“Charles’s programs didn’t turn up anything?”
“Not an ort.”
“Wow. You think they might be dead?”
“If they are nobody buried them — legally. Neither has anyone reported them missing.”
“I’ll get right on it. And if you see Charles, tell him I said hello.”
“You got it.”
14
I was just hanging up with Zephyra when Twill walked into my office. The slender and handsome young man wore silk pants and T-shirt, both black, and a cinnamon-colored jacket with no collar and brass snaps that were not attached. His only flaw was a small scar on his chin — left over from a tumble he took when he was a toddler.
His perfection was very much like that of Achilles.
His skin was actually darker than mine. It was as if Katrina’s DNA hadn’t affected him at all while his African father completely informed his elegant features and genetic history.
“Hey, Pops,” he said. He smiled at me. Twill was usually smiling. As a rule he had everything under control; at least he thought he did.
The reason I’d brought him in as a detective-in-training was because he had gotten into so much trouble in his adolescent years that I feared he’d go too far and end up in prison.
“How’s it goin’, son?”
“I’m bored,” he said, taking one of the chrome-and-cobalt-vinyl visitor’s chairs that faced my desk. “You know, listening to your stakeout tapes and readin’ old files is good and all but I need to do somethin’.”
“I know, boy. I know. It’s just that the things I been working on don’t have a learning curve built into them. Either that or they’re very personal jobs that I really need to see through for myself. Can you hold on for a few more weeks?”
“It’s been months already, LT. And you know I had problems sittin’ at my desk in school every day.”
“Speaking of that, have you looked into the high school equivalency test?”
“Me and Mardi go over it two hours every day after lunch, if she’s not too busy. I’ll probably take it in September.”
Since he was five years old he never made a promise that he didn’t keep.
“I will get you a job,” I said.
For a moment Twill’s perpetual smile dimmed, but then the grin broke through again.
“Don’t worry ’bout it, Pops. I know you tryin’. And, who knows? If you hadn’t roped me in here, I might be sittin’ in some jail by now — maybe worse.”
Unlike Achilles (at least since his sixteenth birthday), Twill did not suffer from false pride nor did he deceive himself with unrealistic optimism. He was tough and smart. But, most of all, he saw the world for what it was.
I have always loved him without reservation.
“How you been doin’?” Twill asked with a peculiar slant to his gaze.
“Okay. Fine. Why do you ask?”
“I don’t know. For the past few days your eyes been kinda glassy. And sometimes you look off into space... like, forever.”
“Yeah, yeah,” I said, feeling as if I was talking to a peer instead of a young man not yet out of his teens. “I’ve been running a little fever. It’s nothing.”
Twill’s smile evaporated for a moment and he nodded, agreeing with some notion that I had not put forward.
I was about to ask him what he was thinking when the buzzer sounded. Looking at my watch, I saw that it was three minutes after ten. A red light was glaring on my desk phone.
I nodded at Twill and he left with a parting nod.
I took in a deep breath, picked up the receiver, and pressed the clear plastic cube that was imprinted with the number six.
“Hello, Breland.”
“I’ve been calling you since early this morning,” the lawyer said, his lack of civility telling me that something was seriously wrong.
“Thanks for helping with Zella,” I said, deflecting his urgency. “I picked her up at the bus station. I guess she called you.”
“Yes. She was very reserved. Minksy at the Rag Factory said that she came in and will be starting work today. I gave Minks your assurance that there won’t be any trouble.”
“Thanks again.”
Then came the necessary lull when I was supposed to ask why he called.
“My phone died,” I explained instead. “That’s why I didn’t get your call. You know, I usually plug it in. But Dimitri moved out and Katrina tied one on. Between those two fiascoes I guess I was a little thrown off.”
“You remember the Mycrofts, don’t you?” he asked, no longer able to hold back his business.
I’d never met the billionaire family, but I knew that the Mycrofts’ live-in maid was Velvet Reyes’s mother.
“What’s up with them?” I asked.
“Shelby called me last night. He was very disturbed.”
“Oh?”
“It’s their son — Kent. They have two children, Kent is the elder. For a while there he was estranged from the family but he’s been back for a couple of years — enrolled at NYU.”
“College man, huh? He need a math tutor or something?”
“Your kind of math, LT.”
“Spell it out, Breland.”
“It has come to the attention of Mr. and Mrs. Mycroft that their son has fallen in with a very bad crowd down in the Village. He’s an extremely emotional and impressionable young man and they fear for his safety.”
It was lawyerspeak. I knew from his elocution that Breland felt pressured.
“What kinda crowd?” I asked.
“We didn’t get into specifics.”
“No? Are we talkin’ about the Little Rascals or the Purple Gang?”
“I’m sure it’s nothing you can’t handle.”
“And what is it exactly that the Mycrofts want me to do?”
“I want you to go see them and give them any help you can.”
The prospect of visiting a rich man didn’t appeal to me. I hadn’t adopted my father’s political zeal, but I didn’t like the company of the upper classes.
Prejudices aside, however, I am a private detective in a downward-spiraling economy. When the country’s got a healthy GNP the husband or wife wants to know if a spouse is cheating — they’re willing to pay a man like me to find out. But when jobs are scarce that same spouse knows they need the extra paycheck.
“I don’t know, Breland.”
“You don’t know what?”
“These friends of yours seem to have more than their share of trouble.”
“They have more than their share of cash too.”
“The last time I dealt with them I had to break a promise I’d made to myself.”
“It’s not like that this time.”
“You said you don’t know what the problem is.”
“He’s just a stupid college kid, LT. Any trouble he’s in is nothing like the other thing.”
“If it’s so simple why do you need me?”
“Shelby likes to keep things quiet and confidential. His investment fund caters to blue bloods and old money. The kind of folks that don’t appreciate scandal.”
“How much money?”
“Half the Reyes thing.”
I wasn’t worried. I knew that Breland was telling me the truth, that as far as he knew this was a routine job. I wanted him to squirm a bit, however. Having covered up for Velvet still stung.
“It would be a deep favor for me and a good payday for you, Leonid.”
“Just a college kid took a bad turn on the way to the john, huh?”
“That’s all.”
“I’ll tell you what, Breland. I’ll go talk to these people and see if it’s as simple as you say.”
“Thank you.”
“But you have to do something for me in return.”
“What’s that?”
“You still got that old girlfriend, the assistant to the director of the department of records?”
“Jeanette? I don’t see her anymore, not since Madeline and I renewed our vows.”