A giant on screen,
in real life West stood no more than five foot eleven inches tall. He was
forty-five now and a rumor circulated in the rags that he had Pec implants to
keep his chiseled chest chiseled. Pushups were probably to time-consuming at
this stage of his busy, busy life.
While I waited for
West to speak, I ran the rolodex in my head for information on him. I knew that
he made some of the most popular films of our time. He’s portrayed characters
of every type, from cops to gladiators to war heroes. He’s won two Academy
Awards and has had every type of accolade heaped upon him possible. He is, as
some would say, a man’s man.
My first
impression of the man was that of hen pecked pussy. He dumped his second wife
of a dozen years to take up with Monica Spinks, a movie star some fifteen years
his junior. Childless in marriage, West and Spinks appeared to have set the
goal of adopting a child from every country on the globe except their own. In
every photograph I’d seen of West, Monica and their growing crowd of children,
West always appears absolutely miserable, or at least to my eye.
I grew tired of
waiting and said, “Mr. West?”
West looked
directly at me, making strong eye contact. Up close, he wasn’t as good looking
as on screen. For one, his forty five year old skin didn’t appear as smooth as
it did with tons of makeup on it. For another, he was, or at least to me, one
of those people that looks better on film than in person.
“Normally I never
leave the house without a bodyguard,” West said. “The press hounds us like you
wouldn’t believe. We have no privacy … ever. It makes me wonder…” West paused
to sigh openly. “Never mind, that’s not important. Yesterday afternoon … it was
one or one-thirty, something like that. Anyway, I decided I needed to get out
and take a walk. The problem was that I gave Swen the afternoon off so he could
visit his mother in the hospital. She’s recovering from breast surgery.” West
paused to gulp some more of his drink, then he cleared his throat. “So what I
did, I put on some faded jeans, a sweatshirt and a baseball cap, dark glasses
and went out.”
“With the baby?” I
said.
“Yes, of course,”
West said. “I put her in the stroller and entered the park as quickly as
possible to avoid detection. Then …”
“How?” I said.
“How, what?” West
said.
“Did you avoid
detection?” I said. “On the way in I counted at least a dozen photographers
hanging around just waiting to snap your picture.”
“Oh,” West said.
“We have an elevator that goes down to the basement and out the rear of the
courtyard. After they shot John … well.”
After they shot
John like he knew him personally. Helen and I exchanged a hint of a glance.
West continued. “Anyway, I made it across the street and went into the park at
Strawberry Fields and walked down to the carousel. Binta has never seen a …”
“Binta?” Helen
said as she crushed out her cigarette butt in a silver ashtray.
“West African,”
West said. “Means With God.”
“So you took Binta
to the carousel and what happened?” I said.
“I took her for a
ride,” West said. “At first she was terrified, but then she got the hang of it
and wanted more. We went around three, maybe four times. After that, I bought
her an ice cream and that’s when it happened.”
“She was
abducted?” I said.
West swallowed the
last of his drink and set the glass on the highly polished desktop. “Yeah,” he
finally said. “There’s a vendor that sells out of a pushcart by the carousel.
It was hot, Binta wanted ice cream. Maybe five, six people were on line. next
to the cart, six, seven feet to my left is a tree. I left her in the shade
where I could watch her ever second, except for …” West paused to suck in air
and let it out with a deep sigh. “Except for the twenty or so seconds it takes
to ask for the ice cream and pay the guy. I turn around with two ice creams in
my hands … she’s gone.”
We waited for West
to pour another drink and take a hefty gulp. He swallowed, sighed and looked at
us. “I thought … I mean at first that is … I thought she fell out of the
stroller and maybe landed behind it. I ran over and she was gone. Just like
that … gone.”
I glanced at
Helen. I knew what she was thinking. Twenty seconds is enough time to get lost
in Central Park and never be heard from again.
Around a corner, behind a hill and out of sight. Central
Park is a purse-snatchers wet dream for that very reason.
West took another
sip of his drink. At that point I was wondering if he needed the whiskey to
talk himself through the incident or was he a drunk. I settled on benefit of
the doubt.
“And? I said.
“There were a note
and a cell phone in the stroller,” West said.
“Show them the
note, Chad,”
Myers said.
West opened a desk
drawer and removed a folded note, slid it across the desk toward me. I picked
it up, unfolded the paper and read the words. They were neatly typed on regular
paper and could have come from any printer anywhere. The note read, I AM NOW IN POSSESSION OF THE LITTLE GIRL. DO
NOT REACT TO THIS NOTE AS YOU ARE BEING WATCHED. DO NOT CALL THE POLICE OR THE
FBI OR THAT WILL ENSURE THAT YOU NEVER SEE HER ALIVE AGAIN. THE FEE FOR HER
RETURN IS 500,000. THIS IS NOT NEGOTIABLE. I WILL CALL AT 6 PM TONIGHT ON THE
CELL PHONE LEFT WITH THE NOTE WITH INSTRUCTIONS. IF I EVEN SNIFF POLICE … THE
GIRL DIES.
I passed the note
to Helen even though she read over my shoulder. “The phone?”
West removed it
from the desk and slid it across to me. I didn’t pick it up. I didn’t need to
in order to verify it was an untraceable 60 minute of airtime disposable sold
everywhere. The preferred method of terrorist communication around the world.
“When he called,
what did he say?” I said.
“Exactly?” West
asked.
“The best you can
remember.”
“He said Binta was
alive and …”
“He called her
that, Binta?” Helen said.
West nodded yes.
“Her name is no secret. The media covered the adoption like it was the
reincarnation of Pope John or Elvis.”
“Okay, then what?”
