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Authors: Blair Underwood,Tananarive Due,Steven Barnes

From Cape Town with Love (11 page)

BOOK: From Cape Town with Love
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Cliff is in his midfifties, but you'd have to carbon-date him to know it. He's built like a double-wide refrigerator, and his wrists are as thick as my forearms. He has a gut, but it's as solid as a sack of rocks. Unbelievably strong: Once upon a time he benched five hundred. As flexible as Gumby, he's just one of those prodigies who started with an infinite pain threshold and the body control of a reincarnated yogi, then added an ocean of sweat and a bucket of blood. Not all of it his own. One of those sleepy, bemused guys who always seems to know a secret worth dying to learn. He's one of the deadliest men in the world.

Cliff has worked as a bodyguard for everyone from Muhammad Ali to Hugh Hefner, and is one of only two men in the world to complete Master Instructor Masaad Ayoob's Lethal Force Institute pistol-shooting classes back-to-back.

I was with Cliff in Vegas eight years ago for a mixed martial arts event the night three ultimate fighting behemoths tried to intimidate everyone off the hotel elevator. I got off. Cliff stayed on. He got off three floors later, the only one still moving under his own power. He had a bloody lip, a torn shirt, and a Buddha's contented smile.

As soon as I was within Cliff's reach, his palm shot out, snake quick. A playful sting vibrated against my cheek before my hand was up to block. In terms of pure speed I'm faster than Cliff, by maybe a tenth of a second. It doesn't matter. He doesn't telegraph at all. There's just no body language, nothing to react to. No aggressive tension to trigger the hind-brain. Your conscious mind is on its own, and, brother, that's just not fast enough. By the time it occurs to you to move, you're napping.

“Hey, man, save it for the garage.” I laughed. “Been awhile.”

“Whose fault is that? Get your lazy ass in here.”

“Well, move your big ass out of the way.”

Cliff laughed. “You're a sad SOB, Hollywood.”

Cliff had converted his garage to a dream martial arts studio—mirrored wall, heavy bags, and a twelve-by-twelve red-and-blue jigsaw mat.

We caught up on what had been happening in our lives in the past
few months. Cliff told me about his new fiancée, and I told him about some of my adventures on the T. D. Jackson case, keeping it vague. I don't like to talk specifics about my cases, even with the man who taught me how to be a bodyguard.

“Heard you worked a gig for Sofia Maitlin.” His eyes twinkled.

“Not from me you didn't.”

“I've known her regular guy Roman awhile—former Marine, good man. Ask him about Larry Flynt's wife sometime. He told me he ate something that messed up his stomach in Cape Town, so they called you. You must be moving up in the world. She as fine as she looks in the movies?”

“Seen worse,” I said. Cliff laughed.

When Cliff turned on his massive iPod dock, it was time for class. That day, Cliff was all about the motion and music of percussion, so West African drumming filled his garage. With Cliff, once the music starts, the chitchat is over. The buddy thing went bye-bye, and we became teacher and student. I bowed, he nodded.

He ran me through some of the moves he'd last worked me on. Cliff has more black belts than a clothing store, and like many genuine masters, from Ueshiba to Bruce Lee, he had created his own art, a stripped-down synthesis called WAR, an acronym standing for Within Arm's Reach. It was designed for bodyguards, and its specialty is efficient dismemberment without exposing a cowering client to harm. Not a lot of spinning and circling in WAR: You fought as if you had been backed into a corner or pressed against a wall.

It reminds me of Javanese Pentjak Silat Serak, one of Cliff's areas of expertise, a beautiful movement system based on pure mathematics. And as in Silat, WAR's blows are designed to disrupt balance rather than merely damage the body. When Cliff moves on you, it's as if you had an invisible third leg you'd never known was there, and he knows how to kick it out. When you watch him do it to someone else, it looks like they're just falling down for him. It looks fake. Until your butt bounces off the floor. The man is a genius, and swears that if I'd just be a little more serious, I'd have a major breakthrough in six months.

Maybe I
would
keep coming to class this time. Maybe.

I worked hard, breaking the forms into self-defense applications, improvising,
moving to and against the music. But no matter how hard I tried, Cliff knew I wasn't totally there.

“What's going on with you today, Hollywood?”

