Hustle Read online

Page 22


  “He needs his rest,” said Gabriel.

  “He needs a hell of a lot more than that,” said Bear.

  They fell back into the happy ritual of eating. They passed plates, sprinkled parmesan cheese, poured wine, and buttered bread without saying a word. Other than the sporadic, “Mmmmn,” directed at Beatrice, they ate on in silence.

  When the meal was done, and only the wine glasses sat before them, Gabriel tried to explain to Bear the importance of the deed he’d squirreled away.

  “Originally, I thought I might need the Grant Deed because of my wife—soon to be ex-wife—and I never thought I’d need it in a situation like this, but I’m damn glad it’s here.” Gabriel tapped his index finger on the deed before him. “You see, the law considers the transfer of the property the minute the deed is recorded, not when it is signed. If one has another deed, signed and notarized, one only has to record that deed first. Not too long ago, I had a Grant Deed drawn up transferring the asset to Beatrice. It sits waiting, notarized and ready to record. The property can reside in her possession for as long as I need it to, then she can simply grant it back to me. You see, there’ll be nothing to grant to Dustin once this deed is recorded.”

  “We just gotta get in line first?” asked Bear.

  “Exactly.”

  “You think Dustin knows you have another deed?”

  “I doubt it, but he is being advised by Terrence. That means he’s got one of the best snakes in the west guiding him through the grass. I think it would be best if we were at City Hall when they open the doors.”

  Bear thought about it. The city had cops stationed at the doors of City Hall ever since Mayor Moscone had been assassinated way back in ’78. It should be safe, should be a breeze. They’d follow Gabriel’s plan to save his precious mansion, then worry about how to capture Dustin. Maybe let the cops nab him right there at City Hall.

  Beatrice threw a blanket over Donny. He hadn’t moved since he’d passed out. She then went back to the kitchen and poured herself another glass of wine. Bear asked if he could smoke in the house and Beatrice guided him to the balcony where she joined him outside in the cool, fast-moving air. There was an ashtray already in place between two lawn chairs.

  “Bean, I’m surprised. I didn’t know you smoked.”

  “A girl’s got to have some vices. Besides, there’re a lot of things you don’t know about me. Things that Mr. Thaxton doesn’t know either.”

  “Ooh, really? Well, I guess it’s high time I found some of these things out. You’ve always struck me as the mysterious type.”

  They chatted on, flirting back and forth until their glasses were empty and Beatrice went inside to refill them. Gabriel had fallen asleep in the recliner with his legal papers on his lap, so she covered him with a blanket too and returned with two full glasses to the balcony.

  It was refreshing for Bear to let go of the last few days and just be with someone. It was only flirting, after all, and he only thought about Sheila once or twice. Bean was the polar opposite of Sheila. Where Sheila was brass and bold, Bean was shy and quiet. Sheila was seasoned and full of sass; Bean was sweet, naive, and young. Too young for Bear, he thought, till after a few more glasses of wine.

  The night grew cold and eventually they moved inside. Not wanting to wake up Gabriel and Donny, they positioned themselves in the bedroom and continued their talk. She told Bear about growing up in Nevada, how she hated the heat and the whole state. Bear revealed a little about his own history and Bean surprised him by already knowing more about him than he cared to divulge. She’d peeked at his files at the office, she said. Then she admitted having a long-standing crush on him.

  “Hmmn,” he said, “must be a daddy complex. I gotta be old enough to be your father.”

  “No, you are nothing like my dad. He’s a straight-arrow, button-down conservative.”

  “Is he still around?”

  “Yeah, but if he knew I was sitting in my bedroom talking to someone like you, it might kill him.”

  They both laughed about that, and, then, without warning she kissed him, a long, sloppy drunken kiss on the mouth.

  Bear held her by the shoulders and said, “Be careful. I may be old, but I’m not dead.”

  She kissed him again. This time he kissed her back. She fell slowly back onto the bed, pulling him with her. Before long they were under the sheets and the lights were off.

  It didn’t last long, but it was as passionate as anything Bear could remember.

  Soon after, he found himself deep in a dreamless sleep.

