Stark: A Novel (7 page)

Read Stark: A Novel Online

Authors: Edward Bunker

BOOK: Stark: A Novel
9.44Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Damn right we have to trust each other. If we can’t, who can we trust?” Al grinned, thinking his comment humorous. Stark wondered if the man would grin if he knew how funny the statement really was.

He smiled in return, and winked. “Ah like you. Damned if ah don’t. Better get goin’. He’ll be worried. Ya saw how he is. Ah’ll give ya a call tomorrow. Maybe we can do this again, six months.”

“Great. Great. Thanks for everything.” The bartender extended his hand and Ernie Stark shook it firmly. Al went around to enter the truck.

The moment the blue vehicle was in motion, Stark started toward the corner and quickly went around it to get a taxi. Momo came from the doorway and scurried to catch up. When they were together they began to laugh spontaneously, envisioning the expression of horror on the bartender’s face when the amount of the triplicate order was loaded on the truck - that, and no more.

7

__________

 

 

M
inutes later Ernie Stark and Momo Mendoza were speeding down the highway in the back seat of a taxi, faces lighted with the exhilarated satisfaction of predators who have made their kill and gorged themselves on red meat. Both were high on the successful con.

The taxi driver was a gnome-faced runt with ears like a bat’s wings. A procurer of servicemen for the prostitutes of the Panama Club, he was a close-mouthed underworld fringe character, so Stark and Momo were not afraid to talk freely.

“That’s the softest money I ever saw,” Momo said, shaking his head in wonder. Stark’s eyelids fluttered and the smile of a Cheshire cat played across his thin lips. He nodded with fatuous complacency. “Yeah, real sweet bunco… but -” he shrugged and let the thought trail off.

“But what?” Momo asked. “There’s nothing wrong, is there?” the quick suspicion of the paranoid junkie in his voice.

“No, everything’s lovely. We won’t even have any heat, nine chances out of ten.”

“Won’t the sucker call the fuzz?”

“Not usually. He can’t say how the swindle went down or the Board will jerk the bar’s license… padlock the joint and put him out of business.”

“That wasn’t the owner.”

“The owner is responsible for his agent’s actions. And the feds wouldn’t like avoidance of the tax on liquor sales, either.”

“Is that right?”

“Yeah. And the one thing that drives bar owners out of their minds is worrying about losing their license. They pay a shyster a grand to represent them at a hearing for something as simple as a juvenile buying cigarettes out of a machine… No, they won’t go to the fuzz. They just lick their wounds and mark it down as a loss. A few might try to find you and get their money or fuck you up, but it’s like they’re trying to find a needle in a haystack.”

Momo shook his head in slow wonder. “Man, you should be making a million dollars with a gimmick like that. It’s the slickest game I ever saw.” “Yeah, I’ve made some money,” he said in a depressed manner. “And when I do, nowadays you usually wind up with it.” Yet he noticed the respect, even awe, that was in Momo’s voice. It was a sharp change from his previous attitude to him. Momo had made the switch without seeming to remember the arrogance of yesterday, or even this morning. It made Stark even more contemptuous of his dealer. This new relationship might be used to good advantage, for himself and perhaps Crowley.

“It’s sweet,” Stark agreed, “but I’ve burned it out. About fifteen bars have bit in the last eighteen months. The word gets around. I tried one spot a couple of weeks ago and the owner set me up to get my arms broken. A couple of goons were waiting in a parking lot. I cut one and ran. Seems I trimmed the guy’s brother somewhere down the line.” Stark shook his head. “Yeah, it’s just about burned out. All good things come to an end, I guess. You’re the one with the best hustle. There’s never a depression in your business, and you can make big money if you can
get
enough shit. There are more customers than you can handle.”

“I can get the product,” Momo announced proudly, “but Oceanview ain’t got but a few junkies. I just got enough business to keep up my habit. Ain’t no big action here.”

“If I had your connection I’d do more than that. I’d be crappin’ in tall cotton… not living in a bust-out pad making nickels and dimes. That broad could be wearing mink, and you could be driving a Caddy.” Momo rubbed a hand hard across his face, as he might do upon just wakening. He probed a nostril with a fingernail and snorted. Stark could not tell if these gestures had any meaning, or if the man’s mind had wandered. Stark decided to be more specific.

