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Authors: Franklin White

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BOOK: More Money for Good
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Chapter 21
There was no way we were going to convince them to do a damn thing in the funk they were in. Rossi was so sure the sex card would play with Rita, but it only pissed her off and we ended up having to take them out to dinner to try to mend things.
Lauren kissed me on the cheek. “Thanks for dinner, boo. Who would have thought you would have brought us down to Ruth's Chris and get me that one hundred and fifty dollar steak. It was so . . . good.” Then she gave me three more kisses after that.
“No problem,” I let Lauren know. “Anything for you, babe.”
We looked over at Rossi while Rita was finishing her fourth glass of wine.
“Aren't you going to thank me?” Rossi wanted to know.
She wiped her mouth with her napkin. “Thank you,” she said. “So, when exactly do you need us to be at the W, hon?”
Rossi looked at me and back at Rita. “I never told you the interviews were at the W.”
“I know, but I heard you telling West where it was and I had to let Lauren know before we made you take us to dinner.”
Chapter 22
The next week of work was as ordinary as they come. There were no pressing issues at the shop that threatened to make my blood pressure sky rocket. And the guys in the shop were getting them fixed just as fast as they were coming in. Tavious hadn't had any more run-ins with the cops. More than likely because they weren't able to grab him off the street since he now was going straight from the shop to the apartment upstairs.
It was Friday night and the time had come for the ladies to shine in their interviews at the club. Rossi came by and picked us up a little past seven. We made it to the W close to eight o'clock. Yummy is all I could say. My baby Lauren was looking amazing. She was wearing a black dress that brought out her stunning curves on her body. Rita was looking scrumptious as well. She had on a red dress with her twins sitting high and tight for all to see. The plan was for the ladies to go in one at a time and try to locate the Thompsons, who were friendly with Amara, and we would sit in the car and wait for their return. As we sat in the car the only thing exciting was Rossi's new haircut.
“I was told that at least forty couples RSVPed,” Rossi let me know.
“Cool, and all we need is one,” I said.
For the umpteenth time Rossi smoothed his hand over his now-bald head.
I turned to him. “So, what's up with this haircut?”
“Oh, this?”
“Yeah, that.”
“Rita wanted me to get it. Said I would look good.”
“You sure are blaming a lot of shit on your girl these days. First this piece-of-shit car, now your head. I'm beginning to wonder about you.”
“Why?”
“Just saying, man, you got a perfect head full of hair and you cut it off?”
“I already told you. She likes it. It's a change.”
We waited some more and watched a few couples go into the W Hotel hand in hand wondering which ones were going inside to be a part of the interview process.
Rossi plopped a mint in his mouth. “So, how sure are you that there is even two million dollars?”
“I can tell you I've never seen it because it wasn't there when we went to the house. But I did see the dead body and the space where it could have been hidden. But I wouldn't have a reason to doubt Tavious or I wouldn't be here. He did twenty, man—a twenty-year bid for drug trafficking. Mrs. Bullock told me that much.”
Rossi was a stickler for knowing the facts. When I first met him he would test me by asking me a question, then wait for some time to elapse, then ask the same question again to see if he got the same answer.
We ended up having to line the pockets of the valet with fifty dollars to allow us to stay sitting parked in our car at the front of the hotel. Rossi walked down Lenox to a hamburger joint and brought us back burgers and large drinks. In the meantime, I called Tavious to see if he was finished setting up the apartment. I also let him know we were waiting for the girls to come out.
Lauren and Rita had been inside close to three hours and we figured they hadn't run into the Thompsons yet or they would have come out right after.
“What do you think this couple is like?” Rossi wanted to know. “You really have to be comfortable with one another to invite someone in your bed, man.”
I paused for a while because when I met Rita I remember her and Rossi going at it a mile a minute right in front of my face. It took everything I had not to make light of Rossi and remind him but I held it for another time. “Yeah, you really have to be in another zone, man.”
Finally, at a little past twelve that night, I spot Lauren coming out. She sees us and comes over to the car. She sat down inside and exhaled. “Whew, never in my life.” We both had our eyes on her. “West, I am telling you,” she said.
“What are you telling us?” Rossi wanted to know.
Lauren looked at him odd. “Did you get a haircut while I was up in there?”
Rossi looked over at me. “No, no, I didn't, Lauren. Can you just tell us what happened? Where's Rita?”