  There was a banging on the bedroom door. It was Gabriel, shouting that it was time to go. Bear tried to focus on the clock beside Bean’s bed. 5:30 am. Jesus Christ, thought Bear, what am I, a farmer?

  He sat up, hoping Bean would remain in her slumber, and he pulled himself out from the warmth under her comforter. His head was pounding louder than the door. He opened it.

  “What?”

  Gabriel said, “Bear, we’ve got to get ready. We want a jump on Dustin. I fear he may be already camped out, waiting.” Then he looked over Bear’s shoulder at his sleeping secretary and said, “Really, Bear, my receptionist? You couldn’t contain yourself?”

  “What was that you said yesterday? Oh yeah, let he who is without sin ...”

  Gabriel cut him off, “Yes, yes, yes. Let’s just focus now on getting ourselves down to City Hall on time, shall we?”

  Bear found Donny in the kitchen slowly stirring a pan of scrambled eggs with a spatula. Donny’s pupils were constricted and he boasted a sleepy, relaxed smile. He’d clearly already spent some time alone in the bathroom this morning.

  “You okay?” asked Bear.

  “Oh, yeah, I feel great. I’m really a morning person anyway. I’m ready to go.”

  “You can’t keep doing this shit, you know. At some point,” said Bear, “you’re gonna have to get your life together.”

  The smile dissipated from Donny’s face. “I know,” he said, “I’m going to … I plan to.” Then after a moment of contemplation, he said to the frying pan, “I have to.”

  “Don’t forget to butter the toast.”

  While Gabriel moved into the bathroom for a quick shower, Bear scoured the fridge for a beer. Nothing. “Goddamn wine. I woulda been better off with whiskey,” he mumbled to himself. He gave up his search and decided to wait out the hangover and moved himself outside to the balcony for the day’s first cigarette. It was cold and windy still and he stubbed it out after only a few puffs and returned to the comfort of Bean’s apartment.

  The sky outside was growing a pale blue by the time Gabriel emerged from his shower. Donny and Bear already had their shoes and jackets on and looked impatient.

  “What the hell did you drag me out of bed for, Gabe? If I hadda known you were gonna shower, shit, and shave, I could have stayed in bed an extra hour.”

  “I wanted to make sure you were ready—really ready—to do this. If I know Dustin, he’s been awake this whole time trying to figure out how to beat us to the punch.”

  “It’s not even seven o’clock, when does that joint open anyway? We got time for a coffee at least, don’t we?”

  “Eight am, sharp. We’ll be there, at the front door, waiting.”

  “What if he’s on the other side? Don’t they open the Van Ness doors and the Polk Street doors at the same time?” asked Donny.

  “The kid’s got a point, Thaxton. How we plan to stake this place out?”

  Gabriel pursed his lips, thinking it through. “We’ll have to put Donny on one side—the Van Ness entrance. He can guard that door and let us know if he sees Dustin.”

  “How am I gonna let you know?” said Donny.

  “Use your cell phone. Call Bear if you see anything, anything at all. We’ll be waiting at the other side with the paperwork.”

  Bear interrupted, “He can’t call me. My cell is dead. It sat there in Marin for almost two days. That call you made to Bean killed it. I wasn’t kidding yesterday when
I said I hadn’t charged it.”

  “Donny, let Bear use Richard’s phone.”

  Donny’s face blanched. “No, I told you guys, it ain’t workin’ either. It’s broke. It ain’t got no charge.”

  “Which is it?” said Bear. “Is it broken, or does it have no charge?”

  Donny hesitated only a second before Bear lit into him, “I’m sick of this shit. You been jerkin’ me around about the goddamn phones for three fuckin’ days now. Before we go into goddamn battle, I wanna know what the deal is with those phones. What’s on ‘em you had to have ‘em back so fuckin’ bad? And don’t tell me about no goddamn kid pictures this time.”

  Gabriel looked confused. He had no idea what Bear was talking about. He had no idea why Donny was looking like he wanted to disappear into the carpet. “Donny, what is it? Just tell us. This far along, I don’t think there’s any need to keep secrets.”

