She had to get past the oddity of her own appearance. It’d been too long since she’d done undercover work. Donning a micro-miniskirt and a bustier hadn’t thrown her on the last case. Maybe because she’d done the standup trashy tart role in L.A. vice years ago. Maybe because it was such a far cry from her daily administrative civvies these days. Totally out of character. But this, this brown-eyed woman in the mirror was too close for comfort.
For concentration.
No doubt Kinsella had wanted to throw her off her stride, get her out of his hair. There. That thought had got her adrenaline flowing. Whatever he wanted, he would get the opposite.
She swept her eyes over the mirror from left to right, ignoring the naked ladies, concentrating on the men. This place attracted tourists in short-sleeved shirts, a few businessmen in light-colored, lightweight suits, sans ties, punk kids just past twenty-one in sports clothes. No truckers, few jeans.
No one here looked like Rafi Nadir.
She’d tied a narrow scarf around her forehead to pull her hair back, just in case.
She really did look different, dammit.
Eyes back on the suspects.
One in particular. Nobody had zeroed in on this candidate, because the profile was all wrong. This one wasn’t obvious, like Rafi. But sometimes obvious wasn’t right.
Then, a dark head came cruising into view behind her. It was like sighting a shark fin in the water. She tensed, willed herself invisible.
Instead of this shark going for the gaudy, subtropical fish schooling at Kitty City, they headed for him: blondes, redheads, black women in platinum-white wigs.
Molina glimpsed green dollar bills waving as Kitty City’s strippers converged on the bait. “Chum,” they called it in the ocean fish-baiting game. At a strip joint, any guy with cash to wave around attracted an attractive crowd.
This guy was pushing through the tide to the bar, promising drinks all round.
She breathed out. He was just another celebrating good-time Charlie, not a bouncer coming on the job. He wasn’t who she’d thought he might be….
The girls surrounding him sank to seats along the almost empty bar, putting him into high relief, like an outcropping of rock marooned by the ebbing tide.
Her eyes wanted to bug out past the veiling contact lenses.
It was Rafi Nadir.
Molina’s eyes darted to her own reflection in the mirror, this time not transfixed by how different she looked to herself.
This time they were objective, keen, nervous. How different did she really look, to Rafi Nadir? Enough?
“Scotty,” Max said. “Just call me Scotty.”
“As in ‘Beam me up’?” she asked through the smoke she breathed into a kind of holographic lace veil in front of her face.
“As in Hartford the Third.”
She raised wire-thin-plucked eyebrows.
She was exactly the kind of woman you expected to meet in a strip joint. Not a stripper, but some kind of hanger-on. Probably an ex-stripper. Her smoky contralto voice vibrated through a buxom, inverted-triangle frame. She wore a glitzy jogging suit that hid most of her skin. She had found his slumming Yuppie persona unusual enough to merit personal attention.
“I bet they don’t call you Scotty,” she said, eyes narrowed to filter out her own smog. “I bet they call you Scott.”
Max shrugged with what he hoped looked like embarrassment. He had lost the art of embarrassment a long time ago. As long as he looked like a babe in Toyland, women would talk to him. Strippers had a maternal streak, and when they talked, they bared more information about themselves than they did skin on stage.
She tapped her cigarette ash, as long as a mandarin’s fingernail, into one of those black plastic bar ashtrays with jagged edges to hold cigarettes. They look like dead roaches with legs in the air.
“I have a son about your age,” she said, surprising him. She looked like she’d been around, but not that old. “Name’s Lindy.”
“Your son’s?”
“Hell, no! Skip the ‘y’ endings, kid, after twenty. You’ll get taken a lot more seriously. My name’s Lindy.”
“Oh. Well, you certainly look like you know your way around this…scene.”
“Shouldn’t I?”
“I just meant—” Max stirred the skinny striped plastic straw around in his water-and-hint-of-scotch. “I’m kinda here looking for someone.”
“Look, Scotty.” She was violating her own rule and leaned near to put her hand on his arm and her smoky, raspy voice in his ear. “You don’t belong here. Whatever you’re looking for, or looking to forget, go on to some hotel on the Strip.”
“Do you belong here?” he returned.
Her eyes widened with a touch of flattered youthfulness. “Oh, God. Sure I do. Not here, precisely. I’m just visiting the scene of the crime.” She glanced at the stage, nostalgically, even a bit coquettishly. “Used to dance up there myself.”
Max tried not to smile; he’d figured as much.
“But now I run my own club. Les Girls.”
That he hadn’t figured.
“No sense letting the guys get all the dough when we girls show all the go.”
He laughed, but made it apologetic.
She patted his arm. “Now, who you lookin’ for? Some girl you got a crush on?”
“No. Some guy who got a crush on some girl. A bouncer named Rafe. Something like that. This, uh, girl I met at one of the Strip hotels you were advising me to go back to, she said he’d been…stalking her, I guess.”
“And you’re going to put a stop to it, huh?”
“No.” He shrugged, apologetically again. “I thought I’d offer him some money to leave her alone.”
“You got it with you?”
“No, ma’am. I’m a fish out of the water, but I’m not shark bait.”
Lindy rolled her eyes, displaying bloodshot whites. “Young man.” She sighed again. “That girl isn’t worth getting your face pushed in for.”
“I can do some pushing back.”
“Maybe. Only guy I know who bounces, and he bounces around from club to club, is Rafi. Like Rafe. That sound right?”
Max nodded slowly. “Where would he be bounced to now?”
“Don’t know, hon. I heard he was quitting this racket. No loss, from what I also heard. You might check with my ex, Ike. He runs Kitty City. He’s the type who’d like Raf’s style.”
“And what is Raf’s style?”
Lindy made a fist and moved it toward Max’s face. “To the moon, Alice. To the moon.”
“That was all bluff,” Max objected. “Ralph Kramden never hit Alice.”
“Hey! You know The Honeymooners? I thought only us old folks did.”
“Everything old is new again. Cable TV”
“Not everything. Watch yourself around Raf. That guy was always trying to get something back. Those kind are dangerous.”
“What was he trying to get back?”
“Money? A woman? Something.”
Max nodded. He didn’t see Molina as the kind of woman a man would auger into the ground for. Or over. Must have been money. Nadir seemed very hung up on money.
“Take care of yourself.” She patted his arm again, then bore down as she propelled her weight off the barstool and into the smoky, sound-soaked distance that makes such hot, sweaty, crowded places into a negative image of reality.
Max felt touched. Nobody had patted his arm since Miss Rosenblatt in fourth grade. The return to innocence was refreshing, especially in a strip club.
Miss Rosenblatt would have fainted dead away if she had seen Max walk into Kitty City. Luckily, a dead faint was probably all that she was up to nowadays, as she would be confined to coffin and only rolling over in her grave in protest.
Kitty City enjoyed being a strip club: dim, loud, crowded and filled with milling almost-naked girls. Several mirrored balls turned overhead, strafing the clientele with bullets of bright, glancing light.