A black man with an Afro that looked half a foot high came out of a room on the second floor. He glanced around suspiciously and walked down the stairs to the gold Cadillac. He got in the car and drove off.
LaMonica locked his sedan and trotted up the stairs two at a time. He tried the door handle. It was unlocked. He pushed the door open. There was the smell of sex in the room.
Sandy Hartzbecker got up off the bed. She was naked, but made no attempt to cover herself. 'What the hell do you want?' she asked.
'Just to talk,' LaMonica said.
She grabbed a pair of Levi's off the end of the bed and wiggled into them. 'The answer is no,' she said. Having yanked on a pullover, she strode to the dresser mirror. Angrily, she picked up a brush. Ignoring his presence, she yanked it through her hair.
'Can we just have a drink? For old times' sake, shall we say?'
She tossed the brush down and faced him. 'The only 'old times' I remember was when I took chances for you and ended up going to the fuckin' joint. You better get out of here before my boyfriend gets back. He can press three hundred pounds.'
'Your cut in this new thing would be twenty-five C's. I can prove it to you on paper.'
'You are not part of my life anymore,' she said. 'I'm not into being a mule or a slave for any man. I'm tired of being
'I tried to bail you out.'
'And I'm sure you tried to send me flowers, too,' she said. 'There's no need for bullshit. We did our thing and now it's over. I don't need you anymore. I do enough coke and smack deals to keep me in clothes and motels. I'm not greedy. I put everything together myself. No moneymen, no partners, no getting busted for somebody else. I'm my own person, and that's the way I like it. I don't want to work for you or anybody else. I did a lot of thinking when I was in Terminal Island. I look at life a lot more realistically now. I'm no longer your average dumb farm girl.'
'As a matter of fact, you're the most intelligent woman I've ever met,' LaMonica said. His gaze was dead serious.
'Yeah, well my brains didn't keep me from getting busted for you and going to the joint.'
'All I ask is one drink. If you want to talk I'll be down in the bar.' He walked out the door and closed it behind him.
The bar was a spacious, well-lit place with wicker chairs and decorative tiles on the walls and floors. Paul LaMonica sat at a table and sipped a drink. He kept looking out the window toward Sandy's room. Except for a couple of fishermen at the bar exchanging jokes with the bartender, he was alone in the place.
Twenty minutes later Sandy strutted in and LaMonica took a deep breath. The fishermen elbowed one another as she shouted, 'Cuba libre, no ice,' to the bartender and sat down at LaMonica's table. 'I don't like people sneaking up on me,' she said.
'Neither do I.'
Sandy Hartzbecker dug a filter tip out of her purse and flamed it with a gold lighter. She sucked smoke. 'So many people have gotten busted down here in the last few weeks that I've become paranoid,' she said. 'And I'm not talking about getting taken down behind a few spoons of coke or a brick of weed. I'm talking about the other night when the
'The simple explanation,' LaMonica said, 'is that someone who hangs around Teddy's is a snitch.'
'There was a time when it seemed like you could trust everyone there,' Sandy said. She used the straw.
'Trust everyone at Teddy's?' LaMonica laughed.
Her face reddened. She pointed a finger at his face. 'Look, you sonofabitch, I don't have to take any shit from you. The last time we did something together I'm the one who ended up holding the bag, and to this day I'm not even sure what happened. You told me that the pit boss was
And without so much as asking you a question, I did just that. He was
'I've never forgotten that you stood up for me, that you didn't hand me up to the feds,' LaMonica said. 'You might say that I want to make it up to you with this new caper.
'Bullshit,' she said. Tears welled in her eyes. It occurred to LaMonica that he had never seen her cry.
'I know a lot of women who would love to take a shot at twenty-five grand,' LaMonica said.
'Hundreds of women would jump at a chance to make twenty-five bucks, much less twenty-five grand. But you and I know that's not the goddamn point. You want me because you know I won't snitch on you if I get caught. You know I've stood the test of fire.'
'In certain ways that's true.'
'You are the most selfish person I have ever known,
Sandy said. 'Everything revolves around you. It's what turned me off about you. I can't believe we spent almost a year together.' She shook her head.
'In this new thing you wouldn't even have to cross the border,' LaMonica said.
The bartender brought another drink. He set it down.
'The answer is still no.'
LaMonica was silent for a moment. He reached into his back pocket and pulled out the counterfeit passport. He opened it and showed Sandy her photograph. Her eyes lit up. He shoved it back in his pocket.
'The passport would be your bonus,' he said.
Sandy Hartzbecker looked out the window for a while. 'You actually
'A few simple meetings on this side of the border is all I'm asking,' he said.
'Meetings with who?'
'With a turkey, a square who won't know who you are. You will play a part. You'll be in on the whole thing with me, so you'll be able to see exactly how much money is involved. I intend to split fifty-fifty with you, and you'll be right in the middle with me to see that there's no back-stabbing, no rip-offs. We would be partners.'
The fishermen laughed hysterically about something and ordered more tequila.
Sandy Hartzbecker sipped her drink and set the glass down. She lit a cigarette and puffed twice. Smoke floated from her mouth. 'Will you repeat what you've promised me in front of my boyfriend?' Her lips were pursed in a determined manner.
'Sure,' LaMonica said sarcastically, 'and then maybe we should drive down to Teddy's and announce our business to every American thief and dope pusher in Baja. Let's let the whole world in on it.
'You don't have to tell him what it's about, and I won't either. I swear. But I want you to make the commitment in front of him.' She lowered her voice. 'If I don't get my cut when it's over, then he'll come for you. He'll be my insurance.'
'Maybe we should get a lawyer to draw up a contract?' LaMonica said with a sneer. 'Can your nigger read?'
'You are a bigoted chauvinist pig,' she said, her voice cracking. 'Mr. Cool is more of a together person than you ever could be. It was a