  Donny felt all at once exhausted, sick of the whole thing. He didn’t care anymore. He didn’t care about the money, getting off the street; he was tired, pushed to his limits. He thought about his dead friend, he thought about the freak raping him in the motel room. He thought about the plan to extort the man standing right in front of him, a man who was waiting for an explanation with his big, watery blue eyes. A man that had been only kind to him. Donny gave up.

  “There’s a video on Rich’s phone. A movie. We shot it at the hotel last week.”

  Both Gabriel and Bear waited.

  “It’s got you in it, Gabriel. You, me, and Rich. We were gonna tell you we’d put it up on YouTube if you didn’t pay us off. That was it, our big plan. We just wanted enough dough to get off the streets and now,” he almost choked up, but held it in check. “Here we are. Rich is dead.”

  Bear held up a finger and said, “Don’t forget about that poor woman upstairs.”

  “Oh, Jesus,” said Donny. The image of her dead body flashing through his mind again before he continued, “Dustin’s stealing your house, and … and I’m probably going to fucking jail.”

  Bear and Gabriel only let the boy talk.

  “I don’t know, I went along with it. I just wanted to get clean and get outta here, outta San Francisco. Rich told me again and again it would work, even when I knew it was never going to. Then, it was too late, we’d gone too far.”

  Beatrice’s tiny apartment was silent. They heard a toilet flush in another unit, then the creaking of a neighbor’s footsteps upstairs. Still, no one said anything.

  Then Bear said, “I don’t think they even let you put that kinda shit on YouTube.”

  Gabriel smiled. Bear was right. It didn’t take a lot to maintain damage control on a scheme like that. There were entire firms whose sole function was to root out slanderous Internet posts. It would be particularly easy for someone who was not a movie star, someone that nobody wanted to see naked—someone like himself—to quash a plot like that before it got out of hand. Outed. When he thought about it, it was the least of his worries.

  Donny looked visibly relieved. When he’d gotten it all out, he took a couple of deep breaths and lifted his head to face Gabriel. He felt foolish. He felt like a dumb kid, caught with his hand in the cookie jar.

  Gabriel said, “I’m going to help you, Donny, but not because of the film. I’m going to help you get off the street, off the drugs, because I think you deserve that. I’m going to help you because you’re helping me.” He paused a moment, then said, “and because, regardless of what you two were up to, I considered Richard a friend.”

  “Alright, enough of this shit. I don’t want to watch an Afterschool Special. Jesus. I’m gonna say good-bye to Bean and then we’re out of here.”

  Chapter 23

  They’d reached the car, got in, and started to pull out before Gabriel asked Bear, “What did she say?”

  “Nothing,” said Bear. “I couldn’t wake her up.”

  It was an unusually clear morning, crisp and cold. There weren’t too many other cars on the street either, only taxis, Muni buses, and early morning commuters. All three of them kept their eyes peeled for the black Bentley.

  They rolled down Polk Street and when they’d reached City Hall they went around the block a few times, looking for Dustin and trying to find the right parking spot with the best vantage point. They finally settled on a spot perpendicular to the sidewalk on Grove Street across from the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. They pulled in and could see the doors of City Hall from where they sat. Civic Center Plaza was designed to offer a sense of classical antiquity. A hodge-podge of different themes from different eras, there was Roman and Greek architecture mixed in with City Hall’s Parisian dome. The whole place gave one a feeling that its best days were behind it. The plaza laid out in front of the grand buildings was dotted with homeless people—in tents, in sleeping bags, or curled up around their battered shopping carts.

  Bear struck up a Camel and cracked his window. “What time is it?”

  Gabriel didn’t even have to check. “Seven-twenty.”

  Bear leaned back. “Donny, you got that phone?”

  Donny passed it up, and with it the video, the failed plot, and his hopes of extorting Gabriel. “You got another one of those Camels?”

  Bear shook one out for the boy and passed him the lighter. “Now remember, kid, when you walk around to the Van Ness side, keep an eye out. We figure he’s gotta be near here somewhere, waiting, just like we are. If you see anything, anybody that looks like him, you call. Let’s make sure we’re the most recent dialed number in your phone to speed things up.”