I mopped sweat from my face. “Guru,” I told him, using his formal Indonesian title as a Silat instructor. He liked that more than
Sensei
(Japanese) or
Sifu
(Chinese), although he'd earned the right to both. “I feel pretty strong overall—but I saw some knife action a little while ago that kinda freaked me. I'm not sure I could have coped with it, and I hate feeling like that.”

Cliff nodded, face as smooth and impassive as an Easter Island statue. He went to his shelf and brought back two black composition-plastic practice knives. He handed one to me and kept the other, twirling it around his fingers like an evil parlor trick.

“What'd you see?” he said. “Show me.”

I did my best to imitate the rapid-fire jabbing motion I'd witnessed in Langa. Watching, Cliff nodded slowly, his eyes sparking. “Where'd you see that?” he said.

“South Africa.”

“Guess so. Not Japanese, Chinese, or Filipino.” And he'd know. It isn't just that Cliff has trained with the best, all over the world. It's that he's become the one the best come to, when they really want to train. “It sure the hell don't look like anything I've seen. Show me more.”

As I imitated the knife's dance, Cliff improvised within my jabs, gently pushing my wrist right or left, up or down, as he deflected me. Cliff moves so well he sometimes seems to be in slow motion. I couldn't get my knife near him, especially with an unfamiliar movement pattern.

“Fast as you?” he asked.

“Faster.”

His smile flattened a little. Playtime was over. “How much faster?”

“Ten percent, maybe.”

“Rhythm?”

“Broken. Staccato. Maybe based on Jo'burg jazz. Reminded me of Max Roach on the drums, man.”

“This, my brother, is some deadly shit.”

“Tell me about it.” My breathing was already accelerated.

“If I were you, you see this thing again, I'd use furniture-fu.”

“What?”

“Tossing lamps and chairs. You ever see this stuff again, don't even think about fighting fair. You don't wake up, you're in for a dirt nap. You're a primate: Use a tool.”

“And what if I were you?”

He smiled. “Silly question.”

For the next ninety minutes, Cliff woke me up. The drummer's frantic
djembe
flowed through both of us as we lunged and darted. Knives scare the hell out of me. Anyone who tells you they're easy to deal with has never met anyone who could use one. An hour of decent blade instruction transforms a cheerleader into Black Belt Barbie.

So Cliff worked with me on attacking the legs, improvising weapons out of lamps and newspapers, putting power into my fastest low kicks and more accuracy into my eye jabs. Cliff always works out with a Cheshire cat grin, but I was too busy sweating to smile.

“Okay, young man,” Cliff said. “We're about to go live.”

He returned to his shelf and returned with two real knives.

The edges were wrapped with black tape, leaving just a half inch of point. Give you enough of a scratch to keep you mindful. I wouldn't trust just anyone to spar with me using a real knife, but I trusted Cliff—and he trusted me. There's a bond between martial arts teachers and students that reminds me of men who have experienced combat together, something hard to communicate to someone who hasn't been there.

Without warning, Cliff began the dance. We started slow, finding a smooth flow together, with Cliff constantly reminding me to concentrate on my exhalations, to let the inhalations take care of themselves. Controls fear, and engages the core muscles to increase power.

My mind floated away into flow, and I lost myself in the glittering pas de deux. We worked forty-five- and ninety-degree angles, the geometry of destruction. Concentrating on imaginary triangles and squares beneath our feet kept my mind off being punctured. The Moors knew this, and their insights birthed the great Spanish circle Antonio Banderas mastered in
The Mask of Zorro.
The calculating mind shuts down emotion, increases your chances of survival.

I was allowing myself cautious pride in a particularly canny riposte when Cliff tapped the back of my right hand with his knuckle, like a live
electric wire. My knife fell to the mat at the same instant his blade touched my throat.

“Shit,” I said under my breath.

Cliff's grin waited. “It's not all flow either. Don't get hypnotized.”

I was lucky to walk away with only a nick.

I didn't know it then, but Cliff Sanders had just saved my life.

EIGHT

MONDAY AFTERNOON, THE
towering royal palms against the bright blue sky made me wonder how Oliver was doing in Langa. I was on my way to an appointment at Sofia Maitlin's house in Beverly Hills to go over the plans for the birthday party when my cell phone rang:
WILDE LAW CENTER
, the ID said. My lawyer had called back right away.

