True Blue (24 page)

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Authors: David Baldacci

BOOK: True Blue
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P
SYCHO CIRCLED THEM
once and then twice, nodding, smiling, and glancing at his men and then back at Mace and Roy. A little taller than Roy, he had on black jeans, a sparkling white T-shirt, and tennis shoes. Several gold chains were visible at the neckline of his tee. His hair was cut so short it was more like a membrane over his scalp. His forearms were veined, muscled, and heavily tattooed. Mace noted that his pupils were normal-sized and his forearms clear of needle marks. You didn’t last in that business if you were a user, she well knew. Life and death were often separated by only a rational, nimble decision.
On the third pass he stopped and stood in front of them.

“How’s Alisha?” Psycho asked in a surprisingly high-pitched voice.

“Doing okay.”

“They say you with Social? Why don’t I believe that?”

“We’re not cops,” said Mace.

“Hey, lady jumped right to it. Must be smart, so I know she’s not the blue.” His crew laughed. Psycho said, “Then let
me
play the ‘blues’ part, okay?” Not waiting for an answer, he stood straight and assumed a mock stern expression. “Now you two got anything on your person that might
concern
me?”

Several of his crew guffawed at this.

“Not unless you object to a set of keys and a couple cell phones,” said Mace.

“Couple?”

“Yeah, one for business and one for pleasure.”

Psycho flicked his hand and two of his men came forward and performed the frisk. One squeezed Mace’s butt and he got an elbow driven into his gut for the trouble.

“Whoa, lady got some fire,” said Psycho. “You step back in line there, Black,” he said to the doubled-over man. “Before you get your ass thumped.”

He eyeballed Mace. “So no guns, no badge, that still don’t mean no cops. Could be undercover.”

“Don’t even undercover agents carry guns?” asked Roy. “Especially coming around here?”

Mace let a small groan escape as Psycho turned to Roy. “You got a problem with
around here
? What, you don’t like
around here
, Mayonnaise Boy?”

Roy managed to swallow a sudden lump in his throat. “I never said that.”

“Yeah, you ain’t got to say it. I smell it.” He glanced at Mace. “This your old lady?” He ran a tongue over his lips as he checked out Mace. “Fine-looking woman.”

“It’s a business relationship,” said Roy, who instantly regretted having said it.

“A business relationship!” whooped Psycho. “A business relationship?” He turned to his men. “He got himself a business relationship with the chick.”

They all laughed, and then Psycho spun around so fast it was a blur. “Then you ain’t mind if I do this, then, business relationship dude?” He moved to squeeze one of Mace’s breasts, but Roy grabbed his hand and pushed it away.

“Yeah I do mind.”

The crew fell silent.

Psycho looked down at the hand Roy had grabbed and then back up, his grin intact. “You really want to go there, mayo?”

“Not really, no. And I won’t so long as you keep your hands off her.”

“So not you then?” Psycho’s arm moved so fast Mace heard the impact before she even saw the swing of the fist. Roy staggered back, grabbing his face, and then fell down. The blood streamed down from his nose, and his eye was already swelling.

Mace quickly moved in front of him. “Look, we talked to Alisha about helping her and her son. That’s all.”

Psycho shoved her aside. “’Scuse me, bitch, but I ain’t done thumping me this asshole.”

As Psycho advanced on Roy, Mace reached in her pocket for her Taser phone. But before she could snag it two of Psycho’s men grabbed her and held her arms behind her back.

Psycho’s foot snapped into Roy’s gut, doubling him over.

Mace yelled, “We’re leaving, okay? We’re outta here right now.”

Psycho turned back around. “
I
say when you outta here. And
how
you outta here. Walking or not. Breathing or not. Up to me. Me!”

He faced Roy and aimed a leisurely kick at his ribcage. The next moment Psycho had been spun around and was dumped on his knees. Roy’s arms were angled through Psycho’s arms and boxed around the other man’s head, his blood dripping onto Psycho’s scalp.

Roy said, “Seventy pounds of torque to the right and your spine snaps right in half. And there’s not a damn thing you can do about it, you prick. And one of your guys pulls a gun, you turn into a corpse.”

Psycho could only kneel there, his thick arms stuck uselessly out from his sides.

“They will kill your woman. All I got to do is say it.”