I said.
“He said the money
was to be delivered to the Hideaway Motel in Westchester,
room 16,” West said. “He said it didn’t matter if I sent cops or tipped the FBI
because he was a desperate loser who didn’t matter. He said what did matter was
if I wanted the girl back or not, because if cops showed he would never tell
them where she was. He said suicide by cop was a better alternative for him. He
said midnight tomorrow night, which would be tonight , then hung up.”
I picked up the
phone and checked the airtime minutes. There were fifty-three left. “He call
back?” I said, knowing that he hadn’t.
“No.”
“Did he sound
desperate on the phone?” Helen said.
“What do you
mean?” West said.
“Anxious, in a
hurry, crazy, anything in his tone that would indicate he is as desperate as he
said he was,” Helen said.
“No,” West said.
“He sounded cool and calm.”
“Besides Mr.
Myers, who else have you told?” I said.
“No one,” West
said. “You think I want the child harmed?”
“Monica?” Helen
said.
West shook his
head. “She’s on location shooting a hundred million dollar picture. Any leak of
this and the whole words knows. I figure that after you deliver the money and I
have Binta back, I’ll call the FBI and the hell with the world.”
“They won’t like
it,” I said.
“The FBI?” West
said.
“Yes.”
“Fuck them,” West
said. “Binta isn’t their kid.”
Helen, ready for
another cigarette, lit a fresh one and blew smoke. “Was he specific about who
delivered the money?” she said.
“You mean did he
ask me to deliver it personally?” West said. “No, he didn’t.”
“If I may
interject,” Myers said. “Mr. West was fully prepared to deliver the money
himself, but I suggested otherwise. I told him matters like this are best left
to professionals. After thinking it through, he agreed.”
“I’d only fuck it
up,” West admitted. “This isn’t a movie. Nobody is feeding me lines. Nobody
yells cut and gives you take two so you can get it right. I mess up and Binta
dies.”
“I must admit that
my first reaction was to call the police,” Myers chipped in. “But upon studying
the note and weighing the options of the phone conversation, I decided it best
to call you instead and see how you feel about it.”
“They will be very
pissed of,” Helen said.
“Like I said,
fuck’em,” West said. “Binta’s only three years old, for God’s sake.”
“So you believe
he’s that desperate that he’d let her die?” I said.
West looked at me
and slowly nodded his head. “It’s a chance I don’t want to take.”
“Fair enough. Do
you have the cash ready to be delivered?” I said.
“Of course,” West
said. “That amount is no problem.”
I glanced at Helen
to see if she wanted to take the lead. She did not. “How much do you make a
year?” I said.
“What does that
have to do with anything?” West said, showing real emotion for the first time
since the conversation began.
“It’s relevant to
my next question,” I said.
“I don’t know,”
West said. “It depends on how much I feel like working. Last year I made two
films. One this year with another in production.”
“What do you make
per film?”
“My fee is twenty
million plus five points on the back end,” West said. “Last year I made in the neighborhood
of ninety million.”
“So why so little
for the ransom?” I said.
West looked at me.
Myers looked at me. Neither of them spoke.
Helen said, “The
kidnaper either doesn’t understand how much you’re worth or he’s so desperate
that 500 large sounds like all the money in the world to him.”
“I see what you’re
saying,” West said. “So desperate he really doesn’t care if the police blow him
to pieces. So desperate that …”
“He doesn’t care
if he lives or dies,” Helen said.
“So you’ll deliver
the money?” West said.
“Yes,” I said.
“But I have a few questions I’d like to ask. Probably the same questions the
FBI will ask once this is over.”
“At this point I
have nothing to hide,” West said. “Ask.”
I glanced at
Helen. I knew what she was thinking. Did West have something to hide before or
was that a simple turn of the phrase. “At the carousel, did you notice anybody
suspicious? Somebody who might have looked out of place.”
“You’re kidding,
right?” West said. “It’s Central Park. Try to
find someone who doesn’t look suspicious.”
“What I mean is at
the carousel, did you notice anybody sitting or standing around that didn’t
have a child with them?” I said. “Maybe someone you saw when you first entered
the park?”
“You mean did I
notice anybody following me?” West said. “I’d have to say no, but then I was
doing my best to stay under the radar. Head low, avoid eye contact, that kind
of thing.”
“Didn’t look
around when you left the child alone just to be sure?” I said.
There was a brief
hint of anger in West’s eyes, just enough to bring out the deep lines carved
under and around them. “I left her six feet next to me, for Christ’s sake. My
back was turned just long enough to ask for an ice cream. What the fuck was I
supposed to do, build a dome around her to get her an ice cream cone?” The
anger passed. West took a hit from his drink. “This city. This fucking, fucking
city,” he said, softly.
I gave him ten
seconds of peace, then I said, “You do realize that whoever took the child has
had you under surveillance for quite some time? Unless he had a laptop and
printer with him and wrote the note on the spot, spur of the moment. And the
cell phone, all sixty minutes intact. He’s been stalking you, Mr. West.
Stalking and waiting for the right moment.”
“I get that,” West
said. “And I’ll let the FBI and police deal with that once I have Binta back.
She’s the main thing, right? I mean, who gives a shit about a lousy half
million compared to her safety? I’ll take the heat once she’s safe.””
“Mr. West, Helen and
I have to prepare for this,” I said. “We’ll return about nine tonight. I
suggest you don’t go out, don’t answer the phone unless it’s the disposable and
above all try to stay calm. Okay?”
West nodded at us.
“Myers said you guys are good, real good. I trust you.”
With that, Helen
and I departed and made our way to a coffee shop six blocks south on Broadway.
