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“That rings a bell.”

“That meant, go in there, keep your trap shut, and let him give you assignments, and fucking do the assignments,” he said. “That didn’t mean going in there and propositioning the fucking guy.”

I didn’t feel the need to respond. I thought it had gone fine.

“Well?” he asked. “You have some great reason why you didn’t follow my directions?” Lee Tucker was a generally easygoing guy, I gathered, but not at this moment. His eyes were on fire.

“You were trying to clear your own name in there,” he said, annoyed that I wasn’t responding. “And in the process, you might have fucked the whole thing up.”

“Is that what you think?” I asked. “That I fucked this thing up?”

“It’s sure as hell possible you did, yeah. Maybe you seemed too eager to him.”

“Maybe,” I agreed, which only made him angrier. I admit, I was enjoying this.

“You do what I tell you,” he said, directing a finger at me. “You run it past me first. There’s a certain amount of ad-lib we can’t control, but you don’t walk in there with an agenda like that without passing it by me first. Are we clear?”

He was right, but I couldn’t acknowledge it. He didn’t know that I had an agenda that differed from the federal government’s. They were trying to catch some swindlers. I was trying to solve a murder. Okay, and I was pissed off at Cimino and his people for dragging me into the mud with them. I was letting the feds use me for both reasons. But in the end, when all was said and done, for me this was about Ernesto Ramirez, not some public corruption case. I wanted to gain Cimino’s trust so I could get inside, so I could find out more about who killed Ernesto. If Cimino went down because he had his hand in the public coffers, so be it.

“You wanted me to hook Cimino,” I said. “I think I did that.”

“You better hope you did.”

I shook my head, like he was a nuisance. “Think like Cimino,” I said. “I refuse to do these bullshit memos he wants. But he doesn’t bitch me out. He doesn’t say a word to me. He just has someone rewrite them, still using my name. He fucks me, basically. Then he sends this Hauser guy to hire me for some legal work. This is how he says ‘sorry’ and ‘thank you.’ That’s his world. He’s made me an offer, Lee, and he’s waiting to see if I’ll accept. He’s betting I will. So what did I just do in there? I just said ‘yes.’ I made him think he’s the smartest guy in the world. You think I just made him suspicious? I think I just stroked his ego.”

Tucker stared at me for a long time. One eye closed to a wink, but he definitely wasn’t exhibiting affection toward me. “I’ve handled a hundred of you,” he said. “Guys who think they’re suddenly experts in how to do this.”

“Did they all have clean, fresh breath like me?”

He laughed, a humorless grunt. “Well, you are one fucking hotshot, aren’t you, Kolarich?”

My cell phone rang. Didn’t recognize the number. Lee seemed annoyed that I would take the call while we were in the midst of a conversation, which was why I did it.

“Mr. Kolarich? This is Janine from Ciriaco Properties. Mr. Cimino would like you at his office tomorrow morning at nine. He said he’d like to discuss your business offer.”

“Certainly, Janine,” I said with mock sweetness for Lee’s benefit. “I’ll see Mr. Cimino tomorrow at nine.”

I closed my cell phone and thought for a moment. Replayed the call in my mind.

“Go ahead, hotshot,” said Tucker. “Pat yourself on the-what is it?”

Something was rubbing me wrong. I shook my head. I related the call verbatim to Tucker.

“So?” he said. “I’ll meet you at eight-thirty for the hand-off.”

I paced in a circle and stopped. “No,” I said.

Tucker thought about that a moment. “No?” he asked, but he wasn’t putting up much of a fight. He may have been having a similar thought.

“Something about the way she framed it. ‘He wants to discuss your business offer?’ It’s like Cimino was telegraphing it.”

“Hmph. Maybe. He wants to make sure, if you’d ever wear a wire, that you’ll wear it tomorrow?”

“Let’s leave it off,” I said.

“That creates problems for me, you know that.”

Of course I did. I was a defense attorney. When a government cooperator only wears a wire some of the time, it leaves the other conversations open to cross-examination. A good lawyer will claim that the government informant entrapped the defendant during the non-recorded conversations and then turned on the wire when it suited his purposes. Prosecutors prefer their cooperators all wired, all the time. But these things are fluid. Every situation is different.

I stated the obvious: “It’ll create more problems if he makes me.” Tucker relented, more easily than I would have expected. “Okay,” he said. “I have to trust you on this.”

33

I made it to Cimino’s Building by ten minutes to nine. For some reason, it seemed to make sense to me to be punctual for once.

“How are you?” I said to the Amazon princess at the reception desk. I didn’t know where Cimino found these women.

“You’re actually on time.” Cimino appeared from the hallway, looking immaculate as always in his slick Italian suit and bright tie. He kept walking, past me. “Come on.”

“We’re going somewhere?”

“We’re going somewhere. Sweetheart, tell them to have my car out front?”

I followed Cimino to the elevator. He kept his thoughts to himself. He stared at the doors of the elevator, rocking on the balls of his feet, breathing with some congestion. He probably expected me to break the silence with nervous conversation. He probably also expected that his silence was unnerving me. It wasn’t, other than a fleeting notion, maybe one-in-a-hundred chance, that he was taking me somewhere to be executed. Okay, maybe one in fifty. I’d just make sure that Charlie went first through any door.

We joined a few people on the elevator and took it down to the main floor. Cimino took me out a side door, where a bright yellow Porsche 911 awaited us with an attendant standing sentry.

Cimino handed him a tip and got in. I jumped in the other side. The car was immaculate, with a black leather interior and a top-of-the-line stereo.

“Nice ride,” I said.

Cimino threw the stick into first and turned out onto the street with the fluid precision you’d expect from a Porsche. My first time riding in one of these, and I hoped it wouldn’t be my last.

“Not so great in the winter,” said Cimino. “When it gets slick, I don’t even bother.”

“Where are we going?” I asked.

“You play racquetball?”

Did I play racquetball? “Yeah, I guess.”

“Good.”

“Not well,” I said.

“Even better.” It was a ten-minute ride, and I would have been happy with ten hours in this thing. The leather was so soft, and the ride so smooth, I could have dozed off if I weren’t enjoying myself so much. An air freshener shaped like an evergreen tree, hanging from the rearview mirror, bobbed around as Cimino navigated the car through traffic, injuring a few traffic ordinances in the process. The air freshener seemed a little out of place, a little tacky in a hundred-thousand-dollar sports car, but that seemed appropriate for Charlie Cimino: first-class with a touch of vulgar.

We pulled up to the Gold Coast Athletic Club and got out. “Good morning, Mr. Cimino,” a man in a blue jacket greeted him.

“I don’t have any workout clothes,” I said.

It didn’t seem to trouble Charlie. We took an elevator to the third floor and walked through a well-appointed room with a buffet of fruits and coffee and a sitting area. We entered the men’s locker room and Cimino told an attendant, “My friend needs clothes for racquetball, Jamie.”

“Sure, Mr. Cimino. Shoe size?” he asked me.

“Um, probably thirteen,” I said.

We walked through a few aisles of lockers, the smell of aftershave and soap in the air. By the time Cimino had taken off his shoes, the attendant had arrived with a gray t-shirt, black running shorts, socks and a pair of gym shoes.