Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

TIKI NOIR ~ The next installment

The Captain

One of the Regulars
I started this tale on another thread and was encouraged to give it a thread of its' own. I hope you folks won't be disappointed.


TIKI NOIR

RGCardella ~ 2004

Usually a double shot of Jack Daniel’s would have been my libation of choice, but since that chance meeting with “The Dragon Lady”, as I had dubbed her, my choices in everything had changed. She had effected me more in these few short weeks than any other person I have known in my life.
It all started when I got a call from an old friend. His given name was Homer, but only a fool would have called him that. Among the crowds of surfers, beach-bunnies and the flotsam and jetsam who just “hung” at the beach, he was known as, “Spider”. Spider held sway at the little hamburger joint on the beach called, “Bonnie’s”, where the phone was answered, “Bonnie’s at the beach, where the debris meets the sea”. Sitting on his favorite stool next to the jukebox, he would counsel anyone who approached with coins in hand, as to the best "sides" to choose. The box at Bonnie’s was known far and wide as having a great assortment of jazz, both “West Coast” and “East Coast”. Stan Getz, Zoot Sims, Jerry Mulligan, Horace Silver, Sonny Rollins, Ahmad Jamal – they were all there. There was a huge speaker attached to the front of the building and the sounds, both cool and be-bop, floated out over the beach.
I met Spider for lunch at Bonnie’s on one of those days that the local fathers would like to patent. The sky was as blue as the finish on my .45. The beach was covered with multi-colored blankets, which were in turn covered with young, firm, tan flesh. A grouping of surfboards, their tails stuck in the sand, stood totem-like in front of the building. As I entered, he waved me over. The place was small – tiny, really – and most everyone took the food out on the beach to eat. I shouldered my way past the counter, and as I did, my eyes locked with a pair of eyes that almost matched the sky. She had long, sun-streaked hair and was wearing a green one-piece bathing suit. She also was wearing green nail polish. Color coordinated all the way. She was all of nineteen or twenty, a little too young for me, so I broke the eye-lock that we had and sidled on over to Spider.
With his sunglasses pushed up over a shock of blond hair, Spider looked the part of a local surfer, but in reality he was a private gumshoe like me. The big difference between us was that he came from a well-heeled family. Spider’s dad had invested heavily in real estate about a dozen years ago, in a place called Anaheim. Either he was lucky or had some inside information that Disney was going to build a theme park there. The bottom line was that dear old dad made a fortune. Spider never had to worry about paying the bills. If he didn’t have any clients for a while, he just dipped into his trust fund. If I didn’t have any clients, you could find me dipping into dumpsters. Not really. Things never got that bad. Spider and I were friends, but we were also competitors. If he wanted to see me, it was because he either needed a favor, or he had bitten off more than he could chew.
“Rico. Good to see ya’ man,” he said, “I ordered when I saw you parking your car”. I knew that he hadn’t seen me in the parking lot. The windows in the place were never washed and the salt spray that continually assaulted them rendered them almost opaque. I knew he had made me by the sound of my car.
“Been a while, kid, how ya’ doin’?”
“Bitchin’ man, just bitchin’. I was thinking about you yesterday and figured it was time we touched base.”
I knew this was a line of crap, but I learned a long time ago that you never passed up a free lunch even if it was a burger and fries. Anyway, the clients that I had had recently weren’t exactly into French cuisine.
Our food was put on the counter in front of us by a short, stocky woman in her late fifties. She had salt and pepper hair that was held in place by a hairnet and the look on her face was one of perpetual disdain. Bonnie herself had brought us our food. Oh, oh, I thought. She never leaves the kitchen area unless she is going to lay into someone.
“Hi, Bonnie, how are you?” I said.
“Good to see you Rico. How come you never come by to see me anymore?”, she answered, a look on her face that told me she was neither glad to see me or gave a damn if I ever came back.
