Authors: Don Bruns
“We’ve still got his mail.” I leaned against the building, catching my breath. Too many beers and fast-food joints.
James drew a deep breath. “Hey, bro, we had reason to open the man’s mail the last time.”
“You think? We had a package that was leaking blood.”
“Then I say we have more reason than ever to open it now.”
“Okay. But only if it looks like it’s pertinent to the situation.”
“What’s the situation?” Angel was in the dark.
“Long story, Angel. Why don’t you take a breather in the cab and Skip and I will sort this stuff out. Okay?”
He gave us a frown, studying the situation for a moment. Then he nodded. “No problem.” I think he relished the idea. Maybe catch a little nap before his night of whatever. Angel got into the truck and rolled the window down and watched us.
We divided the packages and mail and started wading through the envelopes and boxes while we sat cross-legged on the ground. A good ten minutes went by and James finally looked at me and said, “I don’t know how we’d know what to look for. There’s nothing here that looks like it would give us any information.”
“Hell, we’re fishing, James.”
“Have no idea what we’re going to catch.”
I pulled out the manila envelope at that exact moment. It looked just like the envelope with the finger. The return address was Cubana Coffee Inc., Jacksonville, Florida.
“James. Here’s some mail from a company that has Cuba in its name.” I handed him the envelope. He stared at it for a second, then handed it back.
“Another guy’s mail, I don’t know—”
“The guy who planted condoms in the dean of students’s desk drawer? The guy who stole Professor Owen’s Boston Whaler and took a joy ride down South Beach? When did you get religion?”
“All right. Open it.”
“Me?”
“You.”
“This could screw up our $5,000. You know that.”
“Yeah.”
“At the same time it could save our lives.”
“Skip, it’s probably nothing. Now quit talking and open it up!”
“The problem is getting him to shut up.”
He smiled. “Mike Myers,
Shreck
.”
I carefully tore open the envelope. I kept thinking I could repair the damage later on and no one would know. Obviously that wasn’t going to happen. Once you’ve crossed a line—and we’d definitely crossed it when we opened the bloody envelope—then it’s a whole lot easier to keep, excuse the pun, pushing the envelope.
“Open the damned thing, will you?”
I pulled out a sheaf of papers and scanned the opening letter.
To whom it may concern:
We represent a group of investors who are funding a company called Café Cubana Inc. Said company will consist of a series of franchised and company-owned coffeehouses initially located throughout the state of Florida. The operation will have a central warehouse where a special blend of Cuban coffee will be packaged and shipped to the individual locations. The operations will profit from retail sales of in-store sales of food and beverage, in-store sales of pre-packaged product, and mail order and Internet sales of product. Café Cubana Inc. will eventually move into the eastern corridor of the United States, targeting New England and the New York State market.
I read it back to James.
“Shit. There’s a brilliant idea. I wish we’d come up with it.”
“I think your hauling idea is about as involved as I care to be right now.”
He wrinkled his forehead. “Okay, wiseass, what are the rest of the papers?”
“Lists of investors.” I shuffled through about fifty sheets. “Man, there must be hundreds of thousands of dollars committed here.”
“What level?”
I flipped through the first five. “Twenty-five thousand, here’s one for one hundred thousand, another twenty-five—” I handed him half the stack.
“And this is what Ricardo Fuentes does for a living, right? Finds investors for companies and takes his cut off the top. Christ, Skip. If there’s a million dollars here and he gets just 10 percent he’s pocketed one hundred thou.”
Five minutes later we compared notes.
“Almost four million dollars pledged. And I get the impression there’s a lot more where this came from.”
“Holy shit. Rick Fuentes takes home four hundred thousand dollars in commission? Un-fucking believable.” James looked at the stack of papers. “Can you imagine fifty people investing four million in our hauling venture?”
“We could buy a lot of trucks.”
“Trucks and a warehouse and a staff and some advertising.” He was lost in his own little fantasy world.
“James, look at the names.”
He concentrated on the page I waved in front of him. “That can’t be the former governor.”
“Same name.”
“And this guy?” He pointed to a name on the list. “Christ, is this the same guy who heads up the amusement park and movie company?”
“At that level of money, I would guess it is.”
“Holy shit.” He ran his finger down the list. “And this is the big car dealer?”
I nodded. “This is a huge project, James.”
“Amigo, this is the mother lode of projects.” He continued to scan the list.
The blue Buick had glided silently in, unannounced. I heard the door slam shut and glanced up. Big mouth and his friend stood there with their arms folded, both dressed in black T-shirts that defined their big chests, biceps, and the bulges at their waist-lines.
“Mr. Lessor?”
James seemed to shrink back toward the wall of the building. Never quite the bravado I think he has.
“Mr. Moore.” The other guy gave me a sickening smile. “We took the time to find out about you two. It’s too bad your female friend isn’t here.”
“What?”
“What? We want the stack of papers you’ve been sorting through, the mail that belongs to Ricardo Fuentes, and then you’re coming with us.”
“I don’t think so.”
What the hell was I going to do about it
?
Big mouth reached into his waistband and pulled out a pistol. This was the second time I’d looked down the barrel of a gun, and I can tell you it is truly a frightening experience. Honest to God, it looks like you’re looking into a dark tunnel and there’s no end in sight. That’s the first thing I thought of. I decided then and there that I was getting out of the hauling business as soon as possible.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
J
AMES FINALLY SPOKE. “We don’t know anything. We can’t possibly be any problem for you.”
The jittery man with the greasy hair grabbed my half of the papers and leafed through them.