“In a month we could be selling five times what you’re moving. With less risk. We’d have an organization with other people in front. We should get together and work out something real good for both of us. Besides, I figured that this new shit was coming to you from a bud back in Hawaii. I haven’t figured out how you’re getting it into the country.”

Momo laughed. “This shit is coming from no further than La Jolla. I don’t have any friends left in the islands.”

For the first time Momo saw the possibilities. His surly face registered the kernel of an idea. His lips pursed, and his brow drew down. Stark watched him as a hawk might, high above a rabbit. The Hawaiian sucked a substance from his teeth, probed for it with a forefinger, and shook his head.

“Man,” he said, “if you’d made me a partnership proposition last week I’d have laughed. I used to think you were just a lot of words, pure bullshit. After today, I give you a whole lot of credit. Let me think about us working together. It’s just an idea. Don’t rush me.”

“We’ll make a sackful of money. I’ll find us new customers all over the place.”

“But I don’t think I can cut you into the connection. He won’t meet anybody. He’s weird. The product has to come through me — only.”

“Oh, yeah,” Stark said slowly. He paused, then accused: “What’s wrong? You don’t trust me? Think I’m a snitch or I’ll ace you out of the connection?”

“No, man. I got to protect myself. As long as I supply the product in our partnership, you won’t have the opportunity to ace me out. Besides, the Man is very nervous.” He spread his hands wide, a gestured plea for understanding. “He won’t go for it, and he’ll freeze me out if I try. He doesn’t know about hustlers. He’s a square-john businessman trying to make a killing on the side. He’s scared of his shadow. He doesn’t even know I use. You don’t need to meet him. I can make the arrangements for what we need.”

Momo spoke with such plaintive sincerity that Stark knew he couldn’t press further at this point without losing ground.

“You’re right,” he said. “I don’t have to know him. We can make money anyway.”

“Sure. We’ll try and see what happens.” Momo hesitated, then looked Stark coldly in the eye. “One thing, though, I’m not sharing that broad.”

“Ah, man,” Stark said, poking Momo reassuringly on the arm. “I know she’s your property.”

The object of Momo’s admonishment was not at the apartment. According to a scribbled note, she had gone out to a movie. Momo accepted the information with his characteristic grunt. He was in a good mood and chattered with glee about the easy five hundred dollars he’d just made. He listened attentively to Stark’s brief sketch of the plan. They would enlist peddlers in the nearby small communities. Each had at least one base, a cocktail lounge or a pool hall, and a handful of junkie customers. The junkies presently had to travel fifty or more miles to Los Angeles to make purchases. Stark would set up one dealer in each area to work on consignment initially, and a runner to make the deliveries.

“But we’ll work it out later,” Stark said as they finished fixing. He also pocketed two free grams for later. “There’s a lot of details, but that’s the basic idea. I’ve already got an idea for the runner, somebody who can’t run his mouth. Dummy.”

Momo burst into wild laughter.

“What’s so funny?” Stark asked.

“Dummy!” gasped Momo, “as a runner!”

“What’s so funny about that?” Stark asked irritably.

“Nothing, except he’s my runner. And you don’t want to cross him. Believe me.”

Stark rode another taxi downtown. He sat in a drug-induced snooze and let a cigarette burn down to finger-searing shortness, before flipping it from the window. He mulled on the puzzle of Dummy and the Man, wondering how he could track the guy to his quarry. Yet, try as he might, Stark could not associate Dummy with any businessman in Oceanview, nor anywhere else. Stark reached through his memory for any clue, but finally had to shake his head and put it off until he had more facts. The connection was still anonymous. Now, however, the bits of knowledge were filling into place. He’d find him. And maybe turn him in to Crowley. And then again, maybe not. His idea for a new dope network was beginning to seem attractive. Maybe it could work. Maybe Crowley would have to get another boy.

8

__________

 

 

I
t was easy enough to find Dorie Williams. The beach community had only three movie theaters, and only one of these showed weekday matinees. There were only a handful of patrons. She was in an aisle seat, halfway down.

