Read Troubleshooter Online

Authors: Gregg Hurwitz

Tags: #Los Angeles (Calif.), #Serial murderers, #California, #United States marshals, #Prisoners, #General, #Rackley; Tim (Fictitious character), #Suspense fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Espionage

Troubleshooter (16 page)

BOOK: Troubleshooter
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"Mind if we turn down the TV?" Bear roared.

"What?"

"Mind if we turn down the TV?"

"What?"

This repeated a few more times until Bear resorted to sign language. The volume eased, and pleasant introductions commenced, the man shaking their hands vigorously, Tim's elbow aching with the snapping gesture. Lash seemed unsurprised by the appearance of three deputy marshals, even pleased to see them.

A circular scar stretched tight and shiny over his right biceps, pinched at the edges like a Reese's peanut butter cup. The twitch at his jaw and scurrying fingers showed off a meth high in overdrive; pockmarks said it wasn't a new habit. A silver-dollar-size patch of skin at his massive left pectoral fluttered to his heartbeat, an incongruous fragility. Scabs and bruising spotted the crooks of his elbows, his wrists, between his fingers. Continuing to stretch, Lash stepped on the end of each of Bear's sentences.

"We understand you used to ride with the S--"

"Seven years of full-color-flying mayhem."

"We had a few questions--"

"No problemo, podnuhs. You pay, right? For info? I'll leak you a few words for a price. Times are tough, my friends, times are tough."

Bear fed Lash a twenty to keep the wheels greased, letting the hundred show beneath his money clip. Lash snapped it up, the bill disappeared into a drawer, and then he was stepping into a seventies-appliance-yellow wrestling singlet, bouncing on one hairy leg as he strained into the Lycra.

Bear asked, "Why'd you get kicked out?"

"Little trouble with the needle." Lash fluttered the curtain a bit, letting the breeze pull through the screen. " Scuse the ripeness, lads, enchiladas been chasin' me around the room all night."

"The club gives a shit you used drugs?" Bear asked.

His fingers picked at the fabric, readjusting it to his contours. "Loyalty to the needle is greater than loyalty to the Sinners. We could sell but not partake. That's a lot of road time with the lady calling out from the saddlebag. I never liked the 'ow' in 'willpower.' And so it goes, my friends, and so it goes."

Guerrera indicated Lash's disrupted top-rocker tattoo. "The nomads take the 'Sinners' off your back?"

"Yup. With a wire brush. I'm appreciative, actually. They could've knifed the whole backpack--infection woulda killed me for sure." He gripped his biceps, displaying the circular scar as if offering it for purchase. "Burned over my one-percenter tat with a hot spoon. I miss that one the most, cuz I saw it every day."

"How long ago?"

"It was, shit, two years back. Before they went down for croaking those spics." A glance to Guerrera. "No offense." Lash hoisted one knee to his chest, then the other, grimacing at the hamstring tug. "They're not bad guys, Den and Kaner. They showed up, we was all like, 'Let's get this motherfucker done.' They let me have a few shots of whiskey before they held me down. Didn't use the electric drill or nothin'." He broke wind once, decisively, and headed for the door. "I'm late for an appointment. Walk with me. Your cash is still good across the street."

Lash took the steps two at a time, his stentorian humming picking up the Teutonic Warner Bros. melody. They scrambled to keep pace. He crossed the dark street, a few of the guys laughing at him and calling out. "Hey, Great Mustaro, good luck."

Lash offered a warm, crooked grin and a celebrity's departing wave. "Thanks, lads." They approached the double doors of a decrepit gymnasium, Lash still humming.

Bear said, "Listen, we really just need a few more minutes to--"

Lash hit the swing panels, and the roar of the waiting crowd inside was so shocking it put Tim back on his heels. The ropes of the elevated boxing ring had been restrung with barbed wire. The wall-folding bleachers were packed with chanting fans, men and women holding up fistfuls of cash like cartoon gamblers. A menacing form clad in orange tights and a flickering cape waited in the boxing ring. A banner overhead announced EXTREME FIGHTING SEMIFINALS.

A voice thundered, "And his opponent, at six-six, three hundred and five pounds..."