Over coffee and cheesecake, we hacked it out.
“Besides the
desire for cheery drizzle cheesecake, what does your gut tell you?” I asked
Helen.
Helen waited to
fork a hunk of cheesecake into her mouth before answering. She washed it down
with a sip of coffee, then said, “It stinks. More holes in this story than
Swiss cheese.”
“Example?”
“The note. The guy
says he desperate, but not so desperate he has the kind of time it requires preparing
notes and buying phones and stake out movie stars,” Helen said. “Probably
following him around for a month or more.”
“Yeah, but so does
everybody else follow West around,” I said. “Our guy looks like just another
paparazzi in search of a photo op.”
“A faceless face
in a crowd of faceless faces.”
“Yeah.”
“You think he’d
kill her?”
“Yeah.”
“Think she’s alive
right now?”
“Yeah.”
“Then we better
not fuck this up.”
“Let’s go,” I
said. “We need to get ready for tonight.”
Helen looked me in
the eye. “Just because we’re working a case doesn’t mean we’re back where we
were.”
“For Christ’s
sake,” I said. “Are you going to tell me what this is all about or do I have to
Jeopardy my way through it.”
“You’re a
detective, aren’t’ you,” Helen said. “Clue your way through it.”
Rolodex closed, I
looked at the GPS unit on the dashboard. Ten minutes to destination. The
anxious feeling in the pit of my stomach that I knew would show up finally
arrived. This was our seventh kidnapping case in ten years and that feeling of
pending doom of failure never goes away. Most kidnap victims do the opposite of
what the demands state in that they immediately call the police and FBI. That
usually just ensures the death of the kidnap victim. If it were your kid, what
would you do. I asked myself that question as I went through a red light.
I opened the
Rolodex in my head marked Personal
Information. There was a mild amount of truth in Helen’s anger toward me.
At her cousin’s wedding, another cousin on the Cuban side, a striking looking
woman named Kim came on to me in a less than subtle way. Truth be told, I did
nothing to stop it. She was a bit tipsy and making a fool over me and there is
nothing as vain as the male ego, especially when it’s being fed by a gorgeous
twenty-four-year-old babe in a too tight bride’s maid gown. Truth be told,
that’s all it was, some harmless flirting, or so I thought. Helen thought
otherwise. She knew that in my head I had thrown her cousin over a table and
ravaged her to within an inch of her life. In my head. In my heart, Helen was
still the only woman for me.
The GPS unit
announced in its simulated voice, “Destination arrived.”
The Rolodex in my
head slammed shut.
I looked at 1717 Wentworth Drive.
A two-story house of wood frame construction on a small end of the block lot, a
wood fence separated it from abutting homes on both sides. A for sale sign sat
on the front lawn. The house to its left also had a for sale sign on the lawn.
The house to the right didn’t, but there wasn’t a light on in any of them.
I called Helen on
my cell phone.
“I just arrived,”
I said. “The place has a for sale sign on it. Dark as hell. Ask the dirt bag if
he left a marker.”
“Hold on,” Helen
said. A few seconds passed, then she said, “Backyard. He said you’ll know it
when you see it.”
“Okay, I’m going
in,” I said. I was about to hang up when I heard a noise in the background.
“What’s that?” I said.
“Nothing,” Helen
said. “He’s pacing the room. Keeps saying, this ain’t how it’s supposed to go.”
“You think he’s
going to rock and roll?”
“Let him,” Helen
said. “I’m cocked and locked and just waiting.”
“He twitches, you
shoot this asshole,” I said.
“What constitutes
a twitch?” Helen said.
“I’m not joking.”
“I know.”
There was a moment
of silence.
I said, “This is
probably not the best time to say this, but you were right and I’m sorry.
Nothing would have actually happened, but in my head, I was fueling my ego.
Hell, I don’t even find her attractive. I’d never cheat on you.”
“I know that,”
Helen said. “I just wanted to hear you say it so I don’t have to taze my
cousin. Call me back when you’re done.”
I left the Town
Car and opened the trunk. I removed the massive, 6-volt lantern and folding
shovel that is always kept on hand and walked toward 1717 Wentworth Drive. A long, narrow
cement driveway emptied to a plot of fenced in backyard grass. I scanned the
lawn with the 6-volt and leaning against the wood fence was a scuba tank.
The ninety minutes
of air.
I ran to the tank.
The air hose was submerged into freshly dug Earth. I checked the air gauge. It
showed a full tank of air. The knob to release air from the tank hadn’t been
turned to the open position. The stupid son of a bitch had forgotten to open
the air valve.
I dug two feet
down to the large Rubbermaid container that was buried there, knowing full well
what I wound find. A hole had been cut in the lid for the air hose to fit
through, but with the tank turned off the hose was rendered useless.
I opened the lid.
Binta’s tiny body
was lifeless. Dark skin against a bright yellow sundress, she appeared to be
asleep. If you were a believer, she was now in some other place.
Binta.
With God.
I hoped so.
Chapter Two
The forty-eight
hours Helen and I spent with the FBI were brutal. They don’t like it when
civilians take the law into their own hands, although we weren’t civilians and
duly licensed. To me they seemed more upset with the fact that they weren’t
notified of the kidnapping than of the little girl’s death.
My license was
threatened and blah, blah, blah. The bottom line is Binta would have died no
matter who dug her up. The medical examiner said she would have run out of air
within twenty minutes. He also said she died in her sleep. A trace of either
was found on her nose and mouth, probably applied with a rag.
The Special Agent
In Charge told us he would find a charge to tag us with and make it stick.
Helen told him to check our background first, then she told him to engage in a
sexual act with his mother, though not in those words. My heart soared with
love for my woman.
