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Authors: Tony Dunbar

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“Now how much money did you say this could earn?”

Tubby faithfully repeated the projections he had made up at the restaurant.

“I assume you’ve got all of this laid out on paper?” Banks asked.

“Of course.” Tubby pulled a stack of documents from his briefcase. He and Marguerite had spent most of the previous day manufacturing a fake prospectus, with help from Cherrylynn and her word processor.

“Give all that to Banks,” Mulé directed. “He can look at all of it later. Let’s talk about the money you want.”

“You’ve seen what we have,” Tubby said. “I’m ready to put it up just as soon as you do the same.”

“Who’s gonna hold it?” Mulé wanted to know.

“We would open a joint bank account,” Banks interjected.

“That won’t work, at least not right away,” Tubby said. “Our investment isn’t entirely liquid.”

Mulé nodded understandingly.

“However,” Tubby told Banks, “if the sheriff puts up cash I see no reason why you couldn’t hold his money as well as our loot, I mean investment, as an escrow agent, so to speak. At least until Frank can convert our investment into dollars. I would accept your word, Counselor, that you would hold the stakes of both parties in trust and keep everything safe.”

“Why, of course I would,” Banks murmured, eyes closed.

The sheriff smiled just like he did in his Mardi Gras ad.

“And,” Tubby continued, “we can create a company. It won’t take me or Clifford long. Let’s say we call it, ‘Mission Enterprises’.”

Banks nodded his assent.

“So, where’s the dough?” Mulé asked.

“I’ll bring it to Mr. Banks’s office myself,” Marguerite said, “since Tubby trusts him so implicitly.” She patted her lawyer’s knee. “Where’s your dough, Sheriff?”

Mulé pulled open the top drawer of his desk and brought out a yellow check. He looked at it lovingly for a moment before displaying it for the others to see. It was a certified check for five hundred thousand dollars, made payable to cash.

“That certainly looks negotiable,” Tubby said appreciatively.

“I wouldn’t normally use a check like this,” Mulé said, “but I know it will be safe with Clifford.” He eyed his lawyer carefully.

“Ahem, why certainly, Sheriff.” Banks reached for the check and slipped it inside his coat. “Perfectly safe,” he added.

“Don’t lose it,” Tubby said.

“Because it’s the same as cash,” the sheriff added.

“My law firm is quite safe,” Banks told them.

“Enough said. My partner and I will come by your office tomorrow morning,” Tubby said, “and bring you our contribution. I’d say this afternoon, but I’ve got an ‘Al Hughes for Judge’ crawfish boil going on in my backyard.”

“Oh, yeah? I might come to that,” Mulé said. “It’s always good to press the flesh.”

CHAPTER XVII

Rolling Sam had the nicest table at the Empress of Saigon Restaurant, right beside the fish tank. And he had the most glamorous company— two sisters, Song and Wran, who sat on either side of him and laughed at his jokes.

Sam always went first-class, especially at Bin Minny’s restaurant, where he could run a tab.

So tonight they were enjoying bun tom, laque duck, and shrimp on sugarcane.

The bun tom had just been served when a shadow fell across the table. Rolling Sam looked up to see Bin Minny looming over the diners.

“Good evening, Sam,” Bin Minny said politely. “I am pleased that you and your beautiful companions have selected my restaurant for your enjoyable meal.”

“Hi, Mr. Minh. The food is truly wonderful tonight. This is Song and this is Wran.”

Minh bowed slightly. “So nice to meet you,” he said. “Now I must have a word with Rolling Sam, and I reluctantly ask the ladies to excuse us for a few minutes.”

Song and Wran smiled and looked blankly at each other.

“Go to the powder room, girls,” Rolling Sam explained.

The two did as instructed, and Bin Minny took a chair next to Sam’s.

“Tell me what you have found out,” he said.

“The ‘short man’ is not such an easy target,” Rolling Sam reported. “There is a bodyguard who travels with him and who lives with him at his home.”

“The ‘short man’ is not married?” Bin Minny inquired?

“No, sir, he is not. But the house presents problems. It is on a private street, very exclusive, and there is a guard house where all cars must stop. His bodyguard drives him to and from work.”

“How about at the jail?”

“We have people in the jail,” Rolling Sam whispered, “but unfortunately they do not have access to his office. The sheriff avoids going into the cellblocks.”

