Read The Replacements Online

Authors: David Putnam

The Replacements (23 page)

I sat on the bed, dressed in the new clothes Marie had picked up while I slept, and returned Eddie's stare. “Can you talk?” I asked. “You going to say something soon?” He stared, his eyes big, gut-wrenching big, and filled with innocence. My own inadequacy hung thick in the air. I wanted in the worst way to do something for him now, not later. “You want to go on a trip?” He shook his head “no.” “You wanna go on a trip with Marie?” Caution crept into his expression. He nodded “yes.”

“Good man, so do I.”

The knock at the door interrupted us. I opened the door a crack. A slice of sunlight cut across the room. I had one second to recognize Drago before he shoved his way into the room. “Wait, what are you doing?” I whispered. I didn't want him scaring Eddie. Drago scared
me
, and I'm not a traumatized little kid. “Hey, hey, I said you're gonna scare the kid.” Eddie didn't cringe as I'd expected him to or crawl away. He sat unmoving, watching us.

“What? Scare this little guy?” Drago took two giant steps over and held up his fist. “Wus, up little bro?” Eddie didn't smile, but he held up his fist, and Drago knuckle bumped it with his. Drago said, “We're old pals. Aren't we, bro?” Drago held up his fist again, and Eddie tapped it again, his head tilted away in shyness.

I guess I had slept through a lot last night. Drago wore relaxed denim pants with an obvious lump around his thigh from the bandage. A huge white and blue football jersey with the numbers “00” draped over his big belly. What else would have fit? The jersey, an improvement over all that pale white flesh with the disgusting tattoos, went a long way to mask his lack of sociability.

Drago stuck his nose in the air and sniffed. “I smell something sweet.”

Marie was right; Drago hadn't quite evolved from caveman knuckle-dragger to intellectual human. I picked up the bag on the floor and handed him some chocolate cakes and two chocolate milks.

He took them and sat on the bed, almost capsizing it. “Cool, man. Little Debbie cupcakes. Haven't had these in…in goin' on twelve years.” He tore open the first one and shoved the whole thing in his mouth.

“You know, if you chew them a little, you might even be able to taste them,” I said.

Drago stopped eating, and tearing open the next package, looked as if I'd slapped him. Eddie smiled, slid off the bed, and came over to me. He put his hand up and pulled down the goodie bag. He took out a Little Debbie cupcake, went back to his nest, and burrowed back in. Drago looked at Eddie then at me and smiled. He continued to munch as he opened the chocolate milk. He spoke around the now black load of mush in his cavernous mouth. “Hey, our job just got easier.”

“What are you talking about now?”

“Talked to a bro of mine. He said the FBI has a pole camera pointed right at the front of the clubhouse. They're watchin' the SS, it's some kinda RICO investigation.”

“Are you kidding me? How does that help us? It means the job's off. We can't go in with the FBI watching. And what are you doing calling friends and asking about the clubhouse? You tipped our hand.”

Why had I not thought that the FBI would be watching the clubhouse? Of course they were. It's what I would've done had I wanted to use Drago as a staked goat.

“Man, you need to take a chill pill. Everything's cool, trust me.”

I should never have lain down to sleep. In that short time the plan had gotten away from me. “Take a chill pill? Explain to me how you think this is going to go down with the Feds watching?”

Drago looked at Eddie. I stood there stunned that Drago had the sense to be concerned about the child in the room. More stunned that I hadn't seen the error before Drago had.

I nodded toward the bathroom. Drago struggled to his feet. The mattress righted itself but still had a huge dent where he'd been sitting. He took the goodie bag from me and led us the short distance into the bathroom. He filled the bathroom with his bulk, leaving little room for me. I had to shove in to get the door past me to close it. He took out a bag of Doritos Cool Ranch chips, tore them open, and dumped half in his mouth, spilling little shards down his front. I waited for the grinding machine to process the food before he could talk.

“I don't see how you think this is a bad thing,” Drago said. “If the Feebies are watching the clubhouse, then the boys aren't going to pull any shit when we drive up.” He stopped eating and sniffed the air, leaned over and sniffed me. He flashed a broad smile. “You two just don't give up, do you? Any chance you get, you just get after it, don't you? Man, I'm jealous.”