“Café Cubana.” He glanced at his partner then back to us. “What do you know about Café Cubana?”
“Nothing. Nothing but what we’ve read. A coffee shop with Cuban coffee.”
“Jesus Christ. What do you have?” He shuffled the papers in front of his gun-toting sidekick. “These are the donors.” He looked back at me. “How the hell did you get these papers?”
I shrugged my shoulders. “It was part of the mail that Mr. Fuentes left at his other house. Honestly, we were told to store them in this storage unit.” I watched the gunman the entire time I answered. If he so much as twitched, I was prepared to throw myself on the ground.
“This,” he shook the stack of papers, “this was not supposed to be for your viewing. This was to be mailed somewhere else.” The guy was getting red in the face with beads of sweat dotting his cheeks.
James was frozen. His complexion was almost gray, and I could see fear in his eyes. For good reason.
“The official prospectus calls for Cuban baked goods, Cuban sandwiches, and, of course, the coffee.” The mouth held his gun in front of him with his right hand, pointing the barrel at me. “Maybe the two of you would like to invest in our little venture?”
James’s dad would have invested in Café Cubana if he’d had fifty bucks to his name, because it was right up his alley. A new business venture, a new chance to reinvent himself. But he never had the fifty bucks and he wasn’t around any more.
I tried not to concentrate on the barrel of the gun, which started looking more like a cavern than a tunnel.
“I think we’ve invested in one too many businesses already.” I watched James, who was now sitting on the ground and shaking his head.
The greaser, with papers in hand, leaned close and I could smell his foul cigar breath. “You were never to have seen these. This changes everything. Both of you, get up. Pick up all those papers, envelopes, and boxes and put them in the trunk of the Buick over there.” I hesitated, still not believing this scenario. Apparently I was moving too slowly.
“Now!” The gunman shouted. “I’ll shoot you, and your friend will have to clean that mess up too. Do you understand?”
James struggled to his feet, and I tried to fathom a way to knock the gun out of the man’s hand. It was only a dream. This was no time to be brave.
“You won’t shoot anybody. Because if you don’t lay down the gun, I’m going to blow the back of your head off. Do
you
understand?”
Angel, big, black, and menacing, had a gun in his hand and it was pointed at the back of the mouth’s rather large head.
The big-mouthed man spun around, his right arm stiff and the pistol aimed at Angel’s midsection. It was a split second and it seemed to last forever. Angel squeezed the trigger, and I swear I could see it in slow motion. The explosion thundered in my ears and I thought I saw fire belch from the barrel of his pistol. The Cuban jumped into the air and swatted with his left hand like he was fending off a wasp. He came down on his hip and crumpled there on the asphalt pad outside Jackie Fuentes’s storage unit. Blood ran freely, a stream of the sticky, red fluid heading toward a drain.
“Jesus.” The greasy guy’s head swiveled from Angel to James, back to Angel and then to me.
James didn’t move, but tried to speak. “A . . .” He said it again. “A . . .” Finally he got it out. “Angel. You killed him.”
Angel looked down, squeezing his eyes shut for just a moment. Then he leveled the pistol at the other Cuban. “Would you like to try something?”
The man was wide-eyed, frozen in his spot.
Angel shook his head. “I prefer rogues to imbeciles, because
they
sometimes take a rest.”
I let out a breath I didn’t know I’d been holding. “James!” He seemed to snap out of his trance. “Pick up the mail. Get it into the back of the truck.”
We threw the mail into the truck in less than sixty seconds, and I pulled down the sliding door. Angel stood still, his gun aimed at the Cuban’s head. The man never moved an inch. He just kept breathing heavily—like he’d run two miles.
James and I jumped into the cab, and Angel backed away from the man, finally climbing into the passenger side.
“What the fuck do we do? Just drive away?” James seemed frozen, his hand clutching the truck key.
I shoved him. “Hey, it was self-defense. And there’s still one of them alive. I’ll like our chances a lot better far away from here, James. Come on.”
He turned the key and stepped on the gas and the truck threw gravel thirty feet from where he spun the tires. I was happy we’d left the gate open. We hit the road forty seconds later and never looked back.
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
“C
AN’T CALL THE COPS.” James was hunched over the wheel, staring at the road. I had no idea where we were going.
“We’ve considered that how many times in the last three days?” There was always a reason not to call the cops.
Angel rode shotgun, silent since we took off.
“Angel, where did you get the gun?”
“The Colt 380? Part of the package.”
I must have looked surprised.
“When you hire Angel, you get the complete package.”
I wasn’t sure I wanted to know any more.
“He may be dead.” James looked like he was in a trance as the truck raced down the road.
“I can’t imagine what kind of trouble we’re in.”
“Hey!” I couldn’t let that stand. “Angel probably saved our lives. Jesus, the man was shot in self-defense and you’re worried about the trouble we’re in. James, think about not knowing the trouble we’re in. Think about us not being here to worry about it.”
He was quiet for a moment. “Yeah. There’s that.”
“Angel, what was the thing about rogues and imbeciles?”
He smiled. “Alexander Dumas.”
James and his movie quotes. Angel’s quotes from great literature. And I had nothing.
When we pulled into the apartment complex, it was almost dark. No one had said another word.
“Do you think this is a good idea? Here, where we live?”
James shrugged his shoulders. “Where would you go? These guys have tracked us through the DMV, so they obviously know where Emily lives. They know where we live. I would guess they know where Jackie and Fuentes live. Maybe you have a better suggestion.” Bitter and cold, and he was right. We’d run out of options.