“I don't know where she is. I didn't even see her. Can you believe they had us meet these couples by their last names? I mean, I was freaking looking for the Thompsons and I had to wait that entire time to finally meet them.”
Rossi pushed. “You met them? What did they say? Did you get a contact number or something?”
“No.” Lauren flipped off her shoes then saw the wrappers from the burgers we had and let us know she wanted one too.
Rossi kept on. “No number? Why not?”
“'Cause I didn't like the way he was looking at me,” Lauren said.
I am pretty sure we both said, “What?” at the same time.
Lauren started to fidget around. “He was looking at me all freaky and shit, baby... I mean how many times does he have to lick his lips when talking? I know they wanted someone to watch them, but I think they were on some real freaky shit. I can't exactly put my finger on it but they were some kind of freaky.”
Rossi slid down in his seat and grabbed the steering wheel. “Fuck me.”
“That's right, Mr. Rossi, fuck you,” Lauren told hm.
I tried to calm things down because Lauren and Rossi still would go at each other's throats for any reason, anytime, not out of hatred but because it is what they enjoyed about one another. They went on and on for a few minutes over my objection and then finally Rita came strutting out like she was reliving her prior life before Rossi.
As soon as she sat down Rossi started in on her. “How'd everything go?”
“Wow . . .” Rita said. Then she sat back, exhausted, in the back seat. “Wow . . .” she repeated.
Lauren was still rubbing her feet. “Girl, are you okay?” Lauren wanted to know.
“Yes . . . Wow . . . Wow,” Rita purred.
“Rita, you better tell me something besides wow, or I'm going up in that place and kicking somebody's ass,” Rossi said. “I just know you didn't—”
Rita cut him off. “Hush it up right there, Mr. Man, I'm okay . . .”
Lauren looked at Rossi. “I don't know, maybe you did . . .”
“No, it's just the atmosphere in there. Who would have thought I sold my pussy for two years and I could have joined this club and probably gotten paid to watch; this world is fucked . . . up.” Then she started in with her deep, bellowing laughter.
“Whatever, whatever; did you meet the Thompsons?” I asked her.
“Yes, I met them,” she said.
“I did too,” Lauren added.
All of a sudden Rita looked out the front window from the back seat and pointed at them. “There they are . . . right there.”
We all see a rather tall white man with a black woman under his arm wearing a tight dress.
“There they are, the Thompsons,” Rita said.
Then almost immediately Lauren saw another couple exit the W walking in the opposite direction; then she began to point. “No, no, those two right there are the Thompsons,” she let us know.
Chapter 23
Turns out that both couples were named Thompson and we had to act quickly because it seemed as though our entire night could have been for naught. When Rita told us that she exchanged Facebook accounts with
her
Thompsons we decided to keep an eye on the other pair, and watched as they walked down Lenox and into a swanky-looking bar.
After about twenty minutes of back and forth, Lauren gave in and decided that she would go in and “accidently” run into the Thompsons again. She wasn't happy about it. We waited long enough for her to have a drink with them. Rossi waited inside across the bar, keeping a close eye on her. When she returned and filled us in on their conversation we were 100 percent sure they were not the Thompsons on our radar. Their kink was flirting with women and only allowing men to join them in the bedroom.
 
I had always been amazed at how the Internet and social media applications brought people together. But more so by how quickly Rita was able to connect and become very intimate with her new friends the Thompsons. We confirmed that their names were Charles and Gale and they lived in Cobb County in a nice and quiet private spread. Charles was a surgeon and Gale had a high-profile position with an Atlanta law firm.
When Rita reached out to them they accepted her friend request. The first day they shared fifteen messages and during the night spent close to three hours just chatting on instant messenger. Charles and Gale had become more than ready to meet with Rita in real time but she continued on her objective to get any information she could muster on Amara without mentioning her name. But no matter how she tried they would not give any information about anyone who they could have been intimate with. Charles began to talk about his interns on his job and how he had them follow him on Twitter to follow his daily activities. He sent Rita an invite to follow him and once again the Internet had turned out to be our friend because we found out he loved to eat lunch at the same place and time every day.
I called Tavious and asked him if he wanted to do lunch.
I'd never imagined a hospital cafeteria to be so crowded and right away I thanked the man upstairs for never really having to know. We knew the good doctor came into eat at preciously one-fifteen because he tweeted it. He sat right next to a wall facing a flower bed with the white marble birdbath just like he told everyone in cyber space that he would. Tavious and I were sitting and waiting when he arrived and we decided to get a bite to eat, too.
