'You always leave this many skid marks?' Shane asked. 'We could both get whiplash. Why don't we start by trying to be friends.'

She studied him for almost half a minute while the Majesties switched to 'Stardust.' Then she kissed the tips of her fingers; this time, instead of wiggling them at him, she gently touched his cheek. 'Nobody can resist me for long, Shane.' She smiled at him seductively. 'Let me get you another drink; then we can get started on our new friendship. Or better still, why don't you keep me company? Come to my meeting with Jody.'

Shane finished his drink to buy time. He didn't want to piss off Jody… At least not yet. But this was a heaven-sent opportunity to stand up close and watch the players in this deal. The ice cubes clinked against his teeth. As he set down his glass, he had a strange flashback.

Alexa was standing in his backyard, at the canal house, looking up at Chooch and talking earnestly. Shane's heart froze with the memory, followed by deep pain and intense longing. Then Alexa and Chooch were gone, and Lisa St. Marie remained, frowning at him. She had seen the painful look pass through his eyes.

'Whatever that was, I don't want any,' she said.

'I was just remembering something,' he muttered.

'Follow me, I'm betting we'll have some fun.'

So he followed her… Across the dance floor full of swirling executives and into the bedroom where Jose Mondragon, Jody, and three other men were waiting.

Chapter 26

TRIPPING

THE BEDROOM WAS large, dominated by a king-size Spanish-style poster bed. Four men turned simultaneously as Lisa opened the door. A frozen tableau.

Jody, dressed in powder blue, with two-tone shoes, his drink halfway to his mouth, glaring; Jose Mondragon, by the desk, looking up from a sheaf of papers, startled, like a kid caught cheating on a test. And then there were three gray-haired AAT tobacco executives who were standing together by the plate-glass window. As the door opened, these three West Coast cancer distributors stared as Shane and Lisa entered the room.

'I don't think we need any more people here than is absolutely necessary,' Jose said, now speaking in perfect, unaccented, English. He had completely dropped his bullshit 'como esta' act.

'I can vouch for Mr. Scully,' Lisa said. 'He's working with us on distribution. He's also an extremely qualified deep-end retrieval expert.' She twinkled this nonsense at them, and the room tension dissolved in her smile like an Alka-Seltzer tablet in a sea of sexuality.

Only Jody seemed unmoved. In fact, there was a crazy tightness to his mouth and around his eyes, as if he had just been insulted and didn't know where to park the anger. Finally he nodded-a jerky, almost spastic movement not at all like him.

Lisa motioned toward one of the lung-cancer salesmen. 'This is Chip Gordon, head of our overseas subsidiary, American Global Tobacco,' she said, smiling at a tall, narrow-shouldered man whose face in profile had the shape of a quarter moon. 'And this is Arnold Zook,' she said, motioning to a nondescript, pudgy man with a laurel wreath of gray hair circling a shiny pate of open scalp. 'He supervises some of our other Latin American duty-free transactions.' She turned toward the third man, dressed in black: 'And our host this evening, Louis Petrovitch.' She didn't mention his corporate title, but it was obvious that Petrovitch was the power player. He had a Prussian general's military bearing- tin-colored short hair, a mile of jaw, and eyes the approximate color and texture of poured concrete. He didn't acknowledge the introduction.

'Shall we go out onto the patio, where it's safe?' Jose suggested, fearful of listening devices. He swung open a pair of double doors, and the group walked out onto a large deck, almost twice the size of the bedroom. Shane followed, finding a spot near the door where he could observe but would hopefully be forgotten. The rest of them walked to a glass-topped table ten or twelve feet away. The lit golf course stretched out, fragrant and verdant below them. Shane watched as Jody sat; he seemed stiff, uncoordinated.

Where was that old fluid grace… Jody's athletic elegance… where was the casual economy of motion?

Lisa was the last to join them. She slithered into a chair and wrapped her legs to the side, showing a lot of well-shaped thigh. Chip Gordon, Arnold Zook, and the formidable Lou Petrovitch stood nearby, holding glasses of melting ice. When Lisa crossed her legs, Shane heard Petrovitch inhale sharply.

He's sleeping with her, Shane suddenly realized.

Lisa smiled at Jody with jade-green confidence, while Papa Joe started the meeting.

'Lisa will conduct this transaction for AAT,' Jose said. 'As the representative for Blackstone Duty-Free Imports, I will act as a court of last resort in any dispute. My company will also control the drafting of the transaction, and the contract will be held at the Blackstone office in Geneva for obvious reasons. Acceptable?' The question was aimed at Jody, who simply nodded. Strangely, Jody's hands were trembling on the tabletop.

What the hell's wrong with him? Shane wondered.

'Okay, Ms. St. Marie, you're on,' Jose began.

'Senor Mondragon tells us you want to buy some duty-free, V-Five product and market it in Aruba,' Lisa said. 'Aside from distributing product, we can also handle all the shipping, warehousing, and insurance. I'd like to pitch a package deal.'

'Skip that. Let's start with the cost per case.' Jody's voice was shaky. 'Since we're dealing in bulk, I think five percent to Blackstone and three hundred dollars a case to All-American is fuckin' nuts. You're not even paying federal taxes. It's way too high. We're gonna need a break on those numbers.' Unexpectedly, Jody started rubbing his eyes. The people on the deck watched him with growing concern until he finished and squinted up at them. 'What?' he said angrily, catching them staring.

'It's always bad form to look into someone else's pocket, Mr. Dean. I think if you want to do a deal, we need to transact it along traditional lines. Whether or not we have a federal tax burden just isn't any of your business,' pudgy, dark-suited Mr. Zook said.

'Traditional lines? How many guys you do business with want to buy fifty million in V-Fives in one shipment? I'm looking for a discount and a lowered percentage for volume.'

'Let's get back to who handles the product-shipment insurance and warehousing,' Lisa said, smiling across the glass tabletop at Jody, trying to calm him down.

Jody didn't answer; instead, he rubbed his eyes again. It was almost as if he couldn't see properly.

'We'll ship for fifty cents a carton,' Lisa said. 'We'll insure for another dollar fifty. We'll warehouse in our building in Aruba for two hundred dollars a pallet on an amortized weekly rate.'

Jody dug into his pocket and pulled out a folded paper with some math scribbled on it. He squinted as if he could barely read his own writing.

'Either that,' Lisa said, 'or you can get your break from Jose out of Blackstone's five percent. That's up to them, but All-American is not cutting our three hundred dollar per case base price.'

Petrovitch nodded. He seemed proud of her.

'Leon Fine said there was room to negotiate on volume,' Jody protested.

'Ahhh, yes, Leon… Whatever happened to poor Leon? He sorta up and disappeared,' Lisa said softly. 'And since Leon isn't here to confront that issue directly, maybe we ought to leave him out of it.'

'Who do you fucking people think you're dealing with?' Jody asked, his voice too loud and badly out of sync with the setting.

Shane took another hard look at his old friend: Jody was smarter than this, yet Shane saw something in his eyes that he had never seen before. Jody's eyes were on fire. Gone was the cold appraising confidence. Shane wondered if he was on something. He couldn't believe Jody would be stupid enough to get high and then come to this meeting, yet he seemed clearly out of it.

'There's no need for rude behavior,' Lisa said.

'Fuck you, honey!' Jody responded hotly, exploding to his feet. 'Just 'cause there's no history here, don't think you can fuck me over! You people act like this is a business transaction. It's not! It's a criminal conspiracy. Let's not forget that you're all money launderers. I make one call and this whole deal goes into federal court and back to the

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