“He is campaigning for reelection. A political event where he appears in public might provide you with the best opportunity.”

“Well, sure, but there are naturally going to be a lot of people around. It might almost require a suicide attack to reach him.”

“Absolutely not,” Bin Minny hissed. “We are not Japanese. Whoever accomplishes this hit will be rewarded, but he will be rewarded even more if he escapes.” And the sooner the better, Bin Minny thought. He was beginning to have nighttime visions of corpses lined up, screaming for peace. Their visits had frightened him more than any of his living enemies ever had. This unfinished business must be attended to.

Rolling Sam bowed his head.

“I think we can get him soon,” he said softly.

“That is what I want,” Bin Minny said. “Now I’ll go back to work, and your lady friends can come back and enjoy their meal. Please don’t get up.”

The boss went away to greet his customers and count his money.

The sky was blue, the afternoon breezy, and the aroma of boiling crawfish filled Tubby’s backyard and made his guests’ eyes water. Two huge aluminum pots, heated by jets of propane, were being tended at the same time by Raisin Partlow, whom Tubby had forgiven for his insulting attitude at the bar.

The host himself was clad in Banana Republic shorts and a luau shirt and was passing out beer while his two younger daughters, Christine and Colette, circulated with trays of steamed mushrooms, garlic potatoes, chips, and dips. Two picnic tables had been pulled together and covered with newspapers to hold the mounds of hot, spicy crawfish that would soon be ready.

The turnout was respectable— for a fundraising party. Many noteworthies of the local Bar had come to show their support for Judge Hughes and to get a free meal. Jacob Solomon was there, spinning yarns about the tarpon fishing at Grand Isle. Ponder Fitzpugh was giving a lecture on the Saints defensive line. Carmelite Mirabelle was laughing about the federal judge who told her at a sidebar conference to loosen her jockstrap.

Judge Hughes was at the center of things, shaking hands with one and all. Marguerite was by Tubby’s side, accepting compliments, and all was right with the world.

“Would you like some cheese and crackers?” Christine asked Marguerite. Tubby drifted away.

“Why thank you. Now let’s see. You’re Tubby’s middle child, is that right?”

“Uh huh,” Christine nodded. “You’re from Chicago, and you met my father last Mardi Gras when it flooded, right?”

“That’s what happened,” Marguerite said, stuffing a cracker into her mouth.

“I bet you don’t like New Orleans.”

“Why do you say that? I like it very much.”

“I just think we’re so undisciplined here, the way people party all the time.”

“Well, I don’t think you party
all
the time, do you? But this is certainly a lot of fun.”

“I guess it is, if you’ve never done it before. Have you ever eaten crawfish?”

“No, and I’m a little afraid to try.”

“There’s a little trick to it. I’ll be glad to show you when they’re ready.”

“Would you? Thanks.”

“Okay. I’ll be back.” Christine was gone with her tray.

“Are you doing okay?” Tubby asked over his shoulder.

“I think I passed the first test,” Marguerite said.

“It’s a nice party,” a voice behind them said.

Tubby turned to find Clifford Banks.

“Why hello, Cliff. I didn’t realize that you supported Al Hughes or I would have invited you earlier.”

“Surely I support him. I think he’s done an outstanding job as judge.”

“Help yourself to a beer.”

“Thanks. Frank Mulé may be over in a while.”

“Great. The more the merrier,” was what Tubby said, but lie down with dogs, you wake up with fleas was what he was thinking. He looked across the yard and was startled to see Daisy saunter through the gate. That woman turns up everywhere, he thought to himself. Daisy looked relatively demure in pink sneakers, black tights, and a purple sweatshirt that matched her socks. She glanced toward the host, tossed her head in greeting, and melted into the crowd.

Raisin and a hefty neighbor named Parker O’Malley parted the sea of people, lugging between them the first of the steaming pots. With a heave-ho they upended it over the picnic tables, and a huge pile of bright red crawfish poured over the newspaper.

Tubby noted a trio of Asians entering through the gate. They were similarly dressed in loose white shirts and black slacks, and all were hidden behind sunglasses.

Must be Republicans, Tubby thought, dismissing them as yet another beaming barrister pumped his hand.

Above the gentle hubbub of the party, the guests began to notice the loud wail and throbbing musical beat of “Chain, Chain, Chain.”

Some fool with his super-blaster cranked up, cruising for chicks in the neighborhood, was Tubby’s first guess.