I’ll pick up
Helen’s report to the FBI from the point of our phone call after I arrived at
the Wentworth address.
After speaking with my partner Travis Dunn
by cell phone, the suspect appeared to grow more agitated than in the previous
forty-five minutes. He paced the room in circles and kept repeating that it
wasn’t supposed to go like this. At one point, I asked him how it was supposed
to go and he replied, you leave the money and we split. You go get the kid and
I leave the country. I told him to be patient. A few more minutes passed and he
grew more and more anxious. I told him to relax. He said that he had to pee. I
told him to leave the bathroom door open so I could watch. The suspect then
entered the bathroom and I sat on the bed to watch him. After urinating, the
suspect turned around as if to exit the bathroom, but instead reached behind
the bathroom door where a double barrel shotgun hung from the towel hook. The
suspect cocked both hammers on the shotgun and was in the process of aiming the
weapon at me when I shot him four times in the chest. One barrel fired as he
fell to the bathroom floor and several pellets struck me in the face. Under the
circumstances, I felt I had no choice but to fire upon the suspect.
After that, it was
my turn to write a statement. I did so, and then we were escorted to viewing
room where we could watch through a two-way mirror as three agents interviewed
Chad West.
Actually, one
agent did the interviewing while the other two stood around with their hands in
their pockets. The agent with us turned on the volume of the speaker feed to
the interrogation room so we could listen.
“And you’re
positive you saw no one hanging around your building or in the park that you
recognized?” the agent conducting the interview said.
West, appearing very
bleary-eyed and exhausted sipped coffee from a deli container and stared at the
agent. “I’ve said it six times from fucking Christmas already,” West snapped.
“How many times do I have to tell you guys the same fucking thing. No, I saw
nobody hanging around or that I would say looked suspicious. And you wonder why
I had private people deliver the money, you fucking assholes.”
The agent gave
West a moment to calm down, then said, “I understand how difficult a situation
this is for you, but try to…”
“Really?” West
said.
“Mr. West, if…”
“I don’t think you
understand shit about anything,” West said. “My face is more recognizable that
the President. I can’t fart without it being reported. When Monica started
adopting kids from all over the place, it was nothing but headlines and news
stories. What kind of headline you think this is going to make? That kid was
three years old, for God’s sake. We snatched her from her poverty-stricken shit
hole to bring her to the land of dreams. Not three months later, she’s murdered.
How do I explain that to the world, Mr. FBI Agent? Huh, how?”
“I don’t know,”
the agent said.
“No shit, you
don’t know,” West said. He looked at his coffee container. “Can I get some more
and I’d appreciate it if you’d let me smoke.”
One agent left the
room to fetch West more coffee. West pulled a pack of cigarettes from his
jacket pocket and lit one off his gold Zippo lighter. Helen took that as
permission to light one of her own and I was mildly surprised when the agent in
the room with us didn’t object.
The agent returned
with West’s coffee and the conversation resumed.
“Mr. West, we’d
like to perform an autopsy on the child,” the agent said.
For a moment, West
appeared to look past the agent at the mirror as if trying to see who was
behind it, then his eyes shifted back to the agent. “Are you asking for my
permission?” West said.
“Technically yes.”
“Then my answer is
technically no.”
The agent’s
response boarded on mild shock at being refused. “I … don’t understand. It’s
important to determine the …”
“She suffocated to
death from being buried alive by a crazed madman,” West said. “I haven’t the
medical training to dispense a band aid to a kid with a scraped knee and I know
what the cause of death is, so what is the point of butchering the child like a
hog to determine what we already know?”
The agent stared
at West for several long and uncomfortable seconds as if at a loss for words.
West sipped
coffee, took a puff on his cigarette, then leaned forward and looked at the
agent as if a light bulb went on in his head. “You want to know if she was
raped, don’t you?” West said.
“Mr. West, the
bureau has …,” the agent said before West cut him off.
“The hell with the
bureau,” West snapped. “The child is dead and the man responsible is also dead,
so I fail to see the benefit of cutting her open so you can dot the I’s and
cross the T’s. No. My answer is no.”
“We can …”
“No, you can’t,”
West said. “Monica is on a plane home and production of a hundred million
dollar film has been put on hold. The moment this story hits the news, it will
dwarf every other story in the world for a month, maybe more. The funeral will
be a three-ring circus and they will make documentaries about it on CNN. I will
be forced to move Monica and the kids into seclusion to avoid the army of
reporters that will follow us like a trail of ants to honey. Any celebrity
looking to adopt a child will be scrutinized so far up the ass by agencies and
foreign governments, they won’t do it. So why don’t you quit wasting my time
and find out who the asshole is who murdered the child.”
I looked at Helen.
“At least he has some balls,” she said. “Most of these Hollywood
phonies would have scheduled an hour-long press conference on cable news by now
to proclaim themselves the victim.”
I didn’t point out
to Helen that West was the victim. She said that to see what the FBI Agent in
the room with us had to say. He either missed her point or chose not to respond
to it. The point being was West being sincere or using his formidable acting
skills to bully the FBI?
Back in the
interrogation room, the agent conducting the interview said, “Every resource is
being used to identify the kidnapper, Mr. West. His fingerprints aren’t on file
and he had no identification on him at the time. Dental records take time
despite what they lead you to believe on television cop shows. Our forensics
team is cleaning up the body to take photographs of the man to show you for
purposes of identification.”
“What, you think I
know this fucking creep?” West said.
“He certainly
knows you, Mr. West,” the agent said. “Where you live, your habits, where you
like to go and so on. It’s possible he learned that information from stalking
you, but it’s also possible he knew that information because he had a
relationship with you.”
