They walk onto the jetty. It gives them a long view-they can see anyone following them, and the cops would need a hell of a microphone to pick up anything at this distance.
“So what’s really up?” Doc asks. “It isn’t just your girlfriend getting knocked up.”
John’s surprised he feels nervous. Has to suck it up to ask, “You have something you want to tell me, Doc?”
“Like what?”
“Like you got busted?”
“The fuck you talking about?” Doc laughs.
Suddenly he looks sneaky to John. Say what you will about Doc, he was never that. He was always straight up, out there, who he was.
John hates it. Says, “If you have a problem, let’s talk about it. We can work it out.”
Doc laughs.
“That’s big of you, junior,” he says. “But save the Beatles songs for somebody else. I’m fine.”
“Yeah?”
“Where are you getting this shit?” Doc asks. “Who you been talking to? Ron? Bobby?”
John doesn’t answer, but Doc knows the answer.
“Look,” he says, “those assholes wouldn’t have known coke from Coca-Cola if it wasn’t for me. I was first at the party. Shit, I started the party. Now the guests want my house.”
It makes some sense, John thinks. If the other guys contaminate Doc, he goes into the dope version of quarantine-people won’t deal with him-and they can move in on his market share.
“They’re working you, J,” Doc says. “Trying to drive a wedge between you and me.”
That also makes sense. Doc and John are fucking Batman and Robin. You can’t fight them together, but split them up…
“I’ll deal with Bobby,” John says.
“No, don’t,” Doc says. Then he does a terrible Godfather imitation. “‘Keep your friends close, your enemies closer.’ Stay close to them. Get the lay of the land. Feel them out, find out who’s with me, who’s against me. Can you do that, Johnny, can you do that for me?”
“Sure.”
“You and me,” Doc says. “It’s always been you and me. Always will be. Nobody can get between us, right?”
No, that’s right, John thinks. They go too far back, and Doc’s been
Like a father to me.
“Anyway, look,” Doc says. “I’m working on some shit. I didn’t want to bring it to you until it was more, you know, fully formed, let’s say, but now…”
152
They drive down to Dago.
You haven’t done a buck and change down the 5 through Pendleton in a bloodred Lamborghini, you haven’t had the full California experience.
It’s a… rush.
Especially with Doc steering with one hand and snorting coke off the dashboard with the other. Nevertheless, they make it to San Diego alive and pull off on India Street in Little Italy.
“You develop a sudden craving for meatballs?” John asks.
They walk into a sandwich shop-a few booths and a long counter with red stools. Doc sits down on one of the stools, orders two sausiche sandwiches with peppers and onions, and asks, “Is Chris around?”
“Yeah, somewhere.”
“Do me a favor? Tell him Doc’s here?”
“‘Doc’?”
“That’s me.” Doc grins.
“What are we doing?” John asks.
“Keep your shirt on.”
A few minutes later, a thirtyish guy in a black suit, no tie, comes in and shakes hands with Doc.
“Chris, this is my partner, John.”
Chris offers his hand. “Nice to meet you, John.”
“You, too.”
“Chris, you have a few minutes?” Doc asks.
“Sure,” Chris says. “Let’s take this somewhere else.”
Doc goes to pay for the sandwiches but Chris waves it off. “I got it.”
“A tip?” Doc asks.
“No.”
They walk out onto Laurel Street. The planes coming in to land make a lot of noise. Doc says, “Chris, I wanted John to hear what we’ve been talking about.”
Yeah, John wants to hear what the fuck they’ve been talking about.
Chris says, “I talked with my people, and they’re eager to get in. We’ll take as much product as you can give us, offer national distribution, a certain level of protection.”
“Who are your ‘people’?” John asks.
He realizes that he sounds a little rude.
Chris looks at Doc, like, who’s your little friend?
Doc says, “Chris, give us a minute?”
Chris nods. “I’ll go get a coffee. Just give me a wave when you’re ready.”
When he’s out of earshot, John says, “What the fuck, Doc? The Mafia?”