“You know how it is Bonnie, you get so tied up with work that you lose track”, I said, and added, “Spider and I are just having a bite to eat and talking over some business.”
She leaned in close to us and said, “Remember the last time you boys were down here doing ‘some business’? I had to shut down for two weeks smack dab in the middle of July to get all the blood and brains off of the sidewalk and my front door. Is that what I have to look forward to?”
I looked at her and said with the most conviction I could muster, “I swear, Bonnie, just burgers and fries and cherry pies are on our minds. Nothing more.”
The incident she was referring to had happened about two years back. I had been sitting on the beach soaking up a little sun, reading a Raymond Chandler novel, and listening to the Modern Jazz Quartet, when I see Spider hot-footing it down the narrow road that ran in front of Bonnie’s place. He was in pursuit of a man that was knocking over people like pins in a bowling alley. As the guy neared the front door of Bonnie’s, he suddenly turned and, reaching into his waistband, pulled a snub-nosed .38 revolver. Someone yelled “He’s got a gun!” and everyone within earshot dived for the sand. Spider must have been anticipating this move, because before the guy could draw a bead on him he let loose with a shot that hit the guy in the right shoulder and spun him into the wall. So here I am, sitting on the beach minding my own business and this thug with a .38 still clutched in his mitt is looking right at me. What’s a guy to do? I reached into my beach towel, withdrew my .45 and shot him in the head. That’s where the “blood and brains” thing came in. Bonnie exaggerated when she said she was closed down for two weeks because of this incident. It was more like two days to get the front of the place back in order, but while the cops were there sorting out the details, someone -- in search of a donut, no doubt -- got a good look at the kitchen and called the Health Department. The cleanup back there took the rest of the time. The best thing that came out of that shooting was my introduction to Detective Sergeant Anthony Leone. He and I had had our differences, but he was a straight shooter and fair on all counts. He knew the deceased was a bad boy and that Spider was trying to apprehend him – a wanted fugitive – when the firefight broke out. An inquest was held and everything was kosher.
I had only taken a bite of my too-raw hamburger when the window next to Spider’s head exploded into needles of glass. Everyone in the place tried to hit the deck, some ending up on top of others, and all of them screaming like schoolgirls. Spider, with blood running down his tan cheekbone, went for the piece he had stashed in the small of his back. Me? I tried to hit the floor like all the rest of the schoolgirls. No dice. Too many bodies had beaten me to it. The best I could do was huddle there against the counter with Miss Green Nail Polish of 1960 staring back at me looking like a deer caught in the headlights. Spider hurdled a body next to the jukebox, stepped on a hand -- more schoolgirl screams – and charged through the ragged screen door that covered the side entrance. He was met by a chaotic scene of people running for cover and a black ’40 Ford coupe disappearing in a cloud of dust out of the beach parking lot. I met him at the door and he gave me the description of the car. It was no use contemplating a pursuit. People were milling all over the lot and we would have a hell of a time getting out. As we returned to the building, I saw that my questions to Spider as to just why someone was trying to whack him would have to wait. Everyone in the place that hadn’t ran screaming as soon as they thought it safe to get up off the floor, was looking over the counter. It wasn’t pretty. Bonnie, who had exited her kitchen sanctuary to give us her special brand of crap, was lying face up on the floor behind the counter. There was a small, oozing, black hole in her forehead just a tad above her left eye. Her expression was one of surprise, as if she had had time to register what had just happened to her. Her dress and apron had slid up and I could see that she rolled her nylons to just below her knees. Poor Bonnie, I thought. This was going to take a lot more than two days to clean up. I wondered if I could buy her jukebox?

