Undue Influence

Undue Influence by Steve Martini Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Undue Influence by Steve Martini Read Free Book Online
Authors: Steve Martini
Tags: thriller, Crime, Mystery
throw the bottle. Lama’s waiting to see if Jack can spray any more bile on me. One of Jimmy’s joys in life, spreading pain. He senses that it’s over. “You got pictures?” I turn this on Lama.
    “You’re here to answer the questions,” he says. “I’ll ask them.”
    “We’ve got nothing to say.” Hemple chimes in.
    “Who invited you?” he says.
    “I’m Laurel Vega’s lawyer.” Hemple pulls a business card from her jacket pocket. Hands it to Lama. He looks at it, smiles, then begins to pick his teeth with one of the card’s sharp little corners. “Oh, good,” he says. “Then you can tell us where your client is?”
    “I don’t know,” she says. “Write that down,” says Lama. “Her lawyer has no idea where the suspect is.” Another detective across the room scribbles in a little notebook. “Maybe you know where she was earlier this evening about eleven-thirty?” says Lama. Silence from Hemple.
    “Seems she doesn’t. Write it down,” says Lama. “Got anything else you want to tell us?” he says. A shit-eating grin on Lama’s face. Hemple doesn’t respond.
    “Gee, thanks for coming.” He smiles, Mr. Duplicity, then motions to one of the uniformed cops, who escorts Hemple to the door. Lama turns his venom back on me. “And where were you at eleven-thirty tonight?”
    “Gee, Jimmy, do I need a lawyer?”
    “Not unless you know something we don’t.”
    “Could you write that down,” I say this to the dick across the room, who offers up a little hiccup of a laugh. “Always the smart-ass,” says Lama.
    “I understand you been playin’
    guardian angel for your sister-in-law. Guess you kinda blew it tonight,” he says. I don’t give him a response.
    “Guess you’d know her better than most people?”
    A concession from my look.
    “Then you’d probably know if she has a gun?”
    I give him bright eyes like maybe he’s hit something.
    “What kind?” I say.
    “Nine millimeter, semiautomatic.”
    “Wouldn’t have a clue,” I tell him.
    Lama gives me a sneer. Now he’s given up information with nothing in return. My guess is they don’t have the gun. If they did, Lama would have made a make and model. I assume they have loose cartridge casings and whatever ballistics survive when lead meets tissue or bounces off bone. “When’s the last time you saw her?” he says. Now he’s pissed.
    “Who?” I ask.
    He gives me a look, “like don’t fuck with me,” snaps the toothpick in half, and spits the broken piece on the floor. I make a face, think a couple of seconds like maybe it’s a strain to consider back that far.
    “This afternoon the courthouse.”
    “And you haven’t seen her since?”
    I shake my head.
    The cop with the little book is making notes.
    “Then you wouldn’t have any idea where the kids are?”
    “I assume with their mother.” God’s own gift, I think. Two walking, breathing little alibis, for whatever they’re worth. “Goddamn,” says Jack. He’s shaking, hand with the glass outstretched, booze all over the rug. “She’s murdered my wife, now she running with my children. What the hell are you guys waiting for?” It was one thing when Jack was chewing on my ass, now he’s getting on Lama’s case. A head signal from Jimmy and suddenly Vega is being quietly hustled from the room. Condolences from the cop, but he’s got to go, official business being done here. Vega turns to look at me on the way out. “She’d better let ‘em go,” he says.
    He’s talking about the kids. Jack has visions of Laurel in Rio. I know better. She has no money. “You hear me,” he says. “I’ll leave no stone unturned.” He says this like he honestly believes I can deliver a message. Then he’s history, out the door, straining to get a last look at me over the cop’s shoulder. Lama smiles, puts another toothpick in.
    “Angry man,” he says. “I wouldn’t want him mad at me.”
    “One of life’s battles,” I tell him.
    “Yeah. Talkin’

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