Authors: Domenic Stansberry
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled
“The universals are mineâbut I need a few of her things, signature items, just in case. She did not take a whole lot with her, actually. And anyway, we are close enough in size.”
The woman pulled out some lingerieâa lace nightgown. It was a sheer piece of material, gauze white, and the way she held it up to herself just now reminded him of Marilyn and her white dress.
“Do you really need that?”
“Just in case, Dante.”
“In case of what?”
“Use my name.”
“In case of what, Marilyn?”
She smiled, slyly, pleased at his shyness, at his embarrassmentâsomething a little cruel, perhaps, in the way she turned from him now, folding the lingerie into the suitcase. “This is about illusion,” she said. “The illusion, I believe, is that Marilyn is going away. And Dante will join her in a few days.”
The way they had planned it, Dante had bought two tickets, one in Marilyn's name, departing today, and the other in his own name, for departure a few days hence. As far as the
company was concerned, his goalâhe wanted to give the agency the impression that he had decided to clear out, sending Marilyn on ahead.
The woman modeled a string of pearls now, holding them against her collar.
“Not those.”
“Why not?”
“They belonged to her mother.”
“Everything will be returned.”
“Leave the pearls.”
Dante carried her suitcase down the stairs, out to the car. A neighbor waved from across the way, and that was a good thing, for them to be seen, headed out like this, Dante and Marilyn.
At the end of the block, the tourist couple sat drinking coffee at an iron table that Old Man Liguria had set out in front of his grocery. It was the same pair Dante had seen earlier, out on the walk, but if they were aware of him now, as he pulled around the corner, they made no sign. In a little while, though, a gray sedan appeared on the road behind him. The sedan lingered in the traffic past Geary, into Hayes Valley.
The plan called for this woman to fly south to Long Beach, then take the ferry over from San Pedro to Catalina Island. Once there, in the hotel, her instructions were to make her presence known, out by the pool, in the lobby. When she was done, she could hang out the
DO NOT DISTURB
sign. Then, for all practical purposes, disappear.
“Your face,” she said, “it's like a postcard.”
“What do you mean?”
“A nose like that, you could be on a postage stamp.”
“I haven't heard that before.”
“Turn here.”
“I know the way.”
“We're running late.”
S
omewhere on the freeway, he noticed the sedan again, showing up in his rearview, close one moment, then farther back.
A single occupant, a man. Not close enough for Dante to see.
He slowed to let it passâto get a look at the driverâbut the car slowed, too. Close to the airport, it vanished down an access road, snaking away.
I
nside the terminal, they made a show of it.
He kissed her and they embraced.
Himself and this woman he didn't know.
Her eyes were half-shut, and she brushed his lips with her open mouth. The first kiss was innocent, almost, but the second was not that way. Her touch stirred a desire he knew would not be satisfied. Marilyn and Lake had left just at dawn and would be somewhere over the Eastern seaboard by now, edging toward the Atlantic, onward to Paris, or Barcelona, or Rome, the exact destination he did not know, nor
did Cicero. That had been the idea, for it to remain secretâfor Lake to choose the place and keep it to himself.
“At the hotel, make your presence known, but you don't want to linger.”
“You worrying about me now?”
“I just want you to understand. The situation is not without risk.”
Her assignment, the way it worked, after she checked in as Marilyn, the first two days, she would make an appearance or two, in costume, keep up the game. After that, she was free to disappear.
“I'm going to Ensenada,” she said.
“You don't have to tell me that.”
“You get tired of this game, you can join me.”
“You'll be back.”
“Sure, I'll take off these clothes. I'll do my hair. But there's no reason I have to come back here.”
She was toying with him. Holding on to his belt now, leaning in for one more kiss. It was gentle but not so gentle: a soft kiss, openmouthed, that smeared across his lips. He looked into those half-slanted eyes. They were Marilyn's shades, Marilyn's earrings. Marilyn's perfume mixed with the scent of this woman, and he imagined for a second that he might join her in Ensenada. He might cross the border and let all this go. He touched her again. He put his hand on her waist now, letting it drift, almost, wanting under those layers. He smelled the ocean. He felt the hot sand under his feet. He saw Marilyn in her white dress, out in a plaza somewhere,
in that picture how she wanted it to be. He touched her some more.
