Read Charade Online

Authors: Sandra Brown

Tags: #Mystery & Detective - General, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Serial murders, #Romance: Modern, #Mystery & Detective, #Contemporary, #Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945), #Fiction, #Romance, #San Antonio (Tex.), #General, #Women television personalities, #Romance - General, #General & Literary Fiction, #Romance - Contemporary, #Modern fiction, #Fiction - Romance

Charade (28 page)

BOOK: Charade
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"Cypress." "You're right. It is very pretty." "I've thought about buying some land around here. Building a house." "What's stopping you?" "Initiative, I guess." The road narrowed and became bumpy. The sports car raised a cloud of gravel dust in its wake. Eventually they came to a building that sat a distance from the road in a grove of pecan trees. The edifice was perched on the bluff that descended twenty yards to the rocky riverbed where clear water gurgled over and between limestone boulders. The building didn't live up to the natural beauty of its surroundings. Indeed, it was an eyesore. The corrugated tin walls were rusty. Painted on the north wall was a crude skull and crossbones. A dusty, tattered Confederate flag hung limply in the still air. There were no windows in the building, no name was posted, but a neon beer sign flickered above the recessed entrance. Two pickup trucks and a Harley-Davidson were parked outside. Cat was about to make a joking remark about the disreputable-looking roadhouse when Alex turned into the parking lot. His car wheels crunched on the gravel as he pulled to a stop beside the motorcycle. "You've got to be kidding." "You've got to be quiet." Reaching across her, he unlatched the glove compartment. When it fell open, a snub-nose revolver nearly dropped into her lap. Alex picked it up, opened the cylinder to check that all the chambers were loaded, then clicked it back into place. "I told you this wasn't going to be fun," he said. "Say the word and we'll leave." She gave the entrance a doubtful glance, but cut her eyes quickly back to him. "No. If someone in there can clear up this matter, I want to hear what he has to say." "Fine. But you're to keep quiet and play along no matter what happens. If you don't, if you start shooting off your mouth, you're not the only one who could get hurt. Got that?" She hated being talked down to. Seething, she opened her door.

He grabbed her arm. "Got that?" "Got it," she answered in the same grating tone. Together they approached the foreboding entrance. Before going inside, she muttered, "If only I'd known, I could have worn something more appropriate. Like leather and chains." "Some other time." He pulled open the door. "If you could act a little edgy it might help." "Act?" The atmosphere inside was so dank and dense it had texture. She couldn't see a thing for several moments, but Alex's eyes must have adjusted immediately because he pushed her into a booth along the wall, then left her to go to the bar. It was being tended by a fat guy with mean eyes and a fuzzy black beard that hung to the middle of his chest. Arms that looked like hairy tree trunks were folded over his huge belly. He was gnawing on a matchstick and watching a bowling tournament on a black and white television mounted in the corner above the bar. "Two beers," Alex said. "Whatever you have on draft." The bartender stared at him, unmoving, for several beats. Then, as though for consultation, he cast his eyes down the length of the bar where two other customers sat hunched over their longnecks. Finally he spat the matchstick to the floor, grabbed the handles of two beer mugs in one hand, and filled them from the tap. Alex thanked him, paid him, and returned to the booth. He slid in beside Cat. "Pretend to sip it." "Won't they realize we're not drinking?" "They know we didn't come to drink." "Then they know more than I do. What are we doing here?" "For now, we're waiting." He placed his arm around her and pulled her close. As though smooching, his lips settled against her ear beneath her hair. "I won't let anything happen to you. I swear it." She nodded, but cast a worried glance at the two other customers. They had made quarter turns on their barstools and were staring at her and Alex, exchanging muttered comments. A third customer, she now noticed, was at the video game machine at the other end of the bar. She could see only his back. He was skinny, his butt not even defined in the seat of his dirty jeans.

He had stringy, unwashed hair that trailed over his neck to a point between his bony shoulder blades. He seemed to be playing more from boredom than any desire to win. When his last rocket crashed with a high, shrill whistle, he turned away, tipped a longneck to his lips, and sauntered toward the bar. He eyed them curiously, then dropped onto a barstool and turned his attention to the bowling tournament. Cat whispered, "How long do we have to--" "Shh." "I want to know." "I said shut up and let me handle it!" Alex's sudden shout astonished her into silence. She gaped at him while he swore beneath his breath and glanced nervously over his shoulder at the other patrons and the bartender. He gulped a swallow of beer and shot her a warning look as he slipped out of the booth. Cat watched him sidle up to the skinny guy who'd been playing the video game. Alex ordered two more beers and sat down on the stool next to his. "Uh, excuse me. You Petey?" Cat heard him ask in an undertone. The skinny guy's eyes never left the TV screen. "What's it to you, asshole?" Alex leaned toward him and mumbled something that Cat couldn't hear. Petey guffawed. "Whadaya think, I'm fuckin' stupid? Jesus." He looked down the bar at the other drinkers and rolled his eyes. The bartender chuckled. "Fuck off," Petey said to Alex, hitching his head toward the door. "Hey, look, I got--" Petey came around, snarling like a wildcat who's tail had been stepped on. "Get the fuck outta my face, man. You got heat written all over you." "You think I'm a cop!" Alex exclaimed. "I don't care if you're the fuckin' Tooth Fairy. We got no business with each other." He turned back to the TV. Alex, looking desperate, wiped his palms up and down his pants legs. "Dixie said--" Petey whipped his head around, almost striking Alex's cheek with his stringy hair. "You know Dixie? Fuck, why didn't you say so? Are you the--"

