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Authors: James Scott Bell

BOOK: Don't Leave Me
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Chapter 30
Sun Cycles was a tight little shop on the south side of Ventura Boulevard. A large glass window showed off the array of motorcycles inside. Various makes, lined up like a macho dream of highway freedom, bar fights and chicks. Chuck went in and glanced at the bikes. Sunlight reflected off chrome, and the smell of new rubber and leather mixed with the slight scent of grease.
He leaned on a black and silver Street Bob, waiting for someone to come out on the floor.
“You picked a nice one.” Chuck turned and saw a short, thick-chested guy in a black tee with a sun logo.
“She’s got a twin cam 96” engine,” Black Tee said. “Chrome, staggered shorty exhaust. Classic style. You could see James Dean on this. And here’s the thing. I can get it to you for under fifteen, if you can believe it.”
Chuck said, “If I ever decide to take my life in my hands, I’ll come see you.”
“You don’t ride?”
“I’m actually looking for somebody.”
Black Tee, who was maybe thirty, squinted at him. “Yeah? Who?”
“A guy who wears one of your vests, with the logo on the back.”
Black Tee laughed. “There’s only about five hundred of those guys.”
“He has, or had, shoulder-length hair.”
“That really narrows it down.”
“Any idea?”
“Sorry.”
“You the manager?”
The guy shook his head.
“Maybe I could talk to the head guy,” Chuck said.
“You know, maybe you should call the store later, we got—”
“I’m here now.”
“We sell bikes here.”
Chuck said, “I have to find this guy, okay?”
“Why?” Black Tee said.
“I need to ask him some questions.”
“I really wish I could help.”
“Do you?”
“Listen, if you’re––”
The front doors opened and a couple came in, mid-twenties, decked out in retro rebel. Blue jeans with uprolled cuffs, black tennis shoes, white tee shirts.
“Sorry you came for nothing,” Black Tee said, then switched gears back to a tight smile and made for the couple. “How you doin’ today?”
Chuck went to the counter and looked over, through an open door on the side. A messy office space, no one inside.
He looked back and saw Black Tee engaging the couple, but also giving him the corner of his eye.
There was another door on the other side of the counter. It said
Employees Only
. Chuck hired himself on the spot and went through. He heard a faint “Hey!” from Black Tee that he cut off by closing the door and leaning against it.
He was in the garage area. A couple of denim-clad workers were tinkering on motorcycles. He felt the pressure of someone trying to open the door. The voice of Black Tee blurted through. The tinkering workers looked up.
Chuck scanned the area looking for someone in authority.
Black Tee shoved against the door again.
At which point a man with a thick mane of gray hair, carrying a clipboard, appeared from Chuck’s right, where the garage opened up to the asphalt driveway.
Chuck waited for another shove then stepped away from the door. A second later Black Tee burst through and almost went sprawling.
“What the hell is this?” the clipboard man said.
Black Tee looked around like a cat who’d fallen in the toilet. “He just walked in here,” Tee said, as if defending his watch.
“Who are you?” Clipboard said. He was about six-two. He wore a black, long-sleeved shirt with the same sun logo on the left side.
Chuck said, “I want to talk to the boss.”
“What about?”
“Police matter,” Chuck said.
“You a cop?”
“I’m working with the police,” Chuck said. “Can I have a minute of your time?”
“No way,” Black Tee said.
Clipboard said, “Go on back inside, Chip. I’ll take it.”
Black Tee looked like he wanted to rip Chuck some new nostrils. He made sure Chuck saw his face, then stormed back through the
Employees Only
door.
“Okay,” Clipboard said. “Give it to me now and make it fast.”
“My name’s Chuck Samson. Yours?”
“Nevermind me.”
“Fine. I’m looking for a guy who was seen wearing a leather vest with your logo on it.”
“Seen?”
“By a witness.”
“What’s this police matter you’re talking about?”
Chuck looked at him intently, decided he was the kind of guy you should just be honest with. He wasn’t going to be manipulated or intimidated or faked out.
“My wife was killed last year. She was seen with this guy, he had long brown hair, rode a Harley, had the vest. That’s all I know. My wife was blonde, wore her hair short, about five-eight. She was a writer for
LAEye.

“You saying this guy might have killed her?”