To be continued
 

Dr Doran

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,854
Location
Los Angeles
" The sky was as blue as the finish on my .45."

Love it.

I wonder if they were trying to off the hamburger lady and not Homer/Spider?
 

The Captain

One of the Regulars
OK, I will post some more. Truth is, I didn't think any one wanted to read more of my story. Guess I was wrong. ~RGC~


TIKI NOIR ~ Part III


It had been a long day. The sun was hiding its’ face when I finally convinced Sergeant Leone that I was a simple patron of Bonnie’s and knew nothing of the shooting, so he let me leave the station. Spider was another story. The bullet was undoubtedly meant for him, so there were many questions that Leone wanted answered. As I exited the Police Station, I couldn’t help but think that those dirty windows are what saved Spider’s ass. Chalk another one up for bad housekeeping. I went across the street to a coffee shop and ordered a coffee and an apple fritter and waited. Spider had some questions to answer for me as well.


I had just finished my fifth – or was it sixth – cup of the swill that passed for coffee in the place and was headed for the john to give my kidneys some much needed relief, when Spider walked in. His left cheek was bandaged, his shirt caked with dried blood, and he was as pale as I had ever seen him. He followed me through the restroom door, leaned with both hands on the stained sink and stared at himself in the mirror.
“Took eight stitches to close my cheek, Rico”, he said slowly. “The doctor said I was lucky that I still had an eye. Half an inch higher and…” His voice trailed off. I did my business, zipped up – carefully – turned and spoke to his reflection.
“It’s time, Spider. Time for you to dump your guts. I knew when you called me that there was a lot more to your ‘Let’s have lunch’ than two friends getting together, and that slug they’re probably in the process of digging out of old Bonnie’s head proves it.” He turned and made room for me to wash my hands at the sink.
“Honest to God, Rico, I didn’t think it was this bad. Not shootin’ bad, anyway. I knew they would be coming for me sooner or later and I figured with your help I could – you know – weather the storm.”
“You should have told me about the risks involved, Spider. Whoever it was who popped that cap this morning didn’t give a damn who he hit as long as you ended up with a toe-tag. You know, I have always had a little respect for a shooter who is pro enough to make sure that his target is the only one put down. Bonnie, even though she was a bitch, didn’t deserve this.” We walked back to the booth that I had been occupying. The few patrons in the place hid their stares behind food-stained menus, trying their best not to arouse our attention. I couldn’t blame them. We looked like two street fighters pausing for a coffee break. The “I’ve seen it all, so don’t bother me” waitress drifted over and Spider ordered a cup.
“It’s like this”, Spider started, “ Last fall I flew to Chicago on some business for my father. He’s pretty crippled up with arthritis and I’ve been his legs lately. Anyway”, he continued, “I was just killing some time in the Hyde Park Oriental Institute Museum, when this gorgeous women starts talking to me. At first I thought she was a docent or tour guide at the place, ‘cause she was obviously Asian and she was dressed in one of those high-necked, split-up-the-side dresses that cling to every curve”. Here we go again, I thought. Every time this guy gets next to a dame, there’s trouble. It’s either her boyfriend, husband, father or pimp. Maybe even a combination. For a guy that has brains, looks and money, he can screw up more than anyone I know.
“I’ve heard this tale or a variation of it from you on too many occasions, Spider. Before, it was just a black eye or bruised ego. This time someone took a slug”. Spider started to speak, but I cut him off. “Cut to the chase, kid, I’m tired. Tired of this coffee, tired of sitting here, and real tired of your woman problems”. He looked at me like a puppy that you have just given a whack with the evening Tribune. Kind of a “I’m sorry I peed on the floor” look.
“Honest, Rico, I did nothing wrong. I didn’t do anything but take her to dinner. And before you ask, we didn’t have dessert in my room. She said she was in town to attend a lecture that Chen Ning Yang was giving on the nature and behavior of elementary particles”. Usually this kind of talk would give me a headache, but I had read that Yang and his associate, Tsung Dao Lee had shared the ’57 Nobel Prize in Physics. Hey, I do read something other than Chandler once in a while.
“OK, so you had dinner with a dame that has brains to go along with her beauty. What next?” He thanked the waitress for the cup of coffee she reluctantly delivered, stirred it too many times and said, “To make a long story short, she wasn’t there to listen to Yang. At least that wasn’t her primary reason to be in Chicago. It didn’t take her long after dinner to get to the real reason she had ‘just happened’ to strike up a conversation with me. My dad.” He sat there in the green naugahyde booth with the cigarette burns and the knife slashes, looking forlorn.
“What does he have to do with it? I thought that your dad was a straight arrow. Don’t tell me he got caught in a situation where he left himself open to blackmail?” His eyes lifted from the cup that was rapidly cooling and said, “No, no, nothing like that. Dad has always been true to mom. He would never do anything like that.”
“Alright, he’s a saint. Then why the hell did “The Dragon Lady” contact you?” He looked a little embarrassed as he said, “She wanted to sell him a zither.”