I ignored that last part. “We? You're not going. You never were going.” Originally, Marie and I were going to try and bluff our way in wearing the FBI insignia and yelling that we had a search warrant.

Drago opened his mouth wide, more bits of Doritos dropped onto his chest. “Whoa, there, my Negro cowboy. If Drago's not goin' in, then no one's goin' in.”

“I'm confused here, my Aryan brother. How, in your pea brain, did you think you were goin' to make your Sons of Satan friends think you were an FBI agent?”

“They're not my friends.”

But my question caught, made him think. I could see it in his eyes. “I could lay down in the backseat and—”

“And what, sneak in when no one's looking? No, the deal's cheesed, we're done.”

Someone knocked on the bathroom door loud and high up. Not Eddie, for sure. I opened the door, expecting to see Marie.

John Mack had his hand in the air about to knock again.

CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT

Mack peeked around me at the hulk. “You two reliving a little bit of that prison love?”

I ventured out cautiously, half expecting to see a squad of cops behind Mack, ready to take down the federal fugitive who came back to kidnap more children and spark fear in every household in America. What was he doing here? How had he found us? He didn't know where we were. We were supposed to meet in two hours on Hospitality Lane.

“How did you find us?” I asked.

He slugged me in the stomach, hard. I bent over, choked and gasped and fought to keep down my Sno Balls and chocolate milk. Drago pushed by me, his big paws up, going for Mack's throat. Mack took several steps back, his legs parted in a strong horse stance, hands up, ready to take on the tsunami headed his way. No fear in his expression where there should have been one of impending doom. I rasped, “No, hold it. Don't.”

They both froze, inches away from grappling. I coughed and choked. “Everyone take a breath and relax.”

Mack leaned around Drago. “I owed you that one and you know it.”

“That right?” Drago asked. “He owe you that?” I nodded.

“Karl Drago, meet Los Angeles County Sheriff's Detective John Mack.”

Drago didn't hold out his hand. His eyes narrowed. “A cop?
A county cop? Are you kiddin' me? I hate cops. I mean, I really hate cops.”

“He's a friend.”

“No cop's a friend of mine.”

I waddled over to the bed, cradling my stomach, and sat down. Eddie continued to eat his Little Debbie cupcakes as if he always watched adults play their stupid games.

“Where's Marie?” asked Mack.

“How did you get here?” I asked.

“Drove.”

“Don't be a smart-ass, how did you find me?”

Mack didn't need to answer. In an instant, my mind had tracked backward until I came across what happened and realized I had probably subconsciously done it on purpose. I had called John with a burner phone and got Barbara. I didn't pull the battery or destroy the phone after the call. They had pinged me and got the coordinates. He came to the motel as a sign; he wanted to show me he could be trusted.

He shrugged and smiled.

“I'm sorry, John, the deal's off. We can't make a play on the Sons of Satan clubhouse.”

The smile disappeared. “Why not? The SS clubhouse? Man, that's somethin', really somethin'. They have that kind of money in there?”

Drago came over and again sat on the other bed, compressing his end almost to the floor. “Bullshit, we go or I go by myself, but it's going to get done, believe me. It's going to get done.”

“Watch your language,” Mack said.

Any other time those words would have ended in a fight, but Drago looked at Eddie and nodded.

“Drago here tells me there's now a pole camera on the clubhouse, and the FBI's monitoring it.”

“So?” Mack said.

Drago wanted his money enough to side with a county cop.
“Yeah, I'm with the dipshit. So?” Drago must've thought Mack a dirty cop and that Mack wanted in for a piece of the pie.

“I'm not going to tell you again about your language,” said Mack.

“You're both a couple of fools,” I said. “The plan was to pull up to the front of the clubhouse dressed in FBI windbreakers and use subterfuge to get in. How can we do that if the FBI's watching the place?”

Eddie didn't need to hear any more language that Drago couldn't control. “We're not going to talk about it now,” I said. “We'll talk about it later. But I'm telling you, there isn't a scenario that's going to work, not under these conditions, not with these narrow parameters and the amount of prison time at risk.”

