Authors: Leslie Glass
Tags: #Detective, #Police Procedural, #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction - Mystery, #New York (N.Y.), #Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths, #Policewomen, #Fiction, #Woo, #April (Fictitious character), #Mystery & Detective - Police Procedural, #General, #Women Sleuths, #Police, #Chinese American Women, #Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945), #Literary, #General & Literary Fiction, #Wife abuse, #Women detectives
"Okay, I'm up." He roused himself and reached for the phone. "What's up?
"Oh, God, no." Milton turned away from her. "Yeah, okay. Yeah. Call me in a half-hour. Thanks."
Then he hung up without looking at Nanci and went into the bathroom to pee, still without looking at her. He didn't want to tell her what Frankie had said. She stood by the closed door, knowing she'd have to wait until he was ready.
CHAPTER 41
A
nton fumed in the cab all the way downtown. Now he knew what Marc had called about this morning, but hadn't wanted to tell him over the phone: they had a dead girl on their hands. How could those two asshole relatives of his be so stupid? He knew he'd find them in the office at Golden Bobbin. Marc and Ivan wouldn't leave their clubhouse if it was under siege. And there they were. Marc opened up the building's outside door and pulled Anton inside before he'd finished knocking.
"Did anybody follow you?" he asked anxiously.
"What? No." As soon as they were in the office, Marc jerked his head, making faces at Ivan, who sat at his rolltop desk playing pinball on his computer as if he hadn't a trouble in the world.
"Hi, Andy," he said without looking up.
"Did you hear it on the news?" Marc asked.
"You guys are some fuckups."
Marc took Anton's arm and patted it. "Oh, man, it's so good to see you. I was getting pretty worried about all this."
"What's the matter with you, are you nuts? What are you doing here? Why aren't you in some lawyer's office working on a story?" Anton made a disgusted noise and paced to the other side of the room to examine the computer screen. "What are you doing, Ivan?"
"So our lawyer came to our office. What's the big deal?"
"You don't get it. I'm not your lawyer anymore. This isn't another public-nuisance case." Anton paced to the sofa. "You've got to get organized."
"How did you find out? Did it make the news?" Marc asked eagerly.
Anton stopped pacing and stared at him. "No, it didn't make the news. There's a cop at my house."
"Why? Do they think you had something to do with it?" Ivan looked up, surprised.
"You ruined my life!" Anton raged. "I could kill you both."
Marc nodded. "You know, that's what I told Ivan. I told him there's been a tragedy here. We've got to show respect, close up. But you know Ivan, he does whatever he wants."
"Fuck you," Ivan replied, glued to the computer game.
Anton moved to the desk, bunching his fists. "Marc, you ruined my life, you asshole. Get up. You've had this coming for a long time."
"Oh, this is great. Let's see a fight." Ivan grinned.
"See?" Marc said bitterly. "See what I have to deal with every day? You think this is a picnic, huh? A girl dies, he doesn't give a shit."
Ivan hit a few keys. His computer said, "Good-bye, and have a nice day." "How do the police figure you in this?" he asked Anton.
"Because of you, you idiot. That girl came from here, died here. They're not stupid. They're going to figure it out. You better get a very good criminal lawyer."
Ivan threw up his hands. "Oh, come on, don't give me that shit. I'm not going to look guilty about something I had nothing to do with."
"What are you talking about, looking guilty?" Marc cried. "It was an accident."
"Jesus Christ, you're responsible. I want to kill you," Anton broke in.
Ivan shrugged. "Oh come on, relax. The way I figure it, she wasn't feeling well. She stayed over. I guess she must have—"
"She was staying here?" Anton cried.
Ivan shrugged again, glanced at Marc. "A crazy girl jumped out of the window."
Anton glared at him. "It isn't that simple. Questions are going to be asked. You were putting a lot of pressure on her to find out what she did with the baby. How do I know she wasn't pushed?"
"Hey, hey! Don't start that! Don't even think that." Ivan jumped up from his desk and crossed the room. "Don't start that."
"What do you think, I'm stupid? You think the police are stupid? Who are you kidding? I'm so fucking mad at you I could—"
"What, you want to hit me? Go ahead, hit me." Ivan jumped up and danced on his toes in front of Marc. Older, fatter, his stomach rolling over his belt, his dukes up.
"Oh, come on, you guys." Marc moved in to push Ivan away. "Come on, Anton, you don't mean this. Give me a hug. Huh? You're not mad, are you? Come on, we've seen worse than this before, right?"
"When are you going to wake up?" Anton cried. "This is the worst. There's nothing worse than this. It's you I want to kill. You're supposed to be the sane one."
"You see cops in here? They came; they looked around, they left. Don't worry about the cops. The girl was an illegal nothing. They don't care about this.
We got friends in the cops, don't we, Marc? Isn't your best friend a cop?"
"You ruined my life!" Anton cried. "Who's going to pay me for this?"
"Now don't talk that way. It was an accident." Marc rubbed his brother's shoulder. "Nobody ruined anybody's life."
Anton shook him off. "What was an accident? The assault on my wife? That was an accident?"
Marc glanced at Ivan. "Yeah, that was too bad."
"She wasn't going to tell who did it. She wouldn't even tell me, you bastards. But now that the girl is dead, she's a different person. I wouldn't count on her keeping her mouth shut about anything. I'm fucked, understand? I don't get over this, and neither do you." Anton punched the air. Marc stroked his shoulder. "I hate you."
"Her name was Lin," Ivan said softly.
Anton ranted on. "I don't give a shit. This was supposed to be so easy, a no-brainer. You knew a pregnant girl. Roe and I wanted a baby. And what do we have here—the biggest fuckup in history!"