“You’re going to kill us both anyway. At least I’ll have the pleasure of taking you along for the ride.”

“What’s this pounds of torque bullshit!”

One of Psycho’s men stepped forward. “It’s Marines. It’s how they’re trained to kill perimeter sentries. Shit’s for real, boss,” he added quietly.

Psycho looked up at his guy. “You in the Marines, Jaz?”

“Older brother was. He told me.”

“You a Marine?” Psycho said to Roy.

“Would it matter?”

“You kill me, they kill you and the woman. Now if you don’t kill me,
I’m
gonna kill you both. How ’bout that?”

Roy looked past where Psycho’s men were standing. “How about another option?”

“What?”

“The really manly way to settle disputes.”

“Knives? You ain’t that dumb. I’ll cut your mayo ass up.”

“I said
really
manly.”

“Meaning what?”

“Meaning basketball. One-on-one. There’s a court and a ball right over there.”

Mace turned her head to stare at the single netless hoop and the old ball resting next to the support pole.

“Basketball!” roared Psycho. “Just ’cause I’m black you think I play ball?”

Roy glanced down. “No. But you’re wearing the same shoes that the UNC team wears on the court. And they’re not just for show. They’ve got black scuffs all over the bottoms and the sides. That only comes from playing ball on the asphalt. In fact, I can tell from the scuff patterns that you’re a drive-to-the-hoop and not a pull-up jumper kind of guy.”

“So you know your basketball?”

“I’m a fan. Is it a deal?”

“Sure, man, no problem.”

Roy tightened his grip on the man’s neck. “Don’t bullshit me.”

“I ain’t bullshitting you.”

Mace said, “That’s a good thing. Because if you say you’ll do it and you don’t, then you just lost the respect of your entire crew. They may not show it today, or tomorrow, but one day they will. Their boss, who wouldn’t take a white boy on in hoops? Rather shoot his ass? Yeah, that’s real easy. See, you already let him get the jump on you. And you may try to sound all cool and everything, but you’re the one on your knees with another man making the decision whether you live or die. He could kill you right now. But he didn’t. What he’s offered you is respect. A way to settle this, man to man.”

Psycho’s superior manner slowly faded as he eyed his troops one by one. None of them would fully meet his gaze.

“So what’s it gonna be?” said Mace.

“Play to eleven, a point a hoop and win by two,” snarled Psycho. “Meaning
I
win by two. Now you let go of my neck so I can kick your ass.”

Roy slowly released the man and Psycho stood, carefully wiping off the knees of his jeans. He looked Roy up and down. “Do you even know
how
to play ball?”

“A little.”

“A little don’t cut it,
around here
.”

“We can flip a coin to see who gets the ball first.”

“Oh, you can have it first. Be the only time you get the damn ball. Oh, and here’s one more thing to keep in mind. You win, you both walk. I win, you’re both dead.”

P
SYCHO STOLE
the ball from Roy by burying a shoulder in his gut and knocking him down before dunking and scoring the first point. He walked back over to Roy, who was slowly getting to his feet. Psycho kicked him hard in the shin.
“That’s one.”

“That was also a foul,” said Roy.

“Ain’t no fouls on this court. Just man to man.”

“Your ball.”

Roy had played against every competition imaginable both on the college basketball court and on the streets. Most guys had one signature move, the best two, the very best three. He let Psycho drive past him and score, taking an elbow shot to the thigh.

That was one move, Roy thought to himself.

Psycho scored again, using a different move.

That was two moves.

He glanced over at Mace, who was staring at him anxiously. He gave her a quick wink and then went back on defense, setting his butt low, his feet and hands spread wide.

Psycho drove again and scored using his first move. Or he would have if Roy hadn’t stuffed the ball so hard it knocked Psycho flat on his back on the asphalt.

“My ball,” said Roy as he snagged it and dribbled it back and forth between his legs without even looking down.

As Psycho started to guard him, Roy backed up and banked a twenty-footer.

“That’s one,” said Roy.

A minute later a reverse dunk and then a twenty-foot fader by Roy tied it.

“Three-three.”

Five minutes later, and despite Psycho fouling him brutally at every opportunity, Roy was up by six and his opponent was bent over clutching a stitch in his side while Roy wasn’t even sweating.

