“Ben Westfall,” the man said, shaking Tommy’s hand.
“Hey, I hate know-it-alls,” Tommy said. “Bet whoever you want. I’m just a big mouth sometimes.”
“Don’t worry, I always do.”
“You’ve spent a few afternoons down here betting the ponies, eh, Ben?”
“A few,” Ben said, as he took his beer from the bartender and held it up to his new friend. “Thanks.”
“My pleasure,” Tommy said. He looked up and saw a line forming at the teller. “You better get your bet down on the third.”
“Nah,” Ben said. “I’m not betting the favorite at that price. It’s not worth getting up twice to make twenty cents.”
“Twenty cents? You’re a two-dollar bettor?”
Ben sipped some of the foam off his beer. “Yes, sir.”
Tommy smiled. “My uncle was a two-dollar bettor as well. He used to bet just for the thrill of knowing he was right.”
“He still around?”
“Naw, he died when I was a kid. He was an ex-cop, Baltimore PD.”
Ben put his glass down. “I’m ex-Chicago PD. Your uncle and I would’ve gotten along great.”
“I’ll bet you would’ve,” Tommy said. “Once he died, my cousins Nick and Phil ended up living with us. Nick followed his footsteps as a Baltimore cop, then went on to become an FBI agent.”
“How about Phil?”
“He’s in Vegas gambling his way to bankruptcy.” Tommy shrugged. “You just never know.”
“No, you don’t.”
A distant bell rang and both men instinctively looked up to see the horses break from the gate at Hollywood Park. A low murmur filled the room as the favorite settled into an easy lead.
“You’re right,” Ben said. “He’s going to run away with it.”
As the favorite came down the stretch, the banter and cheering swelled. The moment he crossed the finish line two lengths ahead of the field, the cheering stopped and a handful of men slapped their hands with their Forms, trying to cash in on a long shot which was never going to make it.
Ben looked at Tommy. “How come you didn’t bet?”
“Too much on my mind.”
“Like what?”
Tommy stood and faced Ben. “You see this big guy over my left shoulder.”
Ben gave a cursory glance, then took another sip of his beer. “Yup.”
“You know him?”
Ben gave Tommy a cautious look. “You a friend of his?”
Tommy chuckled. “Hardly. I just want to make sure I got the right guy. His name is Jerry Lemke, right?”
Ben nodded. “That’s him. Why?”
Tommy gave Ben a surreptitious grin. “My cousin’s an FBI agent and he needs some info from this guy. We don’t have time for a formal question and answer session, so I’m going to need to speed up the process a bit.”
“You going to play rough with him?”
“Very.”
Ben gave a satisfied smile. “Good. The guy’s an asshole. Comes in here every day and sits in that booth and makes out with that slut all afternoon. He’s rude to the staff, cuts in line at the teller’s window right at post time, and then he does that.” Ben shot the large man an angry glare. The guy was lighting up a cigarette without a care in the world.
Tommy cringed. “You kidding me? He gets away with that?”
Ben returned his attention to the Form. “They’re all afraid of him. He must be with some drug cartel, or maybe a gun runner, because he comes with an entourage.”
Tommy nodded to the two burly men sitting in the booth next to Lemke, nursing martinis and acting bored. “Yeah, I’ve seen the muscle.”
“That’s just part of the team. They’re all over the place, maybe half a dozen, maybe more. I’m not sure, I’m seeing a lot of unfamiliar faces today.”
Tommy peeked down at the windbreaker draped across the back of Ben’s stool. “You carrying?”
Ben lifted his glass of beer and examined it. “Never leave home without it.” Then he swallowed half the glass in one long pull.
Tommy placed a gentle hand on Ben’s back. “You’re a good man, Ben Westfall. Can you do me one favor?”
“Sure.”
“I’m going to go over there now and make a scene. Don’t get involved. Let the bartender know to be cool as well. It should be over pretty quick.”
“I can do that.”
“Thanks.” Tommy turned to go, then paused and looked back at the ex-cop. “Listen, should I do something stupid and get myself shot. Would you do me a favor and kill the fat fuck for me?”
Ben held up his glass of beer in a mock toast. “Be glad to.”
Tommy slapped a ten-dollar bill on the counter for Ben’s beer, then adjusted his toothpick and headed toward the restaurant seating. As he approached the booth, the burly gentlemen next door straightened up. Tommy slid into the booth next to Lemke and across from the skinny girl with the short shorts.
“Hey, Jerry,” Tommy said, affably. Then he pulled the cigarette from Lemke’s hand and dunked it into the guy’s beer. “There’s no smoking allowed in this establishment.”
Lemke jerked back in surprise, never expecting insubordination like that in public. He glanced to his right, but the two thugs were already out of the booth and on top of Tommy, tugging him from his seat, a tight grip on each arm. Tommy hung limp in their grasp. By now the entire posse had formed a semicircle around the booth, maybe eight guys in total, seeming anxious to engage in battle.
“What do you want to do with him?” one of the thugs said.
Tommy looked over his shoulder and saw Ben fumbling with his windbreaker. Tommy gave him an angry shake of his head to warn him off.
An arrogance blossomed over Lemke’s face. He looked at his cigarette floating in his beer and slashed an index finger across his throat.
“Got it,” the guy said.
That’s when the restaurant was swarmed with a group of dark-skinned men who seemed to appear from the shadows. Men with vowels at the end of their names. They had filled the remainder of the restaurant and flanked Lemke’s crew. Maybe twenty guys, with serious expressions and no need to show their guns to make it known they were packing.
“Let him go,” an authoritative voice growled. Coming forward was a square-jawed man with thick eyebrows and a penetrating glare. Dino Manato elbowed one of the thugs holding Tommy and both men let go of their grips. Tommy smoothed out his shirt, then returned to his seat in the booth. Dino stood at the head of the table, stone-faced.
Lemke’s crew knew they were outnumbered and waited on their boss for direction. The large man appeared interested in the situation but not quite convinced it was a serious event in his day.
“Get out of here, Trixie,” Tommy told the girl.
With a look of shock, the girl glanced at Lemke, who nodded his approval. As she began to slide out of the booth she said, “How’d you know my name?”
“Your name is really Trixie?” Tommy asked.
She bobbed her head in a mixture of fear and confusion.
“Then go home and call your mother and apologize for everything you’ve ever done. Capisce?”
With the girl gone, Tommy examined the contents of the table with a disgusted expression. A half-eaten burger next to a giant plate of fries and two empty chocolate milk shakes with a thin film of grime on the glasses.
“You’re a real piece of shit, Gerald,” Tommy said. “You realize in Nairobi, there are young kids who would feast on that crap for a month just to keep alive.”
Lemke’s face scrunched up into an angry scowl. “Who the fuck are you?”
Tommy scratched his head and glanced around to make sure his coup hadn’t upset too many customers. “I’m the guy who gets what he wants. Every time.”
“And exactly what is it you want?” the obese counterfeiter growled.
“I need to know where Garza’a safe house is here in Tucson. Maybe he’s got a few. I want the one where he might be keeping a kidnapped thirteen-year-old girl.”
A couple of Lemke’s crew didn’t take kindly to being shoved in toward the booth and they shoved back, but a quick punch in the face from a ‘family friend’ stopped the struggle quickly.
“Garza?” Lemke asked, looking sincere. “Who the fuck is Garza?”