I didn’t speak for at least a minute. I just sat there and stared at Spider, whose face was not going to be perfect anymore thanks to that flying glass. I thought of Bonnie lying on a cold, steel table, filleted like a herring by the coroner in search of a “cause of death”. I thought of the film I had seen a decade ago called, “The Third Man”, that popularized zither music with it’s haunting theme song. I finally found my voice.
“Spider, you better start over. For a minute there I thought you said ‘zither’ and I’m pretty sure that people don’t start shooting over zithers. At least the people that I know.” He sat back in the booth and gave me that look that says, “I am about to educate you, little man.” He drank a sip of cold, bitter coffee and started his lecture.
“We’re not talking about any modern day zither here, Rico. Oh, no, we’re talking about a six hundred year old, seven-stringed Chinese Qin from the Ming Dynasty! It was used to play ritual and ceremonial music and was touted as an avenue to spiritual purification.” This time, I did feel one of my headaches coming on. The ones that always seem to start when I am being pelted with more information than I feel necessary. He continued.
“Rico, we’re talking about one of the most cherished classical music instruments in China – and she had it! How she got it out of China I don’t have a clue. I never asked. And before you ask what my father has to do with it, I’ll tell you. He loves Oriental things. He has ivory carvings, Gansu pottery, Tou-ts’ai ware – you know, porcelain – he has a whole secure room in his house filled with ancient -- and I might add, very valuable -- things. The word is out that my dad will buy anything Chinese as long as it is documented and the price? It really doesn’t matter to him. That must be why she pounced on me. Most of my dad’s contacts know he is pretty much confined to his home and it would be prudent of them to talk to me first.” He paused and took a drink of water from the plastic glass in front of him. It was amber in color and had a faint outline of red lipstick on the side facing me. I didn’t tell him about it. So far his story didn’t sound like anything that would end in gunshots, but any business that was conducted with stolen merchandise had that potential. “Get to the zither”, I said flatly.
“The next morning she met me in my rooms and didn’t waste any time. She was carrying this long box that looked like it contained flowers. It even had a red ribbon tied around it. When she opened it I was expecting something that looked – well – expensive. It didn’t. It was a dark brown wooden thing with strings. Granted, it looked old, but it could have been a fake for all I know. She picked up her purse, took out a pair of white, cotton gloves and picked it up so I could see it better. I guess my face showed how unimpressed I was, ‘cause she looked offended. She told me that it was obvious that I didn’t have a clue of the significance of the instrument and she was right – I didn’t. What’s more, I didn’t want dad to get involved with stolen national treasures, so I told her to find another buyer.”
“You’re not thinking that she hired someone to follow you to the coast or came herself to whack you because you know who has the zither, do you? That’s quite a stretch. By your account, your dad has more than a few purloined items in his collection and he – or you – would never do anything to put him under the scope. She must have known that.” He took in a long breath of air and let it out slowly.
“There’s more to it, Rico. She told me that there were – agents – in the country, from China, who were here to secure the zither and any other items of national importance and, in her words, ‘repatriate them’. To be honest, Rico, the picture she painted of these guys scared the crap out of me.” I had this disturbing image pop into my mind of shadowy figures that knew how to kill me six ways with a paper clip. I casually reached with my right hand and adjusted my shoulder holster.
“Where do I fit into this caper, Spider? To be honest, this is your problem, not mine. Sure, we’ve covered each other’s ass more than once, but this is a whole different enchilada. Besides, once you told her ‘no’ that should have been the end of it.” A little bitty light bulb glowed dimly in the back hallway of my mind. “What if she was confronted by these ‘agents’ and she said that you had it? They could have come looking for you, but I don’t see them trying to kill you, that wouldn’t do them any good. Besides, if these guys are pros, you would be on that table instead of Bonnie.” The little light bulb suddenly burned brightly. “Wait a minute, why did you say that you knew they would be coming for you? How would you know that?” His blue eyes were studying his coffee cup much too intently. “Spider, look at me. How do you know they are here?” The puppy look came back in spades. I could see that he was trying to conjure the words, but nothing would come out. Finally, he cleared his throat and, speaking so low I had to strain to hear him, said, “ I stole it from her, Rico.”