"Nephew." "Shit." Petey signaled the bartender. "Get me one of those." He waited until he had a mug of draft, then motioned for Alex to pick up his two fresh beers. They made their way to the booth. Petey slid in across from Cat. "Hiya, Red." Eyeing her, he slurped the head off his beer. "This your old lady?" he asked Alex. "Yeah." Cat remained silent while Petey and Alex swapped stories about Uncle Dixie. Their voices lowered to a covert tone so gradually that Cat hardly noticed until Alex said, "Thanks for agreeing to see me." "My ass is fried if they figure out you ain't who you say you are." "I know," Alex said grimly. "This is important or I wouldn't have asked Uncle Dixie to set it up." "Will one of you please tell me what's going on?" Cat hissed. "Stay cool, babe." Petey reached across the table and stroked her cheek. She slapped away his hand. He laughed and waved it in the air as though his nicotine-stained fingers had been scorched. "Hot tempered, hot in the sack, I always say." "Chill out, will ya?" Alex said to her, loud enough for the others to hear. By now, two more customers had ambled in, a man who looked mean and tough enough to be a logger, and a woman who looked meaner and tougher than he. To the amusement of the other customers, she was exchanging amicable but lewd insults with the bartender. "Dixie filled you in on what I want to talk about?" Alex asked in an undertone. Petey nodded. "I remember it like yesterday. Better'n yesterday in fact. It ain't something you forget, ya know? Almost four years ago, a gang member slid under a trailer truck. Practically took his head off." Cat sucked in a sharp breath. Petey looked at her, then back to Alex. "Are you sure she's cool?" he asked worriedly. "She's cool. Go on." "He went by the name of Sparky. Don't know what his real name was. Serious dude. Always reading books. Poetry, philosophy, shit like that. Had a lot of schooling. He was from back east somewhere, I think. Rich is my guess. Had those fancy mannerisms, ya know?" "What was he doing with the gang?" "Maybe Mom and Dad got pissed over something and kicked him

out. Or he caught his old lady in the sack with her girl friend. Who knows?" Petey raised his bony shoulders in a shrug. "Anyway, he dropped his real name, came to Texas, and found us. He was cool. Everybody liked him okay. 'Xcept Cyc. Right off he and Cyc locked horns." "Cyc?" Cat asked. "The gang leader. Called hisself Cyclops 'cause he had a glass eye." "What was his quarrel with Sparky?" Alex asked. "What else? A squeeze. Hot piece of ass named Kismet. She'd been Cyc's old lady before Sparky came along. They hit it off real good. I think they really had a thing going. They liked to rack, sure, but I think it was more than that. You sense these things, ya know? Whatever, Cyc was pissed. "Funny," he said, lowering his voice even more. "Cyc suspected Sparky of being a narc. He didn't do many drugs, see. A joint now and then. No heavy stuff." "Was he a narc?" "Not that I know of." "What brought on the accident that killed him?" "Cyc made a move on Kismet. Sparky charged him. They fought. Sparky won. He put Kismet on his bike and off they went. But Cyc chased them. Hell of a race. Sparky had to be going ninety or better when he hit that trailer truck 'cause it was like nothing I've seen before or since." His oily hair barely rippled when he sadly shook his head. "Jesus. I'd followed 'em down out of the hills. Figured that Cyc would be the first to draw blood. That trailer truck beat him to it. Sparky was one big blood-slick on the highway." Cat shuddered but remained silent. "The paramedics scooped up the parts and piled them into the ambulance. We all followed it to the hospital. To save her life, Sparky had pushed Kismet off the bike right before they crashed. She was hurt, coupla broken bones, banged up beyond recognition. Cyc had managed to swerve and miss the truck, but his bike went out from under him. He was hurt too, but he was conscious. "This emergency room dude approached us about Sparky being an organ donor and wanted to know how to contact his next of kin. We

said as far as we knew Sparky didn't have no family. He mentioned something about presumed ... uh ... something where they can take the organs." "Presumed consent," Cat said softly. "Yeah. That's it. But he wanted one of us to give him the go-ahead. The rest of us agreed that since Cyc was the leader, he'd have to make that decision. Cyc said, 'Sure. Cut the fucker's heart out and throw it to a dog for all I care.' So I guess they did." Thirsty after the long monologue, Petey noisily gulped his beer before resuming the story. "Kismet stayed unconscious for a coupla days. When she came to, she went apeshit. First because Sparky was history, then because Cyc let them mutilate him before he was buried. Cyc kept telling her the guy had no head left, so what difference did it make? But she went freaking nuts about it anyway." "What happened to her?" Cat asked. He shook his head. "The gang broke up after that. Our heart just wasn't in it no more." He laughed, showing yellowed, pointed teeth that made him look like a friendly rat. He looked at Alex meaningfully. "I moved on, ya know?" Alex nodded. "You gonna tell me why you're interested?" "She's a heart transplantee." Petey's eyes swung back to Cat with renewed interest. "No shit? Cool. You think you got Sparky's heart?" Cat didn't even have to think twice about it. "No. I know I didn't."