With a perfectly executed crossover dribble that had Psycho frantically backpedaling and then falling on his ass, Roy drove past him and slammed the shot home.

“That’s ten,” announced Roy. “One more to go.”

He took the ball and bounced it back and forth between his legs while he studied his staggered opponent. Psycho was humiliated, tired, and pissed. Roy could at least let the guy make it respectable.

Screw that.

He dribbled backward and stopped, set up, and nailed a twenty-five-footer. The ball didn’t even touch the metal rim as it dropped through.

The ball bounced on the asphalt and came to a stop against the post.

“That’s eleven. You lose. We walk.” He headed over to Mace.

Psycho lunged forward and grabbed a gun from one of his men. Breathing hard, he pointed it at Roy’s back.

Roy turned around. “Is there an issue?”

Wiping the sweat from his eyes Psycho said, “Where’d you learn to play ball like that?”

“On a court just like this.”

“You lied to me. You said you knew how to play just a little.”

“Everything’s relative. You might not be as good as you think you are.”

Psycho cocked the pistol’s hammer back.

Mace pulled free from the two men holding her and moved between Roy and the gun. “Everybody here heard you set the rules. He wins, we walk.
Your
words.”

Psycho eyed his crew and then looked back at Mace. The gun came down one inch at a time.

“Get your asses outta here. Now!”

“Just so we’re clear, this is not a cop thing. We’re with Social. We just came here to help Alisha get a better life, for her and her
son
. Don’t make her a part of this, because she’s not.”

Psycho said nothing. He strode off. His crew followed quickly.

When they were alone Mace turned to Roy. “That was unbelievably kickass.”

“Would it be really unmanly if I wet my pants right now?”

“I wouldn’t think any less of you.”

“So what about Alisha and Tyler? Do you think he’ll leave them alone?”

“Call me stupid, but I don’t trust anyone whose name is Psycho. I’m going to have Beth get her and the kid out of here.”

“And her brother?”

“Yeah, I guess so.”

“I suppose we can do some more interviews today,” he said doubtfully.

“I think they can wait. Let’s go back to Abe’s.”

“Is he home?”

Mace used her sleeve to wipe the blood off Roy’s face. “I don’t care if he is or not. I need to get my little hero cleaned up.”

She took his hand and led him back to the Honda.

No one bothered them on the way out.

M
ACE PUT
the pack of ice over Roy’s nose as he sat in the spa in Altman’s guesthouse. “How’s it feel?”
“Broken. But then so does my leg, my ankle, and my ribs.”

“At least the swelling around your eye’s gone down. You want to go to the hospital?”

“No, I’ll be okay so long as I stop interacting with guys named Psycho.”

“I was going to order out for Chinese, but when I called the main house to see if they had a take-out menu, Herbert seemed indignant. So he’s preparing a Chinese dinner just for us.”

“Very nice of Herbert. Where’s Altman?”

“The Bentley’s gone, so maybe he ran out to do something.”

Roy sat up straighter, positioning the ice pack under his eye. “Did you get through to your sister?”

“She had Alisha and Tyler picked up and brought to Social Services.”

“And her brother?”

“He wasn’t there. That guy worries me.”

“That he’ll go after Psycho, you mean?”

“Yep. And that means he’ll be dead.”

She sat on the edge of the spa. “You know why I brought you along with me today?”

“For the comedic potential?”

“No, to keep an eye on you.”

He took off the ice pack and swiveled around to look at her. “To protect
me
?”

“After those guys came after me I knew they’d run your license plate and find out who you were. I was worried. But the only thing I did was set you up in a death match with an asshole named Psycho. What a genius I am.”

He gripped her hand. “Hey, you had no idea that was going to happen. And we did okay. Right?”

“You did great, not just okay.”

“You must be rubbing off on me.”

They stared at each other. She stroked his hair and he rubbed her arm.

“You up for getting wet, Mace?” he said quietly, his gaze melding into hers.

They heard a sound from downstairs. Mace jumped to her feet. “That must be Herbert. Do you want me to bring the food up here or do you want to eat outside overlooking the stunning gardens?”

He let go of her hand. “Stunning gardens sound good.”

“Take your time, I’ll keep the food warm.”

As she fled down the stairs Roy slowly sank back into the water.

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