"I haven't seen three-oh-five since the eighties," Lash muttered to Bear, giving his fellow scale-tipper an elbow jostle.

"...the Great Mustaro!"

The room erupted. Lash continued his Mike Tyson charge to the ring, with Bear, Tim, and Guerrera still pursuing, befuddled. "They say grapplers are tougher than strikers," Lash shouted to them above the clamor, "but I'll take on a grappler any day."

Lash waved off an anxious older man--the gym owner? "The badge boys are okay. They're with me."

The fighter in the ring who--unintentionally?--resembled one of the dreadlocked albinos from The Matrix, beckoned with both hands; the gesture was Bruce Lee by way of Chris Farley.

"All right, lads, gimme a sec." Lash fisted the barbed wire and hoisted himself into the ring, leaving the deputies standing in the front row.

The albino charged in a football tackle, and Lash caught him over the clutching arms and hurled him against the barbed-wire ropes. The guy hung for an instant, snagged, before hitting canvas. He staggered to his feet, and Lash caught him in a surprisingly fluid fireman's carry, flipping him. He slammed the canvas so hard Tim felt it through his boots. The albino rose, snapping his fingers, and his cornerman tossed him a wooden chair. He grabbed it by a leg, whipping it at Lash's head. Lash caught the chair, yanked it free, and set it down on all four legs. He head-butted his opponent, who staggered in a sloppy circle before collapsing into the chair. Lash straddled him stripper style, continuing to administer forehead smashes like a deranged woodpecker. The chair disintegrated, but Lash kept banging away, sitting on the guy's stomach like a kid playing Chinese torture, his face splattered with his opponent's blood.

Before the deputies could intervene, the whistle blew and Lash rose. His opponent gasped and coughed blood. Tim scrambled into the ring and rolled the albino on his side; he drooled out a crimson mouthful. Lash grabbed Tim's hand and raised his arms in victory, the crowd going wild, referees and cut men pouring into the ring. Lash fisted the barbed wire and tugged it down for Tim to step over. He blazed through the boisterous crowd, Tim, Bear, and Guerrera following in his wake and ducking high fives.

They finally arrived back in a small office, the closed door providing an abrupt and disorienting silence. Lash settled into a chair, gauging the cuts in his hands with a scientist's detachment. "Sorry, lads. Where was we?"

Perspiring heavily from the near confrontation, Bear looked unamused. "The Sinners."

"Oh, yeah, right. You got more dead presidents in that pocket of yours, chief?"

Bear withdrew another Jackson but kept the Franklin buckled down. Lash added the twenty to his take from the fight--fifty-five bucks in crumpled tens, fives, and ones.

Bear said, "You know about the transport-van break. And the Cholos massacre. Something big is going down. What?"

"I dunno. I'm out of that game. But Den and Kaner, those boys don't fuck around. From the aftermath, looks like they got their mitts into something tasty."

"Like what?"

"Two years out, pal. Can't help you there."

"You know anything about a Rich Mandrell? Goes by Richie Rich?"

"Must be a new addition."

"How about a Danny the Wand?"

"Course. Best sprayer you'll ever meet. An artist."

"You have a real name?"

"Nope. Just Danny the Wand."

"This Danny, he rides his rep pretty hard."

Lash's hearty laugh was part roar, part grumble. "You'd better not tell Danny that, man."

"Why not?"

"You'll see."

"Where can we find him?" Tim asked.

"Beats the hell outta me. Used to have a shop over on..." Lash snapped his fingers a few times. "I think it was by the Harley dealer in Glendale. But Danny closed up shop. Have spray gun, will travel. I think freelance spraying pays better dough anyway. We lost track."

Bear removed his money clip, tapped it against his palm. Lash's eyes tracked its movement; he reflexively fingered the bruises on his arm.

"We want to find the nomads," Bear said.

"Good luck, man. The Sinners got safe houses all over the state, no papers on 'em, nothing. They roll 'em over every six months."

"Do you have any addresses? Relatives, girlfriends, ex-wives? That's what we need here, Lash, an address."

Lash chewed his lips for a while, his beard bunching like a fist. "Intel officer's who you want. He's the keeper of the plans. The one with the files, the hard facts."

"Chief?"

