Part 1 (1/2)
Kim Oh.
Real Dangerous Ride.
Jeter, K. W.
PART ONE.
The only bad jobs are the ones where you don't get to kill somebody.
Cole's Book of Wisdom.
ONE.
”So you're gonna go see that Morton guy?”
”Yeah . . .” I didn't glance over at my brother Donnie, but just went on packing my shoulder bag with the things I figured I might need. ”Finally.”
”Be careful, Kimmie.” That was all Donnie said before turning back to his laptop on the kitchenette table. He didn't even have to say that much.
Wasn't quite sure what to expect. Like my buddy Elton had warned me, there was something definitely hinky about the whole arrangement. For the last couple months, this Morton whoever the h.e.l.l he was had been leaving text messages on my phone, all about setting me up with jobs. Or a.s.signments, or whatever you want to call them. I think the phrase he used the most often was, Lining up some business Maybe his kind of business wasn't anything I wanted to get involved with. That's why I took along my favorite .357, tucked inside my bag.
”Okay ” I slung the strap over my shoulder and picked up my helmet. ”Don't forget to eat lunch.”
He nodded, not even hearing me. Just leaned closer to the screen, tapping on the keyboard.
Down in the apartment building garage, I fired up the Ninja and headed out the ramp and onto the street. Even through the tinted face s.h.i.+eld, the L.A. sun was hard and bright enough to make me squint. The s.h.a.ggy-topped palm trees barely cast enough shadow to notice as I rolled past. No sense aiming for the freeway it would already be at a standstill, and I didn't feel like cutting between lanes the whole way. Easier to work the surface streets over to Pico, then take it all the way to Fairfax and cross there to Wils.h.i.+re, right by the La Brea Tar Pits. Then downtown . . . and Morton.
But first, along the way, there was something else I had to take care of.
Which I shouldn't have. But I did.
Because it was a lot more fun.
If you're into two-wheeled hardware, a dealers.h.i.+p is like a candy store you can ride into, then get off your bike and walk around in. Surrounded by pretty machines well, actually, some of them are kinda evil-looking. I mean the big-displacement motorcycles, like a Hayabusa or maybe a ZX-14R that thing's got nearly 1500 cc's of instant suicide. Never really seen the attraction, myself. But then I don't have to advertise my testosterone level the way guys think they do.
I parked my machine over by the service department. Carrying my bag and helmet, I walked through the slanted rows of bikes and into the showroom. My man Julie was waiting for me.
”Yo, Kim.” He stood up from where he'd been polis.h.i.+ng the rims of a stand-mounted CBR. ”We decided not to wait for you. Sold it to some college kid from the Valley.”
”Your a.s.s.” I'd already spotted the motorcycle in question, just outside, with the temp DMV plate on the rear fender. ”That bike's mine, sucker.”
”Sure is.” He gave me a tobacco-yellowed smile. ”Come on over here, and let's play with the pencils. You got the cash?”
”Cash and trade, pal.” I followed him behind the counter and into the little office with all the race posters on the walls. ”Like we arranged.”
As I said, I really shouldn't have. But I'd actually come out of my last job with a nice little wad of cash the whole bit with that rich guy Heathman and going down to Meridien with his daughter Lynndie. And I really had stuck most of it in the bank, except for the emergency bug-out fund I always keep on hand, in an envelope taped to the bottom of my underwear drawer. But I'd been thinking about this new bike for a long time . . .
So in a little less than half an hour, I was riding out of the dealers.h.i.+p lot and back onto Pico, with a brand-new Ninja 300 ABS SE underneath me. You shouldn't have, I told myself again, to which the other side of my brain replied, Yeah! Glad I did!
I'd been bringing my 250 in there for servicing, so the dealers.h.i.+p's mechanics were pretty familiar with what shape it was in. Kinda banged up, actually, with the front fairings cracked in a couple different places from the hard falls I'd taken on the bike. So Julie didn't give me much for it, but I didn't care. The Ninja 300's updated engine wasn't that much bigger than the old 250 model's had been, so it wouldn't even be that much faster but the antilock braking system was the big feature for me. Maybe if I'd had that all along, I wouldn't have gone down with the 250 as many times as I had. With these sportbikes, it's the things that keep you out of trouble that are the selling points at least for me.
Plus, the new one looked pretty cool the bodywork was all kinds of sleeker. I know that real hard-core motorcycle types think that's a shallow att.i.tude, to judge a bike by its appearance rather than just speed and handling, but what can I say? I figured I looked good on the 300. I'd debated in my head about getting it in the pearl-white finish, because that way it kinda looked like an Imperial Stormtrooper with two wheels and a racing stripe, but I'd finally told Julie to order the bike for me in all black, what Kawasaki calls ebony. Just as a practical matter sometimes I have to sneak up on people, or arrive someplace as un.o.btrusively as possible, and it's a lot easier to do that on a black motorcycle, at least at night. And of course, if you haven't put on some screamer after-market exhaust that sounds like an F-15 jet coming in for a landing. So I went with the black.
But really, practicality didn't enter into it. I just wanted something nice and new and I figured I deserved it, after some of the stuff I'd been through recently. Yeah, I'd managed to squeeze a decent payday from that job in Meridien, but it'd been tougher than I'd planned on I still had a tender spot on the side of my head, from those thugs whacking me when they'd been pretending to kidnap my client's daughter. Just pulling on my motorcycle helmet caused me to wince. Before that, though, the whole business on the freeway here in L.A., with that nutjob Richter and his crew bottling up all those cars including the van me and Elton had been in all that had gotten me was hospital bills and a scar down my left leg that was still fading.