Up the block, dogs started to howl.

The music grew in intensity and conversation became difficult.

Raisin looked with some concern at his turkey pot, propane turned up full blast, which was vibrating dangerously on its iron stand.

To the mortification of the host, the image that appeared at the wide-open gate of his yard was a familiar self-propelled Carnival float draped in seaweed and equipped with four generator-driven Bose speakers known as the Monster Mobile. On its hood extremely young ladies dressed as immodest mermaids hopped up and down to the deafening music and lobbed beads as the guests covered their ears with their hands. Above them, stirring a huge fake cook pot, was the world’s largest imitation crustacean, Monster Mudbug himself, outfitted in his trademark shiny red shell.

The vehicle lurched into the yard and joined the fun. Tubby’s guests stepped lively to avoid being run down and crushed beneath the slow-moving carriage which carried a big sign proclaiming MONSTER MUDBUG FOR SHERIFF— TAKE A BITE OUT OF CRIME.

While the candidate’s true face was concealed within a pointy plastic head, there was no mistaking his glee. He waved wildly at Tubby and hurled stacks of cups into the air.

Tubby’s yard, while substantial by neighborhood standards, was not designed for parades. His invitees were stumbling into each other trying to avoid the unstable float, which was attempting a slow circuit of the estate. Between the mermaids’ dancing legs, Tubby got a glimpse of the driver— a kid with mirror-blue sunglasses and a Zephyrs cap on backward— who might have been the Monster’s nephew Roger.

Misjudging the location of his paper-mâché fender, Roger nudged into the table supporting the steaming piles of crawfish.

Crying out in unintelligible protest, Raisin bolted across the yard to grab a corner of the table, saving the entire feast from sliding onto the grass. He screamed for help but could not be heard over the general pandemonium.

Nor, as the unguided elephant upended several recently occupied lawn chairs, did anyone have the presence of mind to kill the fire under the frying turkey. In a flash, the aluminum pot full of roiling peanut oil was engulfed in flames. The pot itself began to melt.

“I’ll be damned,” Raisin said to anyone who cared to listen. “I didn’t know it would do that.”

Daisy, who had taken refuge between the pot and Tubby’s wooden fence, was in danger of being incinerated. She screamed. Noticing her plight, Monster Mudbug reached down with his horny claw and scooped her up into the float.

“You’re crazy!” Daisy shrieked at his mandibles.

“Don’t say that. It’s not my fault,” the Monster pleaded, frantically trying to get his nephew to reverse direction and exit the yard.

Meanwhile the peanut oil fire was threatening to take out Tubby’s fig tree. He could see his neighbor tapping on her window and pointing at the flames flickering up her fence.

He fought his way through his guests, who were now departing en masse, to get to his telephone inside the house.

Without loosening his grip on Daisy, Monster Mudbug kicked his nephew away from the wheel and clumsily steered his booming machine back out to the street. He waved a feeble farewell.

Raisin watched his carefully prepared meal come to a spectacularly disastrous conclusion.

“Nuts,” he said and let the table fall. An avalanche of crawfish washed over the grass.

And, as it turned out, Sheriff Mulé was a no-show.

CHAPTER XXVIII

The machine talking into Tubby’s ear said that this was a collect call from the Orleans Parish Prison. The charges were fifty cents per minute. To accept, press 1.

“Hi, Tubby, it’s me.”

“Hey, Cesar. What’s going on?”

“I called you to find out. I haven’t heard from you.”

“Nothing much to report,” the lawyer said guiltily. “I’ve been busy.”

“Oh, okay.” Cesar’s voice cracked. “Sure, okay.”

“But I’m working on it.”

“Work fast if you can. I can’t sleep. These guys play dominoes all night, and they SLAM the blocks down and YELL every time they make a point. I’m, uh, getting where I can’t think.”

“I’ve made some calls. I’m getting a look at the DA’s case.”

“I need to get out of here so I can talk to people and see what’s going down.”

“That’s difficult. Your bail is just so high.”

“Isn’t there any way you can get a judge to lower it? I’m not going anywhere. New Orleans is my home. I’m, like, planted here. They could put me under house arrest, couldn’t they? I just need to get out of here.”

“I’ll keep trying.”

“Okay, you’re all I’ve got.”

“Well, you’ve got your parents and lots of friends.”

“My parents are too old to deal with this, and none of my friends have any money.”

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