“Francisco…”
Frank leaned down closer and whispered, “That’s what this was all about, right? You didn’t need any cable, you didn’t need any of that shit, or not so much you were willing to pay me thirty grand. You wanted a crack at Felix Randall. A little venganza, am I right? What was the boy’s name? Gaspar Arevalo. From the county of Sonora, if I remember right.”
“We would be very interested,” Cesar responded. He extended his hand in the Latin fashion, palm down, for Frank to take. “We’ll make it worth your while. We already have. We’ll talk?”
Frank took Cesar’s hand, gripped it perfunctorily, and stepped backed from the car.
“Till then,” Cesar said. He put the sedan in gear and eased it from the gravel shoulder. As they went, Humberto sang, “Vaya con Dios… Quihubo culero Francisco…”
Frank stared at the receding car with newfound dread. Collecting himself after a moment, he signaled for the brothers to get back in the truck.
“That little guy,” one of the twins remarked. “He’s one butt-ugly little cooze.”
Frank turned about in a sudden fury. It was Mooch, of course. “Come again?”
Mooch took a step back. “Hold the phone, Frank.”
“You know what ‘cooze’ means in the joint, right?”
The boy kept retreating.
“I asked you a question.”
“ ‘Cooze.’ ‘Cooze,’ it’s a fucking word.”
“Hey, Frank,” the other brother said, stepping between them. He was chafing his arms. “Frank-o buddy, he didn’t mean anything, okay? Let’s hit it.”
Frank stood his ground. “That’s just what you need, Mooch,” he shouted. He felt strangely infuriated at the boy’s helpless stupidity. “Some joint time. Let some buck nigger put some flavor in his behavior. You can chalk his stick.”
“Frank,” Chewy said again, reaching out for Frank’s arm. “Let it go. All right? He didn’t mean anything.”
Frank tore his cap off, flung it to the ground then kicked it for good measure. Standing there stock-still for a moment, he realized it had all been decided. It was out of his hands. He picked up his hat, swatted it against his leg and fit it back on top of his head.
“Get in the truck,” he said.
With the twins in back he put the four-by-four in gear again and headed up Pacheco Creek, south to the highway. There he turned east, toward Willow Pass where they’d cross the Diablo foothills. As he drove, Frank checked in back, to make sure the twins were occupied, then he withdrew the Ruger from his waistband and the clip from his pocket, stowing both in the glove compartment. After thinking it over he removed the eight ball of cocaine from his shirt pocket and threw it in with the gun.
They followed Marsh Creek through the arroyos into pasture lowlands, heading toward the Delta tule marshes. The brothers rented a split-level house near Sand Mound Slough. The house sat alone on a dirt road rimmed with cattails. Grime hazed the windows. An antenna clamped to the chimney hung loose, shorn free by the wind.
Frank pulled into the garage. After securing the door behind the truck, the twins came front. Frank opened the glove compartment, removed the eight ball, and waggled it at eye level. “I’d say we deserve ourselves a little victory ball.”
Mooch eyed the bundle with fond surprise. “Well, hey,” he said.
“Check out what the wets left behind.” Frank pulled out the 9 mm and its clip and held them out in his palm.
Chewy eyed the weapon with instant dread. “I knew it, I fucking knew it,” he said. “You’re a damn fool, Frank, walking unpacked into a trade with those fuckers.”
“I walk in packed,” Frank said, “something goes haywire, they toss me and find a gun? Here, take this.”
He handed the Ruger to Chewy. Chewy accepted it in both palms and held it there, like it was sleeping. Like it might wake up. Frank took the clip away from him, emptied it of rounds, then handed it back. He pocketed the bullets, which were hollow-points. “Feel better now?” he asked.
“Some,” Chewy admitted.
Frank brandished the eight ball again. “We gonna hoot the toot or think deep thoughts here?”
“What about the count?”
Frank shrugged. “Money going somewhere?”
The brothers looked at one another. Trick question.
“Thought not,” Frank said. “Let’s get hammered. I hate counting. Thankless goddamn chore.”
Inside the house, every surface wore a glaze of dust. Discarded socks and magazines lay scattered under chairs, behind curtains.
“Bring the party,” Mooch called back over his shoulder as he climbed the stairs.
Abatangelo drove back and forth outside the Akers property twice before deciding he had the right place. It wasn’t till he turned off the road that he spotted a pickup truck with a man at the wheel, parked beyond a stone wall about twenty yards in.
The pickup’s headlights came on and the truck lurched out, blocking the way amid a cloud of dust and exhaust. The driver yammered into a wireless phone over the throb of the truck engine, squinting out into the glare from Abatangelo’s headlights. He was little more than a kid, not much older than the boys who’d provided directions out here, and whoever he was talking to was giving him a hard time. The conversation went from heated to pitched and ended in a shout before the kid slammed down the phone, killed the truck motor, threw open the door and marched forward, rocks crunching beneath his boots. He carried a Maglite with him, flicking the beam on as he came to the driver’s side window of the car. He pointed it inside, scouring the front seat first. Then he raised the beam into Abatangelo’s face.
“Whoa, bub, the eyes, how about it?”
The kid stepped back and lowered the light. He was thin, edgy. Acne rippled across his cheeks. He wore a Raiders cap, brim pointed backwards. It was pulled down low on his head like he was defying someone to pull it off.
“You’re the one kept driving back and forth out here ’bout an hour ago,” the kid said. A nasal twang. “Figured you’d be back.”
“I’m not from out here,” Abatangelo said. “Easy to get lost.”
“What the hell you doing on my property?”
The statement had a defensive ring. This is no more your property, Abatangelo thought, than it is mine. But, given the bit with the phone, he presumed the owner would be out momentarily. Abatangelo patted the six-pack beside him. He’d passed a roadhouse on the Delta Highway just outside Oakley, the name came to him as he traded stares with the boy.
“I’m looking for a buddy of mine. Met him at The Wagon Wheel a few nights back. Told me if I had the inclination I ought to come on out, lift a few brews.”
“This friend, he got a name?”
Abatangelo nodded. “Know somebody who doesn’t?”
In the distance another truck approached, turning a bend and spewing gravel as it lurched up the side road toward them. The kid stepped back from the car, pointed the Maglite toward the oncoming truck and flashed it on and off three times. Abatangelo chuckled. All we need now, he thought, is a tree house and a secret sign. His palms were damp. A confrontation was on the way, an ugly one perhaps, and though he’d readied himself mentally his body rebelled. Sensing the need for a little stage business, he reached to the six-pack beside him and uncapped one of the beers. He’d taken three sips by the time his welcoming committee disembarked from the truck.
There were two of them, they carried shotguns and lumbered toward the car. Something in the way they ignored the pimply kid suggested they were brothers.
You’re a pleasant guy, he told himself. You’re the mildest man on the planet.
The two newcomers split up as they reached the car. One took the passenger side, lifting the barrel of his shotgun so it pointed directly at Abatangelo and pumping a round into the chamber as he took aim. The other one came around to the driver’s side. He had longish graying hair combed straight back, a sweater with holes in it. He seemed to be the oldest.