  Donny scrolled to Rich’s number and hit send. The phone in Bear’s hand rang once before Donny hung up.

  “Good luck, son,” said Gabriel as Donny got out of the car.

  Donny walked around to the driver’s window and Bear rolled it down. Donny said, “One more, for the road?”

  Bear sighed and shook out another Camel for the boy. “You know, kid, they sell these things in stores.” Donny took the cigarette and Bear added, “Remember, be smart. Use your head, Donny. Be smart.”

  Donny turned and walked away, still limping with the pain from his last time on the corner.

  “We should discuss any weapons you might have.” Gabriel spoke without taking his eyes off the ornate golden doors in the middle of City Hall.

  “Why? I know there’re metal detectors. I’ll leave what I have in the car.”

  “When we do see him, he’ll be away from the vehicle. We’ve got to get into that trunk. He won’t have the VHS tape with him, I don’t think. It’ll most likely be in the trunk.”

  “Don’t worry, I haven’t forgotten about your precious tape.”

  “Getting this deed recorded is the easy part, Bear. It’s getting that tape back I’m worried about.”

  Bear asked, “You think the kid is over there yet?”

  “You could call him.”

  “Nah, I’ll wait.”

  Just as the words left Bear’s lips, they spotted the black Bentley. It rolled slowly down Polk Street, from McAllister toward Grove, right past the front steps of City Hall. They could see Dustin behind the wheel, alone in the car, with his neck craning toward the building’s entrance.

  Gabriel said, “Good Lord.”

  And Bear said, “Holy shit.”

  The car moved through the light at Polk and Grove and continued on toward South of Market.

  “Where the fuck is he going?” asked Bear.

  “Pull out, Bear. Follow him,” Gabriel said excitedly. “Quickly, before he gets too far.”

  Bear started his Toyota and threw it into reverse. They made the light and turned left onto Polk. They could see Dustin in Thaxton’s Bentley stopped at the light up ahead of them.

  “He’s in a stolen car, Gabe. Call the cops. Tell ‘em where he’s at.”

  “The car has not been reported stolen. It will only complicate things. Please, just stay close and keep an eye on him.”

  “Jesus Christ, what the hell do you think I’m doing?�


  They now sat two car-lengths behind Dustin. They watched his head turn, bird-like, from side to side, either looking for a place to park or the usual paranoid jerking motions he always made. Bear got a chill just seeing the back of his head. The light changed and they followed the Bentley across Market onto 10th Street. Dustin was moving away from City Hall.

  “You think he sees us?”

  “I doubt it,” said Gabriel. “But I’m not sure what he’s doing either. Maybe he’s looking for parking. Maybe he’s not even sure where he’s going. Stay close, Bear. This is our chance.”

  “To get the tape, you mean.”

  Dustin drove ahead for three more blocks, then, without signaling or slowing, took a hard left on Folsom Street. By the time Bear made the same left, Dustin was halfway up the next block. The Bentley was moving fast. Dustin caught the next two lights and showed no signs of slowing.

  “Shit, I think he spotted us.”

  Gabriel pointed at the corner ahead. “He’s taking a left on 7th. Hurry, Bear, stick with him. He’s going back to the Civic Center.”

  Dustin crossed Market Street again, hooked a right, and zipped into the Tenderloin District. Gabriel started to get nervous. They were dangerously close to a high-speed chase. This could only go on for so many minutes before they attracted the attention of the police. They followed Dustin, zigging and zagging over the one-way streets of the City’s skid row. Then, he was gone.

  “I don’t see him,” said Bear. “What time is it?”

  “Seven thirty-three,” said Gabriel.

  “Call Donny and let him know he’s coming his way. We gotta get back and cover the other entrance.”

  “We’ve got to find him,” Gabriel sounded desperate now. “He’s probably pulled into one of these alleys. We still have time, let’s find him, please. Turn here at Larkin.”

  Bear turned.

  “Left here, on Willow, slow down,” Gabriel commanded. He knew the alleyways of the Tenderloin well, having prowled here when picking up young men. He was sure Dustin would be hiding somewhere near.