Chapter thirty-seven

I

thought you'd turned up zilch about your donor," Alex said.

"That's true. But even without the agency's report, I'd have known Sparky wasn't my donor." Cat turned to Petey, who was hunched forward, listening. "I didn't get your friend's heart. You see, second to blood type, size is critical for a good match." She made a fist with her small hand. "I needed a heart this size. I'm too small to have received a grown man's heart."

Petey again revealed his jagged yellow teeth in a grin. "Sparky wasn't grown."

"I beg your pardon?"

"Don't you think I considered the size of the heart before following this through?" Alex grumbled. He looked at Petey. "Tell her what you told Uncle Dixie."

"Sparky was a runt," he said. "Pint size. Couldn't've been smaller if he'd been sawed off at the knees. He caught hell about his size from everybody, especially Cyclops. Behind his back, Cyc was always saying he didn't know how a pencil dick like Sparky could keep

Kismet happy. Thing was, Sparky had a cock like a racehorse. What he lacked in stature, he made up for in that department." "How big was he?" "At least nine inches," he answered, dead serious. Cat shook her head. "How tall was he?" "Oh. Five-two. Five-three at most." "Stocky?" "Shit, no. Don't you listen, lady?" "Rarely," Alex put in dryly. "I'm telling you, he was a pissant. Strong and quick, though," Petey added as he thoughtfully scratched his armpit. "He could hold his own in a fight. Landed Cyclops flat on his ass." He glanced nervously beyond Alex's shoulder. "Is that it? We gotta wrap this up, if you know what I mean." "Thanks, man." "Anything for Uncle Dixie." Cat watched in disbelief as Alex exchanged several folded bills for a plastic pillow filled with white powder. He slipped it into his jacket pocket, then stood and hauled Cat out of the booth. By way of goodbye, Petey said, "Y'all mind if I finish your beers?" The sun had slipped below the tree line on the distant hills. It was a beautiful twilight, especially in comparison to the gloomy interior of the bar. Cat breathed deeply to cleanse her nostrils of the stink of booze, smoke, and unwashed bodies. She got into the car unassisted and rolled down the window, still greedy for fresh air. Alex slid behind the wheel and, saying nothing, drove for several miles before stopping at a crossroads. Cat watched, aghast, while he removed the plastic pillow from his pocket, pricked it open with his thumbnail and worked his finger inside, then rubbed the white powder into his gums above his front teeth. He glanced at her. "Why're you looking at me like that? You can't be shocked. You're from Hollywood." "I knew plenty of people who did recreational drugs, but I steered clear of them." "You don't want to party with me?" Her jaw was tense and set. "No, thanks."

"You sure? I thought later, when we got back to your place, you could brew us some tea." "Tea?" "Yeah. And we could sweeten it with this." He dumped some of the powder into her lap. She stared at it with apprehension, then looked at him. He winked at her. She dipped her finger into the white substance and tasted powdered sugar. "Smart-ass," she muttered as she brushed the sugar off her skirt. Chuckling, he pushed the car through the first four gears. "Petey's a narc. Works undercover. Deep cover. Has for years. Wouldn't surprise me if he's hooked on the stuff himself, but he wouldn't sell the real thing to a cop. Even a former cop." "How'd you find him?" "I started looking through death certificates and turned up several catastrophic deaths that occurred in Texas during the twelve hours before your transplant. This motorcycle accident was a good place to begin. Sure enough, after digging deeper, I discovered that the fatality had indeed been an organ donor. "Then I asked a former associate at HPD if he knew of any agency--ATF, DEA, local police--that had penetrated a motorcycle gang in the last five years. He nosed around and turned up Uncle Dixie, who's supposed to be Petey's big distributor, but is actually the code word for a special narcotics unit out of Austin. "I talked to the chief of the outfit. He was reluctant to set up a meeting with Petey; he only agreed to it because I was a former cop. I went out on a limb by taking you along. I hope you can keep your mouth shut and not blow his cover." She shot him a retiring look. "Your meeting with Petey had nothing to do with drug trafficking. Why did you have to play out that scene? And why there?" "If we'd met some other place and someone had seen him talking to a straight like me, it would have aroused suspicion. He can't afford that. He could lose his credibility, his contacts, and probably his life. Better that I looked like a duffus who dared to tread on Petey's turf looking to score." "Well, you did look like a duffus." "Thanks. Hungry?" Five minutes later they were seated on opposite sides of a square

BOOK: Charade
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