“No, not saying that. Who killed her was a drunk driver. But this guy might have been with her.”
“Sleeping with her?”
The words brought Chuck up short, a jab to the ribs.
Clipboard shook his head. “Don’t know anybody like that.”
“You seem pretty sure.”
“I am.”
“You don’t want to think about it?”
“Nope.”
“You’re a real sport.”
“Now you can leave.”
Chuck didn’t move.
“Or I can call a real cop,” Clipboard said. “Your choice.”
Chapter 31
As he walked down the alley behind Sun Cycles, Chuck heard a guy say, “Wait.”
It was one of the tinkerers from the shop. A lanky Latino, late twenties. He had a thin mustache that looked like it was struggling to put on weight. He said, “Keep walking.”
Like he was afraid he’d be heard or seen from the shop.
“I think I know who you mean,” the guy said.
“Tell me.”
“Keep walking, huh?”
After a few hurried steps, Chuck said, “All right, what do you know?”
The guy didn’t stop walking. Chuck kept up with him.
The guy said, “You’re talking about a guy used to come in a lot. I worked on his bike. '92 FXR. Beautiful machine. Kept up nice.”
“What’s his name?”
“Easy,
cabrón
. We got to walk more.”
“Why?”
“You’ll see.”
Chuck grabbed the guy’s arm. “Just tell me.”
The guy yanked his arm away. “Don’t touch me, man. You want something, I got it, but you gonna pay for it.”
So that was it. “How much?”
“How much you got?”
“Nothing. A couple of bucks.”
The guy shook his head. “Not enough.”
“Then we have a problem.”
“I don’t got no problem. I got a solution. Right around this corner there’s an ATM. You got a ATM card?”
“How much you talking?”
“I think you want this name pretty bad.”
“How much?”
“Six hundred.”
“You’re crazy.”
“I know. That’s what they call me.”
“Okay, Crazy. You think I’m just gonna to give you six hundred dollars?”
Crazy smiled. “I think so.”
“Make it a hundred,” Chuck said.
“Forget it.”
“How do I know it’s worth more?”
“Oh, you gonna want to know. It’s good stuff.”
Chuck’s stomach clenched.
“I’ll give you a hundred. If it sounds good I’ll give you another hundred.”
“Have a nice day.” Crazy started back toward the shop.
“Okay,” Chuck said, knowing he was had. “I’ll give you two hundred for it.”
“Three,” Crazy said.
“If it’s worth it I’ll give you another hundred.”
Crazy shrugged. “Show me,” he said.
Chuck got two hundred from the B of A ATM. After the bills were in Crazy’s hands, he motioned Chuck to the bus stop overhang. “Okay, this is how it is. His name is Thompson. That’s all I know. I never got his first name. He never talked to me, only to Russell.”
“Who’s Russell?”
“The boss.”
“So Russell was lying to me?”
“Russell is a big fat liar all the time.”
“That’s not worth another hundred.”
Chuck watched as Crazy thought it over. He wasn’t that big, maybe street tough, but Chuck was emitting a barely repressed rage. He knew the guy could feel it.
“Okay,” Crazy said. “I got one other thing to tell you. But you can’t do nothing to me about it, because it’s gonna make you mad. You hear what I’m saying?”
“Talk.”
“The money.”
Chuck hesitated. Then he got another hundred from the machine. He slapped it into the guy’s mitt.
“Okay,” Crazy said. “I only seen 'em together one time, right? Out back of the shop, okay? They were, you know, goin’ at it.”
The sound of blaring horn skewered the moment, went into Chuck’s ears like a hot poker. He felt feverish
“What exactly do you mean?” Chuck said.
“You know.”
“Spell it out.”
“Makin’ out, man. Tongues and everything. Get a room, I’m thinking.”
Chuck closed his eyes, fought to keep steady on his feet.
“Easy, man,” Crazy said.
“Get the hell away from me.”
Crazy put his hands up and backed up a step. “Okay, okay. I know how you feel, man.”
Chuck wanted to make him eat the money and then find out how he felt about it.