Mack came over close to the bed I sat on with Eddie. He nodded. “Hey, kid, you got any more of those?”

Eddie held out the bag. Mack stuck his hand in and came out with another package of Sno Balls and the last carton of chocolate milk. “Thanks, kid, you're all right. You Eddie Crane?”

Eddie looked at me. I nodded, then Eddie nodded. I said, “Eddie isn't talking right now because he doesn't have anything to say. When he has something to say, he'll let us know. Right, Eddie?”

Eddie nodded and took another bite of his Little Debbie.

Mack opened his Sno Balls and shoved half of one into his mouth. He opened the chocolate milk and slurped some of it down. “Okay,” he said, “I think this thing will still work.”

This wasn't going to end easily. “Hold on,” I said, “you two come with me.” Mack and Drago followed me over to the bathroom. Drago and I went in. No room remained for Mack, and he stood at the threshold, his back to the room. I said, “Okay, go.”

“What is this, the cone of silence or something?” asked Mack.

“The kid, you idgit,” said Drago.

“Don't call me an idgit. And you're the one who can't control his pie hole.”

“Children, play nice,” I said. “What were you going to say, Mack?”

Mack took a drink of chocolate milk as he looked over the top of the carton, past me, at Drago. He swallowed and said, “FBI's spread too thin to be involved in the surveillance of the clubhouse. San Bernardino County Sheriff's Criminal Intelligence Unit is doing it for them in a joint operation.”

“It doesn't matter; it's still being watched by cops.”

“Look,” Mack said, “It's not FBI, and that's all that matters. We…I go to the Sheriff's Criminal Intel guys and tell them we're going to do a ‘knock and talk' as a ruse to get in to see who's inside. We tell them we have an informant who is going to lead us directly to some evidence that we've been looking for and haven't been able to find until now. And, that we took Lex Luthor here out of custody just for the ride over, and to do the knock and talk. Then he's going back to prison where he belongs.”

“I done my time,” Drago said. “I'm out free and clear.”

“You're on parole, asshole.”

“I'm an asshole?”

I held up my hands between them. “Stop it, right now.” I thought about it for a minute. “That's no good.”

“Damn straight, that's no good,” Drago said. “You're not goin' in there without me.”

“Dipshit, with my plan, you are going in.”

“Huh?”

Mack raised his voice. “According to Bruno, you were never going in in the first place, fat boy. But this new way, you're going in, but you'll be handcuffed like our prisoner.”

I shoved one man in the chest, then the other, to keep them separated. Who was I kidding? If Drago wanted to go through me, he needed only to raise up his size sixteen shoe and squash me like a bug. “It won't work, Mack, because you're putting yourself up front,” I said. “When this thing goes down and they investigate, you're done. You'll be prosecuted. You'll lose your job and go to the joint.”

Mack smiled. “For what?”

“Yeah, wait a minute, he's right, for what?” Drago said. “You think the SS are going to complain to the cops that someone snuck into their clubhouse and took a million in gold? Hell, we do it right, they won't even know what we took.”

“A million in gold?” asked Mack.

“Forget about the gold, asshole, you're not getting an ounce, not even a gram,” said Drago.

I'd told Mack on the phone that we were going in to get the money to pay the ransom, and didn't get into the long, drawn-out story of how the money had transformed from paper to mineral. “Okay,” I said, “what about collusion, and aiding and abetting a known fugitive? I'll be on that surveillance tape with you.”

“Not if you wear sunglasses and a baseball cap pulled down low. And if we get in and get out without causing a big scene, then no one on our side of the fence is even going to tumble to what happened and look closely at the tape.”

“You don't think someone will recognize me on the video?” I asked.

Drago smirked. “I don't think so. You guys all look—”

I spun and stuck my finger right in his face. “Don't. Don't you even think about saying it.”

CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE

Marie used the cash I'd given her for a nice little Honda Civic, dark blue with a sunroof. She pulled up right in front of the motel room door, sideways, taking up three spots, not intending on staying long. Once any plan was decided and in place, she went after the elements, one at a time, with the determination of a bulldog to complete the task at hand.

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