I'd left a detailed message with Melanie Wilde's secretary to avoid confusion about why I was contacting her. Melanie Wilde and I had fallen into bed after she hired me to find out how her cousin T. D. Jackson died, so I didn't want her to think I was trying to mess with her new marriage. She'd betrayed her man for me once.

“Hope you didn't mind hearing from me,” I said.

Melanie sighed on the phone. Her memories of me weren't happy ones either. “No, it's okay,” she said. Silence filled the space when we might have recapped old times. “So you're looking for a referral to adopt a teenage girl, huh?” Skepticism drenched her voice.

Red light. I braked my Prius. “You think it's a problem?”

“Young, single guy—might raise more than eyebrows. How long has she lived with you again?”

“Two years.”

“And she's seventeen? What's the rush, Ten? Here's the best advice I can give you: Wait a year. Adult adoption is much easier. You have no idea what a hassle you're in for.”

I felt disappointment so keen that it reminded me of losing April in Cape Town—final and irreparable. I hadn't told Melanie much about Chela's history, or mine, but it was as if she already knew. Never mind that Chela and I also both had arrests that might appear in the system if someone started digging. If I couldn't win Melanie over, I'd have no chance with any adoption lawyer she referred me to.

“She's a handful, Mel, and she needs a father.” The word
father
felt odd to my tongue. “I think adopting her would help me be a better guardian. Build her trust. I want her to have a solid place to call home before she turns eighteen. Maybe it's just symbolic, but . . .”

“You are full of surprises, Tennyson Hardwick,” Melanie said. The tightness and distance evaporated from her tone. “You really want this kid.”

“Yeah. I really do. We've been through a lot together. I'm all she has.”

“Well, good for you. Our adoption just went through, by the way.” After T. D. Jackson died, Melanie inherited his two young children. I wondered how the grandparents who'd squabbled over the children felt about it, but I didn't dare ask. A war zone, no doubt.

“How are Maya and Tommy doing?” I said, glad I was so good at remembering names.

“One day at a time. But much better, thanks. We're definitely a family.”

“So are we, Mel. Me, Dad, and Chela. We just want to make it official.”

I could feel her smiling at me through the phone. “I love it, and I'll do what I can to help. I know a great adoption lawyer, and I'll tell her it's not what it looks like. You know . . .”

“Understood. I don't sound like a good bet.” And she didn't know the half of it.

“It'll be rough, Ten. And a long process. You'll be lucky if you wrap it up before her birthday. Where are her birth parents?”

“Father's dead. Mother's a meth addict who vanished almost ten years ago.
Poof.
Thin air.”

The sigh came again. “That's a problem, then,” she said.

“Why?”

“You can't get past square one before the mother signs off. She has to relinquish her parental rights.”

“You're kidding me! She's completely AWOL. I thought after all these years . . .”

“Doesn't matter. The state will need to exercise due diligence, advertise, the whole nine. You'd save yourself time and money if you could find her first. Go in armed and ready.”

Shit.
Lawyers never have good news. Chela had been trying to find her mother, on and off, since she was eleven, and I would need Chela's help to learn where the trail had gone cold. Even bringing up the idea of looking for her mother might stir up more hurt than it healed.

“Life's never easy, is it?” Melanie said.

“You know better than most, hon.” With the violence that had ripped her family apart, I wouldn't want Melanie Wilde's life for a day. The tendrils of her cousin's case hanging between us made me queasy. “I'm glad you have those kids. I know you're a great mom.”

“And I'm sure you're a great dad, Ten,” she said. “The rest is just a piece of paper.”

If only paper didn't matter.

I shook off my disappointment about Chela when I pulled up past the guard gate along the aged cobblestone driveway to Maitlin's mansion on ten secluded acres near Mulholland Drive. My grass was turning brown from the intense late-spring sun, but Maitlin's immaculately maintained yard looked as green as artificial turf. A swarm of gardeners in bright orange shirts were giving the bright bougainvillea and hibiscus bushes a trim. In the circular driveway, two frozen cherubs in the three-tiered marble fountain played water-spewing flutes.

BOOK: From Cape Town with Love
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