"Hey, Heather didn't want him," Marc interjected fiercely.
"Heather wanted him." Anton pulled away from his brother and began punching the arm of the sofa. "I'm going to get him now. Where is he?"
Marc and Ivan exchanged looks.
"Where is the baby? I'm not kidding. I'll put you both away for this. I swear."
"We don't think it's a good idea," Marc said.
"What do you mean it's not a good idea?"
"Let it go. The girl had a cousin. The cousin has the baby." Marc looked embarrassed for the first time.
"It's funny, 'cause she didn't act like she had anybody." Ivan glanced at him angrily. "She was a scared little—"
Anton put up his hand. "Don't tell me. I don't want to know this. You both disgust me."
Ivan protested. "Oh, no, this isn't me. This has somebody else's signature on it."
"You always try to pin everything on somebody else. You won't take responsibility for anything. Damn it, you know I wouldn't hurt a fly," Marc protested.
"Same old story," Ivan rolled his eyes.
"Paternity is easily established these days, but I don't give a shit. I just want to know where my baby is," Anton said.
"He's not yours anymore. We have to distance ourselves from this thing." This from Marc.
"I have cops at my place going through my things. They think I'm a wife beater. A child stealer. I'm not going to let this go."
"Face it, Heather isn't the baby's mother. The thing is, this girl came on to both of us. She wanted it, didn't she, Ivan? There was no victim here."
Anton held up his hand. "I don't want to hear this. I don't care."
"It wasn't me. I like blonds," Ivan said suddenly. "And I can prove it."
"I don't give a shit. Tell a lawyer, tell the judge. It's not my problem. Just tell me where the cousin lives."
Marc looked uneasy. "There's a little bit of a problem with that."
"With you there's always a problem." Anton punched the air.
"Listen to me, this
is
a problem. She came from around here, but she's married to this well-off Chink. They're connected to the Mob."
"How do you know?"
Ivan laughed uneasily. "She came looking for Lin. That's how we knew where the baby was. She even left her number. Lin never told us. Annie got scared and told us last night after the girl was dead." "Why'd she have to die?" Anton's face was white.
"She was sick. Who knows about these girls? Now we all have to get checked. It really bums me."
"Oh, God. You guys are pigs."
"Yeah, so? Anyway there are these guys watching us."
"Well, sure. The cops, the media, a lot of people are watching you."
"Uh-uh. These guys are I-tals. Buildings burn down around here. Things happen—you know what I'm talking about. You don't mess with those people."
"Oh, give me a break. I'm not going to worry about some pizza maker. That baby's mine."
"Not anymore. Your wife gave him back."
"Don't make me mad," said Anton.
"It's a fact. She gave it back," Ivan said.
"She changed her mind. Now she wants him back," Anton insisted.
"Too late. Lin gave it to her cousin. It's on Long Island," Ivan said.
"Shut up, you jerk," Marc snapped.
"How do I know that? How do I know he's alive? How do I know you didn't get rid of him? How can I believe any of this?" Anton raged.
"Guess you'll have to take our word for it."
"No, I refuse. After what happened, I can't trust you."
"You have to let it go, Anton. We don't want any more trouble." Suddenly Ivan was the serious one. "One of our girls got pregnant. We tried to do a good deed. It didn't work out. The woman gave her baby to her cousin, then jumped out the window of our factory. That's all we know. It's got to stop there."
"I did a lot of things for you, covered up your fuck-ups for years. You owe me."
"This is out of your control."
"You owe me."
Ivan heaved a sigh. "You don't understand, Anton. You don't know how it is down here. It's delicate."
"You killed a girl, and you care about 'delicate'?"
Ivan crossed the space between them with one leap and was pummeling his cousin before Anton could finish the sentence. "Don't you dare accuse me!"
"For Christ's sake, give him the name." Always the one to smooth things over, Marc went to the refrigerator. "Want a beer?" he offered the other two. No one answered. "Big deal, so all right. You want the name, I'll give you the name." He popped the top of a beer can, held it out to Anton. "There, happy now?"
Anton's nose was gushing blood, but he took the can. "Yeah."
CHAPTER 42
Y
ou did what?" Lieutenant Bernardino glared at April.
A boss's anger always made her head swim. She could feel herself regress to the state of terror she'd endured in ancient times, back when Bernardino had been in charge of her life. "Gotta go," she murmured, avoiding his eye. "Is Baum back yet?"
"You're not going anywhere. You're going to stay here and translate that fucking tape. How could you do that to me, after I left you alone to do it your way, huh?" He really didn't like the Chinese interview.
April was back on the other side of the desk in the lieutenant's visitor's chair, reminding herself he wasn't her boss anymore. Fear of him receded quickly, but now the heat rose in her body again, beading up her forehead. The sweat and puking came in waves now. April checked her watch. She had to go.
"So, what did she say?" Bernardino demanded.
"She said her job was to watch the door. You know what that means." She picked up a file from Bernardino's desk and fanned her wet face. "Let her sit in an interview room for a few hours, then try her again. I don't think she was anywhere near the place when the death occurred. Her boss must have called her at home and asked her to come down and cover for him after the girl was dumped. She didn't know the girl had been beaten. When are you going to talk to the Popescus?" Breathe in, breathe out.
"Soon."
Breathe in, breathe out. "One of them was probably messing with her. Maybe both. When I asked Annie what the victim was doing there at night, she said the girl liked to sleep there because it was quiet."
"Oh, yeah? So these jerks were running a flophouse for the girls, too?"
"This gives me an ugly idea." April closed her eyes. She was feeling really sick.
"You want to share it?"