“That's good, Dante,” she said.
He watched her go down the causeway, toward security. At the last minute, she turned and waved.
But it was wrong.
The way she waved, how she reached, the little flap of the hand, it didn't look like Marilyn at all.
I
n a vinyl chair, against the airport wall, sat a man in a suit coat. The man was not a traveler. He wore sunglasses and sat with a magazine in his lap, head tilted as if reading, though, in fact, he was looking forward through his dark shades at the couple saying good-bye.
Dante had not seen him, the man knew. Or not recognized him, anyway, as involved as he had been with the woman at the security gate.
Earlier, the man had dressed in a blue Windbreaker. He'd had a camera around his neck and wandered down the hill, his travel companion by his side, and together they had sat with the tourist guidebook there at the Liguria Bakery, drinking the hot espresso. Then Dante had driven by. At that point, the man left his traveling companion behind, walking briskly to the gray car. Following.
Now he stood up.
He had already bought a ticket, the cheapest fare, not caring about the destination, because he did not intend to use it. He needed the boarding pass only to get through
security. He followed the woman with the dark hair and the hoop earrings and the wide belt, her hips swinging under the print skirt. She waited at the Long Beach gate, and he waited, too, until after she boarded, to be sure this was her flight. Then he made his call. It would have been a pleasure to pursue her himself, but the woman was not his job, not now. She belonged to someone on the other end. Meanwhile, he had his own work to do. And his companion was waiting.
D
ante walked down along the west side of Portsmouth Square, in front of Cookie Picetti's old place, where the cops and the city hall people had used to eat in the old days, just around the corner from the morgue. There was a rice parlor there now, and an empty storefront next to that, and across the way stood a hotel, from which only the day before the paramedics had wheeled an old woman who dropped dead on the interior stairs.
He surveyed the hotel more carefully. In the front window stood a crowd of Buddhas, all shapes and sizes, large and small, exorbitantly priced.
A man lurked behind the counter, bored as hell.
There were places like this all over Chinatown, selling imitation jade, statues of the divinity in obscene positions. There was nothing much in there a tourist would want, or anyone else, for that matter.
A front, he guessed, for laundering money.
If you examined the books, they'd tell you the statues had been bought cheap, wholesale, for next to nothing. Then sold to tourists, paid for in cash. Except, of course, the books were a lie. No one ever bought the statues. The money that passed through the store, it was drug money. And the statues were thrown in the bay.
He went inside and paid for the room.
He circled the Benevolent Association. Steam hissed up beneath the grate at his feet. There was a light on up top, behind the slatted shades. Love Wu, with his ancient library, full of secret papers. If the mayor was right, Ru Shen's diary was up there. Dante hung in the square, as he'd been doing these past days, surveying the building, watching the come-and-go. Tomorrow, he would check the manifest at the Chinese Historical Society.
Now he headed back through the blue light, down Stockton. The vegetable stalls were not yet closed, and a woman sold moon cakes on the corner. Pigeons fluttered in the alley. Back in the tenements there was a squalling, as of an animal being butchered. A group of tourists walked relentlessly forward in search of the wharf. Dante went on toward Fresno Street. He would have to clear out soon. He touched his nose. He ran his fingers over the long bump and felt the slope of his nose drooping infinitely downward. There was a small buzz at the center of his forehead.
The faintest whisper.
I am already dead.
T
he Lady in Blue, wearing no blue whatsoever. Chin the impeccable. She'd grown up around the corner and navigated the street as a child, no doubt, with its shadows and its crooked light. Dante regarded her from the darkness of his father's porch, in her patrol flats and gray suit, her pencil skirt and white blouse. If not for the blouse, its white sheen in the dark, he might not have seen her coming up the alley. There was a reason cops wore blue. It made for less of a target at night, when the hard business went down.