“The amateur hour is over,” Doc says. “These people can give us national distribution-Chicago, Detroit, Vegas-”
“I thought they worked with the Mexicans.”
“Chris says they’d rather work with white people,” Doc says. The truth is that the Mexicans are bypassing them, dealing directly with L.A., and the San Diego mob wants its own source.
“Jesus Christ, Doc,” John says. “Once you let these people in, you never get them out.”
“That’s all the movies,” Doc says. “They’re businessmen, same as us.”
“I don’t know.”
“What do you want to do?” Doc asks, “just stand around with our thumbs up our asses, let Bobby and them steamroll us? Fuck that. Fuck ‘the Association.’ That shit’s over. We gotta look out for ourselves.”
He waves to Chris.
Chris comes back out on the sidewalk. “We all on the same page now?”
“Totally.”
Chris looks at John. “Yeah?”
“Yeah.”
They get down to details-price per ounce based on volume, delivery methods, who talks to whom when and how-the nitty-gritty logistics of the dope trade.
Then Doc says, “Chris, I have one other thing.”
“Tell me.”
“Some people aren’t going to be happy about this,” Doc says. “They might try to do something about it.”
Chris says, “No problem.”
“No?”
“Your turn to get coffee,” Chris says. “Let me make a phone call.”
Twenty minutes later Chris and another guy walk into the coffee shop.
The guy is middle-aged, professionally dressed, built like a refrigerator.
“Doc, John,” Chris says, “this is Frank Machianno. He’s going to move up to Laguna for a while, keep an eye on things.”
Frank offers his hand to each of them.
“It’s a pleasure to meet you,” he says.
Very quiet voice.
Competent.
John doesn’t miss it Frank’s a stone killer.
153
John’s coming out of Papa’s Tacos in South Lagoo when Bobby Z rolls up on him in his pickup.
“Hop in,” Bobby says. “We need to talk.”
John’s not so sure they need to talk, but then he remembers Doc’s request to stay close, feel Bobby out, so he gets in.
“You give any thought to what we talked about?” Bobby asks.
“I don’t believe that Doc would flip on us.”
Bobby says, “Someone I want you to meet.”
They drive back north, up into the canyon, and pull over in the parking lot where hikers leave their cars. A white Ford Falcon’s sitting there with a guy in it, and both the car and the man have narc written all over them.
The cop rolls down the window when the truck pulls up. Bobby doesn’t waste any time.
“Tell this guy what you told us,” he says.
“Halliday’s under indictment in the San Diego Federal District,” the cop says. “I don’t have details because it’s sealed, but I know it’s a Class A felony, fifteen to thirty. They’ve had him under surveillance for two years.”
“Tell him the rest,” Bobby says.
“They’ve got him out there proving ‘good intent,’” the cop says. “Man’s a walking sound studio.”
“Will he testify?” Bobby asks.
“He better,” the cop says. “No testimony, no deal. Anything else?”
“Anything else?” Bobby asks John.
John shakes his head.
The narc rolls up his window and pulls out.
“Horse’s mouth,” Bobby says. “He’s Dago DEA.”
“I get it.”
“Do you?” Bobby asks. “I mean, the rest of the guys are going to want to know where you come out on this thing.”
“What thing?”
“We’re not just going to sit back and let Doc give us up one by one,” Bobby says.
John’s reeling.
First, proof that Doc is ratting them out. Shit, he could have been wearing a wire while they were talking in Dana Point, while they were meeting with the people down in Dago. Then there’s what Bobby seems to be saying “Are you talking about what I think you’re talking about?” John asks.
“You wearing a wire, too?”
“Come on.”
“Open your shirt.”
“Fuck you.”
“Open your fucking shirt!”
John opens his shirt and shows Bobby his chest. “Happy?”
Yeah, John thinks, ain’t nobody happy about anything these days. But Bobby seems satisfied that John’s not miked up.
“So where are you at with this thing?” Bobby asks.
“I’m neutral.”
“No such gear on this bus,” Bobby says. “Not to traffic in cliches, but you’re either with us or against us.”
John gets it.
Like the man said You’re gonna have to serve somebody.