January Justice (38 page)

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Authors: Athol Dickson

BOOK: January Justice
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Medallion rolled, putting his body between me and his weapon and using the momentum from my kick to keep moving away. I scrambled after him. He got a hand on his pistol. I hammered a fist into his forearm. He grunted, his hand dropping away. He swung a leg up between us and kicked me hard in the chest. I turned in the nick of time. His kick glanced off, but the ribs he had cracked the last time we met felt like a hot knife in my side. I ignored the pain and piled onto him again, the two of us wrestling on the floor for the gun. He jammed the heel of one hand hard under my chin. I got a grip on the weapon. I pulled it from his holster, but he had my wrist pinned with his other hand before I could bring the gun to bear. He slammed my chin with his free hand again and again, every blow whiplashing my head back toward my shoulders. I felt a blackout coming. Then for some reason, he stopped.

I realized Olivia was there, bleeding and beating him with a table lamp. She lifted it high for another blow, and then the Other One was behind her. He hit her head with the muzzle of his M9. She dropped to the floor. He started to swing his weapon toward me, but I rolled, coming away with Medallion’s gun. We both fired at once. Incredibly, we both missed.

I sat up and aimed as the man ducked and ran. I had him lined up just as he was about to disappear around a corner, but Medallion kicked me in the hip. It threw my aim off, and my second round hit the Sheetrock a foot behind the fleeing man. Medallion kicked me again before I could aim the gun at him. The impact rocked me, and the gun flew out of my hand. I reached around, picked it up, and swung back toward him, but he was already up and out of sight in the front hallway.

The blows to my chin had left me groggy; otherwise I might have made it to the hall in time to stop him. Instead, I stood in the open front doorway, listening as the two of them ran away into the night. A few seconds later, I heard an engine roar to life, and then tires squealing. I closed the door and locked it, then went in to Olivia.

She was conscious, lying on the floor and staring at the ceiling. There was a bruise shaped like an open hand on her cheek. One eye was beginning to swell.

I knelt beside her and said, “Tell me where it hurts.”

She tried to smile. “Everywhere.”

I felt behind her head where the Other One had hit her with his sidearm. She wasn’t bleeding much.

I said, “Can you sit up?”

“Don’t want to.”

“We need to find out if you can move.”

She rolled to her side, pushed herself into a seated position, and then kept going until she was on her feet. She swayed a little, but it didn’t look as if Medallion had broken any bones. I stepped close, slipped an arm around her back, and helped her to the sofa. I eased her down and then dropped to the cushion beside her, wincing as the cracked rib sent another spike of pain across my side. I took out my cell phone.

She said “Who are you calling?”

“The police and an ambulance.”

“Could we talk about that first?”

“Okay…”

“I’ve got some, uh, some pending legal issues. They could come up if the police get involved.”

“You don’t want to report this?”

“I’d rather not, if that’s okay.”

“We need to get some medics over here. A blow like that to the head… You could have a concussion. Maybe a subdural hematoma. It could kill you or cause a stroke and leave you paralyzed. Besides, you’re an assault victim, and shots were fired.”

“I’m okay, Malcolm. Please? It would be really bad for me.”

“Want to tell me why, exactly?”

“It’s better if you don’t know, but I’ll explain if you make me.”

“I don’t want to make you do anything.”

“I’m not wanted for murder or robbery or anything like that. They don’t want to put me in jail. It’s more of a civil issue, if that helps.”

“If we don’t report this now, we can’t report it later.”

“I know.”

“Those guys could come back.”

“I don’t think so. Not after the beating you gave them. They’re probably thinking there are easier ways to rape a girl in this town.”

“You think this was about rape?”

“Sure. What else?”

“I heard the one who beat you ask where something is.”

“Did he? I guess I don’t remember.”

“What was he asking you about?”

“I don’t know. It’s all kind of blurry.”

Sitting beside her on the sofa, I thought about how close I’d come to telling her I knew who she was, to trusting that she would come clean about her relationship to Alejandra Delarosa. Now I’d almost been killed protecting her, and she wouldn’t even admit that the same guys who had tried to kill me in the Santa Ana Mountains had been trying to beat some information out of her. I told myself I was a sentimental fool.

She laid her head on my shoulder. “I can never thank you enough for what you did, Malcolm.”

I put the cell phone back in my pocket. I pushed her away gently and stood up. I walked to Medallion’s M9, which I had put down on a table to help Olivia to the sofa. I slipped it under my belt and said, “Do you have any first-aid supplies? We should look after that cut on your head. Then let’s get some ice on that eye.”

I checked her pupils for uneven dilation. I crushed some ice and put it in a plastic baggie, then told her to hold it on her eye. I sterilized the cut on the back of her head and covered it with a little gauze and surgical tape.

Olivia said she was afraid to spend the night alone. It was the one thing she had said that I believed, so I offered the spare bedroom at the guesthouse. She packed a few things, and half an hour later, we were in the Aston Martin, heading for El Nido.

When we arrived, I pulled into the garage, walked Olivia over to the house, put Medallion’s M9 on the coffee table, and showed her the bedroom. After making sure she had towels and a fresh bar of soap and so forth, I headed back over to the garage to get my gun out of the glove box and cover the car. By the time I returned to the guesthouse, Olivia was asleep.

In the kitchen I poured myself a Scotch. I walked into the dark living room, put both the M11 on the coffee table next to Medallion’s M9, and sat down to think. I didn’t have much new information to consider. I tried to organize everything into actual facts, the possibilities and informed guesses, and the complete unknowns.