Stark halted, while still unnoticed, beside her. A malicious grin crossed his face. He leaned down and dropped a hand firmly on her shoulder.

“We want to talk to you at the station, Miss Williams,” he said coldly.

Dorie jerked at the touch and words. A reflexive gasp issued from her. Stark knew the panic she felt. He chuckled as she turned to see what she assumed was a cop. “Oh, you asshole,” she said. “You fucking creep. I thought you were a cop.”

“Funny, huh?” he said, sliding past her legs and plopping into the next seat. On the screen John Wayne was mauling the villain.

“Good movie?” he asked.

“It was awful, until you got here. Now it’s worse.”

“Then let’s get out of here.”

“You’re crazy. How’d you find me?”

“I got your note.”

“I left that for Momo.”

“You put his name on it, but I knew it was for me.”

“Did you steal it?”

“No.”

“You’re awfully sure of yourself…” Her voice rose sharply and stood out against a sudden lull of sound on the screen. Someone nearby made an irate “shhh” sound.

“Come on,” Stark whispered, leaning close to breathe in the sweet scent of her perfume, and putting a hand gently on her arm. “We didn’t have time to talk before… We’ve got time now. I want to continue our conversation. Don’t you?”

Dorie wavered, looked into his face in the flickering dimness; then, with a sigh of resignation, gathered her purse. He hungrily watched the swish of her wide hips as he followed her up the aisle.

It was dusk when they came out of the theater. Oceanview’s main drag was crowded with traffic hurrying from work, with square Johns and Janes trying to finish shopping and get home. Cars choked the streets in a honking tangle, crowds jostled in and out of the stores. A breeze was rising. In the deepening twilight the neon signs were throwing off their first glow, a halo-like aura that had not yet grabbed enough darkness to be brilliant. Dorie waited on the sidewalk. The breeze whipped her skirt against her legs.

“Where should we go?” she asked. Her voice was thick and tense.

“He won’t worry about you for a couple of hours.”

She nodded slowly and dropped her eyes.

“Yes. I have about two hours.”

They hesitated, waiting for thoughts to jell. The pedestrians broke around them and hurried on. The street’s traffic struggled forward.

“We can have a drink… or we can go to my place.”

“Whatever you want.” She looked at him. He could not tell whether it was with surrender or hate. Stark took her arm and they started toward a cab stand.

In the taxi there was silence for the first few blocks as he wondered why he was taking her to his pad. Then they were beyond the downtown section and the automobile picked up speed.

“Is it very far?” Dorie asked.

“About ten minutes’ drive.” Stark looked at her in profile against the backdrop of a red sun sinking into the sea. Hers was not a hardened face. There was something childish and undefiled - or perhaps only half defiled. It was not purity, really; neither was it evil. He did not know what it was, but it was fascinating.

“I don’t know why I’m doing this,” Dorie said, speaking suddenly. “I don’t like you. You’re no good. Momo’s a crude animal, but you’re like a snake with shiny scales.”

She spoke so quietly that Stark could not become angry. Instead, he felt dirty. He needed to lighten her up. He needed to lessen her loathing. He thought that humor might do it. “Maybe it’s like Bess and Crown - you know, in ‘Porgy and Bess’ — she couldn’t stay away from the evil Crown, even though she loved Porgy. When Crown called, she had to go.” He spoke in a semi-singing voice, jocularly.

She responded with seriousness, “You might be closer to the truth than you think.”

They both fell silent. Only the whoosh of spinning tires and the click of the taxi’s meter broke the silence. Stark looked at her closely, the length of her. This was the first time he’d seen her fully clothed, wearing a dress. Her garb and makeup were not those of a whore shacking up with a penny ante dope pusher. She was dressed in modish style, but not garishly. There was nothing visible to suggest that she would come so easily to his bed. And it was even stranger that this paradoxical girl, ready to give her body to him, would put up a defense of Momo Mendoza.

Other books

Brush of Darkness by Allison Pang
Meteor by Brad Knight
Wounds by Alton Gansky
Unravelled by Lee, Kirsten
Midnight Frost by Jennifer Estep
Rogue Spy by Joanna Bourne
A Missing Peace by Beth Fred