into business for yourself.'
'Not so,' Manny said, spreading his hands. 'Ask up and down the street. Where could I have it copied in twenty minutes?'
Coe stared at him angrily. 'No one messes with Sid Coe. You're fired. Get your ass the hell out of here.'
'Sure,' Suarez said, 'as soon as you pay me commissions for three days' work. You owe me.'
'I owe you shit,' Coe said. He opened his desk drawer, took out the heavy.45 automatic, and placed it on the desktop. He turned it with his forefinger until the muzzle was pointing at Manny.
'Look what I got,' Coe said. 'Now get out.'
Suarez lifted the tail of his white guayabera shirt to reveal the short-barreled.38 Special holstered on his hip. 'Look what I got,' he said. 'You wanna see who's the fastest draw in the East?'
Coe looked up at his face, his eyes. Then he took out his wallet, extracted two hundred in fifties and threw them on the desk.
'You fuckin' spic,' he said. 'You're all alike.' 'Yeah, I know,' Manny said, picking up the bills. 'We wanna get paid for the work we do. Un-American-right? See you soon, Mr. Coe.'
'Not if I can help it.'
'You can't,' the agent said, smiling. 'Too late.'
He left Coe trying to figure that and went out onto Oakland Park Boulevard. He found a phone kiosk and called Tony Harker. But he wasn't back in his office yet, so Manny drove to a place that served Tex-Mex and had a big bowl of peppery chili and two icy bottles of Dos Equis. Then he called Harker again.
'I got canned,' he reported.
Tony took it in his usual laid-back style. 'Too bad,' he said. 'Any heat?'
'Some. He's a mouthy guy. But nothin' I couldn't handle.'
'Good. Well, come on in; I've got another job for you.'
'Yeah? What is it?'
'Roger Fortescue could use some help. He's investigating a homicide.'
'No kid?' Suarez said. 'Sounds inarresting.'
52
A real estate agent found Simon Clark a nice two-bedroom condo on the Waterway down near Las Olas. It was completely furnished and had a terrace facing east. He signed a year's lease and moved in. He figured that eventually he'd have to go back to Chicago and pack up clothes, law books, and personal belongings, and have them shipped down. But that could wait; he had bought enough Florida duds to dress like a native, and the condo was equipped with linens and kitchen stuff, so he was all set there.
He inspected possible office space on Commercial, but he really didn't want to be located there, so he kept looking. The agent, Ellen St. Martin, was helping him, and the last time they spoke, she reported she had a lead on a small but elegant office up near Boca Raton. That would be a long daily commute, especially during the tourist season, but Simon didn't plan on a nine-to-five job, and it was important to have a flash front.
Nancy Sparco had delivered a copy of her husband's Super Sucker list, and it looked good to Clark: twenty- four names, addresses, and telephone numbers with notations on net worth, personal peccadilloes, and the kind of scams they bought: oil wells, grain futures, computer leasing, real estate, even fish farms and Arabian mares.
His Chicago checking account was getting low, and it hurt him to run up unpaid balances on his credit card accounts, considering the usurious interest those bastards charged, so Clark figured it was time to hit Mort Sparco. He thought about buying a gun-God knows it was easy enough in Florida-but decided against it. With the ammunition he had, a gun just wasn't necessary.
He arrived at the discount brokerage a little after one p.m., but had to cool his heels in that ratty reception room for almost a half-hour because 'Mr. Sparco is busy with a client right now.' Clark doubted that, but waited patiently until the summons, 'Mr. Sparco will see you now,' like the guy was a brain surgeon or something.
The broker was Mr. Congeniality, greeting Clark warmly, shaking his hand, getting him seated in a low club chair alongside his desk.
'Well now,' he said briskly, 'I suppose you want a progress report on your investment in the Fort Knox Fund. I can sum it up in one word: dynamite! Let's see, you put in a total of about sixty thousand, didn't you?'
'About that.'
'What would you say if I told you the value of your stock now is close to seventy-five? Is that a barn-burner or isn't it?'
'Mr. Sparco,' Clark said, 'I'd like to cash in. I've decided to move back to Chicago. But first, of course, I have to pay off my father's home-equity loan. So if you'll sell my stock as soon as possible, I'd appreciate it.'
He had to admire the broker. Sparco didn't seem shocked or startled, and his affable smile didn't fade. Instead, he leaned back in his swivel chair, took a cigar from his desk drawer, bit off the tip and spat it into his wastebasket. Then he lighted the cigar with a wooden kitchen match scratched on the underside of his desk. He blew a plume of smoke at the ceiling.
'Now why would you want to do that, Mr. Clark?' he asked pleasantly. 'The fact that you're moving back to Chicago needn't make any difference; you can keep your account open here. We have a number of active clients who go north eight months out of the year. They phone collect whenever they want to trade or ask a question.'
'I don't think so. I'd like to sell my Fort Knox Fund and close out my account. How soon can I get the money?'
'But why should you want to unload such a money-making investment? You're already showing a twenty- five-percent profit, and that stock has nowhere to go but up.'
'I want to sell,' Clark repeated stubbornly. 'I want my money. Immediately.'
Sparco showed the first signs of discomposure, tapping his cigar frequently on the ashtray rim, blinking rapidly. He licked his lips a few times, leaned toward Clark, tried a smile that didn't work.
'That might present some difficulties,' he said. 'As I'm sure you've noticed, the Fort Knox Fund is not listed on any of the exchanges. That means we'll have to negotiate a private trade for you. It may take some time.'
'You mean I can't get my money?'
'Oh no,' Sparco said. 'No, no, no. Your investment is perfectly safe. It's just not as liquid as you might have thought.'
'How long will it take to sell it?'
'Well, that's hard to say. We'll certainly make a best-faith effort to unload it, but I can't guarantee you'll get top market price.'
'That's all right,' Clark said. 'I'll forget about the profit. I'll be satisfied if I just get my sixty thousand back.'
'Mr. Clark,' Sparco said earnestly, 'one of the first things I learned about this business is that a broker should always try to fit the investment to the client. It's not always a matter of dollars and cents; it's frequently an emotional thing. The client should be comfortable with his investments. If he's not, then I'm not doing my job.'
Clark listened closely to this spiel, wanting to remember the phraseology since it might prove valuable in his new career as a shark.
'Now it's obvious to me,' the broker continued, 'that you are not comfortable with the Fort Knox Fund, regardless of how well it's doing. All right, I accept that. Around here, the client calls the shots. Now what I suggest is this: Instead of closing out your account, you roll over your funds, including your profit, into another investment. I can suggest a number of equities as good or better than Fort Knox. I see no reason why you can't double your money in six months or less.'
Simon Clark was silent, staring steadily at the other man. The silence went on so long that the broker began to fidget, relighting his cigar with fingers that trembled slightly.
Clark sighed, leaned back in the armchair, crossed his legs. 'Mr. Sparco,' he said quietly, 'I want sixty thousand dollars from you. Cash, not a check. And I want it now.'
'That's ridiculous!' the broker burst out.
'Do you know Sidney Coe?' Clark asked suddenly.
'What?'
'Do you know a man named Sidney Coe?'
'No, I've never heard the name.'