First, the facts. I knew Olivia was Alejandra Delarosa’s daughter. I knew she was a skilled mechanic with a good knowledge of high-end cars. I knew she was living under an assumed name. I knew she had been born in America and was a US citizen. I knew her father was a drunk and a civil engineer and was living in a cheap, virtually unfurnished apartment in a bad neighborhood in a city with one of the highest murder rates per capita in the world, while Olivia lived in a nice apartment just a few blocks from the beach and worked for a major movie star. I knew her mother was involved in a kidnapping and a murder and had claimed on camera to be a member of the URNG. I knew her father insisted that it wasn’t true. And I believed him.

I also knew there were two guys who wanted something from Olivia badly enough to torture her to get it, and they were the same two guys who had tried to kill me. I knew for a fact they were well-trained professionals. I knew they carried the kind of sidearms issued to US military personnel and soldiers from allied Latin American countries. I knew they were Latinos, or at least they looked like Latinos and spoke Spanish. Strangely, though, they hadn’t spoken Spanish when they interrogated Olivia.

I knew they had been following Valentín Vega when I first noticed them. Or had they? No, stick to the facts. For all I knew they had been following me from the start. So the exact nature of the connection between them and Vega was an open question. But I did know one of them had a thing for gold jewelry, and the other was trigger happy, since he had seemed ready to shoot me as early as our initial meeting at Crystal Cove State Park. I also knew they had stolen the Range Rover and my M11. I knew they had an affinity for large SUVs. I knew Doña Elena had reported seeing two men and a woman fleeing from her home on the night she shot Castro, and she believed the woman was Alejandra Delarosa. And that was about all I knew for sure.

I took a sip of Scotch and moved to the possibilities and informed guesses.

It was possible that Olivia Delarosa had indeed lived in Spain, received a degree in international banking there, and learned to work on high-end automobiles there. It was possible that she had been sending money to her father in Guatemala. But it was also possible the money in her father’s bank account had come from Olivia’s mother, who took it from Arturo Toledo just before she murdered him, since the amount in the account matched the amount delivered to the kidnappers. If it was blood money, and if Olivia’s father was a decent man, that would explain why he hadn’t spent it for seven years in spite of his miserable living conditions.

Moonlight slanted into the darkened living room. I looked at the way it fell on Medallion’s M9 on the coffee table and considered him again. For perhaps the hundredth time, I wondered if he and the Other One who had tried to kill me really were part of the old military junta that had once controlled Guatemala. I wondered if they were trying to protect themselves and their superiors from prosecution for past war crimes. If that was the situation, then they would see me as a threat, since there was a chance I might clear the URNG from suspicion in Arturo Toledo’s murder and Dona Elena’s kidnapping. If I managed to do that, it could cause Congressman Hector Montes to stop opposing US assistance for the URNG. The US might even support an international investigation into the genocide, the so-called disappeared ones during the Guatemala civil war. A lot of very powerful old men in Guatemala would be unhappy about that.

As for the complete unknowns, I still had no idea if Haley’s Guatemalan movie project had anything to do with all the rest of it. I had no idea why Olivia had gotten herself hired as Doña Elena’s personal assistant. I had no idea what she planned to do. I had no idea why Castro had been in Doña Elena’s house during the final moments of his life, and no idea if Alejandra Delarosa had been with him, or if it had been Olivia or some other woman. I also had no idea who the other two men were in Doña Elena’s house that night. I only knew neither of them had been me, and unless I found a way to prove it, I would probably spend the next decade or so in prison.

I finished off the Scotch, put the glass down on the table next to Medallion’s M9, picked up the weapon, and took it with me to bed. Sleep was a long time coming.

42

Sometime after dawn,
I heard Olivia rattling around in the kitchen. At least I hoped it was Olivia. I rolled out of bed, wincing at the damage to my ribs, and slipped into a shirt and jeans.

“Good morning,” she said from the other side of the cabinets as I entered the living room. “I’ve got coffee going. Hope that’s okay.”

“Sure. Make yourself at home.”

“In that case, would you like bacon and eggs?”

“Sounds good.”

I sat at the little table in the corner and watched as she cooked. As always, she was well dressed in a pale-blue robe and matching pajamas and slippers. A memory came of Haley exactly in the same physical positions, in exactly the same place, doing exactly the same things. I had a fleeting whimsy that the only difference was time. I considered metaphysical coincidences, accidents of time and space, and possibilities that might include Haley still existing somehow as a collection of atoms and molecules among the other molecules and atoms in that same space she had once occupied.

A strange sense of distance began to creep into the room. The woman in my kitchen seemed to slide away, the entire room elongating away from me. Hard edges softened and blurred, with everything becoming translucent. Glowing, changing colors flowed into the air from everything I saw, new ideas appearing, drifting randomly across my interior landscape, enticing me to follow into chaos.

I shook my head one time, very quickly, like a dog emerging from deep water. I told myself to think of what was true. I turned away from Olivia. I looked out through the window. I saw Teru on the far side of the lawn, sending pipe smoke up into the clouds and watering a hibiscus that was in glorious full bloom. I thought about him and Simon searching for me on that lonely mountain road. With that memory of generous friendship, I felt the madness fading.

“Here you go,” said Olivia, setting a plate on the table. She sat across from me and started eating. Her eye was bruised but hadn’t swollen shut, which surprised me. The mark on her cheek where Medallion had slapped her was still there. Chewing seemed to cause her pain. I looked away from her again, took a bite of eggs, and went through the motions, moving my jaw up and down.

“How you feeling?” I asked.

“A little sore here and there, but I’m okay.”

“Any pain inside your stomach or chest?”

“No. It’s all superficial,” she said. “Who’s the painter?”

“What?”

“In my bedroom. The painting on the easel. Is that yours?”

“I dabble just a little. Used to, anyway.”

“It’s beautiful. I think you do more than dabble.”

“Thank you.”

“Do you sell them in a gallery?”

“I usually just give them away.”

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