To Be Continued
 

The Captain

One of the Regulars
TIKI NOIR ~ Part IV

TIKI NOIR ~ Part IV


There haven’t been many times in my life when I couldn’t dredge up the proper words to describe how I feel about something. They always just seemed to flow seamlessly out of my mouth. Sometimes that trait would get my ass in a sling, but nevertheless, they flowed.
“How could you be so stupid? If you believed her for just one moment when she said there were people in the country who were looking for the piece…” My voice trailed off just as he found his.
“I figured it this way. She had boosted it, so it wasn’t like I was stealing from the Chinese. My whole aim was to see that they got it back. All I was looking for was a....small finders fee. That’s the reason I called you. You have a lot more contacts than I do and I figured you might know someone in Chinatown that could put us in touch with the right people You could act as an intermediary.” I sat there looking at this young, handsome, healthy, rich kid, who didn’t have to work a day in his life if he didn’t want to, and realized something I had never thought of before. All this private eye stuff wasn’t a business with him. It was just a game. I thought again of Bonnie. She should be in the cooler by now, draped with a muslin sheet. The door of the coffee shop opened and two Asian men walked in. They were both dressed in dark suits. One wore glasses. In my line of work you learn to size up people in just a glance. My glance was enough for me to reach with my left hand and unbutton my coat. Spider had his back to the door and didn’t see them enter. They walked straight over to our booth and stopped. Glasses spoke.
“I believe you are the one known as Spider. Is that correct?” Spider didn’t say a word. He just starred at the guy. Thinking that that wasn’t particularly polite, I jumped right in.
“Yep, that’s him alright. Why don’t you fellas sit down?” Glasses looked at no glasses and got a nod. They sat, Glasses next to me and the other guy next to Spider. Glasses, looking at Spider, spoke again.
“We have reason to believe that you have an object that belongs to the Chinese people. If you would be kind enough to return it, we will be on our way.” Spider, who up until now had been just sitting there wide-eyed, seemed to find his voice and his cojones at the same time.
“Which one of you tried to kill me today?” The look on Glasses face was one of both shock and incredulity. I knew he wasn’t faking it.
“What are you talking about? We just arrived from Chicago two hours ago and why, may I ask, would you think we would want to kill you?” Spider sat there and pondered this for a moment and then said, “How did you find me?” Glasses reached into his coat and withdrew a sheet of newspaper and laid it on the table. There was a picture of Spider talking to Leone with Bonnie’s draped body being loaded into an ambulance in the background. As Spider read the caption under the picture, Glasses filled us in.
“We had been on the ground but a few minutes, when we read of your good fortune and Miss Bonnie’s lack of it. At the time of this incident we were in the air somewhere over this country’s state called Arizona. The newspaper said that you were being questioned as the possible target in the shooting, so we simply drove down here to the Police Station and waited.” Spider had one more question. “OK, say I buy all that. There’s one other thing. How did you know what I looked like?” Glasses looked…inscrutable.
“The pictures of you at the museum in Chicago, are quite good”, he smiled. “Would you like, as they say, a few ‘wallet size’ prints?” As he said this, he pushed a picture across the table towards Spider. Even upside down, the image of the Chinese girl looked exciting. The picture showed her and Spider engaged in conversation in front of a glass case filled with pottery. Glasses continued.
“We have had Miss Chan under surveillance for some time now. We were ready to confront her about the theft of the Qin when she approached you. I must congratulate you sir, on being even a better thief than Miss Chan. But how you removed it from her possession is no concern of ours, we simply want it back.” Spider looked deep into the eyes of the man across the table from him and what he saw was – nothing. No emotion, no nothing and it sent a chill up his spine.
“It’s in the trunk of my car in the lot across the street”, he said. As we exited the booth, I tossed a couple of bucks on the table and winked at the waitress who was leaning against the counter. She flipped me off. We crossed the street and walked over to the blue and white ’57 Chevy, that Spider used as his “work” car, and he fished his keys out of his pocket. He popped the trunk and the little light that came on illuminated the interior. There was a package there, wrapped in butcher paper and tied with string. Glasses reached in with his left hand and with his right produced a knife from – somewhere. He deftly severed the string, removed the paper from
the non-descript box and opened it. His eyes that had showed no emotion in the coffee shop now glowed. He looked at no glasses, gave him an almost imperceptible nod, and the two men just walked away. Spider had obviously been holding his breath, because the exhalation that came from him was audible. I hadn’t noticed, but there were tiny beads of perspiration covering his forehead.
“What do you think, Rico, am I safe now?” Good question, I thought. If these two hadn’t shot at him then who did? I dismissed the fleeting thought that Miss Chan had done it. Shooting Spider wouldn’t get the Qin back, so why do it? Something I had said earlier was trying to muscle its’ way to the front of my line of thoughts. It made it.
“Remember when I said that I held a certain begrudging respect for a shooter who is professional enough to hit only his target?” Spider wasn’t as dumb as I sometimes thought.
“Are you thinking that the target wasn’t me -- all along it was Bonnie he was after?”
“That’s exactly what I’m thinking. Of course that theory opens up a whole new batch of questions, especially for Leone. I’m thinking we should dump this whole mess on his desk and count ourselves lucky.” Spider gave me a look.
“I think we should sniff around a little before we talk to the law. We stand a better chance of finding out why Bonnie pissed off someone bad enough for her to end up like this than they do. The people that hang around her place know us, Rico, they would talk to us where the cops would get zilch.” I hated to admit it, but he made sense. Besides, I figured we owed Bonnie that much.
“OK, Spider, tomorrow we hit the beach and I don’t mean we’re going surfing.”