And he stood there alone for five minutes, maybe ten. Two, or was it three, buses stopped, loaded, unloaded. An ambulance went by, sirens blaring, Chuck wanting to be standing in front of it, then thinking what did it matter anyway? You live, you die, sometimes you die before your time, like Julia. Lying, cheating, you can do that too in life, can’t you? Do it to someone who put his pumping heart in your hands every night, letting you hold it, the only one, the only one . . . and there won’t be another like you, Julia, I won’t let the beating heart go anywhere close to that you know, thank you, you lying, lying, lying . . .
Chapter 32
Steven Kovak, born Svetozar Zivkcovic, looked at his son and almost wept. For his son, yes––for what he was not and never would be. But also for himself, for how he had failed to forge a will of iron in his only child.
But while there was time left, he would not give up. He had never given up on anything. If he could only get that through to his boy, his work on earth would be truly done and he would have peace with God.
They were on the balcony overlooking the dark Pacific. The stars were bright, the sky clear. Kovak enjoyed his pipe, but his son still looked lost in the muck of his own confusion.
“This country is the problem,” Kovak said finally. “It always has been. Oh, maybe not at the very beginning. Or during World War II. But after that the country became meek, womanish. It has allowed women to take away its martial spirit, its grit. They raise girls, not boys or men. This is why their time of greatness is gone. It will not survive. And their weakness is our advantage.”
His son’s head moved slightly downward, as if listening through one ear.
“We must never forget who we are,” Kovak said. “We come from a proud race. Deep inside us we have flowing the memory of the Turks slaughtering us in Kosovo. That was June 15, 1389. The day hell came. The day you must never forget. We learned what subjugation was then. The Turks, the Mohammedans, took our children and conscripted them. Their blood tax bled us dry. Their abuses of our women taught us to hate on a scale never before known. History is what we must remember, son, because that is what keeps us strong.”
His pipe was cold. Pausing to relight it, he looked upon his son and loved him.
“I have never told you this,” Kovak said. “Now is the time.”
Dragoslav’s head came up slightly.
“It was August, 1968,” Kovak continued. “I lived with my mother and father, your grandparents, on a farm in Kosovo. We had fields of wheat and cattle. Then the Soviets invaded Czechoslovakia and that scared Tito, Prime Minister of Yugoslavia. He was not Serb. He was Croat-Slovene, and to keep power he took the side of Albanians in Kosovo. Who then began to drive all Serbs out. One day they came to our farm. They told us to get out or die. My father refused. They took my mother and cut her open in front of us. Then they hanged my father. I pretended to scream and cry, but by then I knew I would never feel such emotions. The will to power and life flooded into me, and I surprised one Albanian with a rifle by jamming a stick into his eye. I took his rifle and killed two men before escaping on foot. I was three days without food. I thought I was going to die. Perhaps I did die, for I saw a great light just before I woke up in the bed of a Serb woman who found me, and nursed me back to health.”
He noted Dragoslav was listening intently. This was the time he had been hoping for.
“I was in an orphanage, but ran away a year later and joined the Army. It trained me well. I made a name for myself. I knew God was with me. The great light. I knew I had a destiny. In the early 1990s I came to the attention of Radovan Karadzic.”
“Karadzic?” Dragoslav said.
“The very same.”
“You never told me.”
“The time was never right. It is right now. The world calls him a war criminal. They call what we did ethnic cleansing. That is no crime, not in the eyes of God. You need only read the Jews’ book to know that. I am proud of what we did, and you need to feel that pride, too.”
“I want to, Father. I do.”
Kovak put his pipe down on the small table between them, and put his hand on his son’s head. “Of course you do,” he said. “Why then do you allow your emotions to take you away?”
“It’s the alcohol,” Dragoslav said.
“Yes,” Kovak said. “In that you speak the truth.”
“I want to stop,” Dragoslav said. “I can.”
Kovak took a handful of Dragoslav’s thick hair. He gently pulled his son’s head toward him and kissed his cheek.
Someone knocked on the French doors. Kovak saw it was Simo, indicating something in his hand.
He stood and opened the doors, went inside.
“Further information on the teacher Samson,” Simo said, handing Kovak a folder.
“Ah. Dragoslav, come inside.” He waited until his son joined them. “This concerns you as well.”
“I’m sorry, Father, I—”
“No, say nothing. To apologize is to be weak.” Kovak opened the folder.
His breath left him.
“What is it?” Dragoslav said.
“The hand of God,” Kovak said.

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