Chin, the unimpeachable.
Out all hours, forever on the job. She lived on Mt. Davidson, where the sky was perpetually overcast, in one of those buildings, those lines of condos, that circled the hill at the top of the city. San Francisco was not a big town, its boundaries confined by the Bay on one side and the ocean on the other, and those sprawling suburbs to the south. Physically
there was only so much space, the people lived crammed up close, the fog skittering overhead, the blue sky forever about to reveal itself, almost visible, up above the slipping clouds. Chin had lived all her life in the city, same as himself, walking these streets. People talked. She lived alone, and there were rumors about her on this account. About her sexuality, her private life. People in San Francisco did not care about such things, supposedly, but that was nonsense, because who you slept with, everyone cared about that.
The rumor was, Chin slept with no one.
Chin the Lonely.
Cold fish, out of water.
Last duck on the pond.
It explained the late hours, the attention to detail, why all these years she'd dressed in the colors of a cop on duty. Lately, though, she blushed her cheeks, however faintly, put some pencil about the eye, however slight, and sometimes wore a blouse with fluted sleeves. The change had come with her promotion, people said. She wanted to move to the next level, so she had finally learned. You had to be attractive to someone.
“Excuse the hour.”
“I'm awake.”
“Just a few questions.”
“You don't sleep?”
“Loose ends.”
“OK.”
“Inside would be better.”
She had come alone, no backup in the wings, no trace of
Angelo and his boys. This meant she had come to talk, not to arrest him, though that could change quickly enough. He wondered if Angelo knew about this visit. When they were partners, Dante had learned there were times when it was best not to have him along. Angelo had a tendency to go upstairs, over your head, at the first chance he got, and to do so in surreptitious ways. Over the years, his ex-partner had developed contacts with the Feds, inside the Bureau, and a case like this, who knew whom he might pull in.
Inside, boxes were scattered much as they had been during Chin's last visit, only more so. The house was in disarray, and did not give the best of impressions.
“Going somewhere?”
“Just sorting. Between the robbery, and your warrant boysâit's hard to keep up.”
“Sorting?”
“Yes.”
“You were down to the bank yesterday. You cleaned out your account. And your girlfriendâher place is dark.”
It was what he had wanted, for the word to spread, for people to think he and Marilyn were leaving town. Even so, it disarmed him how quickly Chin had followed the thread.
“Where are you going?”
“Everyone gets a vacation.”
“The way it looks to me, you don't plan on coming back.”
“San Francisco is my home.”
“They'll come after you, you know that. Same as they went after your cousin.”
“They?”
Chin's eyes were pale gray. He had noticed that paleness before, and noticed the emptiness in her expressionâin the flat line of her lips, in the brow. It was tempting to think that this emptiness contained knowledge. That she knew things she was not saying, though he understood this was not necessarily so. It was the mark of a good investigator: the ability to look as if you knew something when, in fact, you knew nothing at all.
Chin reached then into the pocket of her blazer. She had some photos, like last time, but these photos, they were not of his cousin. At least not the one on top, anyway, the one she flipped first. Rather it was a young woman, exposed from the chest up. Dante recognized her. A big-breasted young woman, dark-skinned, standing on a tabletop, her blouse undone, wearing short pants, very short, very tight. It was a portfolio photo of a certain sort, for a certain type of work.
“Do you know this woman?”
“She works at Gino's. She's a dancer.”
“A dancer?”
“Yes.”
“In what capacity do you know her?”
“In the capacity you might expect.”
“You've been asking after her quite a bit lately. Down at Gino's.”
“You in vice now?”
It was possible someone had filed a missing persons report on the girl, but Dante didn't think soâstrippers came and wentâand anyway, that kind of report would not end
up with Chin. Dante had not mentioned the girl to Chin in their earlier conversation. Apparently, she had retraced his steps that night, and had probably been retracing other things as well.