For a moment, West
was stumped into silence. “I hadn’t seriously considered it might be someone
close to me,” he said.
“But you did
consider it?” the agent said.
“Briefly,” West
admitted. “But then I realized that anyone close to me knows all they had to do
was ask me for the money and I would give it them.”
“Five hundred
thousand dollars and you’d simply give it away?”
“If I knew the
person and it was someone I trust, yes, I would.”
I opened the
Rolodex in my head marked Chad
West and made a note to check West’s personal wealth, filed it and shut it
down.
“Mr. West,” the
agent said, then paused when the door opened and a fourth agent stepped in with
a large file.
“The photos,” the
fourth agent said.
“Thank you,” the
agent at the table with West said and took the folder. He opened the file in
front of him so that West couldn’t see over it, studied the photos for a moment
and then said, “Mr. West, have you ever seen this man before? Maybe hanging
around your apartment building or in the park?”
The agent slid the
file across the desk toward West, who picked it up, took one look and said,
“You gotta be shitting me, right? I mean, this is some kind of joke or
something you guys are pulling here, right?”
“No, no joke,” the
agent said. “This is the man who kidnapped Binta and was shot and killed by
Helen Ruiz in the motel room. I take it by your reaction that you’re familiar
with this man.”
“Familiar with
him,” West said. “That’s Paul Bruno.”
“Paul Bruno,” the
agent said. “You’re positive of that name?”
“He was my fucking
agent, for God’s sake,” West said. “I think I’m pretty fucking sure who he is.”
The hammer of
silence dropped and for about ten seconds nobody so much as took a breath. Next
to me, the FBI agent pulled his cell phone and called somebody. He stepped away
and whispered so I wouldn’t overhear the conversation. I looked at Helen and
although her face remained expressionless, her eyes told me this was just the
tip of the proverbial iceberg.
“He’s your agent?”
the FBI Agent at the table said.
“Was,” West said.
“Was my agent. A long time ago. In fact, he was my first agent. Got me my first
acting job when I was just nineteen. Played a fruit in an underwear commercial
and a tomato in a ketchup ad.”
“How long was he
your agent?”
“Three … no four
years.”
“What happened?”
“Nothing,” West
said. “I felt he wasn’t doing enough to further my career. There were no hard
feelings or anything. At the time, he had dozens of other clients and didn’t
even miss me. In fact, it was months before he even knew I left his agency.”
“How so?”
“I resigned to one
of his staff people,” West said. “I hired a new agent and in fact I was working
on a made for TV film when he called with a part. He seemed shocked that I no
longer was a client.”
“And after that?”
“After that
nothing. I’ve had three agents since then.”
“Any idea what led
him to this?”
“I haven’t spoken
to him in something like twenty-two years,” West said.
“No contact
through friends or other actors?”
“No, nothing. As
far as I know he was still doing his thing as an agent.”
My Rolodex opened
again and I made a note to background check Paul Bruno.
“Anything else?”
West said. “I’d like to meet Monica at the airport.”
“We’ll take you to
the airport,” the agent said. “We can get you in and out without a crowd
following you around. Just a few more questions first.”
“That’s right
considerate of you under the circumstances,” West said. It was difficult to
tell is he was being sincere or sarcastic.
“In your circle of
influence, would you know anyone who may keep regular contact with Paul Bruno?”
the agent said.
“Off the top of my
head, no,” West said. “But I can make the question known. Anything else?”
“Yes, our file on
you states …”
“You have a file
on me?” West said with genuine shock. “The fuck for?”
“Relax,” the agent
said. “We started it the second we received information on the kidnapping. It’s
routine. We downloaded as many news stories as possible about the adoption of
Binta for our own knowledge. Mostly to see if there were any objections to the
adoption of the child. There were none.”
I looked at Helen.
Who, we said silently to each, would object to taking a child from a lifetime
of poverty and disease and transporting her to the lap of luxury where she had
a chance to live past the age of forty, marry, raise a family and not have to
worry where her next meal would originate from?
“No, not a one,”
West said. “In fact, it was just the opposite. They celebrated the fact that
this poor orphan would have a chance at a better life.” He stopped, thought for
a moment and then said, “Had a chance at a better life.”
“One report said
the papers would be final after ninety days,” the agent said.
“Yeah, probably,”
West said. “My lawyers handle things like this for me. Us. I have lawyers for
just about everything. We can’t even go grocery shopping without a lawyer in
case we buy something that isn’t politically correct.”
“I understand,”
the agent said. “In all likelihood, Paul Bruno acted alone. However, on the
chance that he did not our investigation will be on going. We will keep in
close touch with you and your lawyers. If you think of anything, anything at
all, I’ll give you my private number.”
West nodded and
took the business card the agent handed him. He stood up and looked at the
agent. “Look,” West said. “Those two detectives, they risked their lives to
save Binta. I would hate to see them in any trouble with you people. I mean it
might not sit right if they wound up being charged with obstruction or some
such stupid bullshit.”
“They won’t,” the
agent said.
West nodded, then
he was escorted from the room and taken to the airport in an unmarked, FBI
sedan.
Then it was our
turn again. In a conference room on a different floor, the Agent in Charge sat
with us at a table.
Helen took the
offensive. “Don’t even think about charging us with obstruction,” she said. “It
wouldn’t stick, anyway. So why the call back? We already told you everything we
know in interview and writing.”
“No charges,” the
agent said. “I’m actually in need of a favor.”
“Like?” Helen
said.