Lash looked surprised that Bear had produced a name. "Yeah, that's right."

"Where's he lay his head?"

"No one knows. Not Uncle Pete. Not even the other nomads. And that's God's truth. The intel officer runs separate from the pack, never goes to the clubhouse. Keeps his own safe house, even. That's where all the dirt is."

Bear slid his fat money clip back into his pocket and angled toward the door. Tim and Guerrera shadowed his body language.

Lash half rose out of the chair. "He's got a deed, Chief, but you won't get shit from her. Not a damn thing. Don't even bother. The Cholos one time got ahold of her, kept her for three days. She didn't squeal. Not a sentence. Den and Kaner caught up to the spics six months later, took care of them. Chief showed up for that party. Yes, sir, Chief loves that cunt something fierce."

"You got a name?"

Lash took a long time thinking about that one, pinching the mouths of his hand wounds and watching the blood flow. "Hell," he said at last, "not like it's a big secret. Even the Cholos know about her. It's just a name."

"That's right," Bear said. "Just a name. Like, say, Benjie Franklin."

"Terry Goodwin." Lash's eyes darted around the room. "There. I said it." He scratched a scab at the base of his biceps, drawing a red smear. "Now, where's that hundo?"

Chapter
25

By 3:00 P.M. Tim's lower back ached every time he shifted, but he didn't complain, since Bear and Guerrera had been sitting the stakeout all the way through. At least Tim had been able to sneak away to drop fresh flowers off in Dray's room--irises to greet her awakening if he couldn't--and then spend the morning at the command post. Even so, he'd memorized every detail of the exterior of Terry Goodwin's house, a ranch style on a corner lot in Valencia.

Tannino had expedited their middle-of-the-night warrant request, personally waking up a federal judge. Tim, Bear, and Guerrera had stalked the property cautiously the night before, not wanting to blow the lead if Chief wasn't present. Tim had beheld Terry's sleeping form--solo in the California king--through the bottom seam of the bedroom blinds, a pair of night-vision goggles helping him fill in the picture.

The RV trailer they'd hooked from the Asset Seizure warehouse at least permitted them better viewing comfort. Sunflower seeds overflowed two cups in the front holders. Tim leaned over, finger in one ear so he could hear Freed giving him a cell-phone breakdown on chop and spray shops that had closed in the past few years around the Glendale Harley store. He and Thomas hadn't stumbled across any paperwork with a "Danny," "Daniel," or "Dan" on it.

Guerrera was lying on the shag carpet in the back, staring up at the ceiling. "She still at the kitchen table?"

From his post at the tinted window, Bear said, "Yup."

"What's she doing now?"

"Reading the paper."

"Which section?"

"Front page."

Ten minutes later. "And now?"

"Sports."

"Finally. Who won the Citrus Bowl?"

Bear readjusted his binoculars. "Dunno...she's flipping back and forth.... Mia Hamm pulled a hamstring....Turning the page...Miami."

"Yes." Guerrera pumped his fist.

Tim finished with Freed and snapped the phone shut. The RV's smell--salsa and stale cigarettes--and his exhaustion, now verging on sleep deprivation, added to the burden of his frustration. "This is stupid."

"I said last night I didn't want to sit the house." Bear, hater of stake-outs, failed to keep the resentment from his voice. "We don't have time to wait and see if Chief's gonna swing by to play a little grab-ass."

"I agree," Guerrera weighed in. "Not the best use of our time, here, socio."

"So what is? This is our strongest lead."

"If Lash's information is good," Bear said.

"He's a junkie. He needs money, and he knows if he does us right, we'll be back with more. Beats ping-ponging around barbed wire for a few bucks."

Guerrera said, "It'll catch up with him. You don't tell tales out of school about the Sinners. He'll be killed. Sooner or later."

They sat in silence, the only sound the autozoom on Bear's binocs. Though he hadn't remarked on it, Tim had taken a shine to Lash, and he'd gleaned that Bear and Guerrera had, too.

Finally Bear said, "Let's hope later."

"Why don't we knock-and-notice her, search the house?" Guerrera said.

"Because if nothing turns up, then we lose the angle," Tim said.

BOOK: Troubleshooter
2.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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