To Be Continued
 

Dr Doran

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,854
Location
Los Angeles
Has this all been planned in advance or are you making it up as you go along? -- never mind, I don't want to know.
 

The Captain

One of the Regulars
TIKI NOIR ~ Part V

TIKI NOIR ~ Part V


The morning came much too soon. I had spent a restless night trying to find a spot in bed that felt comfortable. No luck. At five o’clock I finally gave up and stumbled out to the kitchen and started a pot of coffee. All the coffee that I had drank last night and now I couldn’t wait for my morning fix. Well, it would have to wait for a few minutes. I shuffled into the bathroom and peed a stream that would have made Seabiscuit proud. I glanced in the mirror and was thinking about shaving, when the doorbell rang. I figured that Spider had had a night like I did and was anxious to dig into Bonnie’s killing. I was wrong. One of these days I’m going to remember that it just isn’t a good idea to answer the door in your skivvies. The picture that I had seen of Miss Chan hadn’t done her justice. She stood there with a half smile on her perfect face. I, on the other hand, stood there and gaped. I recovered my composure in a moment or two and stood aside for her to enter. Sure, I was in my skivvies, but my first concern was about the condition of my little bungalow. OK, so I’m a little freaky when it comes to my surroundings. It’s a condition I have courtesy of the United States Marine Corps. I like being “squared away”. A quick glance around the room told me that it passed muster. Now, the bedroom was something else. I had taken a quick shower and just fallen into bed. My clothes were wherever they happened to fall. Of course, the condition of my bedroom didn’t make any difference unless Miss Chan had occasion to be in it, and as yet I hadn’t even introduced myself. I introduced myself.
“If you’re here you must know who I am, but just to make it formal, my name is Rico Danova.” I extended my hand and she took it in hers. Her hand was warm and soft, but her grasp was firm. She smiled.
“Mr. Danova – Rico – it is a pleasure to meet you. I have met your associate, Mr. Webster, or Spider as he is known, but up until now I have only observed you from a distance. I thought it time that we met.” Her eyes that were looking at my face, slowly started to look lower. I had forgotten that I was in my underwear. Geez!
“Excuse me a moment while I get some clothes on. There’s coffee in the kitchen, help yourself. By the way – what’s your first name”?
“It’s Laura, Rico.” As I moved to the bedroom to get dressed, I thought that “Laura” was too westernized a name for such an exotic looking woman. I quickly put on a pair of faded Levi’s and a T-shirt emblazoned with a picture of Miles Davis. I slipped on some clean socks, crammed my feet into my favorite cowboy boots, and walked back into the front room. Laura was sitting on the couch. There were two mismatched cups of steaming coffee on a Corona beer tray sitting on the old steamer trunk that I used as a table.
“Sorry for the casual atmosphere, Laura. If I had known I was going to have company I would have got out the good setting.” I gave her an apologetic look.
“Don’t apologize. I think it is quaint, but functional and it gives me a little look into what kind of person you are”, she said.
“I take that as a compliment.” We both sipped gingerly at the hot coffee. “What did you mean when you said that you had observed me from a distance ”?
She smiled that same “I know something you don’t know” smile. “I was watching when Spider relinquished the Qin to the government men. It was a prudent move on his part, as they would not have hesitated to remove it from his possession by whatever means necessary. You understand I’m sure.” Yes, I did understand. I got that impression the minute I saw them in the coffee shop. No nonsense guys. If they had been Italian instead of Chinese I would have thought of them as “soldiers” or “button men”.
“Laura, although I’m flattered that you wanted to meet me, I have a feeling that there is another reason for your being here”, I said. She started to speak but was cut off by the sound of a ringing telephone. I reached over, picked up the receiver and said “Hello”. There was no one there and for some reason the thing was still ringing. What the hell is going on here, I thought. The ringing got louder and – as my eyes popped open – I realized that it was the doorbell I was hearing. I was in bed, wrapped up like a mummy in the sheets and sweating like a racehorse that had just finished the mile. I fought my way out of bed, stubbed my toe as I passed the dresser – the clock said six AM – and stumbled into the front room. I reached for the knob and decided that I should see who it was before I opened the door. I peeked out of one of the narrow side windows that flanked the door and saw Spider’s Chevy parked at the curb. I opened the door and he sauntered in.
“Couldn’t sleep, Rico. Thought we could get an early start”, he said. I just stood there and stared at him. “Earth to Rico! Hey man, wake up”. I shook my head to clear the cobwebs and headed for the bathroom, giving the old steamer trunk a glance as I did, half expecting to see the coffee cups sitting there. Damn! Talk about your realistic dreams! If I thought about it for a moment, I could still smell a hint of her perfume – Opium – on the air.