“Chad West is
correct when he says this event will be the biggest media circus since the OJ
trial,” the agent said. “None the less, we have a job to do. We would
appreciate it if you didn’t speak to anybody or seek out to contact anybody
regarding any and all of what took place.”
“Appreciate or
insist?” Helen said.
“Both,” the agent
said. “Because I’m not filing charges doesn’t mean that I can’t. Do we
understand one another?”
“Yes, we do,” I
said. “But it would help us help you if our names weren’t released to the
media.”
“They won’t be,”
the Agent in Charge said.
After forty-eight
hours in FBI custody, Helen and I walked out of the building and into an
unmarked sedan where the driver whisked us to Queens where we had dinner with
Helen’s parents at an Italian Restaurant in Forest Hills.
Helen’s mother is
slight of build, but tough as nails. At sixty, she is three years away from
retirement and she’d like to make Colonel for the added pension dollars, but if
not three quarter Captain’s pay for life is nothing to sneeze at. As a young
woman, she must have been a looker because as an older woman she still could
turn heads by walking into a room. Her Korean name is Jae-Sun, which translates
to Respect and Good. Her American name is Julie, which is less fanciful and a
lot more boring. American names generally don’t mean shit.
When we sat down
at the table, Julie said, “I’d have shot him, too. Don’t lose any sleep over
it.”
“I wasn’t planning
to,” Helen said.
The daughter
didn’t fall far from the tree.
Helen’s father was
another matter entirely. Rodolfo Luis Ruiz, though as slight of build as his
wife has the reputation of a giant. He is considered to be honest, brave and
fierce in the pursuit of justice. To make it from junior ADA to District Attorney of Queens meant he
also possessed superior intelligence and a willing desire to play politics.
He’s outlasted four different mayors in his tenure and that told me a great
deal about how serious he took his life’s work as well as the man.
“They were hard on
you the FBI, eh,” Rodolfo said.
“They are just
doing their job,” I said.
“I’m starving,”
Helen said. “Let’s order something before I pass out.”
“I took the
liberty,” Rodolfo said. “And a nice bottle of wine.”
Julie looked at
Helen and took her time before speaking. “It wouldn’t be very difficult for me
to have you back in uniform with sergeant stripes,” she said. “Detective first
grade within a year.”
“Mom, we’ve been
over this a hundred times,” Helen said. “I left the job because I don’t work
well with all the rules and regulations. Same with Travis. It drove us nuts having
to conform to the point of ass kissing. Has anything changed in ten years?”
Julie didn’t
respond, but Rodolfo did. To me. “Yet you made sniper in the Army. Didn’t that
incur a great many rules and regulations?”
“I liked shooting
the guns,” I said. “The rest of it sucked.”
Julie sighed.
Rodolfo grumbled under his breath. Helen rolled her eyes.
“Does it hurt?”
Julie said and reached out to touch the two band-aids on Helen’s left cheek.
“No. It’s little
more than a scratch.”
“This time,”
Rodolfo said.
“Dad, don’t
start,” Helen said.
A waiter arrived
with our food. A seafood dish for Helen and Julie, a steak for Rodolfo and me,
a bottle of the house red wine to wash it all down. We ate in silence for a
moment and as I took a sip of the harsh wine, Julie said, “How do you think the
media will handle this?”
“Through the
roof,” Helen said. “24-7 of Binta coverage. It won’t stop until something more
tragic comes along to take its place.”
“I realize that,”
Julie said. “I mean what angle will they take? Is the actor going to portrayed
as the victim worthy of our sympathy or will they rip him apart for being
careless enough to turn his back on the child?”
“It will probably
be across the board,” Helen said. “I’m sure it will be discussed and analyzed
for months by every talk show on radio. Some will say West is a victim of the
ravings of a madman. Others will say he was careless and neglectful. Some will
play the race card and there it will get ugly.”
At the mention of
the race card, the table fell silent for a moment and we concentrated on
eating. The race card would probably go as follows; some will claim that if
Binta were a white child, West would have taken additional precautions before
venturing out. Others will say West is to be heralded for adopting a black child
to begin with. Some will say that only blacks should adopt black children and
West is just additional proof of the burden the white man has put upon the
black man. It will go around and around and not one damn thing of importance will
be resolved.”
I ate another
piece of my steak. It was tasteless to me at this point and I washed it down a
sip from my glass. The harshness of the wine seemed to cut through the
blandness and settle in my stomach like broken glass.
Julie said, “There
will always be those who bring race into every situation, even when it doesn’t
belong. Thirty years ago, when I made detective, it was because of Affirmative
Action. I knew it and so did everybody else. I had to work twice as hard as
everyone else to prove I belonged there. The thing is I had a voice in the
matter. Not just verbally, but in my actions, my ability, my conduct. I spoke
loud and often. The same for your father.”
“I was born here,”
Rodolfo said. “My grandparents fought in the Spanish, American War and settled
in Florida in 1899. Yet, when I was appointed
a junior ADA,
some thought it was funny to leave little notes on the phone at my desk. Dial 1
for English. I spoke English before I learned Spanish. It’s my first language,
but that didn’t matter. Like your mother, I too had a voice and it spoke louder
and more often that the rest. Now I run the show and those who left notes are
long ago forgotten.”
Helen looked at
her parents. “I know all that,” she said. “What, in your own very obtuse way
are you trying to say?”
“The little girl
no longer has a voice,” Julie said.
“Who speaks for
her now?” Rodolfo added.
*****
Our spat quelled for the moment,
Helen moved back into our bedroom where we made love for the first time in seven
days and thirteen hours. Not that I was counting, for if I were I’d know the
countdown to the second.