I told the voices bickering back and forth in my head about whether I should or shouldn't have bought the new bike, to just shut up. Even in the L.A. city traffic, I was getting a kick out of riding it. Or even just waiting for a stoplight to change, with my boots down from the pedals. This Morton guy would have to turn out to be really unpleasant before my mood would be totally spoiled.
Which was why I was surprised when I rolled up to the address that I'd been given. Some of the tourist guidebooks for Los Angeles say that there's still a street corner on Wils.h.i.+re, somewhere around MacArthur Park, where you can gaze toward downtown, and somehow the angle is just right so it looks like what Raymond Chandler would've seen back in the thirties and forties, when he was writing all those hard-boiled detective novels. The Big Sleep's always been my favorite. But I don't know about any part of L.A. still looking like Chandler territory everything's so built up, with all those gla.s.s and steel towers.
Morton had texted me. The little dingy building, with its soot-blackened facade, looked like it had fallen out of some time warp and landed upright at the edge of a cracked cement sidewalk. About six stories, with old-fas.h.i.+oned signage lettered on the dusty windows a cut-rate bail bondsman, a Chinese dentist, a defunct-looking insurance brokerage. That sort of thing. It didn't look like they were getting many customers when I leaned the Ninja over on its kickstand and killed the engine, the only other human being I saw for blocks around was a bag lady in a man's tattered overcoat, pus.h.i.+ng a shopping cart half full of scavenged deposit bottles down the street. For a moment, I had the feeling that it was the bike, and that I had traveled from some modern era into one that had died and gone into rigor mortis sometime during the Second World War, if not the First.
The building's front door, with a leasing agent sign taped to the gla.s.s, was unlocked. Carrying my helmet by its strap and with my bag slung over my shoulder, I pushed my way into the dim lobby. A bare fluorescent fixture buzzed and flickered above the directory board, which had enough letters missing to make it an illegible scramble. I didn't need it Morton's last text message told me what floor to go to. The elevator looked like it'd stopped working a long time ago, with nothing but an empty shaft and dangling cables behind the creaking grille. I took the stairs.
Up on the fifth floor, I thought I could hear the mosquito-like whine of a dental drill. I pa.s.sed by that gla.s.s-paned door and headed to the one at the end of the hallway. Weirdly, there was somebody waiting outside it, sitting in one of the rickety wooden chairs lined up against the splotch-marked wall. He didn't look like he belonged there, either too well dressed, with that tailored ease only money can give. No tie, but the jacket certainly hadn't come off the marked-down rack at the Men's Wearhouse. His silvering hair was the best clue that he might've reached his sixties. He didn't glance up as I approached, but just went on thumbing the screen of the smartphone in one hand, as though idly checking his email.
”Are you . . .” I pointed to the door next to us. ”Waiting for . . .”
The man waved me off. ”You go ahead.”
I didn't like that whole bit at all. If Morton wanted to have our meeting in a dump like this, that was fine by me but I'd been expecting it to be private, just the two of us. Who was this guy? Maybe something to do with the business that Morton wanted to line up for me. Why else would he be waiting there?
I tapped a finger against the door gla.s.s. No answer. I turned the rust-spotted doork.n.o.b, pushed the door open, and went on in.
The office was empty, or at least as far as I could see. Nothing but a wooden desk sitting in the exact center of the s.p.a.ce, and looking beat-up and old enough for Moses to have edited the Ten Commandments on it. Not even a chair behind the desk. Murky sunlight, hazed by the dust on the window gla.s.s, slid through venetian blinds old enough to have grown fur on them and cast thin parallel lines on the bare floor.
I didn't bother calling out to see if anyone was around. In rooms that have been empty as long as this one, you can always tell you're the only one there.
Stepping behind the desk, I spotted the white extension cord snaking across from the electrical outlet and into the bottom drawer. At the same time, I heard that funny little boop-boop noise Skype makes. I've heard that a thousand times it's what Donnie uses to get hold of me when he's out with a school program or something like that.
Pulling open the drawer, I found a cheap HP laptop, the screen raised up a couple of inches. I took it out and set it on top of the desk, tilting the screen farther back. The Skype window said that a video call from morton2kim_private was coming in. So I'd finally get to see this Morton guy, even if he wasn't here in person. I moved the little cursor arrow over with the touchpad and tapped on the ANSWER b.u.t.ton.
TWO.
Only I didn't. See him, that is.
Instead of a live video feed, an old black-and-white photo came up on the screen. Really old, like one of the presidents whose name you never can remember Taft or Harding, or somebody like that, gazing sternly at some point beyond my left shoulder.
”Very funny,” I said, setting my hands down on either side of the laptop. The little dot of light had come on at the top of the screen, indicating that the camera was on. So he could see me, even if I couldn't get a view of him. ”You just shy, or what?”
”h.e.l.lo, Kim.”
More gratuitously spooky stuff. The voice coming out of the laptop speaker was filtered through one of those audio programs that makes the words sound like they're spoken by a chain-smoking robot. Whoever was on the other end not only didn't want me to see what he looked like, he didn't want me to hear his real voice, either.