Before flying to Los Angeles, Gannon had gone to Ivan’s website. He’d sent an email from an anonymous online account WPA used to confirm Ivan Peck would be in his office the next morning to meet a potential client who wanted to check on someone’s past.
Will be in from 9 am to 1 pm – IP, was the response.
The creaking door announced Gannon’s arrival in the dimly lit office. The musty air was in keeping with the pale walls and scuffed hardwood floor. A woman in her thirties sat at a standard police-issue steel desk and looked up from her People magazine.
“May I help you?”
“I’d like to speak with Ivan Peck.”
“Do you have an appointment?” Her eyes flicked to the half-opened door of a small room. “No.”
“Hang on,” a male voice said over the rush of water in a sink. It came from the small room. A large man emerged, holding a glass coffee decanter. He positioned it into the dual coffeemaker on the credenza, pressed a switch then poured a mug of black coffee from another near-empty decanter.
“I’m Ivan Peck. And you are?”
“Jack Gannon.”
“Want a coffee?”
“No, thanks, I’m good. I was hoping to talk to you.”
“I got some time.”
Peck led Gannon to a large office where Venetian blinds filtered the morning sunlight on the drab walls. Olive file cabinets were secured with large padlocks. Gannon smelled onions and bacon wafting up from the canteen below as Peck hooked his foot around a visitor’s chair, offering it to Gannon. The chair was before the large dark wood desk. On the desk were a pack of Marlboro Reds, a file folder, a legal pad, a pen and a holstered pistol.
Peck wore a powder-blue dress shirt, the collar button undone. His navy tie was loosened and shirtsleeves were rolled to the forearms. He filled out the shirt as if he were made of stone. He stood about six four, had a few days’ salt-and-pepper growth and short, silver cop hair.
His face was void of emotion as he lowered himself into his high-back swivel chair and took a hit of coffee. Then he shook out a cigarette and, without consideration for Gannon, lit it with a match and took a long pull.
“Gannon? The name’s familiar. What can I do for you?”
“I want to look into someone’s background.”
“Who?”
Gannon set a recent photo on the desk for Peck to see.
“That’s my sister. Cora.”
Peck picked it up, held it before him. Then Gannon set another photo on the desk.
“That’s her daughter, Tilly.”
Peck studied both photos, shot Gannon a look and passed the photos back.
“You know who they are, Ivan?”
“I know who they are. I see the news.”
“Tilly’s your daughter.”
The little muscles in Peck’s jaw started pulsing. He locked Gannon in a gaze for a long, icy moment before he got up, shut the door and inserted himself between the desk and Gannon. Towering over him, invading his space.
“What the fuck do you want?”
“I want you to help me find Tilly.”
“And why would I do that?”
“Just over eleven years ago, you fathered a child with my sister, Cora. Just over two days ago, Tilly-your daughter-was kidnapped by a cartel holding her for a five-million-dollar debt they say is owed by Cora’s boss, Lyle Galviera. They say they will kill Tilly if they are not repaid. In connection with this, Octavio Sergio Salazar, an ex-LAPD officer, and John Walker Johnson, ex-Customs, were found murdered in the desert outside Juarez, Mexico.”
Peck stared at Gannon for several moments, then returned to his chair and his cigarette, dragging on it while keeping his eyes on Gannon. He leaned back in his chair, swiveling like a ruler on a throne as Gannon searched for resemblance to Tilly.
“What’s any of this got to do with me?”
“I think you might know something.”
“Why would I know something?”
“You were a cop. You worked in drugs.”
“That’s quite a leap. I still don’t see why I should care.”
“Tilly’s your daughter. Cora says you dated her when she was a waitress at a bar in North Hollywood. You wanted her to have an abortion then walked away.”
Peck studied the tip of his cigarette.
“Okay, the fun’s over. I’m not her father. I’m not anyone’s father. I got a low count, which is partly why I’m divorced.” He took a few last pulls.
“Then why did you give her money and drive her to a clinic?”
“Because she begged me.” Peck stubbed the cigarette in an LAPD ashtray. “Gannon? You’re a reporter, right? I’ve seen your name in the Times with the Associated Press or some wire service.”
Gannon didn’t respond.
“Jack, let me tell you something about your sister. She was not a waitress at that bar. She was hooking there. Yeah, I banged her. Despite being a tripped-out whore, she was a fine piece of ass.”
Gannon’s gut spasmed as if he’d been punched.
She was hooking…a tripped-out whore…a fine piece of ass.
The insult burned through him but Gannon refused to believe it. A memory pulled him back to his childhood in Buffalo.
Here he is with Cora, Mom and Dad at Mass. Here’s Cora receiving Communion, crossing herself, genuflecting.
A tripped-out whore…
Cora had had her troubles but she was not a prostitute. She couldn’t be. She would never do that. How could she do that? She was a waitress. This prick is trying to humiliate me.
But Cora was an addict and addicts turn tricks.
Was it true?
Oh Christ, images of this douche with his hands all over Cora.
Maybe Peck was just trying to knock him off his game.
“That’s right, Jack, your sister was a sweet piece of tail, and that’s the truth about her.”
Peck glared at Gannon. His words were meant to wound him and the detective was assessing their impact.
Gannon struggled to focus.
Don’t flinch. Rise above the blow. Use the pain.
“You know,” Peck added, “I saw Cora on CNN begging for her kid. Got to admit it’s a heartbreaker and with these cartels, well, there’s not much hope. Tragic for the kid and I’m sorry for that.” Peck reached for his Marlboro cigarettes. “But the whole time, I’m thinking that while Cora’s still looking good after all these years. I admit, I’d still tap that again.” He winked at Gannon. “But I’m thinking, after all these years, that stupid bitch is still messed up with drug shit. I mean, I heard she got into trouble way back. She is one stupid bitch.”
Gannon was a heartbeat away from leaping across the desk.
But he held his ground because this was Peck’s world. Gannon knew enough about hard-asses and assholes, knew that Peck wanted him to take his shot so he could physically destroy him. Gannon had no cards to play except one-which would take him over an ethical line as a reporter, but he had no choice.
“She looks like you,” Gannon said.
“What?”
“Tilly. You can see the resemblance. It’s there.”
“What?”
“I’m with the World Press Alliance. WPA stories go around the world, you know. Now, I’m thinking about a story-just thinking about one-that would suggest that the anguished mother, Cora, has named you as Tilly’s father, an ex-cop with a number of blotches on his record. Use of force and, oh right, some tie to cartels and planting evidence. Right, that would be a good one. I’m just thinking about a story that implicates you in the abduction and likely murder of your eleven-year-old alleged daughter. Should be good for your business, your life, whatever would be left of it after the hellfire that would befall you. Oh, and I kind of let my editor know about you already, in case I end up in hospital, or worse.”
Peck’s jawline pulsed again.
“Now, Ivan, you’re a smart man. You know that old ditty about the pen being mightier than the big, bad asshole with a gun. You can work with me, or you can work against me. I do not give a damn because the only thing that matters is the life of an eleven-year-old child.”
The detective eyed Gannon for several cold moments. While the wheels turned, Gannon asked him, “What about Octavio Salazar or John Walker Johnson? Can you help me out there?”