'Meet you at the Park Century in half an hour?' April asked anxiously.
He called over his shoulder, 'That's where I'll be. Hey, and while you're in there, why don't you check out if they have anything to cure assholes.'
20
Wally Jefferson did not find Julio that day in any of his usual hangouts in Queens. He found him in the Magic Club off Broadway in West Harlem at 9:39 in the evening. Julio was leaning against an un- painted side wall, drinking a Corona from the bottle. From the way he was standing it did not look like the beer was his first. But the five or six other men weren't standing at all. They were sprawled on chairs scattered around the otherwise unfurnished room in various states of nodding off. Only one grizzled grandfather was watching the basketball game on the TV in a corner, smoking a cigarette and talking to himself.
As Wally gave the signal to the one vigilant man at the door and was let in, Julio turned away from him. He wore a scarf with three knots tied on his head. Wally knew the knots were some kind of code for bad. He'd been frightened by Liberty and chilled from his daylong search and Julio's lack' of acknowledgment. He wasn't in the mood for a display of bad dude. He crossed the space between them on the tips of his toes like the boxer he used to be.
'Hey, man, I told you I needed to talk to you.'
Julio's eyes were dead. He shrugged.
'Don't give me any of this Spanish
'Why need?'
'Because my boss is dead and so is Liberty's wife.'
'So people die.'
'These people are
and because of the damn car he thinks I had something to do with it.'
'Thees is no my
Wally bunched his broken hands. 'This
'Why?'
'I told you. He and the police think I killed them. I ain't going to prison for killing no woman.'
Suddenly Julio smiled. Seven gold teeth flashed at Wally. 'Man, wo-man, what difference?'
'Hey, I didn't have nothing to do with this killing.'
'No se nada.'
'Don't give me that shit, man. They're going to tie this all together, they're going to tie you into it. You're not safe if that car doesn't go back to the garage.'
Julio laughed. 'Thees is no my
'Okay, you want to see it that way, just tell me where the car is. I'll pick it up.'
'Thees is the
'What do you mean you don't know? You used it. Where did you put it?'
'Other guy take.'
'What guy took it?'
'Don't know name.'
'The guy took the car?' Wally was stunned.
Julio nodded. His hollow eyes held a glimmer of amusement. 'Took limo.'
'You let him take my car?' Wally couldn't believe it.
'Not your car.'
'Jesus, are you crazy? The guys in the garage know me. They know me on the street. Why'd you let him take it?'
Julio shrugged.
'What happened? Did something go wrong?'
'Yeah, went wrong.'
Wally looked around and took a deep breath. No one was interested in their conversation. Wally's buddies were all too wasted to join a fight on either side. Julio was a small man who owed him a car and a lot of money. 'Went wrong' didn't sit well with him. He considered busting Julio's head, then decided to be smart.
'I want the car and my share of the money.'
Julio shook his head. 'Don't know about the car, but I'll get you some money. You take off. Okey-doke?'
Wally nodded. 'Fine, but don't shit me. I want the whole amount.'
'Okeydoke. I'll get.'
'When? Don't make this hard,' he warned.
'What the hell is that?'
'Saturday. '
'How about tomorrow? .
'Saturday.'
Wally chewed on his lips, looked around at his wasted buddies, then nodded. He didn't want to push this Julio too hard. The little man was known to carry a machete under his jacket. Saturday it was.
As the elevator door opened, Rick Liberty could see that the reception area was empty just as Marvin had promised it would be. The door to Marvin's office was open. He sat alone at his enormous desk, his head bent over some papers. Rick pushed back the hood covering his head and the lower part of his face. He unzipped his down jacket that covered the laptop he clutched close to his chest. Underneath the parka, he was dressed in the same well-tailored gray trousers and sweater he'd been wearing for four days.
By rote he'd taken the clothes off to shower several times when he tried to cleanse his mind and find a way out of the tunnel. But the showers didn't help. He was deep inside a pit of darkness and couldn't find a way to go. The stock market had taken a huge dip of 350 points in the last two days on the threat of a rise in interest rates. The market fall looked like a major correction. His clients' portfolios were lined up like soldiers in his laptop computer, demanding his attention and review. But he didn't care about the market.
Other thoughts disturbed him, and he wanted to hide away like a wounded animal. Tor and Merrill were dead, and Rick Liberty knew there was something wrong with him. In the instant of their death he'd been robbed of himself. The famous Liberty, who'd always known how to tum a bad situation into a good one, was suddenly completely at odds with the world, too ashamed to face it.
Marvin looked up and gestured him in. For some reason the gesture frightened Rick. Suspicious of some kind of trick, he quickly pulled the door toward him and looked behind it, then felt stupid to see the space was filled with a Health Rider. Something new in the lavish private office of Marvin Farrish, president and chairman of the board of FCN, the largest black-owned cable-TV network in the country.
'Come in, Rick. Don't worry, no one else is here.' Like a cat stretching, Marvin unfolded his compact body from the tilt and swivel orthopedic chair specially designed to ease his lower back pain. The chair and the Health Rider clashed with the massive brass-and tortoiseshell-inlaid French Empire desk and the rest of the priceless antiques. Everything fought for attention in the huge and ornately decorated office that had its own kitchen and private elevator to which only a few of Marvin's closest associates—and his bodyguard—had access.
Marvin Farrish liked to tell white folks that because he had not been tall enough to be a basketball player, dense enough to be a football or baseball player, musical or funny enough to be an entertainer, or handsome enough to be a movie star, he had had to invent some new little thing for a man, black as coal, to be. The white folks usually laughed uneasily when he said this, not sure exactly where the barb was aimed.
'We missed you at the funeral.' Marvin opened his arms and crossed the room, eyeing his famous friend as uneasily as white men sometimes regarded him. He tried to give Rick a hug but was prevented from getting close by the computer Rick still held to his chest as if it were the only thing keeping him alive. Drawing away, Marvin waved a hand at one of the two huge armchairs placed in front of his desk.