Lassiter 08 - Lassiter

Lassiter 08 - Lassiter Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: Lassiter 08 - Lassiter Read Online Free PDF
Author: Paul Levine
where I learned how to try homicide cases without pissing my pants. I moved into private practice with a deep-carpet firm of paper pushers who settled all their civil cases and pled out all their criminal clients. I was an oddity there, a guy who’d hit more blocking sleds than law books. They discarded me after one-too-many contempt citations. So now I fly solo and follow my own rules. It’s the only way I can live.
    The building is owned by Jorge Martinez, who runs Havana Banana, a Cuban restaurant on the first floor. A few years ago, I saved Jorge’s
huevos con bacon
by keeping the Health Department from shutting the joint down. That’s more than I could do for his earlier restaurant, Escargot-to-Go, which landed in bankruptcy. Turned out there wasn’t much of a market for fast-food snails in paper cups. These days I defend food poisoning lawsuits involving cockroaches in the
caldo gallego
.
    I do a few divorces, too. Mostly, they’re referrals from the marriage counselor next door. His failures become my paychecks. I kick back one-third of the fee to him, which is dicey under the ethical rules, if you pay attention to that sort of thing.
    I found Cindy, my assistant, in her cubicle, grooming her cuticles. She’s Gothic pale with purple hair exploding in different directions like the twigs of an osprey nest. Today she wore a black sleeveless leather vest with dangling silver chains. Two chrome studs poked out of the flesh above her left eyebrow, and werewolf tattoos covered her toned upper arms.
    “Hold my calls, Cindy,” I ordered, moving past her.
    “What calls?”
    “And clear my calendar.”
    She waved a hand like a genie. “Poof! Done.”
    Sonia Majeski answered on the first ring. I told her who it was and she hollered into the phone, “No way! Lord, how long’s it been?”
    We did the pleasantries. She was aboard ship in St. Thomas. The passengers were sightseeing and buying duty-free liquor. American tourists will happily skip historic sites and forgo exotic meals for a chance to save a few bucks on their booze.
    “I need to ask you about a girl from the old days,” I said.
    “I don’t remember her.”
    “Whoa. I haven’t given you a name.”
    “I’ve spent a long time forgetting the ‘old days.’ Not gonna start remembering now.”
    “This is important. I think the two of you might have worked together in a strip club.”
    “Not going there, Jake.”
    “Help me out, Sonia. This girl was underage.”
    “Lots were back then. So what?”
    “Her name was Krista. Krista Larkin.”
    The pause on the line told me I had hit paydirt.
    “Sonia?”
    “Did they find her body?” she asked, softly.

    I told Sonia about my meeting with Amy. Told her that Krista was missing but no body had been found, and I asked her to tell me everything she remembered.
    Sonia said she’d been living in an apartment in Miami Springs, near the airport. The place was filled with stewardesses, as they were still called. Eastern Air Lines had recently gone under, and the building was only half full. Sonia was stripping in a club owned by Russian gangsters.
    “One day, I get a new neighbor,” she said. “Krista. She looked like a high school girl. Hell, she
was
a high school girl. But when she got dolled up, Jesus, Jake, bar the door.”
    “Did you know a guy named Charlie she hung around with?”
    “That sleazebag. Charlie’s the one who got her into porn.”
    I remembered what Krista told me that night at Bozo’s.
“There’s this guy.… An old guy. Like almost forty. He pays my rent and wants me to do these gross movies.…”
    And I was the dumb bastard who delivered her to the dirtbag.
    “Any chance you remember his last name?” I asked Sonia.
    “You don’t want to be messing with this guy.”
    “So you know. Tell me.”
    “He’s connected, Jake.”
    “Organized crime?”
    “Political connections that are even scarier.”
    “Just tell me, Sonia. What’s his name?”
    “Ziegler. Charlie
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