Afterward, Helen
curled up against my chest and fell asleep for a little while. When she woke
up, she said, “Trav, are you up?”
“Do you mean awake
or …”
“Up as in awake,
stupid,” Helen said. “Not the other kind.”
“Both, actually.
What did you have in mind?”
“Talk.”
“Boring.”
“Would you just
listen?”
“Okay.”
That was Helen’s
cue to roll over for her smokes. She lit one and sat Indian style on the bed. I
waited, but she said nothing. I said, “Is it almost getting shot?”
“I did get shot,”
Helen said and blew smoke.
“Two BB’s a bullet
doesn’t make,” I said.
Helen shook her
head. “I was in control the entire time. He left me no choice.”
“Then what?”
“Do you understand
what my parent’s said to us at the restaurant?”
“Which part?
Affirmative Action, notes on the phone, the …”
“Voice for Binta,
that part.”
“The who speaks
for her now?”
“Yeah.”
“Unless, after
twelve years of marriage to their daughter I don’t know them as well as I
think, they were suggesting we dive a bit deeper into this mess and see what
there is to see,” I said.
“Not bad, but not
quite there,” Helen said. She puffed, blew a smoke ring and watched it fan out
at the ceiling. “And I think it might be thirteen years. I’m not sure.”
“Okay, what part
did I miss?”
“They weren’t just
suggesting we do some poking around, they were offering to help us poke around.”
I mulled that over
for a moment. “I buy that, but what makes you think there’s more to this than
Paul Bruno and his desperate need for money?”
“Do you think it
starts and ends with Paul Bruno?”
“No, but that
doesn’t necessarily mean there’s anything we can do about it.”
“We can try.”
“There’s that.
Why?”
“Maybe because I
came within two seconds of taking one in the chest,” Helen said. “I’d like to
know the full story behind what made him that desperate. Can you do that for me
my husband?”
“We have anything
else on our calendar right now?”
“Nothing we can’t
handle or farm out.”
“Two weeks enough
time?”
Helen crushed out
her cigarette in an ashtray overflowing with butts, then she showed me some
gratitude.
*****
The following morning, I was having
coffee on the sofa, taking in the cable circus when our lobby doorbell rang.
For two solid hours, on every cable news program the topic of conversation was
Chad West, Monica Spinks and the tragic death of baby Binta. If it was possible
to out cover the Baby Jessica story, the little girl who fell down the well,
they had done so with ease.
Myers, whose first
name is Martin was at the door.
“Marty,” I said.
“Let me guess. The TV at your office is on the blitz and you wanted to watch
the news?”
“Why, is there
anything special on?” Myers said. As I said, away from the office, Myers had a
dry sense of humor that countermanded his stuffy court demeanor.
“Nothing really,”
I said. “Just round the clock Chad West and Baby Binta coverage. ”
“That’s what
they’re calling her, Baby Binta?” Myers said.
“You knew this was
coming. Coffee?”
“Sure. Where’s
Helen?”
“Taking a bath.
Sit. I’ll bring you a cup.”
Myers took a seat
on the sofa while I went to the kitchen to fill a mug for him. When I returned
to the living room, Myers had an envelope in his hand. “From West.”
I sat, took the
envelope and pulled out the cashier’s check for our fee. Normal is ten percent of the ransom. I was
expecting a check for fifty thousand. West added twenty five thousand extra. “He
felt that the risks you took called for a bonus,” Myers said.
I nodded and set
the check aside. “Something you should know,” I said. “We’ve decided to do a
little snooping under the radar. Nothing big, mostly low key.”
“Why,” Myers said
and looked at the muted television. “It’s a done deal as far as the FBI and
police are concerned. That’s just circus fallout.”
“Wife wants,
husband does,” I said.
Myers turned
toward me. “For a tough guy you are the most pussy whipped individual I’ve ever
met.”
“I’ll ignore that
crack only because it’s true,” I said.
“Seriously, what
do you hope to find?” Myers said. He tasted my brew and nodded his approval.
“That the FBI won’t.”
“I don’t know.
Maybe nothing, possibly something. Helen thinks …”
Helen entered the
living room wrapped in a white terrycloth robe. “Because you don’t,” she said.
“Marty brought us
a check,” I said.
“Oh goody,” Helen
said, sat, lit a cigarette and took the mug from Myer’s hand.
“Seventy five
thousand,” I said.
Helen looked at
me.
Myles said,
“Travis tells me you’re going to do some poking around.”
Helen blew a smoke
ring and sipped from Myer’s mug. “I’d like to know what I almost died for
besides the money,” she said.
“You mean Paul
Bruno?” Myers said.
“Something drove
him to that,” Helen said. “I’d like to know what that was.”
“And you think
you’re better equipped than the FBI to investigate that?” Myers said. “The two
of you.”
“No,” Helen said. “But
we’re not chasing down home grown terror cells, investigating bank robberies,
searching for kidnapped children, backing up TSA, tracking serial killers or
juggling ten thousand other investigations either.”
I looked at the
television. Chad
and Monica were on some cable news show giving a statement. “The FBI will keep
the file open, but victim and perpetrator are dead and even they don’t have the
manpower to waste on the dearly departed.”
Myers sighed. “No
sense trying to talk you out of this, but I may have a few clients for you
before the end of the month.”
“We’re low keying
it,” Helen said. “So we’re still working on active clients.”
Myers stood up.
“Thanks for the coffee. I’ll be in touch.” He walked to the door, paused and
turned back around. “Don’t spend that all at once, you crazy kids,” he said and
let himself out.
I looked at Helen.
“Call or visit?” I said.
“You in a hurry?”
“No.”