“Fix us a pot while I get my act together, Spider, I really need a cup”. I went into the bathroom and did what I had dreamed I did earlier. I went into the bedroom and put on a pair of Levi’s and realized something. I didn’t have a T-shirt with a picture of Miles on it. Some detective I am. That should have been the first clue that I was hallucinating. The second clue was the Corona Beer tray. That disappeared into the trash months ago. It was dented beyond repair when I swung it into the face of some cretin that was in the process of climbing through my kitchen window. The short-sleeved sweatshirt I put on had a picture of Snidley Whiplash in front of a red, white and blue shield with the words, “A Great American” below. Yeah, I’m a fan of Jay Ward. I put on my old, scuffed, but soft-as-butter cowboy boots, placed my .22 Berretta automatic in the custom holster I had sewn into the right boot and went back to the front room. Spider was slouched on the couch busily devouring a bear claw. There were two cups of coffee sitting on the steamer trunk.
“There’s a fritter in the kitchen for you, Rico”, he said. I thanked him and went into the kitchen. I stood in front of the counter and stared out of the window at the sliver of ocean that I could see. In Southern California a property is listed as “Ocean View” no matter how small and insignificant that view actually is. My little one bedroom, one bath bungalow was a block away from the beach, but was set on the lot so that I could see between two houses that faced the street that ran along the cliff above the beach. There were numerous footpaths on those cliffs, mere scratches in the face, that surfers and others too lazy to walk north a half mile, used to access the beach. From time to time there was an accident, usually involving a tourist or drunk that fell to the rocks below. I remembered an incident last summer, when a dog, busily chasing a ground squirrel, found that he couldn’t go up or down. His pathetic barking roused a sunbather who called the Fire Department. One of the firemen rappelled down the face of the cliff and the dog, evidently very glad to see him, leaped into his arms and, licking the fireman’s face all the way up, was returned to solid ground.
“Hey! Bring that fritter in here so we can talk”, said Spider “If we’re going to dig into Bonnie’s life we need to make some plans”. I picked up the fritter, placed it on a plate and walked into the front room. Spider had finished his bear claw and was just about to brush the crumbs from his shirt when he say me looking at him and changed his mind.
“Spider, for the life of me, I can’t think of any reason someone would have that would drive them to toss a slug her way. Sure, she is – was – a miserable bitch, but killing her? That’s a little over the top.” He looked at me for a long moment and said, “Then maybe I was the target.”
That thought had been doing laps in my mind as I tried to get to sleep last night. Spider, for all of his boyish charm, could be a large pain in the ass. He was a little too eager to close the cases he worked and he had stepped on a lot of toes. And then there was the female element. His love-‘em-and-leave-‘em attitude had made a lot of ladies very unhappy with him. I was pretty sure that it wasn’t a dame that fired the shot that put an end to Bonnie’s life. Most of the dames I know would rather do the deed up close and personal. The shooter, whoever it was, cranked off the shot from the beach parking lot. And then there was the car that he – they? – left in. A ’40 Ford coupe isn’t the ride of choice of most women. This wasn’t going to be easy.
“What are you involved in at the moment? Anything that has the potential for gunplay? “ He looked at me and said “No. Nothing. I finished up a case last week that involved a runaway teenager – found the chick in a motel up in Fresno with another chick – but most of my stuff has been pretty light-weight for months now.” We sat there for a couple of hours and beat the hell out of every possible theory that we could dredge up. Nothing. Okay, so this was getting us nowhere.
“Let’s go down to the beach. I feel like having a drink with an umbrella sticking out of the top of the glass”, I said. Spider looked at me with a quizzical face. “Sniffing around Bonnie’s place isn’t going to get us much, besides the place is still a crime scene. Let’s go to ‘The Hut’. Maybe we can pick up some gossip there.”
The Hut was a local hangout for the surf crowd. The decor was strictly southern California beach, with lots of bamboo, palm fronds and tapa cloth. The draft beer was cold and the bartenders could make a decent mixed drink, but their specialty was knowledge. I don’t mean to infer that the glass polishers that walked up and down behind that bamboo bar were mental giants. On the contrary, they were dedicated surfers who worked only enough to support their surf habit. When they weren’t working, they were in the water and that water was in front of Bonnie’s. If anyone knew anything, had heard anything or had seen the car that roared out of the lot, you could make book that the bartender at The Hut knew it too.