“I can't fuckin' believe people will put their every move on a computer screen so anyone can follow what they're doing,” Tavious mentioned. “Shit is as bad as prison, if you ask me.”
“Well, I know at least one activity he's not telling anyone about.”
Tavious grabbed his drink and shook his head. “I don't get it, West; technology has taken over the world in twenty years, man. GPS, texting, computers, cell phones, books in a machine. Amara told me it was crazy out here but where in the fuck am I? Look around . . . more people in this café looking down at their fuckin' machines than talking to one another.”
I'm sure life and everyday living had to be a change for Tavious. Probably in his eyes it was like he was stepping into a world from which he was far removed. I could sometimes see his frustrations with some of the cars we'd get in the shop and the computers that told us how to do our job, or even the computers that make the cars actually run.
We waited in the lunchroom at least twenty minutes before we went over. Charles was a few minutes into the front page of the
AJC.
We finally walked over and I spoke first.
“Dr. Thompson?”
He looked up from his paper and quickly scanned me and then Tavious with his eyes before he ran his hand through his dark hair and answered. “Yes.” He looked to be over six feet and in pretty good shape, maybe a runner or boxer type.
“My name is West, do you mind if we have a bit of your time?”
He was clearly confused. “But I—”
“It's about Amara,” Tavious let him know; then he sat down without an invite.
There was a quiet pause and the good doctor looked around the cafeteria. “I . . . I didn't get your name,” he said.
“My name is Tavious Bell. A friend of Amara's.”
The doctor softened. “Tavious . . . ? Yes, yes . . . I've heard all about you.”
Tavious inched up closer to hear what the doctor had to say, and the doctor's face told me he could feel his anxiety.
“Just a figure of speech. But yes, I've heard Amara say your name several times . . . if you know what I mean.” Then he smiled.
“Okay, since we got that all out the way, can you tell us what happened to her?
The doctor paused. “Can you tell me how you found me?”
“Internet,” I let him know.
“That got-damn Twitter no doubt. I teach a class at Georgia Tech and it's a part of the territory. Got-damn technology, whole world can find out what you're doing. Fuckin' gadgets—we've become too spoiled. Spoiled to no end.” He pointed to his paper. “Look here: yesterday two teenage girls killed their mother. For what? I bet they were given everything they ever wanted in life and never told no. Or worse yet they're a fuckin' result of that crack epidemic. I see it all the time, mothers who smoked that shit—their kids have turned out to be fuckin' devils I tell you . . . devils.”
“Yeah, it's a bad situation, but you're clear why we are here, right?”
The doctor shook his head no but said yes.
“Amara. We need to find out who killed her and if she had any other contacts in the club who got you guys together,” I said.
“My, you guys know my life story or something?”
“It would probably take us a few days but we could get it,” I let him know.
“Wouldn't even have to ask Gale,” Tavious boasted.
The doctor put his paper down. “Look, I don't know what to tell you. I told the police everything I know.”
I wanted to know about the police and asked him about it.
“Two cops came to see me. That's how I found out she had died. They found my card with my number in her bedroom and wanted to know our relationship. And they asked if I knew you.” He pointed at Tavious.
“What did these officers look like?”
“Um, I don't know. One white, the other black,” he said.
“What did you tell them?” Tavious asked.
“I gave Amara all the respect she deserves. The only thing I told them was that she came to my office for a consultation.”
I asked him what type of consultation.
“I told them it was confidential and couldn't divulge it to them. But she was fine. I just didn't want to scar her memory in any way; plus, it's none of their damn business what people do in their private lives.”
“Including yours,” I mentioned.
He pointed at me. “Exactly.”
“She ever mention if anyone was after her? Was she scared of anything?”
“Amara didn't have an ounce of fear in her body. Like I said, all she talked about was waiting until you got home and how her life would change. To me, she was head over heels with you and wanted you, man.”
Tavious had a look on his face that if he heard that again he would explode.
“How long did you know her?” I asked him.
“A couple of years.”
We sat and talked until his next scheduled surgery. When we left the only things we knew were that the detectives had paid him a visit and Amara was not heavy into their wild and kinky lifestyle while caring for Tavious a great deal all along. On the way out of the hospital the first thing Tavious said was concerning the story in the paper the doctor spoke of. He wanted me to know that he never sold crack and these bad kids running the streets are not a result of what he did in his past.
BOOK: More Money for Good
6.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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