“Good,” she said,
stood up and dropped the robe. “I hate it when you’re in a hurry.”
*****
I drove the Town Car across the
bridge into The Bronx while Helen read a women’s fashion magazine and
chain-smoked. I would like to be able to say that a drive to The Bronx is a
pleasant experience, but that would be less than truthful. On the Major Deegan
Expressway, I counted eleven abandoned cars on the shoulder, two of which were
on fire. Needless to say, Graffiti is alive and well and actually gave me
something to look at besides weeds and garbage for scenery.
I took the exit
for Webster Avenue,
the widest, longest street in The Bronx. Helen tossed the magazine on the back
seat. “Stop at the DD for a box for the boys in the squad room,” she said.
I drove through
bumper-to-bumper traffic past the zoo and botanical gardens to the Dunkin
Donuts and entered the drive through. “Anything special?”
“Assorted,” Helen
said. “Whatever you think Rachael Ray would like.”
At the speaker, I
told the girl behind the glass to load up two dozen assorted and throw in a
Box-O-Joe to go with it. Armed with enough artery fat to bring down a grizzly,
I shot a few blocks northeast of Webster to the 55th Precinct.
Julie’s Lexus was in
her reserved for Captain spot. I slipped the Town Car into a vacant guest’s
spot a few rows down. Armed with donuts and coffee, we entered the building of
the 55.
Somewhere between
eighty and one hundred years old, the two story structure is a massive red
brick building that resembled an armory, which it may very well have been in
the beginning. The interior is scratched wood the color of burnt orange and
warped floors, although clean and polished.
We left a dozen
donuts at the desk with the Watch Commander, then took the staircase to the
second floor where Julie’s office is located in the rear of the detectives squad
room.
Five of the green
metal desks were occupied when we entered the squad room. I set the donut box
on the first vacant desk and before we reached Julie’s office door, five
detectives were making their selections.
Julie was behind
her desk, the only one in the entire building that wasn’t green metal. Worn and
scratched, nonetheless it was made of some kind of wood proving once and for
all that privilege came with rank.
Julie looked up at
us through rimless reading glasses as we came in and helped ourselves to chairs
in front of the desk. “Manpower reports to the mayor’s office,” she said. “I
don’t know how they expect me to keep a lid on this neighborhood with the
personnel I have assigned to me. It’s a third what I need and half the Forest Hills precinct, which is a third this size.”
“Ah, but Forest Hills is rich white and sadly this is not,” I
said.
Julie looked at
us. “My daughter has a healthy glow to her skin and you don’t have that lemming
chased by a fox look on your face, so I guess you two made up from whatever
tiff of the month you had this month.”
“Thank you for the
Jenny Jones moment, but that’s not why we’re here,” Helen said. She lit a
cigarette, which brought disapproving eyes from Julie.
“Is there anyplace
you don’t smoke?” Julie said.
“Pretty much no,”
I said.
Helen said, “Paul
Bruno. Last known address, arrest record, finances and whatever whatnot you can
get your hands on.”
Julie looked at us.
“Had lunch?”
“Half a month old
Snickers bar from the glove compartment,” Helen said.
“I didn’t see
that,” I said. “You didn’t share?”
“There’s a decent
Thai place around the block from the zoo,” Julie said. “We’ll take my car. I
get sick if I don’t drive.”
As Julie
described, the Thai restaurant fired up some mean lunch dishes. We had hot and
sour soup, followed by a spicy chicken salad, followed by stir-fried basil with
beef as the main course, followed by Tums for desert.
Helen drank iced
tea, I washed down water with lemon and Julie sipped from a bottle of alcohol
free, Thai Beer.
“Why the feast?” I
said as I shoved a huge fork full of basil with beef down my gullet.
“Walls have ears,”
Julie said.
“Even the
Captain’s walls?” I said.
“Especially the
Captain’s walls,” Julie said. “The center of the universe right now is named
Chad West with Monica and Binta in close orbit.”
“24-7 on CNN, Fox
and MSNBC,” Helen said. “They’d have to blow up the Sears Towel to push it to
page two.”
“Translation?” I
said to Julie.
“Don’t let anyone
know anything about whatever it is you uncover in the due course of your
non-investigation into the file I didn’t leave in the glove compartment of my
car that you didn’t find and take with you,” Julie said.
I looked at Helen.
“For a minute there I thought she was going to say something that didn’t make
sense.”
“Don’t worry,
mom,” Helen said. “Your pension is secure.”
Soaking wet with
rocks in her pockets, Julie weighs is at one ten, maybe. Out of uniform, which
she wore now, she is delicate to the point of appearing frail. That fooled many
a person, me included at first, but to know Julie is to understand that she can
be as tough as nails when need be.
“Fuck my pension,’
Julie said.
“Mom,” Helen said.
Julie shrugged her
thin shoulders. “I work mostly with men. Fuck you is the same as saying hello
to them.”
“How do they say
goodbye?” Helen said.
“What’s in the
file?” I said.
“Read it,” Julie
said. “Then call me at home.”
“What does dad
say?” Helen said.
“Your father says
he wants grandchildren,” Julie said and stared at me while saying it. “And
since my son is just shy of imbecile status, the onus is on you.”
“We’re working on
it,” I said.
“I’ll tell your
father,” Julie said. “His birthday is in exactly nine months. Better get busy.”
Helen rolled her
eyes at Julie and said, “He’ll have to settle for a new tie. I’ve told you a
hundred times already, no kids until we leave the city and we’re not ready to leave
the city just yet. Take it or leave it.”
As I said, the
daughter didn’t fall far from the tree.
Julie looked at
me. “Travis, you’re the man here. Pay the check.”