To Be Continued
 

Nashoba

One Too Many
Messages
1,384
Location
Nasvhille, TN & Memphis, TN
yeah me too. this story is becoming and addiction for me....I need to know what happens....I need my fix.....I'm not good at waiting for these kinds of things. I'm the kind of person who will stay up all night reading a book just to see how it ends. Most of the books I read, I read in single sittings regardless of the length...
 

Dr Doran

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,854
Location
Los Angeles
Nashoba said:
yeah me too. this story is becoming and addiction for me....I need to know what happens....I need my fix.....I'm not good at waiting for these kinds of things. I'm the kind of person who will stay up all night reading a book just to see how it ends. Most of the books I read, I read in single sittings regardless of the length...

The proper way to read. We don't halt movies halfway and pick them up again a week later, do we? I admire anyone who soldiers through and forces herself/himself to finish a book ... I did that with Martin Amis' London Fields which I found odious but I figured I'd just push myself through.
 

BegintheBeguine

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Doran said:
The proper way to read. We don't halt movies halfway and pick them up again a week later, do we? I admire anyone who soldiers through and forces herself/himself to finish a book ... I did that with Martin Amis' London Fields which I found odious but I figured I'd just push myself through.
Um, I watch movies that way, Doran. :eek: Dare I admit here on the Lounge that the only books I tend to read in one sitting are true crime? By then it's 4AM and I have to sleep with the light on, I'm so scared, which of course only makes it easier for The Zodiac to find me in the house....They never caught him, you know.
 
BegintheBeguine said:
By then it's 4AM and I have to sleep with the light on, I'm so scared, which of course only makes it easier for The Zodiac to find me in the house....They never cought him, you know.
This, Ms. Ashley, is part of why some of us place so much study in the art of "threat management" (management potentially meaning "nullification" if necessary...)--I quite literally keep a copy of Gray's Anatomy (the original medical reference, not the TV series) at bedside and reread a chapter every night to reinforce my knowledge of anatomical weak-points. Book's heavy enough to make a good throwing weapon too...:D lol

Cap, an interesting tale to say the least! Nicely started...
 

BegintheBeguine

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Doran said:
The proper way to read. We don't halt movies halfway and pick them up again a week later, do we? I admire anyone who soldiers through and forces herself/himself to finish a book ... I did that with Martin Amis' London Fields which I found odious but I figured I'd just push myself through.
However, I abandon books and movies if I don't care about what happens to the characters. Life's too short and I have too many books to re-read. ;)
 

Nashoba

One Too Many
Messages
1,384
Location
Nasvhille, TN & Memphis, TN
Doran it's a habit that drives my husbad crazy when he's trying to sleep. Part of it stems from insomnia...these days I have the lounge and our recent abundance of noir stories.

Ashley, thanks I'll sleep easier tonight lol. I'll abandon movies but I rarely abandon books. though I have been known to skip to the end.

Diamondback - Yeah, that's why I have an 80lb dog who goes cujo on anyone who doesn't have permission to enter the house and hasn't been properly introduced to him. He's a good dog :)
 
Nashoba said:
Diamondback - Yeah, that's why I have an 80lb dog who goes cujo on anyone who doesn't have permission to enter the house and hasn't been properly introduced to him. He's a good dog :)
OT: Ummmm..... yeah, that works too. Unfortunately, dogs and I don't get along, so it's all on me, my better-than-normal senses, and whatever improvised or purpose-made weapons I have available...
 

Nashoba

One Too Many
Messages
1,384
Location
Nasvhille, TN & Memphis, TN
Diamondback said:
OT: Ummmm..... yeah, that works too. Unfortunately, dogs and I don't get along, so it's all on me, my better-than-normal senses, and whatever improvised or purpose-made weapons I have available...


aww he's a sweetie. more bark than anything else but he serves his purpose.

So Captain....when's the next installment come out??? I need my fix :D
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,009
Messages
3,072,589
Members
54,037
Latest member
GloriaJama
Top